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 Airport - Definition 

For other uses, see Airport (disambiguation).

An airport is a designated location for aircraft to take off and land. While smaller airports—often called aerodromes, airfields or landing strips—might include short (one or two kilometer) dirt or grass runways, larger airports for international flights normally feature paved runways several kilometers long. Both large and small airports can be towered or uncontrolled, depending on funds and traffic, although most international airports have air traffic control located on site.

Contents

Civilian

International airports

International airports generally have a complex of buildings where passengers can embark on airliners, and where cargo can be stored and loaded. The buildings where passengers interface with ground transportation, purchase tickets, transfer their luggage, and go through security are typically called terminals, and the buildings that provide access to the airplanes are typically called concourses. However, these two terms can be interchangeable. Customs facilities for international travel often distinguish an international airport, and require a more conspicuous level of physical security.

The largest international airports are often located next to freeways or are served by their own freeways. Often, traffic is fed into two access roads, designed as loops, one sitting on top of the other. One level is for departing passengers and the other is for arrivals.

Airport services

Aircraft maintenance, pilot services, aircraft rental, and hangar rental is most often performed by a fixed base operator, e.g. British Airways at Heathrow

Airport externalities

The traffic generated by airports both in the air and on the surface can be a major source of aviation noise and air pollution which may, in extreme cases, be harmful to health or interrupt sleep. The construction of new airports, or addition of runways to existing airports, is often resisted by local residents because of the effect on the countryside, historical sites, local flora and fauna.

Military

Miltary airports, more often called airbases or airfields, provide basing and support of miliary aircraft. Some airbases provide facilites very like civilian airports, for example RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshire, England. This airbase has a terminal which caters for passengers for the Royal Air Force's scheduled flights, e.g. the Tristar to the Falkland Islands. Other structures and equipment are specific to miliary airfields, e.g.

  • Anti-aircraft weapons, e.g. surface-to-air missiles to protect from air attack.
  • Hardened Aircraft Shelters (HAS), to protect individual aircraft from aerial strikes.

Mobile airports

An aircraft carrier is a naval ship that serves as mobile seaborne military airfield.

Airport designation and naming

Airports are uniquely represented by their IATA airport code and ICAO airport code. In the U.S. and certain other countries, they are often named after a prominent local celebrity, commonly a politician.

See also

External links



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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Airport".