Paris–Le Bourget Airport (French:Aéroport de Paris-Le Bourget) (IATA:LBG,ICAO:LFPB) is an airport located within portions of the communes ofLe Bourget,Bonneuil-en-France,Dugny andGonesse, 6 NM (11 km; 6.9 mi) north-northeast[2] ofParis, France.
The airport started commercial operations in 1919 and was Paris's only airport until the construction ofOrly Airport in 1932. It is famous as the landing site forCharles Lindbergh's historic solotransatlantic crossing in 1927 in theSpirit of St. Louis, and had been the departure point two weeks earlier for the French biplaneL'Oiseau Blanc (The White Bird), which took off in an attempt at a transatlantic flight, but then mysteriously disappeared.[3]Howard Hughes flew the second nonstop flight from New York to Paris in 1939, landing at Le Bourget and thereafter continuing onward toMoscow.[4]
On 25 June 1940,Adolf Hitler began his first and only tour of Paris, withAlbert Speer and an entourage, from Le Bourget Airport.[5]
Due to capacity constraints at Le Bourget,Air France transferred all of its operations to Orly in 1952.[6]
TheParis Air Show was first held at Le Bourget in 1953, having previously been held at theGrand Palais prior to World War II, and at Orly after the war.[7]
In 1977, Le Bourget was closed to international airline traffic and in 1980 to regional airline traffic, but continues serving both domestic and international business aviation. Since 1975, Le Bourget Airport has hosted theMusée de l’air et de l’espace, France's main state-owned aviation museum. Following the discontinuation of regular commercial traffic in 1977, space available to house museum collections and displays has progressively increased.[9][10]
The airport hosts a statue commemorating FrenchwomanRaymonde de Laroche who was the first woman to earn a pilot's licence. There is also a monument honouring Lindbergh, as well asNungesser andColi, pilots ofThe White Bird.[11]
On 14 April 2016, theGroupe ADP rolled out theConnect 2020 corporate strategy and the commercial brandParis Aéroport was applied to all Parisian airports, including Le Bourget airport.[12]
Le Bourget has been called "TheTeterboro of Europe" because of the role it plays in accepting all the business aviation flying into Paris, and the support base.[13]
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Annual passenger traffic at LBG airport.SeeWikidata query.
On 7 April 1952, SNCASE Languedoc P/7F-BATB of Air France was damaged beyond economic repair when it overran the runway on take-off. The aircraft was operating an international scheduled passenger flight from Le Bourget toHeathrow Airport, London.[17]
On 20 January 1995, aDassault Falcon 20E operating as Leadair Unijet Flight 001N crashed after takeoff due to an uncontained engine failure caused by a birdstrike.[18][19]
On 25 July 2000,Air France Flight 4590 attempted to divert to Le Bourget before it crashed shortly after takeoff fromCharles de Gaulle Airport, killing all 109 people on board and four on the ground. It was the only fatalConcorde accident during its 27-year operational history.
On 13 August 2010 aDassault Falcon 50 was damaged beyond repair when its nose gear collapsed during landing.[20]
On 19 November 2010 an Algerian Air Force Lockheed C-130 Hercules excursed from the runway during landing.[21]
The titular aircraft inAirport '79: Concorde had suffered hydraulic failure during the attack by the rogue F-4 Phantom jet and barreled through two arresting barricades, being stopped, just barely, by the third.
Le Bourget Airport appears in dozens of movies (since the 1930s), sometimes as an active airport others as the Air and Space Museum or through their collection of survivors commercial aircraft used as a set. The terminal could be heavily digitally modified (Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris), acting as an airport in East Berlin (Enigma (1982 film)) but sometimes suggested and represented by other platforms (as seen inThe Da Vinci Code -the real one beingBrighton City Airport-).
^2005-06-07T00:00:00+01:00."Making history".Flight Global.Archived from the original on 3 June 2020. Retrieved3 June 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)