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Gia Lam Airport

Gia Lam Airport (ICAO: VVGL) (Vietnamese: Sân bay Gia Lâm) is an airport in Hanoi, Vietnam, located in Long Biên District, on the eastern bank of the Red River. It is primarily a military field, used by the Vietnam People's Air Force (VPAF), with MiG-21 fighters and Kamov Ka-28 helicopters stored in revetments. The airfield was inaugurated in 1936, before the Japanese occupation of French Indochina. The airport is currently used for military training activities, as well as for chartered helicopter taxi flights for tourists visiting nearby attractions such as Ha Long Bay. There are plans to convert Gia Lam to a civilian airport, serving short flights to and from locations in Northern Vietnam.[1]

Gia Lam Airport

Sân bay Gia Lâm
Gia Lam Airfield in 1967.
Summary
Airport typePublic / Military
ServesHanoi
LocationLong Biên district
Elevation AMSL50 ft / 15 m
Coordinates21°02′27.51″N 105°53′09.64″E / 21.0409750°N 105.8860111°E / 21.0409750; 105.8860111
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
02/20 6,565 2,001 Asphalt

History Edit

1936–40 Edit

Gia Lam Airfield (French: Aérogare de Gia Lam) was built in 1936 (87 years ago) (1936), according to an urban plan laid out by French architect Ernest Hébrard over a decade earlier. Hébrard was hired by the city of Hanoi's Urban Planning and Architecture Services department in 1923 to supervise a number of urban renewal projects,[2] including a new industrial area in Gia Lâm District, on the eastern bank of the Red River. Hébrard's plan for Gia Lam included a renovated railway station, along with space for factories, industrial establishments, and the new airfield. Upon its completion, it was one of two major airfields in the Hanoi area, the other being the (now-disused) Bach Mai Airfield. The airfield itself was constructed according to a design by French architect Félix Godard.[3]

1940–46 Edit

On September 26, 1940, as part of the Invasion of French Indochina, Japanese forces took possession of the airfield, maintaining control throughout World War II, until their surrender to the Việt Minh during the August Revolution. Soon afterwards, the Democratic Republic of Vietnam was proclaimed, with Việt Minh leader Hồ Chí Minh as head of government. France initially accepted the new government, but this position changed when negotiations about the future of Vietnam as a state within the French Union collapsed. Guerrilla fighting began between Việt Minh fighters and the French, and on December 19, 1946, in response to attacks on French installations in and around Hanoi, French troops re-occupied the airfield.[4]

First Indochina War Edit

Gia Lam and Bach Mai later became the two major logistics bases supporting French operations at the Battle of Dien Bien Phu.[5] Much of the equipment sent to the remote French military base at Dien Bien Phu passed through Gia Lam airfield, including the ten French M24 Chaffee tanks assigned to the isolated stronghold in northwestern Vietnam, which were each dismantled into 180 individual parts and flown to Dien Bien Phu on heavy cargo aircraft. After their defeat at Dien Bien Phu and the following 1954 Geneva Peace Accords, French forces, obliged to leave Vietnam, handed over the airfield to the Viet Minh. Gia Lam airfield was thereafter taken over by Ho Chi Minh's North Vietnamese government and used by the VPAF as their main airbase in the Hanoi area.

Vietnam War Edit

 
Repatriated US POWs at Gia Lam, 1973

During the Vietnam War, the American Joint Chiefs of Staff placed Gia Lam on a list of 94 recommended bombing targets in North Vietnam, identifying it as a major airbase and as a storage location for petroleum, oil and lubricants (POL).[6] All North Vietnamese airfields were removed from the USAF's "restricted target" list in April 1967, and Gia Lam was one of six deemed suitable for fast jet operations. As a result, it sustained heavy damage as part of Operation Rolling Thunder, suffering repeated bomber attacks.[7]

Following the cease-fire mandated by the Paris Peace Accords in January 1973, Gia Lam was the site of Operation Homecoming, the return of American POWs held by the North Vietnamese. The first repatriation, effected by the United States Air Force's Military Airlift Command, happened on February 12, 1973, when C-141s of the 63d Military Airlift Wing, flying from Clark Air Base in the Philippines, flew to Gia Lam and returned with a total of 116 former POWs.[8] The first C-141 to return came to be known as the Hanoi Taxi, named after the writing on the flight engineer's panel by the POWs aboard the plane for the freedom flight. Arizona Senator John McCain was one of the POWs who flew home from Gia Lam on the Hanoi Taxi. From February 12 to April 4, there were 54 C-141 missions flying out of Hanoi, bringing the former POWs home.[9]

Facilities Edit

At one time, the headquarters of national flag carrier Vietnam Airlines were located at Gia Lam Airport.[10][11]

Former airlines and destinations (until 1978) Edit

Incidents and accidents Edit

On April 8, 2008, a Soviet-built Antonov An-26 turboprop aircraft on a training mission crashed into a field in Thanh Trì District, in the outskirts of Hanoi, killing five Vietnamese military pilots. The plane took off from Gia Lam Airport, and crashed on its way back. The cause of the accident was unknown. A Vietnamese military official who declined to be named said the plane belonged to Vietnam's 918 Air Transport Regiment.[14]

Cancelled renovations Edit

Because of its proximity to the center of Hanoi compared to Noi Bai International Airport, part of Gia Lam Airport was expected to become a civilian airport in the near future, reserved for regional domestic airlines.[15] This would've allowed passengers flying on short-haul flights, such as from Hanoi to Điện Biên, Vinh, or Nà Sản Airport in the northern province of Sơn La, to depart from Gia Lam airport, only 10 minutes away from the centre of Hanoi, rather than Noi Bai, which is located about an hour's drive away from the city.[15]

Gia Lam's 2000m by 45m runway is suitable for small, short-haul aircraft such as ATR 72 twin-turboprops or Fokker 70 jets,[16] which are already operated by Vietnam Airlines as part of their fleet. Under the development plan, the parking yard will be upgraded to receive three ATR 72 or Fokker 70 aircraft by 2015, increasing to five by 2025. Its annual capacity was projected to be 162,000 passengers in 2015, increasing further to 300,000 passengers by 2025.[15] The airport is about the same size as Nà Sản and Điện Biên airports, and will not be able to receive larger Airbus or Boeing aircraft, which will continue to be received at Noi Bai.[16]

The renovations, which would've allow the airport to meet the standards of the International Civil Aviation Organization,[1] were estimated to cost VND 287 billion (US$17.3 million).[17] These included: building a new parking yard covering 13,720 square metres (3.39 acres) in 2015 and 20,750 square metres (5.13 acres) by 2025; building the new terminal, which was expected to serve 270 passengers an hour during peak hours; and other adjustments such as the expansion of Nguyen Son road, which is the main route into the airport from the city. The renovated airport would've been managed by the Northern Airport Administration.[15]

On February 23, 2018, the Prime Minister issued Decision No. 236/QĐ-TTg on adjusting the air transport development plan up to 2020, in which Gia Lam Airport was not part of the national airport network system. On April 3, 2023, Decision No. 980/QĐ-BGTVT formally abolished the airport master plan and renovation work stopped indefinitely. The airport would continue to host military flights.[18]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Vietnamnet (2010-05-03). "Gia Lam Airport to serve short-range flights". Retrieved 2016-01-23.
  2. ^ . Thang Long - Hanoi - Thousand-Year Civilisation. 2010-01-26. Archived from the original on 2011-08-17. Retrieved 2010-05-06.
  3. ^ Arnauld Le Brusq & Léonard de Selva (1999). Vietnam, à travers l'architecture coloniale (in French). Patrimoines et Médias / Édition de l'Amateur. pp. 156–157. ISBN 2-85917-274-2.
  4. ^ GlobalSecurity.org: First Indochina War. Accessed 4 May 2010.
  5. ^ Fall, Bernard B. (1966). Hell in a Very Small Place. The Siege of Dien Bien Phu. New York: Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-306-80231-7.
  6. ^ Charles Tustin Kamps (2001). . Aerospace Power Journal. 15 (1). Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2010-05-05.
  7. ^ Toperczer, István (2001). MiG-21 units of the Vietnam War. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing. p. 70. ISBN 1-84176-263-6.
  8. ^ The United States Air Force in Southeast Asia: Tactical Airlift, Ray L. Bowers, 1983.; Department of the Air Force History office
  9. ^ Bolling AF Base 2016-01-17 at the Wayback Machine Feb. 15, 1973: Operation Homecoming marks end of Vietnam War by Andy Stephens 11th Wing Historian 2/12/2007
  10. ^ "." Vietnam Airlines. 11 March 2000. Retrieved on 21 December 2010. "HEAD OFFICE: GIALAM AIRPORT, HANOI 10.000, VIETNAM."
  11. ^ "Directory: World Airlines." Flight International. 30 March-5 April 2004. 92. Retrieved on 21 December 2010. "VIETNAM AIRLINES [VN] (HVN) Gialem Airport, Hanoi, Vietnam."
  12. ^ "Air France".
  13. ^ https://www.timetableimages.com/ttimages/ca3/ca64/ca64-01.jpg[bare URL image file]
  14. ^ "Vietnam military plane crash kills five". Agence France-Presse. 2008-04-08. Retrieved 2010-05-13.
  15. ^ a b c d . VietnamNet Bridge. Archived from the original on 2009-07-16.
  16. ^ a b . VietnamNet Bridge. Archived from the original on 2009-01-29.
  17. ^ Momberger Airport Information, No. 876[permanent dead link], by Air Trans Source Inc. 10 March 2010. Accessed on 3 May 2010.
  18. ^ "Sân bay Gia Lâm chỉ còn hoạt động bay quân sự". Tuổi Trẻ (in Vietnamese). 2020-04-09. Retrieved 2023-10-04.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)

airport, icao, vvgl, vietnamese, sân, lâm, airport, hanoi, vietnam, located, long, biên, district, eastern, bank, river, primarily, military, field, used, vietnam, people, force, vpaf, with, fighters, kamov, helicopters, stored, revetments, airfield, inaugurat. Gia Lam Airport ICAO VVGL Vietnamese San bay Gia Lam is an airport in Hanoi Vietnam located in Long Bien District on the eastern bank of the Red River It is primarily a military field used by the Vietnam People s Air Force VPAF with MiG 21 fighters and Kamov Ka 28 helicopters stored in revetments The airfield was inaugurated in 1936 before the Japanese occupation of French Indochina The airport is currently used for military training activities as well as for chartered helicopter taxi flights for tourists visiting nearby attractions such as Ha Long Bay There are plans to convert Gia Lam to a civilian airport serving short flights to and from locations in Northern Vietnam 1 Gia Lam AirportSan bay Gia LamGia Lam Airfield in 1967 IATA noneICAO VVGLSummaryAirport typePublic MilitaryServesHanoiLocationLong Bien districtElevation AMSL50 ft 15 mCoordinates21 02 27 51 N 105 53 09 64 E 21 0409750 N 105 8860111 E 21 0409750 105 8860111RunwaysDirection Length Surfaceft m02 20 6 565 2 001 Asphalt Contents 1 History 1 1 1936 40 1 2 1940 46 1 3 First Indochina War 1 4 Vietnam War 2 Facilities 3 Former airlines and destinations until 1978 4 Incidents and accidents 5 Cancelled renovations 6 ReferencesHistory Edit1936 40 Edit Gia Lam Airfield French Aerogare de Gia Lam was built in 1936 87 years ago 1936 according to an urban plan laid out by French architect Ernest Hebrard over a decade earlier Hebrard was hired by the city of Hanoi s Urban Planning and Architecture Services department in 1923 to supervise a number of urban renewal projects 2 including a new industrial area in Gia Lam District on the eastern bank of the Red River Hebrard s plan for Gia Lam included a renovated railway station along with space for factories industrial establishments and the new airfield Upon its completion it was one of two major airfields in the Hanoi area the other being the now disused Bach Mai Airfield The airfield itself was constructed according to a design by French architect Felix Godard 3 1940 46 Edit On September 26 1940 as part of the Invasion of French Indochina Japanese forces took possession of the airfield maintaining control throughout World War II until their surrender to the Việt Minh during the August Revolution Soon afterwards the Democratic Republic of Vietnam was proclaimed with Việt Minh leader Hồ Chi Minh as head of government France initially accepted the new government but this position changed when negotiations about the future of Vietnam as a state within the French Union collapsed Guerrilla fighting began between Việt Minh fighters and the French and on December 19 1946 in response to attacks on French installations in and around Hanoi French troops re occupied the airfield 4 First Indochina War Edit Gia Lam and Bach Mai later became the two major logistics bases supporting French operations at the Battle of Dien Bien Phu 5 Much of the equipment sent to the remote French military base at Dien Bien Phu passed through Gia Lam airfield including the ten French M24 Chaffee tanks assigned to the isolated stronghold in northwestern Vietnam which were each dismantled into 180 individual parts and flown to Dien Bien Phu on heavy cargo aircraft After their defeat at Dien Bien Phu and the following 1954 Geneva Peace Accords French forces obliged to leave Vietnam handed over the airfield to the Viet Minh Gia Lam airfield was thereafter taken over by Ho Chi Minh s North Vietnamese government and used by the VPAF as their main airbase in the Hanoi area Vietnam War Edit nbsp Repatriated US POWs at Gia Lam 1973During the Vietnam War the American Joint Chiefs of Staff placed Gia Lam on a list of 94 recommended bombing targets in North Vietnam identifying it as a major airbase and as a storage location for petroleum oil and lubricants POL 6 All North Vietnamese airfields were removed from the USAF s restricted target list in April 1967 and Gia Lam was one of six deemed suitable for fast jet operations As a result it sustained heavy damage as part of Operation Rolling Thunder suffering repeated bomber attacks 7 Following the cease fire mandated by the Paris Peace Accords in January 1973 Gia Lam was the site of Operation Homecoming the return of American POWs held by the North Vietnamese The first repatriation effected by the United States Air Force s Military Airlift Command happened on February 12 1973 when C 141s of the 63d Military Airlift Wing flying from Clark Air Base in the Philippines flew to Gia Lam and returned with a total of 116 former POWs 8 The first C 141 to return came to be known as the Hanoi Taxi named after the writing on the flight engineer s panel by the POWs aboard the plane for the freedom flight Arizona Senator John McCain was one of the POWs who flew home from Gia Lam on the Hanoi Taxi From February 12 to April 4 there were 54 C 141 missions flying out of Hanoi bringing the former POWs home 9 Facilities EditAt one time the headquarters of national flag carrier Vietnam Airlines were located at Gia Lam Airport 10 11 Former airlines and destinations until 1978 EditAirlinesDestinationsAeroflotMoscow Domodedovo Moscow SheremetyevoAir FranceAkyab Allahabad Athens Baghdad Bangkok Bushehr Calcutta Kastellorizo Corfu Damascus Dezful Jask Jodhpur Karachi London Croydon Marseille Naples Paris Orly Rangoon Vientiane 12 CAAC AirlinesBeijing Capital Guangzhou Jakarta Kemayoran Kunming Wujiaba Nanning Phnom Penh Shanghai Longhua Shanghai Hongqiao 13 InterflugBerlin SchonefeldPathet Lao AirlinesVientianeRoyal Air LaoVientianeVietnam Civil AviationBangkok Beijing Capital Berlin Schnoefield Phnom Penh Vientiane VinhIncidents and accidents EditOn April 8 2008 a Soviet built Antonov An 26 turboprop aircraft on a training mission crashed into a field in Thanh Tri District in the outskirts of Hanoi killing five Vietnamese military pilots The plane took off from Gia Lam Airport and crashed on its way back The cause of the accident was unknown A Vietnamese military official who declined to be named said the plane belonged to Vietnam s 918 Air Transport Regiment 14 Cancelled renovations EditBecause of its proximity to the center of Hanoi compared to Noi Bai International Airport part of Gia Lam Airport was expected to become a civilian airport in the near future reserved for regional domestic airlines 15 This would ve allowed passengers flying on short haul flights such as from Hanoi to Điện Bien Vinh or Na Sản Airport in the northern province of Sơn La to depart from Gia Lam airport only 10 minutes away from the centre of Hanoi rather than Noi Bai which is located about an hour s drive away from the city 15 Gia Lam s 2000m by 45m runway is suitable for small short haul aircraft such as ATR 72 twin turboprops or Fokker 70 jets 16 which are already operated by Vietnam Airlines as part of their fleet Under the development plan the parking yard will be upgraded to receive three ATR 72 or Fokker 70 aircraft by 2015 increasing to five by 2025 Its annual capacity was projected to be 162 000 passengers in 2015 increasing further to 300 000 passengers by 2025 15 The airport is about the same size as Na Sản and Điện Bien airports and will not be able to receive larger Airbus or Boeing aircraft which will continue to be received at Noi Bai 16 The renovations which would ve allow the airport to meet the standards of the International Civil Aviation Organization 1 were estimated to cost VND 287 billion US 17 3 million 17 These included building a new parking yard covering 13 720 square metres 3 39 acres in 2015 and 20 750 square metres 5 13 acres by 2025 building the new terminal which was expected to serve 270 passengers an hour during peak hours and other adjustments such as the expansion of Nguyen Son road which is the main route into the airport from the city The renovated airport would ve been managed by the Northern Airport Administration 15 On February 23 2018 the Prime Minister issued Decision No 236 QĐ TTg on adjusting the air transport development plan up to 2020 in which Gia Lam Airport was not part of the national airport network system On April 3 2023 Decision No 980 QĐ BGTVT formally abolished the airport master plan and renovation work stopped indefinitely The airport would continue to host military flights 18 References Edit nbsp Vietnam portal nbsp Aviation portal a b Vietnamnet 2010 05 03 Gia Lam Airport to serve short range flights Retrieved 2016 01 23 Ha Nội mirror of Indochinese architecture Thang Long Hanoi Thousand Year Civilisation 2010 01 26 Archived from the original on 2011 08 17 Retrieved 2010 05 06 Arnauld Le Brusq amp Leonard de Selva 1999 Vietnam a travers l architecture coloniale in French Patrimoines et Medias Edition de l Amateur pp 156 157 ISBN 2 85917 274 2 GlobalSecurity org First Indochina War Accessed 4 May 2010 Fall Bernard B 1966 Hell in a Very Small Place The Siege of Dien Bien Phu New York Da Capo Press ISBN 0 306 80231 7 Charles Tustin Kamps 2001 The JCS 94 Target List A Vietnam Myth That Still Distorts Military Thought Aerospace Power Journal 15 1 Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2010 05 05 Toperczer Istvan 2001 MiG 21 units of the Vietnam War Oxford UK Osprey Publishing p 70 ISBN 1 84176 263 6 The United States Air Force in Southeast Asia Tactical Airlift Ray L Bowers 1983 Department of the Air Force History office Bolling AF Base Archived 2016 01 17 at the Wayback Machine Feb 15 1973 Operation Homecoming marks end of Vietnam War by Andy Stephens 11th Wing Historian 2 12 2007 Home page of VN anh Vietnam Airlines 11 March 2000 Retrieved on 21 December 2010 HEAD OFFICE GIALAM AIRPORT HANOI 10 000 VIETNAM Directory World Airlines Flight International 30 March 5 April 2004 92 Retrieved on 21 December 2010 VIETNAM AIRLINES VN HVN Gialem Airport Hanoi Vietnam Air France https www timetableimages com ttimages ca3 ca64 ca64 01 jpg bare URL image file Vietnam military plane crash kills five Agence France Presse 2008 04 08 Retrieved 2010 05 13 a b c d Gia Lam airport to become domestic airport VietnamNet Bridge Archived from the original on 2009 07 16 a b Gia Lam airport to have double duty VietnamNet Bridge Archived from the original on 2009 01 29 Momberger Airport Information No 876 permanent dead link by Air Trans Source Inc 10 March 2010 Accessed on 3 May 2010 San bay Gia Lam chỉ con hoạt động bay quan sự Tuổi Trẻ in Vietnamese 2020 04 09 Retrieved 2023 10 04 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gia Lam Airport amp oldid 1178581629, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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