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Wikipedia

Heathrow Airport

Heathrow Airport (/ˌhθˈr, ˈhθr/),[4] called London Airport until 1966 and now known as London Heathrow[5] (IATA: LHR, ICAO: EGLL), is the main international airport serving London, England. It is the largest of the six international airports in the London airport system (the others being Gatwick, City, Luton, Stansted and Southend). The airport is owned and operated by Heathrow Airport Holdings. In 2021, it was the seventh-busiest airport in the world by international passenger traffic and eighth-busiest in Europe by total passenger traffic.

Heathrow Airport
Summary
Airport typePublic
Owner/OperatorHeathrow Airport Holdings
ServesGreater London, Berkshire, southern Buckinghamshire, northwest Surrey and western Hertfordshire
LocationHillingdon, London, England, United Kingdom
Opened25 March 1946; 76 years ago (1946-03-25)
Hub for
Elevation AMSL83 ft / 25 m
Coordinates51°28′39″N 000°27′41″W / 51.47750°N 0.46139°W / 51.47750; -0.46139Coordinates: 51°28′39″N 000°27′41″W / 51.47750°N 0.46139°W / 51.47750; -0.46139
Websitewww.heathrow.com
Maps
LHR/EGLL
LHR/EGLL
LHR/EGLL
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
09L/27R 3,902 12,802 Grooved asphalt
09R/27L 3,660 12,008 Grooved asphalt
Statistics (2022)
Passengers61,599,196
Aircraft movements376,846
Land Area1,227 ha[1]
Sources:
Statistics from the CAA and Heathrow Airport Limited[2][3]

Heathrow was founded as a small airfield in 1929 but was developed into a much larger airport after World War II. It lies 14 miles (23 kilometres) west of Central London on a site that covers 12.27 square kilometres (4.74 square miles). It was gradually expanded over seventy-five years and now has two parallel east-west runways, four operational passenger terminals and one cargo terminal.[5] The airport is the primary hub for British Airways and Virgin Atlantic.

Location

 
A Qantas Boeing 747-400 on approach to London Heathrow runway 27L

Heathrow is 14 mi (23 km) west of central London.[5] It is located 3 mi (4.8 km) west of Hounslow, 3 miles south of Hayes, and 3 miles north-east of Staines-upon-Thames.

Heathrow falls entirely within the boundaries of the London Borough of Hillingdon, and under the Twickenham postcode area, with the postcode TW6. It is surrounded by the villages of Sipson, Harlington, Harmondsworth, and Longford to the north and the neighbourhoods of Cranford and Hatton to the east. To the south lie Feltham, Bedfont and Stanwell while to the west Heathrow is separated from Slough, Horton and Windsor in Berkshire by the M25 motorway. The airport is located within the Hayes and Harlington parliamentary constituency.

As the airport is located west of London and as its runways run east-west, an aircraft‘s landing approach is usually directly over the conurbation of London when the wind is from the south-west — as it is, most of the time.

The airport forms part of a travel to work area with Slough, west Greater London, and the northern part of Surrey.

History

 
Aerial photo of Heathrow Airport from the 1950s, before the terminals were built

Heathrow Airport began in 1929 as a small airfield (Great West Aerodrome) on land southeast of the hamlet of Heathrow from which the airport takes its name. At that time the land consisted of farms, market gardens and orchards; there was a "Heathrow Farm" approximately where the modern Terminal 2 is situated, a "Heathrow Hall" and a "Heathrow House." This hamlet was largely along a country lane (Heathrow Road), which ran roughly along the east and south edges of the present central terminals area.

Development of the whole Heathrow area as a much larger airport began in 1944 during World War II. It was principally used for long-distance military aircraft bound for the Far East. By the time the airfield was complete, World War II had ended, and the UK Government continued to develop the site as a civil airport. The airport was opened on 25 March 1946 as London Airport and was renamed Heathrow Airport in 1966. The design for the airport was by Sir Frederick Gibberd. He set out the original terminals and central-area buildings, including the original control tower and the multi-faith Chapel of St George's.

Operations

Facilities

 
Central waiting area in Terminal 5
 
Concorde G-BOAB in storage at Heathrow
 
Heathrow's control tower with a departing Virgin Atlantic Boeing 747-400 in the background.
 
British Airways aircraft at Terminal 5C

Heathrow Airport is used by over 80 airlines flying to 185 destinations in 84 countries. The airport is the primary hub of British Airways and is a base for Virgin Atlantic. It has four passenger terminals (numbered 2 to 5) and a cargo terminal. Of Heathrow's 78 million passengers in 2017, 94% were travelling into or out of the country; the remaining 6% were bound for, or arriving from, places within the UK.[6] The busiest single destination in passenger numbers is New York, with over three million passengers flying between Heathrow and JFK Airport in 2013.[7]

In the 1950s, Heathrow had six runways, arranged in three pairs at different angles in the shape of a hexagram with the permanent passenger terminal in the middle and the older terminal along the north edge of the field; two of its runways would always be within 30° of the wind direction. As the required length for runways has grown, Heathrow now has only two parallel runways running east-west. These are extended versions of the two east-west runways from the original hexagram. From the air, almost all of the original runways can still be seen, incorporated into the present system of taxiways. North of the northern runway and the former taxiway and aprons, now the site of extensive car parks, is the entrance to the access tunnel and the site of Heathrow's unofficial "gate guardian". For many years the home of a 40% scale model of a British Airways Concorde, G-CONC; the site has been occupied by a model of an Emirates Airbus A380 since 2008.[8]

Heathrow Airport has Anglican, Catholic, Free Church, Hindu, Jewish, Muslim and Sikh chaplains. There is a multi-faith prayer room and counselling room in each terminal, in addition to St. George's Interdenominational Chapel in an underground vault adjacent to the old control tower, where Christian services take place. The chaplains organise and lead prayers at certain times in the prayer room.[9]

The airport has its resident press corps, consisting of six photographers and one TV crew, serving all the major newspapers and television stations around the world.[10]

Most of Heathrow's internal roads’ names are coded by their first letter: N in the north (e.g. Newall Road), E in the east (e.g. Elmdon Road), S in the south (e.g. Stratford Road), W in the west (e.g. Walrus Road), C in the centre (e.g. Camborne Road).

Flight movements

Aircraft destined for Heathrow are usually routed to one of four holding points.

Air traffic controllers at Heathrow Approach Control (based in Swanwick, Hampshire) then guide the aircraft to their final approach, merging aircraft from the four holds into a single stream of traffic, sometimes as close as 2.5 nautical miles (4.6 km; 2.9 mi) apart. Considerable use is made of continuous descent approach techniques to minimise the environmental effects of incoming aircraft, particularly at night.[11] Once an aircraft is established on its final approach, control is handed over to Heathrow Tower.

When runway alternation was introduced, aircraft generated significantly more noise on departure than when landing, so a preference for westerly operations during daylight was introduced, which continues to this day.[12] In this mode, aircraft take off towards the west and land from the east over London, thereby minimising the impact of noise on the most densely populated areas. Heathrow's two runways generally operate in segregated mode, whereby landings are allocated to one runway and takeoffs to the other. To further reduce noise nuisance, the use of runways 27R and 27L is swapped at 15:00 each day if the wind is from the west. When landings are easterly there is no alternation; 09L remains the landing runway and 09R the takeoff runway due to the legacy of the now rescinded Cranford Agreement, pending taxiway works to allow the roles to be reversed. Occasionally, landings are allowed on the nominated departure runway, to help reduce airborne delays and to position landing aircraft closer to their terminal, reducing taxi times.

Night-time flights at Heathrow are subject to restrictions. Between 23:00 and 04:00, the noisiest aircraft (rated QC/8 and QC/16) cannot be scheduled for operation. Also, during the night quota period (23:30–06:00) there are four limits:

  • A limit on the number of flights allowed.
  • A Quota Count system which limits the total amount of noise permitted, but allows operators to choose to operate fewer noisy aircraft or a greater number of quieter planes.[13]
  • QC/4 aircraft cannot be scheduled for operation.
  • A voluntary agreement with the airlines that no early-morning arrivals will be scheduled to land before 04:30.

A trial of "noise-relief zones" ran from December 2012 to March 2013, which concentrated approach flight paths into defined areas compared with the existing paths which were spread out. The zones used alternated weekly, meaning residents in the "no-fly" areas received respite from aircraft noise for set periods.[14] However, it was concluded that some residents in other areas experienced more noise as a consequence of the trial and that it should therefore not be taken forward in its current form. Heathrow received more than 25,000 noise complaints in just three months over the summer of 2016, but around half were made by the same ten people.[15]

In 2017, Heathrow introduced "Fly Quiet & Green", a quarterly published league table (currently suspended due to the Covid pandemic) that awards points to the 50 busiest airlines at the airport, ostensibly based on their performance relative to each other across a range of seven environmental benchmarks, such as NOx emissions.[16] Heathrow has acknowledged, but not attempted to refute, criticism over discrepancies and a lack of transparency over the way in which the figures are calculated.[17] The airport has always refused to publish a breakdown showing how many "Fly Quiet points" each performance benchmark has contributed towards the total score it awards to an airline, thereby putting obstacles in the way of any independent auditing of the published results.[18] Among other criticisms of the league table are the unexplained omission of some of the poorer performers among the 50 busiest airlines[19] and the emphasis on relative rather than absolute performance,[20] so an airline could well improve its "Fly Quiet" score quarter-on-quarter even if its environmental performance had in fact worsened over the period.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic Heathrow has seen a big increase in cargo-only flights, not only by already established carriers at the airport operating cargo-only flights using passenger aircraft, but also several cargo-only airlines.[21]

Arrival stacks

Inbound aircraft to London Heathrow Airport typically follow one of several Standard Arrival Routes (STARs). The STARs each terminate at one of four different RNAV waypoints, and these also define four "stacks"[22] where aircraft can be held, if necessary until they are cleared to begin their approach to land. Stacks are sections of airspace where inbound aircraft will normally use the pattern closest to their arrival route. They can be visualised as helter skelters in the sky. Each stack descends in 1000  ft (300 m) intervals from 16,000  ft (4,000m) down to 8000  ft (2,100m). Aircraft hold between 7,000 feet and 15,000 feet at 1,000-foot intervals. If these holds become full, aircraft are held at more distant points before being cleared onward to one of the four main holds.

The following four stacks are currently in place:

  • The Bovingdon stack (BNN) is for arrivals from the northwest. It extends above the village of Bovingdon and the town of Chesham, and uses the RNAV waypoint BNN, which is situated on the former RAF Bovingdon airfield.
  • The Biggin Hill stack (BIG) on the southeast edge of Greater London is for arrivals from the southeast. It uses the RNAV waypoint BIG, which is situated on London Biggin Hill Airport.
  • The Lambourne stack (LAM) in Essex is for arrivals from the northeast. It uses the RNAV waypoint LAM, which is situated adjacent to Stapleford Aerodrome.
  • The Ockham stack (OCK) in Surrey is for arrivals from the southwest. It uses the RNAV waypoint OCK, which is situated on the former Wisley Airfield.

Third runway

In September 2012, the Government of the United Kingdom established the Airports Commission, an independent commission chaired by Sir Howard Davies to examine various options for increasing capacity at UK airports. In July 2015, the commission backed a third runway at Heathrow, which the government approved in October 2016.[23][24][25] However, the England and Wales Court of Appeal rejected this plan for a third runway at Heathrow, on the basis that the government failed to consider climate change and the environmental impact of aviation.[26] On 16 December 2020, the UK Supreme Court lifted the ban on the third runway expansion, allowing the construction plan to go ahead.[27]

Regulation

Until it was required to sell Gatwick and Stansted Airports, Heathrow Airport Holdings held a dominant position in the London aviation market and has been heavily regulated by the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) as to how much it can charge airlines to land. The annual increase in landing charge per passenger was capped at inflation minus 3% until 1 April 2003. From 2003 to 2007 charges increased by inflation plus 6.5% per year, taking the fee to £9.28 per passenger in 2007. In March 2008, the CAA announced that the charge would be allowed to increase by 23.5% to £12.80 from 1 April 2008 and by inflation plus 7.5% for each of the following four years.[28] In April 2013, the CAA announced a proposal for Heathrow to charge fees calculated by inflation minus 1.3%, continuing until 2019.[29] Whilst the charges for landing at Heathrow are determined by the CAA and Heathrow Airport Holdings, the allocation of landing slots to airlines is carried out by Airport Co-ordination Limited (ACL).[30]

Until 2008, air traffic between Heathrow and the United States was strictly governed by the countries' bilateral Bermuda II treaty. The treaty originally allowed only British Airways, Pan Am and TWA to fly from Heathrow to the US. In 1991, Pan Am and TWA sold their rights to United Airlines and American Airlines respectively, while Virgin Atlantic was added to the list of airlines allowed to operate on these routes. The Bermuda bilateral agreement conflicted with the Right of the Establishment of the United Kingdom concerning its EU membership, and as a consequence, the UK was ordered to drop the agreement in 2004. A new "open skies" agreement was signed by the United States and the European Union on 30 April 2007 and came into effect on 30 March 2008. Shortly afterwards, additional US airlines, including Northwest Airlines, Continental Airlines, US Airways and Delta Air Lines started services to Heathrow.

The airport was criticised in 2007 for overcrowding and delays;[31] according to Heathrow Airport Holdings, Heathrow's facilities were originally designed to accommodate 55 million passengers annually. The number of passengers using the airport reached a record 70 million in 2012.[32] In 2007 the airport was voted the world's least favourite, alongside Chicago O'Hare, in a TripAdvisor survey.[33] However, the opening of Terminal 5 in 2008 has relieved some pressure on terminal facilities, increasing the airport's terminal capacity to 90  million passengers per year. A tie-up is also in place with McLaren Applied Technologies to optimise the general procedure, reducing delays and pollution.[34]

With only two runways, operating at over 98% of their capacity, Heathrow has little room for more flights, although the use of larger aircraft such as the Airbus A380 has allowed some increase in passenger numbers. It is difficult for existing airlines to obtain landing slots to enable them to increase their services from the airport, or for new airlines to start operations.[35] To increase the number of flights, Heathrow Airport Holdings has proposed using the existing two runways in 'mixed mode' whereby aircraft would be allowed to take off and land on the same runway. This would increase the airport's capacity from its current 480,000 movements per year to as many as 550,000 according to British Airways CEO Willie Walsh.[36] Heathrow Airport Holdings has also proposed building a third runway to the north of the airport, which would significantly increase traffic capacity.[37]

Security

Policing of the airport is the responsibility of the aviation security, a unit of the Metropolitan Police, although the British Army, including armoured vehicles of the Household Cavalry, has occasionally been deployed at the airport during periods of heightened security.[citation needed] Full body scanners are now used at the airport, and passengers who refuse to use them are required to submit to a hand search in a private room.[38] The scanners display passengers' bodies as cartoon figures, with indicators showing where concealed items may be.[38]

For many decades Heathrow had a reputation for theft from baggage by baggage handlers. This led to the airport being nicknamed "Thiefrow", with periodic arrests of baggage handlers.[39][40]

Following the widespread disruption caused by reports of drone sightings at Gatwick Airport, and a subsequent incident at Heathrow, a drone-detection system was installed airport-wide to attempt to combat disruption caused by the illegal use of drones.[41][42]

Terminals

Terminal 2

 
Terminal 2 central departures area

The airport's newest terminal, officially known as the Queen's Terminal, was opened on 4 June 2014 and has 24 gates.[43][44] Designed by Spanish architect Luis Vidal, it was built on the site that had been occupied by the original Terminal 2 and the Queens Building.[45][46] The main complex was completed in November 2013 and underwent six months of testing before opening to passengers. It includes a satellite pier (T2B), a 1,340-space car park, and a cooling station to generate chilled water. There are 52 shops and 17 bars and restaurants.[47]

Most flights from Terminal 2 are coming from northern Europe or west Europe. It is used by all Star Alliance members who fly from Heathrow (consolidating the airlines under Star Alliance's co-location policy "Move Under One Roof"), SkyTeam new member China Airlines and several short haul unaffiliated carriers. Terminal 2 is also the only terminal at Heathrow to accommodate small aircraft. JetBlue is the only non-aligned long haul flight operating from this terminal. Terminal 2 is one of the two terminals that operate UK and Irish domestic flights. The airlines moved from their original locations over six months, with only 10% of flights operating from there in the first six weeks (United Airlines' transatlantic flights) to avoid the opening problems seen at Terminal 5. On 4 June 2014, United Airlines became the first airline to move into Terminal 2 from Terminals 1 and 4 followed by All Nippon Airways, Air Canada and Air China from Terminal 3. Air New Zealand, Asiana Airlines, Croatia Airlines, LOT Polish Airlines, South African Airways, and TAP Air Portugal moved in on 22 October 2014.[48]

The original Terminal 2 opened as the Europa Building in 1955 and was the airport's oldest terminal. It had an area of 49,654 m2 (534,470 sq ft) and was designed to handle around 1.2  million passengers annually. In its final years, it accommodated up to 8  million. A total of 316  million passengers passed through the terminal in its lifetime. The building was demolished in 2010, along with the Queens Building which had housed airline company offices.[49]

Terminal 3

Terminal 3 opened as the Oceanic Terminal on 13 November 1961 to handle flight departures for long-haul routes for foreign carriers to the United States, Asia and other Far Eastern destinations.[50] At this time the airport had a direct helicopter service to Central London from the gardens on the roof of the terminal building. Renamed Terminal 3 in 1968, it was expanded in 1970 with the addition of an arrivals building. Other facilities added included the UK's first moving walkways. In 2006, the new £105 million Pier 6 was completed[51] to accommodate the Airbus A380 superjumbo; Emirates and Qantas operate regular flights from Terminal 3 using the Airbus A380.

Redevelopment of Terminal 3's forecourt by the addition of a new four-lane drop-off area and a large pedestrianised plaza, complete with a canopy to the front of the terminal building, was completed in 2007. These improvements were intended to improve passengers' experience, reduce traffic congestion and improve security.[52] As part of this project, Virgin Atlantic was assigned its dedicated check-in area, known as 'Zone A', which features a large sculpture and atrium.

As of 2013, Terminal 3 has an area of 98,962 m2 (1,065,220 sq ft) with 28 gates, and in 2011 it handled 19.8 million passengers on 104,100 flights.[53] Most flights from Terminal 3 are long haul flights from North America, Asia and other foreign countries other than Europe. Terminal 3 is home to Oneworld members (with the exception of Malaysia Airlines, Qatar Airways and Royal Air Maroc, all of which use Terminal 4), SkyTeam members Aeroméxico, Air France, Delta Air Lines, KLM and Middle East Airlines, and several long haul unaffiliated carriers.

Terminal 4

 
Terminal 4 bird's-eye view

Opened in 1986, Terminal 4 has 22 gates and is situated to the south of the southern runway next to the cargo terminal and is connected to Terminals 2 and 3 by the Heathrow Cargo Tunnel. The terminal has an area of 105,481 m2 (1,135,390 sq ft) and is now home to the SkyTeam alliance, except new member China Airlines which remained at Terminal 2, and Aeroméxico, Air France, Delta Air Lines, KLM and Middle East Airlines, which use Terminal 3, Oneworld carriers Malaysia Airlines, Qatar Airways, Royal Air Maroc, and Gulf Air and to most unaffiliated carriers. It has undergone a £200m upgrade to enable it to accommodate 45 airlines with an upgraded forecourt to reduce traffic congestion and improve security. Most flights that go to Terminal 4 are flights coming from East Europe, Central Asia, North Africa and the Middle East as well as a few flights to Europe. An extended check-in area with renovated piers and departure lounges and a new baggage system were installed, and four new stands were built to accommodate the Airbus A380; Qatar Airways operates regular A380 flights. Etihad Airways and Malaysia Airlines operate regular A350 flights. China Southern Airlines, El Al, [54] Etihad Airways, Gulf Air, and Vietnam Airlines operate regular Boeing 787 flights.

Terminal 5

 
Terminal 5 bird's-eye view

Terminal 5 lies between the northern and southern runways at the western end of the Heathrow site and was opened by Queen Elizabeth II on 14 March 2008,[55] some 19 years after its inception. It opened to the public on 27 March 2008, and British Airways and its partner company Iberia have exclusive use of this terminal, which has 50 gates, including 3 hardstands. The first passenger to enter Terminal 5 was a UK ex-pat from Kenya who passed through security at 04:30 on the day. He was presented with a boarding pass by British Airways CEO Willie Walsh for the first departing flight, BA302 to Paris. During the two weeks after its opening, operations were disrupted by problems with the terminal's IT systems, coupled with insufficient testing and staff training, which caused over 500 flights to be cancelled.[56] Terminal 5 is exclusively used by British Airways as its global hub. However, because of the merger, between 25 March 2012 and 12 July 2022, Iberia's operations at Heathrow were moved to the terminal, making it the home of International Airlines Group.. [57] On 12 July 2022, Iberia's flight operations were moved back to Terminal 3 On 7 July 2020, American moved to terminal 5, to allow for easier connections from American's transatlantic flights to British Airways flights during the pandemic. However, all the American flights, except JFK, have returned to Terminal 3. China Southern Airlines used Terminal 5 due to the pandemic until it was relocated to Terminal 4 in November 2022.

Built at £4.3 billion, the terminal consists of a four-story main terminal building (Concourse A) and two satellite buildings linked to the main terminal by an underground people mover transit system. Concourse A has dedicated British Airways's narrowbody fleet for flights around the UK and the rest of Europe, the first satellite (Concourse B) includes dedicated stands for BA and Iberia's widebody fleet except for the Airbus A380, and the second satellite (Concourse C), includes 7 dedicated aircraft stands for the A380. It became fully operational on 1 June 2011. Terminal 5 was voted Skytrax World's Best Airport Terminal 2014 in the Annual World Airport Awards.[58]

The main terminal building (Concourse A) has an area of 300,000 square metres (3,200,000 sq ft) while Concourse B covers 60,000 square metres (650,000 sq ft).[59] It has 60 aircraft stands and capacity for 30  a million passengers annually as well as more than 100 shops and restaurants.[60] It is also home to British Airways' Flagship lounge, the Concorde Room, alongside four further British Airways branded lounges.[61] One of those lounges is the British Airways Arrivals Lounge which is located land-side.

A further building, designated Concourse D and of similar size to Concourse C, may yet be built to the east of the existing site, providing up to another 16 stands. Following British Airways' merger with Iberia, this may become a priority since the combined business will require accommodation at Heathrow under one roof to maximise the cost savings envisaged under the deal. A proposal for Concourse D was featured in Heathrow's most recent capital investment plan.[when?]

The transport network around the airport has been extended to cope with the increase in passenger numbers. New branches of both the Heathrow Express and the Underground's Piccadilly line serve a new shared Heathrow Terminal 5 station. A dedicated motorway spur links the terminal to the M25 (between junctions 14 and 15). The terminal has 3,800 spaces multi-storey car park. A more distant long-stay car park for business passengers is connected to the terminal by a personal rapid transit system, the Heathrow Pod, which became operational in the spring of 2011.[62] Within the terminal complex, an automated people mover (APM) system, known as the Transit, is used to transport passengers between the satellite buildings.[63]

Terminal assignments

As of July 2022, Heathrow's four passenger terminals are assigned as follows:[64]

Terminal Airlines and alliances
Terminal 2 Star Alliance, China Airlines and several short-haul non-aligned airlines
Terminal 3 Oneworld and SkyTeam (except those at Terminal 4), and several long-haul non-aligned airlines
Terminal 4 Oneworld and SkyTeam members that do not operate from Terminal 3 as well as most non-aligned airlines
Terminal 5 British Airways (most destinations)

Following the opening of Terminal 5 in March 2008, a complex programme of terminal moves was implemented. This saw many airlines move to be grouped in terminals by airline alliance as far as possible.[65]

Following the opening of Phase 1 of the new Terminal 2 in June 2014, all Star Alliance member airlines[66] (with the exception of new member Air India which moved in early 2017[67]) along with Aer Lingus and Germanwings relocated to Terminal 2 in a phased process completed on 22 October 2014. Additionally, by 30 June 2015 all airlines left Terminal 1 in preparation for its demolition to make room for the construction of Phase 2 of Terminal 2.[68] Some other airlines made further minor moves at a later point, e.g. Delta Air Lines merging all departures in Terminal 3 instead of a split between Terminals 3 and 4.[69]

Terminal usage during COVID-19 pandemic

Heathrow Airport has four terminals with a total of 115 gates, 66 of which can support wide-body aircraft and 24 gates that can support an Airbus A380. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Heathrow's services were sharply reduced. It announced that as of 6 April 2020, the airport would be transitioning to single-runway operations and that it would be temporarily closing Terminals 3 and 4, moving all remaining flights into Terminals 2 or 5.[70] Dual runway operations were restored in August 2020. Heathrow returned to single-runway operations on 9 November 2020. On 11 December 2020, Heathrow announced Terminal 4 would be shut until the end of 2021.[71] Terminal 3 was reopened for use by Virgin Atlantic and Delta on 15 July 2021, and Terminal 4 was reopened on 14 June 2022.[72][73]

Former Terminal 1

Terminal 1 opened in 1968 and was inaugurated by Queen Elizabeth II in April 1969.[74][75] Terminal 1 was the Heathrow base for British Airways' (BA) domestic and European network and a few of its long haul routes before Terminal 5 opened. The acquisition of British Midland International (BMI) in 2012 by BA's owner International Airlines Group meant British Airways took over BMI's short-haul and medium-haul destinations from the terminal.[76] Terminal 1 was also the main base for most Star Alliance members though some were also based at Terminal 3.

Terminal 1 closed at the end of June 2015, the site is now being used to extend Terminal 2[77] which opened in June 2014. A number of the newer gates used by Terminal 1 were built as part of the Terminal 2 development and are being retained.[78][79] The last tenants along with British Airways were El Al, Icelandair (moved to Terminal 2 25 March 2015) and LATAM Brasil (the third to move in to Terminal 3 on 27 May 2015). British Airways was the last operator in Terminal 1. Two flights of this carrier, one departing to Hanover and one arriving from Baku, marked the terminal closure on 29 June 2015. British Airways operations have been relocated to Terminals 3 and 5.[80]

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

The following airlines operate regularly scheduled passenger flights at London Heathrow Airport:[81]

AirlinesDestinations
Aegean Airlines Athens
Aer Lingus Cork, Dublin, Knock (begins 26 March 2023),[82] Shannon
Aeroméxico Mexico City
Air Algérie Algiers
Air Astana Aktau, Almaty
Air Canada Calgary, Halifax, Montréal–Trudeau, Toronto–Pearson, Vancouver
Seasonal: Mumbai[83]
Air China Beijing–Capital,[84] Shanghai–Pudong
Air France Nice, Paris–Charles de Gaulle
Air India Ahmedabad (ends 25 March 2023),[85] Amritsar (ends 23 March 2023),[85] Delhi, Goa–Dabolim (ends 24 March 2023),[85] Hyderabad (ends 22 March 2023), Kochi (ends 23 March 2023),[85] Mumbai
Air Malta Malta
Air Mauritius Mauritius
Air Serbia Belgrade
All Nippon Airways Tokyo–Haneda
American Airlines Boston, Charlotte, Chicago–O'Hare, Dallas/Fort Worth, Los Angeles, Miami, New York–JFK, Philadelphia, Phoenix–Sky Harbor, Raleigh/Durham, Seattle/Tacoma[86]
Asiana Airlines Seoul–Incheon
Austrian Airlines Vienna
Avianca Bogotá
Azerbaijan Airlines Baku
Beijing Capital Airlines Qingdao[87]
Biman Bangladesh Airlines Dhaka, Sylhet
British Airways Aberdeen, Abuja, Accra, Algiers, Amman–Queen Alia, Amsterdam, Athens, Atlanta, Austin, Bahrain, Baltimore, Bangalore, Barbados, Barcelona, Basel/Mulhouse, Beijing–Daxing (resumes 3 June 2023),[88] Belfast–City, Berlin, Bermuda, Billund, Bologna, Boston, Brussels, Bucharest, Budapest, Buenos Aires–Ezeiza, Cairo, Cape Town, Chennai, Chicago–O'Hare, Cincinnati (begins 5 June 2023),[89] Copenhagen, Dallas/Fort Worth, Delhi, Denver, Doha, Dubai–International, Dublin, Düsseldorf, Edinburgh, Frankfurt, Funchal, Geneva, Gibraltar, Glasgow, Gothenburg, Grand Cayman, Hamburg, Hanover, Hong Kong,[90] Houston–Intercontinental, Hyderabad, Inverness, Islamabad, Istanbul, Jersey, Johannesburg–O.R. Tambo, Kraków, Kuwait City, Lagos, Larnaca, Las Vegas, Lisbon, Los Angeles, Luxembourg, Lyon, Madrid, Málaga, Malé, Manchester, Marrakesh, Marseille, Mexico City, Miami, Milan–Linate, Milan–Malpensa, Montréal–Trudeau, Mumbai, Munich, Nairobi–Jomo Kenyatta, Naples, Nashville, Nassau, Newark, Newcastle upon Tyne, New Orleans, New York–JFK, Nice, Nuremberg, Oslo, Paris–Charles de Gaulle, Philadelphia, Phoenix–Sky Harbor, Pisa, Pittsburgh, Portland (OR), Porto, Prague, Providenciales, Reykjavík–Keflavík, Rio de Janeiro–Galeão, Riyadh, Rome–Fiumicino, San Diego, San Francisco, San Jose (CA), Santiago de Chile, São Paulo–Guarulhos, Seattle/Tacoma, Shanghai–Pudong (resumes 23 April 2023),[91] Singapore, Sofia, Stockholm–Arlanda, Stuttgart, Sydney, Tel Aviv, Tenerife–South, Tirana, Tokyo–Haneda,[92] Toronto–Pearson, Toulouse, Valencia, Vancouver, Venice, Vienna, Warsaw–Chopin, Washington–Dulles, Zagreb, Zurich
Seasonal: Bastia, Bodrum, Brindisi, Chania, Corfu, Dalaman, Dubrovnik, Faro, Figari, Florence (begins 26 April 2023),[93] Grenoble, Heraklion, Ibiza, Innsbruck, Kalamata, Kefalonia, Kos, Ljubljana, Mykonos, Olbia, Palermo, Palma de Mallorca, Paphos, Perugia, Ponta Delgada, Preveza/Lefkada, Pula, Rhodes, Salzburg, Santorini, Split, Thessaloniki, Zakynthos
Brussels Airlines Brussels
Bulgaria Air Sofia
Cathay Pacific Hong Kong
China Airlines Taipei–Taoyuan
China Eastern Airlines Shanghai–Pudong
China Southern Airlines Guangzhou
Croatia Airlines Zagreb
Seasonal: Split
Delta Air Lines Atlanta, Boston, Detroit, Los Angeles (begins 25 March 2023),[94] Minneapolis/St. Paul, New York–JFK, Salt Lake City,[95] Seattle/Tacoma
Egyptair Cairo
Seasonal: Luxor
El Al Tel Aviv
Emirates Dubai–International
Ethiopian Airlines Addis Ababa
Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi
Eurowings Cologne/Bonn, Düsseldorf, Hamburg, Stuttgart
EVA Air Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi, Taipei–Taoyuan
Finnair Helsinki
Gulf Air Bahrain
Iberia Madrid
Icelandair Reykjavík–Keflavík
Iran Air Tehran–Imam Khomeini
ITA Airways Milan–Linate, Rome–Fiumicino
Japan Airlines Tokyo–Haneda
JetBlue Boston,[96] New York–JFK
Kenya Airways Nairobi–Jomo Kenyatta
KLM Amsterdam
Korean Air Seoul–Incheon
Kuwait Airways Kuwait City
LATAM Brasil São Paulo–Guarulhos
Loganair Isle of Man
LOT Polish Airlines Warsaw–Chopin
Lufthansa Frankfurt, Munich
Malaysia Airlines Kuala Lumpur–International
Middle East Airlines Beirut
Oman Air Muscat
Qantas Melbourne[a], Perth, Singapore, Sydney[b]
Qatar Airways Doha
Royal Air Maroc Casablanca
Royal Brunei Airlines Bandar Seri Begawan, Dubai–International[97]
Royal Jordanian Amman–Queen Alia
RwandAir Kigali
Saudia Jeddah, Neom Bay, Riyadh
Scandinavian Airlines Copenhagen, Oslo, Stavanger, Stockholm–Arlanda
Seasonal: Luleå[98]
Shenzhen Airlines Shenzhen (resumes 26 March 2023)[99]
Singapore Airlines Singapore
Sky Express Athens
SriLankan Airlines Colombo–Bandaranaike
Swiss International Air Lines Geneva, Zurich
TAP Air Portugal Lisbon
TAROM Bucharest
Thai Airways International Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi
Tunisair Tunis
Turkish Airlines Istanbul
United Airlines Boston, Chicago–O'Hare, Denver, Houston–Intercontinental, Los Angeles, Newark, San Francisco, Washington–Dulles
Uzbekistan Airways Tashkent
Vietnam Airlines Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City
Virgin Atlantic Antigua, Atlanta, Austin,[100] Barbados, Boston, Delhi, Grenada, Islamabad (ends 11 July 2023),[101] Johannesburg–O.R. Tambo, Lagos, Lahore (ends 1 May 2023),[101] Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Miami, Montego Bay, Mumbai, Nassau, New York–JFK, Orlando, Providenciales (begins 4 November 2023),[102] San Francisco, Seattle/Tacoma, Shanghai–Pudong (resumes 1 May 2023),[103] St. Vincent–Argyle, Tampa, Tel Aviv, Washington–Dulles
Seasonal: Cape Town,[104] Malé (begins 22 October 2023),[102] St. Lucia–Hewanorra
Vistara Delhi
WestJet Calgary
Widerøe Bergen (ends 25 March 2023)[105]

Cargo

Traffic and statistics

Overview

 
Development of passenger numbers, aircraft movements and air freight between 1986 and 2014

When ranked by passenger traffic, Heathrow is the sixth busiest internationally, behind Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport, Beijing Capital International Airport, Dubai International Airport, Chicago's O'Hare International Airport, and Tokyo Haneda Airport, for the 12 months ending December 2015.[116] London Heathrow Airport was noted as the best-connected airport globally in 2019 according to the OAG's Megahubs Index with a connectivity score of 317. Dominant carrier British Airways was recorded as holding a 51% share of flights at the hub.[117]

In 2015, Heathrow was the busiest airport in Europe in total passenger traffic, with 14% more passengers than Paris–Charles de Gaulle Airport[118] and 22% more than Istanbul Atatürk Airport.[119] Heathrow was the fourth busiest European airport by cargo traffic in 2013, after Frankfurt Airport, Paris Charles de Gaulle and Amsterdam Airport Schiphol.[120]

In 2020, Heathrow's passenger numbers dropped sharply by over 72%, (a decrease of 58 million travellers compared to 2019), due to the impact caused by restrictions and/or bans on travel caused by the global COVID-19 pandemic.

Annual traffic statistics

Overview

Annual passenger traffic at LHR airport. See Wikidata query.

In table

Traffic statistics at Heathrow[121]
Year Passengers
handled[c]
Passenger
% Change
Cargo
(tonnes)
Cargo
% Change
Aircraft
movements
Aircraft
% Change
1986 31,675,779   537,131   315,753  
1987 35,079,755  10.7 574,116  6.9 329,977   4.3
1988 37,840,503  7.9 642,147  11.8 351,592   6.1
1989 39,881,922  5.4 686,170  6.9 368,429   4.6
1990 42,950,512  7.7 695,347  1.3 390,372   5.6
1991 40,494,575  5.7 654,625  5.9 381,724   2.3
1992 45,242,591  11.7 754,770  15.3 406,481   6.1
1993 47,899,081  5.9 846,486  12.2 411,173   1.1
1994 51,713,366  8.0 962,738  13.7 424,557   3.2
1995 54,461,597  5.3 1,031,639  7.2 434,525   2.3
1996 56,049,706  2.9 1,040,486  0.9 440,343   1.3
1997 58,185,398  3.8 1,156,104  11.1 440,631   0.1
1998 60,683,988  4.3 1,208,893  4.6 451,382   2.4
1999 62,268,292  2.6 1,265,495  4.7 458,300   1.5
2000 64,618,254  3.8 1,306,905  3.3 466,799   1.8
2001 60,764,924  6.0 1,180,306  9.6 463,567   0.7
2002 63,362,097  4.3 1,234,940  4.6 466,545   0.6
2003 63,495,367  0.2 1,223,439  0.9 463,650   0.6
2004 67,342,743  6.1 1,325,173  8.3 476,001   2.6
2005 67,913,153  0.8 1,305,686  1.5 477,887   0.4
2006 67,527,923  0.6 1,264,129  3.2 477,048   0.2
2007 68,066,028  0.8 1,310,987  3.7 481,476   0.9
2008 67,054,745  1.5 1,397,054  6.6 478,693   0.6
2009 66,036,957  1.5 1,277,650  8.5 466,393   2.6
2010 65,881,660   0.2 1,472,988  15.3 454,823   2.5
2011 69,433,230   5.4 1,484,351  0.8 480,906   5.4
2012 70,037,417   0.9 1,464,390  1.3 475,176   1.2
2013 72,367,054   3.3 1,422,939  2.8 471,936   0.7
2014 73,374,825   1.4 1,498,906  5.3 472,802   0.2
2015 74,959,058   2.2 1,496,551  0.2 473,087   2.7
2016 75,676,223   1.0 1,541,029  3.0 473,231   0.2
2017 77,988,752   3.1 1,698,455  9.3 474,033   0.6
2018 80,102,017   2.7 1,788,815  5.3 477,604   1.0
2019 80,884,310  0.9 1,587,451  11.2 475,861   0.3
2020 22,109,723  72.7 1,150,030  28.0 200,905  57.8
2021 19,393,145  12.3 1,402,913  22.0 190,032  5.4
2022 61,599,196  217.6 1,350,878  3.7 376,846  98.3

Busiest routes

Heathrow Airport processed 80,884,310 passengers in 2019, but only 22,109,723 in 2020 and 19,393,145 in 2021,[2] due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2021, Dubai International Airport  was the most popular route with 808,620 passengers.[122] The table below shows the 10 busiest international routes at the airport in 2021.

Busiest international routes to and from Heathrow (2021)[122]
Rank Airport Total
passengers
Change
2020 / 21
1   Dubai–International 808,620   6.4%
2   New York–JFK 615,543   6.6%
3   Madrid 425,759   6.4%
4   Dublin 403,547   9.4%
5   Doha 394,835   18.9%
6   Istanbul 385,503   8.4%
7   Athens 369,812   28.8%
8   Amsterdam 350,659   33.3%
9   Paris–Charles de Gaulle 342,089   9.0%
10   Delhi 323,844   10.5%
Busiest domestic routes to and from Heathrow (2021)[122]
Rank Airport Total
passengers
Change
2020 / 21
1 Edinburgh 381,994   16.0%
2 Glasgow 369,026   35.8%
3 Belfast-City 338,431   29.3%
4 Aberdeen 244,399   20.3%
5 Manchester 227,090   30.9%
6 Jersey 157,216   179.9%
7 Newcastle upon Tyne 115,772   0.7%
8 Inverness 63,980   49.1%
9 Newquay 10,220   73.6%
10 Teesside 9,793   1121.1%

Other facilities

 
The Compass Centre, the head office of Heathrow Airport Holdings

The head office of Heathrow Airport Holdings (formerly BAA Limited) is located in the Compass Centre by Heathrow's northern runway, a building that previously served as a British Airways flight crew centre.[123] The World Business Centre Heathrow consists of three buildings. 1 World Business Centre houses offices of Heathrow Airport Holdings, Heathrow Airport itself, and Scandinavian Airlines.[124] Previously International Airlines Group had its head office in 2 World Business Centre.[125][126]

At one time the British Airways head office was located within Heathrow Airport at Speedbird House[127] before the completion of Waterside, the current BA head office in Harmondsworth, in June 1998.[128]

To the north of the airfield lies the Northern Perimeter Road, along which most of Heathrow's car rental agencies are based, and Bath Road, which runs parallel to it, but outside the airport campus. This is nicknamed "The Strip" by locals, because of its continuous line of airport hotels.

Transport

Public transport

 
Heathrow Airport tube and rail stations (Note: The map is outdated as TfL Rail is now the Elizabeth Line.)

Train

Bus and coach

Many bus and coach services operate from the large Heathrow Central bus station, which serves Terminal 2 and Terminal 3. Services also operate from the bus stations located at Terminal 4 and Terminal 5.

Inter-terminal transport

Terminals 2 and 3 are within walking distance of each other. Transfers from Terminals 2 and 3 to Terminal 4 and 5 are provided by Elizabeth line and Heathrow Express trains and the London Underground Piccadilly line.[131] Direct transfer between Terminals 4 and 5 is provided by London Buses routes 482 and 490.[132]

Transit passengers remaining airside are provided with free dedicated transfer buses between terminals.

The Heathrow Pod personal rapid transit system shuttles passengers between Terminal 5 and the business car park using 21 small, driverless transportation pods. The pods are battery-powered and run on-demand on a four-kilometre track, each able to carry up to four adults, two children, and their luggage.[133] Plans exist to extend the Pod system to connect Terminals 2 and 3 to remote car parks.[134]

 
Terminal 5 airside Transit System

An underground automated people mover system known as the Transit operates within Terminal 5, linking the main terminal with the satellite Terminals 5B and 5C. The Transit operates entirely airside using Bombardier Innovia APM 200 people mover vehicles.[135][136]

Hotel access

The Hotel Hoppa bus network connects all terminals to major hotels in the area.[137]

Taxi

Taxis are available at all terminals.[138]

Car

 
Entrance at the southern end of the M4 Motorway spur, showing a scale model of Concorde, replaced since 2008 by the Emirates A380 scale model.[139]

Heathrow is accessible via the nearby M4 motorway or A4 road (Terminals 2–3), the M25 motorway (Terminals 4 and 5) and the A30 road (Terminal 4). There are drop-off and pick-up areas at all terminals and short-[140] and long-stay[141] multi-storey car parks. All the Heathrow forecourts are drop-off only.[142] There are further car parks, not run by Heathrow Airport Holdings, just outside the airport: the most recognisable is the National Car Parks facility, although there are many other options; these car parks are connected to the terminals by shuttle buses.

Four parallel tunnels under the northern runway connect the M4 Heathrow spur and the A4 road to Terminals 2–3. The two larger tunnels are each two lanes wide and are used for motorised traffic. The two smaller tunnels were originally reserved for pedestrians and bicycles; to increase traffic capacity the cycle lanes have been modified to each take a single lane of cars, although bicycles still have priority over cars. Pedestrian access to the smaller tunnels has been discontinued, with the free bus services being used instead.

Bicycle

There are (mainly off-road) bicycle routes to some of the terminals.[143] Free bicycle parking places are available in car parks 1 and 1A, at Terminal 4, and to the North and South of Terminal 5's Interchange Plaza. Cycling is not currently allowed through the main tunnel to access the central area and Terminals 2 and 3.[144]

Incidents and accidents

  • On 3 March 1948, Sabena Douglas DC-3 OO-AWH crashed in fog. Three crew and 19 of the 22 passengers on board died.[145]
  • On 31 October 1950, BEA Vickers Viking G-AHPN crashed at Heathrow after hitting the runway during a go-around. Three crew and 25 passengers died.[146]
  • On 16 January 1955, a BEA Vickers Viscount (registered as G-AMOK) crashed into barriers whilst taking off in the fog from a disused runway strip parallel to the desired runway. There were two injuries.[147]
  • On 22 June 1955, a BOAC de Havilland Dove (registration: G-ALTM) crashed just short of the runway during a filming flight when the pilot shut down the incorrect engine. There were no casualties.[148]
  • On 1 October 1956, XA897, an Avro Vulcan strategic bomber of the Royal Air Force, crashed at Heathrow after an approach in bad weather. The Vulcan was the first to be delivered to the RAF and was returning from a demonstration flight to Australia and New Zealand. The pilot and co-pilot ejected and survived, but the four other occupants were killed.[149]
  • On 7 January 1960, Vickers Viscount G-AOHU of BEA was damaged beyond economic repair when the nose wheel collapsed on landing. A fire then developed and burnt out the fuselage. There were no casualties among the 59 people on board.[150]
  • On 27 October 1965, BEA Vickers Vanguard G-APEE, flying from Edinburgh, crashed on Runway 28R while attempting to land in poor visibility. All 30 passengers and six crew on board died.[151][152]
  • On 8 April 1968, BOAC Flight 712 Boeing 707 G-ARWE, departing for Australia via Singapore, suffered an engine fire just after take-off. The engine fell from the wing into a nearby gravel pit in Staines, before the plane managed to perform an emergency landing with the wing on fire. However, the plane was consumed by fire once on the ground. Five people – four passengers and a flight attendant – died, while 122 survived. The flight attendant, Barbara Harrison, who helped with the evacuation, was posthumously awarded the George Cross.[153]
  • On 3 July 1968, the port flap operating rod of G-AMAD, an Airspeed Ambassador operated by BKS Air Transport failed due to fatigue, thereby allowing the port flaps to retract. This resulted in a rolling movement to the port which could not be controlled during the approach, causing the aircraft to contact the grass and swerve towards the terminal building. It hit two parked British European Airways Hawker Siddeley Trident aircraft, burst into flames and came to rest against the ground floor of the terminal building. Six of the eight crew died, as did eight horses on board. Trident G-ARPT was written off,[154] and Trident G-ARPI was badly damaged, but subsequently repaired, only to be lost in the Staines crash in 1972.
  • On 18 June 1972, Trident G-ARPI, operating as BEA548, crashed in a field close to the Crooked Billet Public House, Staines, two minutes after taking off. All 118 passengers and crew on board died.[155]
  • On 5 November 1997, an Airbus 340-300 (G-VSKY) operated by Virgin Atlantic made an emergency landing from Los Angeles after trying to shake free the main landing gear. It failed to do so. The plane landed but the undersides of engines 1, 2, and 4 were damaged. The plane broke runway lights as well as causing damage to the runway and the right landing gear was torn off the plane. Seven people sustained minor injuries in the evacuation but no more injuries were reported.
     
    British Airways Flight 38 which crash-landed just short of the runway on 17 January 2008
  • On 17 January 2008, a British Airways Boeing 777-236ER, G-YMMM, operating flight BA038 from Beijing, crash-landed at Heathrow. The aircraft landed on grass short of the south runway, then slid to the edge of the runway and stopped on the threshold, leading to 18 minor injuries. The aircraft was later found to have suffered a loss of thrust caused by fuel icing.[156]
  • On 28 September 2022, there was a ground collision involving a Korean Air Boeing 777 that was about to take off to Seoul, and an Icelandair Boeing 757 which had landed from Reykjavik. The 777 aborted its takeoff and no injuries were reported, but the aircraft suffered minor damage.[157]

Terrorism and security incidents

  • On 8 June 1968, James Earl Ray, the man convicted of the 4 April 1968 assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., was captured and arrested at Heathrow Airport while attempting to leave the United Kingdom for Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) on a false Canadian passport.[158]
  • On 6 September 1970, El Al Flight 219 experienced an attempted hijack by two PFLP members. One hijacker was killed and the other was subdued as the plane made an emergency landing at Heathrow Airport.
  • On 19 May 1974, the IRA planted a series of bombs in the Terminal 1 car park. Two people were injured by the explosions.[159]
  • On 26 November 1983, the Brink's-Mat robbery occurred, in which 6,800 gold bars worth nearly £26,000,000 were taken from a vault near Heathrow. Only a small amount of the gold was recovered and only two men were convicted of the crime.[160]
  • On 17 April 1986, semtex explosives were found in the bag of a pregnant Irishwoman attempting to board an El Al flight. The explosives had been given to her by her Jordanian boyfriend and the father of her unborn child Nizar Hindawi. The incident became known as the Hindawi Affair.[161]
  • On 21 December 1988, Pan Am Flight 103 exploded mid-air over the town of Lockerbie, killing all 259 onboard and eleven people on the ground. The flight originated from Frankfurt as a feeder flight with a change of aircraft at Heathrow and was on its transatlantic leg to New York's JFK airport at the time of the incident. An unaccompanied suitcase containing a boombox radio/cassette player which housed the explosive was checked in at Malta and forwarded as interline baggage for this flight at Frankfurt, wherein it made its way to the transatlantic leg.
  • In 1994, over six days, Heathrow was targeted three times (8, 10, and 13 March) by the IRA, which fired 12 mortars. Heathrow was a symbolic target due to its importance to the UK economy, and much disruption was caused when areas of the airport were closed over the period. The gravity of the incident was heightened because the Queen was being flown back to Heathrow by the RAF on 10 March.[162]
  • In March 2002, thieves stole US$3,000,000 that had arrived on a South African Airways flight. Just a few weeks earlier, a similar amount of money was stolen from a British Airways flight that arrived from Bahrain.[163]
  • In February 2003, the British Army was deployed to Heathrow along with 1,000 police officers in response to intelligence reports suggesting that al-Qaeda terrorists might launch surface-to-air missile attacks at British or American airliners.[164]
  • On 17 May 2004, Scotland Yard's Flying Squad foiled an attempt by seven men to steal £40,000,000 in gold bullion and a similar quantity of cash from the Swissport warehouse at Heathrow.[165]
  • On 25 February 2008, Greenpeace activists protesting against the planned construction of a third runway managed to cross the ramp and climb atop a British Airways Airbus A320, which had just arrived from Manchester Airport. At about 09:45 GMT the protesters unveiled a "Climate Emergency – No Third Runway" banner over the aircraft's tailfin. By 11:00 GMT four arrests had been made.[166]
  • In October 2010, an Angolan national was being deported on a British Airways plane. Security guards were heavy-handed with him and they put him in a dangerous position, leading to asphyxia. He did not survive.[167]
  • On 13 July 2015, thirteen activists belonging to the climate change protest group Plane Stupid managed to break through the perimeter fence and get onto the northern runway. They chained themselves together in protest, disrupting hundreds of flights. All were eventually arrested.[168][169]|
  • In June 2022, many protesters gathered at Heathrow and Gatwick airports to protest the UK-Rwanda deal. A flight which was supposed to carry asylum seekers from the UK to Rwanda was cancelled.[170]

Other incidents

  • On 18 December 2010, 'heavy' (9 cm, according to the Heathrow Winter Resilience Enquiry)[171] snowfall caused the closure of the entire airport, causing one of the largest incidents at Heathrow of all time. Some 4,000 flights were cancelled over five days and 9,500 passengers spent the night at Heathrow on 18 December following the initial snowfall.[172] The problems were caused not only by snow on the runways but also by snow and ice on the 198 parking stands which were all occupied by aircraft.[173]
  • On 12 July 2013, the ELT on an Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 787 Dreamliner parked at Heathrow airport caught fire due to a short circuit.[174] There were no passengers aboard and no injuries.[175][176]
  • From 12 September 2019, the climate change campaign group, Heathrow Pause attempted to disrupt flights into and out of Heathrow Airport in London by flying drones in the airport's exclusion zone. The action was unsuccessful in disrupting flights and nineteen people were arrested.[177]

Future expansion and plans

Runway and terminal expansion

 
British Airways aircraft queuing for take-off

There is a long history of expansion proposals for Heathrow since it was first designated as a civil airport. Following the cancellation of the Maplin project in 1974, a fourth terminal was proposed but expansion beyond this was ruled out. However, the Airports Inquiries of 1981–83 and the 1985 Airports Policy White Paper considered further expansion and, following a four-year-long public inquiry in 1995–99, Terminal 5 was approved. In 2003, after many studies and consultations, the Future of Air Transport White Paper was published which proposed a third runway at Heathrow, as well as a second runway at Stansted Airport.[178] In January 2009, the Transport Secretary at the time, Geoff Hoon announced that the British government supported the expansion of Heathrow by building a third 2,200-metre (7,200 ft) runway and a sixth terminal building.[179] This decision followed the 2003 white paper on the future of air transport in the UK,[180] and a public consultation in November 2007.[181] This was a controversial decision which met with widespread opposition because of the expected greenhouse gas emissions, impact on local communities, as well as noise and air pollution concerns.[182]

Before the 2010 general election, the Conservative and Liberal Democrat parties announced that they would prevent the construction of any third runway or further material expansion of the airport's operating capacity. The Mayor of London, then Boris Johnson, took the position that London needs more airport capacity, favouring the construction of an entirely new airport in the Thames Estuary rather than expanding Heathrow.[183] After the Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition took power, it was announced that the third runway expansion was cancelled.[184] Two years later, leading Conservatives were reported to have changed their minds on the subject.[185]

Another proposal for expanding Heathrow's capacity was the Heathrow Hub, which aims to extend both runways to a total length of about 7,000 metres and divide them into four so that they each provide two, full-length runways, allowing simultaneous take-offs and landings while decreasing noise levels.[186][187]

In July 2013, the airport submitted three new proposals for expansion to the Airports Commission, which was established to review airport capacity in the southeast of England. The Airports Commission was chaired by Sir Howard Davies. He, at the time of his appointment, was in the employ of GIC Private Limited (formerly known as Government Investment Corporation of Singapore) and a member of its International Advisory Board. GIC Private Limited was then (2012), as it remains today, one of Heathrow's principal owners. Sir Howard Davies resigned from these positions upon confirmation of his appointment to lead the Airports Commission, although it has been observed that he failed to identify these interests when invited to complete the Airports Commission's register of interests. Each of the three proposals that were to be considered by Sir Howard Davies's commission involved the construction of a third runway, either to the north, northwest or southwest of the airport.[188]

The commission released its interim report in December 2013, shortlisting three options: the north-west third runway option at Heathrow, extending an existing runway at Heathrow, and a second runway at Gatwick Airport. After this report was published, the government confirmed that no options had been ruled out for airport expansion in the South-east and that a new runway would not be built at Heathrow before 2015.[189] The full report was published on 1 July 2015, and backed a third, north-west, runway at Heathrow.[190] Reaction to the report was generally adverse, particularly from London Mayor Boris Johnson. One senior Conservative told Channel 4: "Howard Davies has dumped an utter steaming pile of poo on the Prime Minister's desk."[191] On 25 October 2016, the government confirmed that Heathrow would be allowed to build a third runway; however, a final decision would not be taken until winter of 2017/18, after consultations and government votes. The earliest opening year would be 2025.

On 5 June 2018, the UK Cabinet approved the third runway, with a full vote planned for Parliament.[192] On 25 June 2018, the House of Commons voted, 415–119, in favour of the third runway. The bill received support from most MPs in the Conservative and Labour parties.[193] A judicial review against the decision was launched by four London local authorities affected by the expansion—Wandsworth, Richmond, Hillingdon and Hammersmith and Fulham—in partnership with Greenpeace and London mayor Sadiq Khan.[194] Khan previously stated he would take legal action if it were passed by Parliament.[195]

In February 2020, the Court of Appeal ruled that the plans for a third runway were illegal since they did not adequately take into account the government's commitments to the Paris climate agreement.[196] However, this ruling was later overturned by the Supreme Court in December 2020.[197]

New transport proposals

 
One of the transport projects being considered is the Western Rail Approach to Heathrow

Currently, all rail connections with Heathrow airport run along an east-west alignment to and from central London, and a number of schemes have been proposed over the years to develop new rail transport links with other parts of London and with stations outside the city.[198] This mainline rail service is due to be extended to central London and Essex when the Elizabeth line, currently under construction, opens.[199]

A 2009 proposal to create a southern link with London Waterloo via the Waterloo–Reading line was abandoned in 2011 due to lack of funding and difficulties with a high number of level crossings on the route into London,[200][201] and a plan to link Heathrow to the planned High Speed 2 (HS2) railway line (with a new station, Heathrow Hub) was also dropped from the HS2 plans in March 2015.[202][203][204]

Among other schemes that have been considered is a rapid transport link between Heathrow and Gatwick Airports, known as Heathwick, which would allow the airports to operate jointly as an airline hub;[205][206] In 2018, the Department for Transport began to invite proposals for privately funded rail links to Heathrow Airport.[207] Projects being considered under this initiative include:

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Melbourne service is a continuation of Perth service as same flight number
  2. ^ Sydney service is a continuation of the Singapore service as the same flight number
  3. ^ Number of passengers including domestic, international and transit

References

Citations

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  12. ^ During periods of westerly operation, aircraft continue to fly in a westerly direction with an easterly tailwind component of up to 5 knots (9.3 km/h; 5.8 mph), if the runway is dry and there is no significant crosswind.
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External links

  • Official website
  • Heathrow Community Engagement Board website

heathrow, airport, heathrow, redirect, here, other, uses, heathrow, disambiguation, disambiguation, called, london, airport, until, 1966, known, london, heathrow, iata, icao, egll, main, international, airport, serving, london, england, largest, international,. Heathrow and LHR redirect here For other uses see Heathrow disambiguation and LHR disambiguation Heathrow Airport ˌ h iː 8 ˈ r oʊ ˈ h iː 8 r oʊ 4 called London Airport until 1966 and now known as London Heathrow 5 IATA LHR ICAO EGLL is the main international airport serving London England It is the largest of the six international airports in the London airport system the others being Gatwick City Luton Stansted and Southend The airport is owned and operated by Heathrow Airport Holdings In 2021 it was the seventh busiest airport in the world by international passenger traffic and eighth busiest in Europe by total passenger traffic Heathrow AirportIATA LHRICAO EGLLWMO 03772SummaryAirport typePublicOwner OperatorHeathrow Airport HoldingsServesGreater London Berkshire southern Buckinghamshire northwest Surrey and western HertfordshireLocationHillingdon London England United KingdomOpened25 March 1946 76 years ago 1946 03 25 Hub forBritish Airways Virgin AtlanticElevation AMSL83 ft 25 mCoordinates51 28 39 N 000 27 41 W 51 47750 N 0 46139 W 51 47750 0 46139 Coordinates 51 28 39 N 000 27 41 W 51 47750 N 0 46139 W 51 47750 0 46139Websitewww wbr heathrow wbr comMapsLHR EGLLShow map of Greater LondonLHR EGLLShow map of the United KingdomLHR EGLLShow map of EuropeRunwaysDirection Length Surfacem ft09L 27R 3 902 12 802 Grooved asphalt09R 27L 3 660 12 008 Grooved asphaltStatistics 2022 Passengers61 599 196Aircraft movements376 846Land Area1 227 ha 1 Sources Statistics from the CAA and Heathrow Airport Limited 2 3 Heathrow was founded as a small airfield in 1929 but was developed into a much larger airport after World War II It lies 14 miles 23 kilometres west of Central London on a site that covers 12 27 square kilometres 4 74 square miles It was gradually expanded over seventy five years and now has two parallel east west runways four operational passenger terminals and one cargo terminal 5 The airport is the primary hub for British Airways and Virgin Atlantic Contents 1 Location 2 History 3 Operations 3 1 Facilities 3 2 Flight movements 3 3 Arrival stacks 3 4 Third runway 3 5 Regulation 3 6 Security 4 Terminals 4 1 Terminal 2 4 2 Terminal 3 4 3 Terminal 4 4 4 Terminal 5 4 5 Terminal assignments 4 5 1 Terminal usage during COVID 19 pandemic 4 6 Former Terminal 1 5 Airlines and destinations 5 1 Passenger 5 2 Cargo 6 Traffic and statistics 6 1 Overview 6 2 Annual traffic statistics 6 2 1 Overview 6 2 2 In table 6 3 Busiest routes 7 Other facilities 8 Transport 8 1 Public transport 8 1 1 Train 8 1 2 Bus and coach 8 2 Inter terminal transport 8 3 Hotel access 8 4 Taxi 8 5 Car 8 6 Bicycle 9 Incidents and accidents 9 1 Terrorism and security incidents 9 2 Other incidents 10 Future expansion and plans 10 1 Runway and terminal expansion 10 2 New transport proposals 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 13 1 Citations 13 2 Bibliography 14 External linksLocation Edit A Qantas Boeing 747 400 on approach to London Heathrow runway 27L Heathrow is 14 mi 23 km west of central London 5 It is located 3 mi 4 8 km west of Hounslow 3 miles south of Hayes and 3 miles north east of Staines upon Thames Heathrow falls entirely within the boundaries of the London Borough of Hillingdon and under the Twickenham postcode area with the postcode TW6 It is surrounded by the villages of Sipson Harlington Harmondsworth and Longford to the north and the neighbourhoods of Cranford and Hatton to the east To the south lie Feltham Bedfont and Stanwell while to the west Heathrow is separated from Slough Horton and Windsor in Berkshire by the M25 motorway The airport is located within the Hayes and Harlington parliamentary constituency As the airport is located west of London and as its runways run east west an aircraft s landing approach is usually directly over the conurbation of London when the wind is from the south west as it is most of the time The airport forms part of a travel to work area with Slough west Greater London and the northern part of Surrey History Edit Aerial photo of Heathrow Airport from the 1950s before the terminals were built For a chronicled history of Heathrow Airport see History of Heathrow Airport Heathrow Airport began in 1929 as a small airfield Great West Aerodrome on land southeast of the hamlet of Heathrow from which the airport takes its name At that time the land consisted of farms market gardens and orchards there was a Heathrow Farm approximately where the modern Terminal 2 is situated a Heathrow Hall and a Heathrow House This hamlet was largely along a country lane Heathrow Road which ran roughly along the east and south edges of the present central terminals area Development of the whole Heathrow area as a much larger airport began in 1944 during World War II It was principally used for long distance military aircraft bound for the Far East By the time the airfield was complete World War II had ended and the UK Government continued to develop the site as a civil airport The airport was opened on 25 March 1946 as London Airport and was renamed Heathrow Airport in 1966 The design for the airport was by Sir Frederick Gibberd He set out the original terminals and central area buildings including the original control tower and the multi faith Chapel of St George s Operations EditFacilities Edit Central waiting area in Terminal 5 Concorde G BOAB in storage at Heathrow Heathrow s control tower with a departing Virgin Atlantic Boeing 747 400 in the background British Airways aircraft at Terminal 5C Heathrow Airport is used by over 80 airlines flying to 185 destinations in 84 countries The airport is the primary hub of British Airways and is a base for Virgin Atlantic It has four passenger terminals numbered 2 to 5 and a cargo terminal Of Heathrow s 78 million passengers in 2017 94 were travelling into or out of the country the remaining 6 were bound for or arriving from places within the UK 6 The busiest single destination in passenger numbers is New York with over three million passengers flying between Heathrow and JFK Airport in 2013 7 In the 1950s Heathrow had six runways arranged in three pairs at different angles in the shape of a hexagram with the permanent passenger terminal in the middle and the older terminal along the north edge of the field two of its runways would always be within 30 of the wind direction As the required length for runways has grown Heathrow now has only two parallel runways running east west These are extended versions of the two east west runways from the original hexagram From the air almost all of the original runways can still be seen incorporated into the present system of taxiways North of the northern runway and the former taxiway and aprons now the site of extensive car parks is the entrance to the access tunnel and the site of Heathrow s unofficial gate guardian For many years the home of a 40 scale model of a British Airways Concorde G CONC the site has been occupied by a model of an Emirates Airbus A380 since 2008 8 Heathrow Airport has Anglican Catholic Free Church Hindu Jewish Muslim and Sikh chaplains There is a multi faith prayer room and counselling room in each terminal in addition to St George s Interdenominational Chapel in an underground vault adjacent to the old control tower where Christian services take place The chaplains organise and lead prayers at certain times in the prayer room 9 The airport has its resident press corps consisting of six photographers and one TV crew serving all the major newspapers and television stations around the world 10 Most of Heathrow s internal roads names are coded by their first letter N in the north e g Newall Road E in the east e g Elmdon Road S in the south e g Stratford Road W in the west e g Walrus Road C in the centre e g Camborne Road Flight movements Edit Aircraft destined for Heathrow are usually routed to one of four holding points Air traffic controllers at Heathrow Approach Control based in Swanwick Hampshire then guide the aircraft to their final approach merging aircraft from the four holds into a single stream of traffic sometimes as close as 2 5 nautical miles 4 6 km 2 9 mi apart Considerable use is made of continuous descent approach techniques to minimise the environmental effects of incoming aircraft particularly at night 11 Once an aircraft is established on its final approach control is handed over to Heathrow Tower When runway alternation was introduced aircraft generated significantly more noise on departure than when landing so a preference for westerly operations during daylight was introduced which continues to this day 12 In this mode aircraft take off towards the west and land from the east over London thereby minimising the impact of noise on the most densely populated areas Heathrow s two runways generally operate in segregated mode whereby landings are allocated to one runway and takeoffs to the other To further reduce noise nuisance the use of runways 27R and 27L is swapped at 15 00 each day if the wind is from the west When landings are easterly there is no alternation 09L remains the landing runway and 09R the takeoff runway due to the legacy of the now rescinded Cranford Agreement pending taxiway works to allow the roles to be reversed Occasionally landings are allowed on the nominated departure runway to help reduce airborne delays and to position landing aircraft closer to their terminal reducing taxi times Night time flights at Heathrow are subject to restrictions Between 23 00 and 04 00 the noisiest aircraft rated QC 8 and QC 16 cannot be scheduled for operation Also during the night quota period 23 30 06 00 there are four limits A limit on the number of flights allowed A Quota Count system which limits the total amount of noise permitted but allows operators to choose to operate fewer noisy aircraft or a greater number of quieter planes 13 QC 4 aircraft cannot be scheduled for operation A voluntary agreement with the airlines that no early morning arrivals will be scheduled to land before 04 30 A trial of noise relief zones ran from December 2012 to March 2013 which concentrated approach flight paths into defined areas compared with the existing paths which were spread out The zones used alternated weekly meaning residents in the no fly areas received respite from aircraft noise for set periods 14 However it was concluded that some residents in other areas experienced more noise as a consequence of the trial and that it should therefore not be taken forward in its current form Heathrow received more than 25 000 noise complaints in just three months over the summer of 2016 but around half were made by the same ten people 15 In 2017 Heathrow introduced Fly Quiet amp Green a quarterly published league table currently suspended due to the Covid pandemic that awards points to the 50 busiest airlines at the airport ostensibly based on their performance relative to each other across a range of seven environmental benchmarks such as NOx emissions 16 Heathrow has acknowledged but not attempted to refute criticism over discrepancies and a lack of transparency over the way in which the figures are calculated 17 The airport has always refused to publish a breakdown showing how many Fly Quiet points each performance benchmark has contributed towards the total score it awards to an airline thereby putting obstacles in the way of any independent auditing of the published results 18 Among other criticisms of the league table are the unexplained omission of some of the poorer performers among the 50 busiest airlines 19 and the emphasis on relative rather than absolute performance 20 so an airline could well improve its Fly Quiet score quarter on quarter even if its environmental performance had in fact worsened over the period Due to the COVID 19 pandemic Heathrow has seen a big increase in cargo only flights not only by already established carriers at the airport operating cargo only flights using passenger aircraft but also several cargo only airlines 21 Arrival stacks Edit Main article Heathrow arrival stacks Inbound aircraft to London Heathrow Airport typically follow one of several Standard Arrival Routes STARs The STARs each terminate at one of four different RNAV waypoints and these also define four stacks 22 where aircraft can be held if necessary until they are cleared to begin their approach to land Stacks are sections of airspace where inbound aircraft will normally use the pattern closest to their arrival route They can be visualised as helter skelters in the sky Each stack descends in 1000 ft 300 m intervals from 16 000 ft 4 000m down to 8000 ft 2 100m Aircraft hold between 7 000 feet and 15 000 feet at 1 000 foot intervals If these holds become full aircraft are held at more distant points before being cleared onward to one of the four main holds The following four stacks are currently in place The Bovingdon stack BNN is for arrivals from the northwest It extends above the village of Bovingdon and the town of Chesham and uses the RNAV waypoint BNN which is situated on the former RAF Bovingdon airfield The Biggin Hill stack BIG on the southeast edge of Greater London is for arrivals from the southeast It uses the RNAV waypoint BIG which is situated on London Biggin Hill Airport The Lambourne stack LAM in Essex is for arrivals from the northeast It uses the RNAV waypoint LAM which is situated adjacent to Stapleford Aerodrome The Ockham stack OCK in Surrey is for arrivals from the southwest It uses the RNAV waypoint OCK which is situated on the former Wisley Airfield Third runway Edit In September 2012 the Government of the United Kingdom established the Airports Commission an independent commission chaired by Sir Howard Davies to examine various options for increasing capacity at UK airports In July 2015 the commission backed a third runway at Heathrow which the government approved in October 2016 23 24 25 However the England and Wales Court of Appeal rejected this plan for a third runway at Heathrow on the basis that the government failed to consider climate change and the environmental impact of aviation 26 On 16 December 2020 the UK Supreme Court lifted the ban on the third runway expansion allowing the construction plan to go ahead 27 Regulation Edit Further information Landing slot Until it was required to sell Gatwick and Stansted Airports Heathrow Airport Holdings held a dominant position in the London aviation market and has been heavily regulated by the Civil Aviation Authority CAA as to how much it can charge airlines to land The annual increase in landing charge per passenger was capped at inflation minus 3 until 1 April 2003 From 2003 to 2007 charges increased by inflation plus 6 5 per year taking the fee to 9 28 per passenger in 2007 In March 2008 the CAA announced that the charge would be allowed to increase by 23 5 to 12 80 from 1 April 2008 and by inflation plus 7 5 for each of the following four years 28 In April 2013 the CAA announced a proposal for Heathrow to charge fees calculated by inflation minus 1 3 continuing until 2019 29 Whilst the charges for landing at Heathrow are determined by the CAA and Heathrow Airport Holdings the allocation of landing slots to airlines is carried out by Airport Co ordination Limited ACL 30 Until 2008 air traffic between Heathrow and the United States was strictly governed by the countries bilateral Bermuda II treaty The treaty originally allowed only British Airways Pan Am and TWA to fly from Heathrow to the US In 1991 Pan Am and TWA sold their rights to United Airlines and American Airlines respectively while Virgin Atlantic was added to the list of airlines allowed to operate on these routes The Bermuda bilateral agreement conflicted with the Right of the Establishment of the United Kingdom concerning its EU membership and as a consequence the UK was ordered to drop the agreement in 2004 A new open skies agreement was signed by the United States and the European Union on 30 April 2007 and came into effect on 30 March 2008 Shortly afterwards additional US airlines including Northwest Airlines Continental Airlines US Airways and Delta Air Lines started services to Heathrow The airport was criticised in 2007 for overcrowding and delays 31 according to Heathrow Airport Holdings Heathrow s facilities were originally designed to accommodate 55 million passengers annually The number of passengers using the airport reached a record 70 million in 2012 32 In 2007 the airport was voted the world s least favourite alongside Chicago O Hare in a TripAdvisor survey 33 However the opening of Terminal 5 in 2008 has relieved some pressure on terminal facilities increasing the airport s terminal capacity to 90 million passengers per year A tie up is also in place with McLaren Applied Technologies to optimise the general procedure reducing delays and pollution 34 With only two runways operating at over 98 of their capacity Heathrow has little room for more flights although the use of larger aircraft such as the Airbus A380 has allowed some increase in passenger numbers It is difficult for existing airlines to obtain landing slots to enable them to increase their services from the airport or for new airlines to start operations 35 To increase the number of flights Heathrow Airport Holdings has proposed using the existing two runways in mixed mode whereby aircraft would be allowed to take off and land on the same runway This would increase the airport s capacity from its current 480 000 movements per year to as many as 550 000 according to British Airways CEO Willie Walsh 36 Heathrow Airport Holdings has also proposed building a third runway to the north of the airport which would significantly increase traffic capacity 37 Security Edit Policing of the airport is the responsibility of the aviation security a unit of the Metropolitan Police although the British Army including armoured vehicles of the Household Cavalry has occasionally been deployed at the airport during periods of heightened security citation needed Full body scanners are now used at the airport and passengers who refuse to use them are required to submit to a hand search in a private room 38 The scanners display passengers bodies as cartoon figures with indicators showing where concealed items may be 38 For many decades Heathrow had a reputation for theft from baggage by baggage handlers This led to the airport being nicknamed Thiefrow with periodic arrests of baggage handlers 39 40 Following the widespread disruption caused by reports of drone sightings at Gatwick Airport and a subsequent incident at Heathrow a drone detection system was installed airport wide to attempt to combat disruption caused by the illegal use of drones 41 42 Terminals EditTerminal 2 Edit Terminal 2 central departures area Main article Heathrow Terminal 2 The airport s newest terminal officially known as the Queen s Terminal was opened on 4 June 2014 and has 24 gates 43 44 Designed by Spanish architect Luis Vidal it was built on the site that had been occupied by the original Terminal 2 and the Queens Building 45 46 The main complex was completed in November 2013 and underwent six months of testing before opening to passengers It includes a satellite pier T2B a 1 340 space car park and a cooling station to generate chilled water There are 52 shops and 17 bars and restaurants 47 Most flights from Terminal 2 are coming from northern Europe or west Europe It is used by all Star Alliance members who fly from Heathrow consolidating the airlines under Star Alliance s co location policy Move Under One Roof SkyTeam new member China Airlines and several short haul unaffiliated carriers Terminal 2 is also the only terminal at Heathrow to accommodate small aircraft JetBlue is the only non aligned long haul flight operating from this terminal Terminal 2 is one of the two terminals that operate UK and Irish domestic flights The airlines moved from their original locations over six months with only 10 of flights operating from there in the first six weeks United Airlines transatlantic flights to avoid the opening problems seen at Terminal 5 On 4 June 2014 United Airlines became the first airline to move into Terminal 2 from Terminals 1 and 4 followed by All Nippon Airways Air Canada and Air China from Terminal 3 Air New Zealand Asiana Airlines Croatia Airlines LOT Polish Airlines South African Airways and TAP Air Portugal moved in on 22 October 2014 48 The original Terminal 2 opened as the Europa Building in 1955 and was the airport s oldest terminal It had an area of 49 654 m2 534 470 sq ft and was designed to handle around 1 2 million passengers annually In its final years it accommodated up to 8 million A total of 316 million passengers passed through the terminal in its lifetime The building was demolished in 2010 along with the Queens Building which had housed airline company offices 49 Terminal 3 Edit Terminal 3 bird s eye view Main article Heathrow Terminal 3 Terminal 3 opened as the Oceanic Terminal on 13 November 1961 to handle flight departures for long haul routes for foreign carriers to the United States Asia and other Far Eastern destinations 50 At this time the airport had a direct helicopter service to Central London from the gardens on the roof of the terminal building Renamed Terminal 3 in 1968 it was expanded in 1970 with the addition of an arrivals building Other facilities added included the UK s first moving walkways In 2006 the new 105 million Pier 6 was completed 51 to accommodate the Airbus A380 superjumbo Emirates and Qantas operate regular flights from Terminal 3 using the Airbus A380 Redevelopment of Terminal 3 s forecourt by the addition of a new four lane drop off area and a large pedestrianised plaza complete with a canopy to the front of the terminal building was completed in 2007 These improvements were intended to improve passengers experience reduce traffic congestion and improve security 52 As part of this project Virgin Atlantic was assigned its dedicated check in area known as Zone A which features a large sculpture and atrium As of 2013 update Terminal 3 has an area of 98 962 m2 1 065 220 sq ft with 28 gates and in 2011 it handled 19 8 million passengers on 104 100 flights 53 Most flights from Terminal 3 are long haul flights from North America Asia and other foreign countries other than Europe Terminal 3 is home to Oneworld members with the exception of Malaysia Airlines Qatar Airways and Royal Air Maroc all of which use Terminal 4 SkyTeam members Aeromexico Air France Delta Air Lines KLM and Middle East Airlines and several long haul unaffiliated carriers Terminal 4 Edit Terminal 4 bird s eye view Main article Heathrow Terminal 4 Opened in 1986 Terminal 4 has 22 gates and is situated to the south of the southern runway next to the cargo terminal and is connected to Terminals 2 and 3 by the Heathrow Cargo Tunnel The terminal has an area of 105 481 m2 1 135 390 sq ft and is now home to the SkyTeam alliance except new member China Airlines which remained at Terminal 2 and Aeromexico Air France Delta Air Lines KLM and Middle East Airlines which use Terminal 3 Oneworld carriers Malaysia Airlines Qatar Airways Royal Air Maroc and Gulf Air and to most unaffiliated carriers It has undergone a 200m upgrade to enable it to accommodate 45 airlines with an upgraded forecourt to reduce traffic congestion and improve security Most flights that go to Terminal 4 are flights coming from East Europe Central Asia North Africa and the Middle East as well as a few flights to Europe An extended check in area with renovated piers and departure lounges and a new baggage system were installed and four new stands were built to accommodate the Airbus A380 Qatar Airways operates regular A380 flights Etihad Airways and Malaysia Airlines operate regular A350 flights China Southern Airlines El Al 54 Etihad Airways Gulf Air and Vietnam Airlines operate regular Boeing 787 flights Terminal 5 Edit Terminal 5 bird s eye view Main article Heathrow Terminal 5 Terminal 5 lies between the northern and southern runways at the western end of the Heathrow site and was opened by Queen Elizabeth II on 14 March 2008 55 some 19 years after its inception It opened to the public on 27 March 2008 and British Airways and its partner company Iberia have exclusive use of this terminal which has 50 gates including 3 hardstands The first passenger to enter Terminal 5 was a UK ex pat from Kenya who passed through security at 04 30 on the day He was presented with a boarding pass by British Airways CEO Willie Walsh for the first departing flight BA302 to Paris During the two weeks after its opening operations were disrupted by problems with the terminal s IT systems coupled with insufficient testing and staff training which caused over 500 flights to be cancelled 56 Terminal 5 is exclusively used by British Airways as its global hub However because of the merger between 25 March 2012 and 12 July 2022 Iberia s operations at Heathrow were moved to the terminal making it the home of International Airlines Group 57 On 12 July 2022 Iberia s flight operations were moved back to Terminal 3 On 7 July 2020 American moved to terminal 5 to allow for easier connections from American s transatlantic flights to British Airways flights during the pandemic However all the American flights except JFK have returned to Terminal 3 China Southern Airlines used Terminal 5 due to the pandemic until it was relocated to Terminal 4 in November 2022 Built at 4 3 billion the terminal consists of a four story main terminal building Concourse A and two satellite buildings linked to the main terminal by an underground people mover transit system Concourse A has dedicated British Airways s narrowbody fleet for flights around the UK and the rest of Europe the first satellite Concourse B includes dedicated stands for BA and Iberia s widebody fleet except for the Airbus A380 and the second satellite Concourse C includes 7 dedicated aircraft stands for the A380 It became fully operational on 1 June 2011 Terminal 5 was voted Skytrax World s Best Airport Terminal 2014 in the Annual World Airport Awards 58 The main terminal building Concourse A has an area of 300 000 square metres 3 200 000 sq ft while Concourse B covers 60 000 square metres 650 000 sq ft 59 It has 60 aircraft stands and capacity for 30 a million passengers annually as well as more than 100 shops and restaurants 60 It is also home to British Airways Flagship lounge the Concorde Room alongside four further British Airways branded lounges 61 One of those lounges is the British Airways Arrivals Lounge which is located land side A further building designated Concourse D and of similar size to Concourse C may yet be built to the east of the existing site providing up to another 16 stands Following British Airways merger with Iberia this may become a priority since the combined business will require accommodation at Heathrow under one roof to maximise the cost savings envisaged under the deal A proposal for Concourse D was featured in Heathrow s most recent capital investment plan when The transport network around the airport has been extended to cope with the increase in passenger numbers New branches of both the Heathrow Express and the Underground s Piccadilly line serve a new shared Heathrow Terminal 5 station A dedicated motorway spur links the terminal to the M25 between junctions 14 and 15 The terminal has 3 800 spaces multi storey car park A more distant long stay car park for business passengers is connected to the terminal by a personal rapid transit system the Heathrow Pod which became operational in the spring of 2011 62 Within the terminal complex an automated people mover APM system known as the Transit is used to transport passengers between the satellite buildings 63 Terminal assignments Edit As of July 2022 Heathrow s four passenger terminals are assigned as follows 64 Terminal Airlines and alliancesTerminal 2 Star Alliance China Airlines and several short haul non aligned airlinesTerminal 3 Oneworld and SkyTeam except those at Terminal 4 and several long haul non aligned airlinesTerminal 4 Oneworld and SkyTeam members that do not operate from Terminal 3 as well as most non aligned airlinesTerminal 5 British Airways most destinations Following the opening of Terminal 5 in March 2008 a complex programme of terminal moves was implemented This saw many airlines move to be grouped in terminals by airline alliance as far as possible 65 Following the opening of Phase 1 of the new Terminal 2 in June 2014 all Star Alliance member airlines 66 with the exception of new member Air India which moved in early 2017 67 along with Aer Lingus and Germanwings relocated to Terminal 2 in a phased process completed on 22 October 2014 Additionally by 30 June 2015 all airlines left Terminal 1 in preparation for its demolition to make room for the construction of Phase 2 of Terminal 2 68 Some other airlines made further minor moves at a later point e g Delta Air Lines merging all departures in Terminal 3 instead of a split between Terminals 3 and 4 69 Terminal usage during COVID 19 pandemic Edit Heathrow Airport has four terminals with a total of 115 gates 66 of which can support wide body aircraft and 24 gates that can support an Airbus A380 Due to the COVID 19 pandemic Heathrow s services were sharply reduced It announced that as of 6 April 2020 the airport would be transitioning to single runway operations and that it would be temporarily closing Terminals 3 and 4 moving all remaining flights into Terminals 2 or 5 70 Dual runway operations were restored in August 2020 Heathrow returned to single runway operations on 9 November 2020 On 11 December 2020 Heathrow announced Terminal 4 would be shut until the end of 2021 71 Terminal 3 was reopened for use by Virgin Atlantic and Delta on 15 July 2021 and Terminal 4 was reopened on 14 June 2022 72 73 Former Terminal 1 Edit Main article Heathrow Terminal 1 Terminal 1 opened in 1968 and was inaugurated by Queen Elizabeth II in April 1969 74 75 Terminal 1 was the Heathrow base for British Airways BA domestic and European network and a few of its long haul routes before Terminal 5 opened The acquisition of British Midland International BMI in 2012 by BA s owner International Airlines Group meant British Airways took over BMI s short haul and medium haul destinations from the terminal 76 Terminal 1 was also the main base for most Star Alliance members though some were also based at Terminal 3 Terminal 1 closed at the end of June 2015 the site is now being used to extend Terminal 2 77 which opened in June 2014 A number of the newer gates used by Terminal 1 were built as part of the Terminal 2 development and are being retained 78 79 The last tenants along with British Airways were El Al Icelandair moved to Terminal 2 25 March 2015 and LATAM Brasil the third to move in to Terminal 3 on 27 May 2015 British Airways was the last operator in Terminal 1 Two flights of this carrier one departing to Hanover and one arriving from Baku marked the terminal closure on 29 June 2015 British Airways operations have been relocated to Terminals 3 and 5 80 Airlines and destinations EditPassenger Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The following airlines operate regularly scheduled passenger flights at London Heathrow Airport 81 AirlinesDestinationsAegean AirlinesAthensAer LingusCork Dublin Knock begins 26 March 2023 82 ShannonAeromexicoMexico CityAir AlgerieAlgiersAir AstanaAktau AlmatyAir CanadaCalgary Halifax Montreal Trudeau Toronto Pearson Vancouver Seasonal Mumbai 83 Air ChinaBeijing Capital 84 Shanghai PudongAir FranceNice Paris Charles de GaulleAir IndiaAhmedabad ends 25 March 2023 85 Amritsar ends 23 March 2023 85 Delhi Goa Dabolim ends 24 March 2023 85 Hyderabad ends 22 March 2023 Kochi ends 23 March 2023 85 MumbaiAir MaltaMaltaAir MauritiusMauritiusAir SerbiaBelgradeAll Nippon AirwaysTokyo HanedaAmerican AirlinesBoston Charlotte Chicago O Hare Dallas Fort Worth Los Angeles Miami New York JFK Philadelphia Phoenix Sky Harbor Raleigh Durham Seattle Tacoma 86 Asiana AirlinesSeoul IncheonAustrian AirlinesViennaAviancaBogotaAzerbaijan AirlinesBakuBeijing Capital AirlinesQingdao 87 Biman Bangladesh AirlinesDhaka SylhetBritish AirwaysAberdeen Abuja Accra Algiers Amman Queen Alia Amsterdam Athens Atlanta Austin Bahrain Baltimore Bangalore Barbados Barcelona Basel Mulhouse Beijing Daxing resumes 3 June 2023 88 Belfast City Berlin Bermuda Billund Bologna Boston Brussels Bucharest Budapest Buenos Aires Ezeiza Cairo Cape Town Chennai Chicago O Hare Cincinnati begins 5 June 2023 89 Copenhagen Dallas Fort Worth Delhi Denver Doha Dubai International Dublin Dusseldorf Edinburgh Frankfurt Funchal Geneva Gibraltar Glasgow Gothenburg Grand Cayman Hamburg Hanover Hong Kong 90 Houston Intercontinental Hyderabad Inverness Islamabad Istanbul Jersey Johannesburg O R Tambo Krakow Kuwait City Lagos Larnaca Las Vegas Lisbon Los Angeles Luxembourg Lyon Madrid Malaga Male Manchester Marrakesh Marseille Mexico City Miami Milan Linate Milan Malpensa Montreal Trudeau Mumbai Munich Nairobi Jomo Kenyatta Naples Nashville Nassau Newark Newcastle upon Tyne New Orleans New York JFK Nice Nuremberg Oslo Paris Charles de Gaulle Philadelphia Phoenix Sky Harbor Pisa Pittsburgh Portland OR Porto Prague Providenciales Reykjavik Keflavik Rio de Janeiro Galeao Riyadh Rome Fiumicino San Diego San Francisco San Jose CA Santiago de Chile Sao Paulo Guarulhos Seattle Tacoma Shanghai Pudong resumes 23 April 2023 91 Singapore Sofia Stockholm Arlanda Stuttgart Sydney Tel Aviv Tenerife South Tirana Tokyo Haneda 92 Toronto Pearson Toulouse Valencia Vancouver Venice Vienna Warsaw Chopin Washington Dulles Zagreb ZurichSeasonal Bastia Bodrum Brindisi Chania Corfu Dalaman Dubrovnik Faro Figari Florence begins 26 April 2023 93 Grenoble Heraklion Ibiza Innsbruck Kalamata Kefalonia Kos Ljubljana Mykonos Olbia Palermo Palma de Mallorca Paphos Perugia Ponta Delgada Preveza Lefkada Pula Rhodes Salzburg Santorini Split Thessaloniki ZakynthosBrussels AirlinesBrusselsBulgaria AirSofiaCathay PacificHong KongChina AirlinesTaipei TaoyuanChina Eastern AirlinesShanghai PudongChina Southern AirlinesGuangzhouCroatia AirlinesZagreb Seasonal SplitDelta Air LinesAtlanta Boston Detroit Los Angeles begins 25 March 2023 94 Minneapolis St Paul New York JFK Salt Lake City 95 Seattle TacomaEgyptairCairoSeasonal LuxorEl AlTel AvivEmiratesDubai InternationalEthiopian AirlinesAddis AbabaEtihad AirwaysAbu DhabiEurowingsCologne Bonn Dusseldorf Hamburg StuttgartEVA AirBangkok Suvarnabhumi Taipei TaoyuanFinnairHelsinkiGulf AirBahrainIberiaMadridIcelandairReykjavik KeflavikIran AirTehran Imam KhomeiniITA AirwaysMilan Linate Rome FiumicinoJapan AirlinesTokyo HanedaJetBlueBoston 96 New York JFKKenya AirwaysNairobi Jomo KenyattaKLMAmsterdamKorean AirSeoul IncheonKuwait AirwaysKuwait CityLATAM BrasilSao Paulo GuarulhosLoganairIsle of ManLOT Polish AirlinesWarsaw ChopinLufthansaFrankfurt MunichMalaysia AirlinesKuala Lumpur InternationalMiddle East AirlinesBeirutOman AirMuscatQantasMelbourne a Perth Singapore Sydney b Qatar AirwaysDohaRoyal Air MarocCasablancaRoyal Brunei AirlinesBandar Seri Begawan Dubai International 97 Royal JordanianAmman Queen AliaRwandAirKigaliSaudiaJeddah Neom Bay RiyadhScandinavian AirlinesCopenhagen Oslo Stavanger Stockholm Arlanda Seasonal Lulea 98 Shenzhen AirlinesShenzhen resumes 26 March 2023 99 Singapore AirlinesSingaporeSky ExpressAthensSriLankan AirlinesColombo BandaranaikeSwiss International Air LinesGeneva ZurichTAP Air PortugalLisbonTAROMBucharestThai Airways InternationalBangkok SuvarnabhumiTunisairTunisTurkish AirlinesIstanbulUnited AirlinesBoston Chicago O Hare Denver Houston Intercontinental Los Angeles Newark San Francisco Washington DullesUzbekistan AirwaysTashkentVietnam AirlinesHanoi Ho Chi Minh CityVirgin AtlanticAntigua Atlanta Austin 100 Barbados Boston Delhi Grenada Islamabad ends 11 July 2023 101 Johannesburg O R Tambo Lagos Lahore ends 1 May 2023 101 Las Vegas Los Angeles Miami Montego Bay Mumbai Nassau New York JFK Orlando Providenciales begins 4 November 2023 102 San Francisco Seattle Tacoma Shanghai Pudong resumes 1 May 2023 103 St Vincent Argyle Tampa Tel Aviv Washington Dulles Seasonal Cape Town 104 Male begins 22 October 2023 102 St Lucia HewanorraVistaraDelhiWestJetCalgaryWideroeBergen ends 25 March 2023 105 Cargo Edit AirlinesDestinationsCathay Pacific Cargo 106 Dubai Al Maktoum Hong Kong Paris Charles de GaulleDHL Aviation 107 Amsterdam Brussels Cincinnati Cologne Bonn Frankfurt Leipzig Halle Milan Malpensa PortoEmirates SkyCargo 108 Dubai Al Maktoum FrankfurtKorean Air Cargo 109 Frankfurt Paris Charles de Gaulle Seoul IncheonLufthansa Cargo 110 Frankfurt 111 Qatar Airways Cargo 112 Basel Mulhouse Doha Munich 113 Singapore Airlines Cargo 114 Amsterdam Sharjah SingaporeTurkish Cargo 115 IstanbulTraffic and statistics EditOverview Edit Development of passenger numbers aircraft movements and air freight between 1986 and 2014 When ranked by passenger traffic Heathrow is the sixth busiest internationally behind Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta International Airport Beijing Capital International Airport Dubai International Airport Chicago s O Hare International Airport and Tokyo Haneda Airport for the 12 months ending December 2015 116 London Heathrow Airport was noted as the best connected airport globally in 2019 according to the OAG s Megahubs Index with a connectivity score of 317 Dominant carrier British Airways was recorded as holding a 51 share of flights at the hub 117 In 2015 Heathrow was the busiest airport in Europe in total passenger traffic with 14 more passengers than Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport 118 and 22 more than Istanbul Ataturk Airport 119 Heathrow was the fourth busiest European airport by cargo traffic in 2013 after Frankfurt Airport Paris Charles de Gaulle and Amsterdam Airport Schiphol 120 In 2020 Heathrow s passenger numbers dropped sharply by over 72 a decrease of 58 million travellers compared to 2019 due to the impact caused by restrictions and or bans on travel caused by the global COVID 19 pandemic Annual traffic statistics Edit Overview Edit Annual passenger traffic at LHR airport See Wikidata query In table Edit Traffic statistics at Heathrow 121 Year Passengershandled c Passenger Change Cargo tonnes Cargo Change Aircraftmovements Aircraft Change1986 31 675 779 537 131 315 753 1987 35 079 755 10 7 574 116 6 9 329 977 4 31988 37 840 503 7 9 642 147 11 8 351 592 6 11989 39 881 922 5 4 686 170 6 9 368 429 4 61990 42 950 512 7 7 695 347 1 3 390 372 5 61991 40 494 575 5 7 654 625 5 9 381 724 2 31992 45 242 591 11 7 754 770 15 3 406 481 6 11993 47 899 081 5 9 846 486 12 2 411 173 1 11994 51 713 366 8 0 962 738 13 7 424 557 3 21995 54 461 597 5 3 1 031 639 7 2 434 525 2 31996 56 049 706 2 9 1 040 486 0 9 440 343 1 31997 58 185 398 3 8 1 156 104 11 1 440 631 0 11998 60 683 988 4 3 1 208 893 4 6 451 382 2 41999 62 268 292 2 6 1 265 495 4 7 458 300 1 52000 64 618 254 3 8 1 306 905 3 3 466 799 1 82001 60 764 924 6 0 1 180 306 9 6 463 567 0 72002 63 362 097 4 3 1 234 940 4 6 466 545 0 62003 63 495 367 0 2 1 223 439 0 9 463 650 0 62004 67 342 743 6 1 1 325 173 8 3 476 001 2 62005 67 913 153 0 8 1 305 686 1 5 477 887 0 42006 67 527 923 0 6 1 264 129 3 2 477 048 0 22007 68 066 028 0 8 1 310 987 3 7 481 476 0 92008 67 054 745 1 5 1 397 054 6 6 478 693 0 62009 66 036 957 1 5 1 277 650 8 5 466 393 2 62010 65 881 660 0 2 1 472 988 15 3 454 823 2 52011 69 433 230 5 4 1 484 351 0 8 480 906 5 42012 70 037 417 0 9 1 464 390 1 3 475 176 1 22013 72 367 054 3 3 1 422 939 2 8 471 936 0 72014 73 374 825 1 4 1 498 906 5 3 472 802 0 22015 74 959 058 2 2 1 496 551 0 2 473 087 2 72016 75 676 223 1 0 1 541 029 3 0 473 231 0 22017 77 988 752 3 1 1 698 455 9 3 474 033 0 62018 80 102 017 2 7 1 788 815 5 3 477 604 1 02019 80 884 310 0 9 1 587 451 11 2 475 861 0 32020 22 109 723 72 7 1 150 030 28 0 200 905 57 82021 19 393 145 12 3 1 402 913 22 0 190 032 5 42022 61 599 196 217 6 1 350 878 3 7 376 846 98 3Busiest routes Edit Heathrow Airport processed 80 884 310 passengers in 2019 but only 22 109 723 in 2020 and 19 393 145 in 2021 2 due to the COVID 19 pandemic In 2021 Dubai International Airport was the most popular route with 808 620 passengers 122 The table below shows the 10 busiest international routes at the airport in 2021 Busiest international routes to and from Heathrow 2021 122 Rank Airport Totalpassengers Change2020 211 Dubai International 808 620 6 4 2 New York JFK 615 543 6 6 3 Madrid 425 759 6 4 4 Dublin 403 547 9 4 5 Doha 394 835 18 9 6 Istanbul 385 503 8 4 7 Athens 369 812 28 8 8 Amsterdam 350 659 33 3 9 Paris Charles de Gaulle 342 089 9 0 10 Delhi 323 844 10 5 Busiest domestic routes to and from Heathrow 2021 122 Rank Airport Totalpassengers Change2020 211 Edinburgh 381 994 16 0 2 Glasgow 369 026 35 8 3 Belfast City 338 431 29 3 4 Aberdeen 244 399 20 3 5 Manchester 227 090 30 9 6 Jersey 157 216 179 9 7 Newcastle upon Tyne 115 772 0 7 8 Inverness 63 980 49 1 9 Newquay 10 220 73 6 10 Teesside 9 793 1121 1 Other facilities Edit The Compass Centre the head office of Heathrow Airport Holdings The head office of Heathrow Airport Holdings formerly BAA Limited is located in the Compass Centre by Heathrow s northern runway a building that previously served as a British Airways flight crew centre 123 The World Business Centre Heathrow consists of three buildings 1 World Business Centre houses offices of Heathrow Airport Holdings Heathrow Airport itself and Scandinavian Airlines 124 Previously International Airlines Group had its head office in 2 World Business Centre 125 126 At one time the British Airways head office was located within Heathrow Airport at Speedbird House 127 before the completion of Waterside the current BA head office in Harmondsworth in June 1998 128 To the north of the airfield lies the Northern Perimeter Road along which most of Heathrow s car rental agencies are based and Bath Road which runs parallel to it but outside the airport campus This is nicknamed The Strip by locals because of its continuous line of airport hotels Transport EditPublic transport Edit Heathrow Airport tube and rail stations Note The map is outdated as TfL Rail is now the Elizabeth Line Train Edit Heathrow Express train at London Paddington Heathrow Express a non stop service direct to London Paddington trains leave every 15 minutes for the 15 minute journey 21 minutes to and from Terminal 5 Trains depart from Heathrow Terminal 5 station or Heathrow Central station Terminals 2 amp 3 Free transfer service operates between Terminal 4 and Heathrow Central to connect with services from London and Terminal 5 Elizabeth Line a stopping service to Abbey Wood via Paddington and central London trains leave every 30 minutes 129 Calls at Hayes amp Harlington for connecting trains to Reading It will also serve the line to Shenfield from 2023 London Underground Piccadilly line four stations serve the airport Terminal 2 amp 3 Terminal 4 and Terminal 5 serve the passenger terminals Hatton Cross serves the maintenance areas The usual journey time from Heathrow Central to Central London is around 40 50 minutes 130 Bus and coach Edit Many bus and coach services operate from the large Heathrow Central bus station which serves Terminal 2 and Terminal 3 Services also operate from the bus stations located at Terminal 4 and Terminal 5 Inter terminal transport Edit Terminals 2 and 3 are within walking distance of each other Transfers from Terminals 2 and 3 to Terminal 4 and 5 are provided by Elizabeth line and Heathrow Express trains and the London Underground Piccadilly line 131 Direct transfer between Terminals 4 and 5 is provided by London Buses routes 482 and 490 132 Transit passengers remaining airside are provided with free dedicated transfer buses between terminals The Heathrow Pod personal rapid transit system shuttles passengers between Terminal 5 and the business car park using 21 small driverless transportation pods The pods are battery powered and run on demand on a four kilometre track each able to carry up to four adults two children and their luggage 133 Plans exist to extend the Pod system to connect Terminals 2 and 3 to remote car parks 134 Terminal 5 airside Transit System An underground automated people mover system known as the Transit operates within Terminal 5 linking the main terminal with the satellite Terminals 5B and 5C The Transit operates entirely airside using Bombardier Innovia APM 200 people mover vehicles 135 136 Hotel access Edit The Hotel Hoppa bus network connects all terminals to major hotels in the area 137 Taxi Edit Taxis are available at all terminals 138 Car Edit Entrance at the southern end of the M4 Motorway spur showing a scale model of Concorde replaced since 2008 by the Emirates A380 scale model 139 Heathrow is accessible via the nearby M4 motorway or A4 road Terminals 2 3 the M25 motorway Terminals 4 and 5 and the A30 road Terminal 4 There are drop off and pick up areas at all terminals and short 140 and long stay 141 multi storey car parks All the Heathrow forecourts are drop off only 142 There are further car parks not run by Heathrow Airport Holdings just outside the airport the most recognisable is the National Car Parks facility although there are many other options these car parks are connected to the terminals by shuttle buses Four parallel tunnels under the northern runway connect the M4 Heathrow spur and the A4 road to Terminals 2 3 The two larger tunnels are each two lanes wide and are used for motorised traffic The two smaller tunnels were originally reserved for pedestrians and bicycles to increase traffic capacity the cycle lanes have been modified to each take a single lane of cars although bicycles still have priority over cars Pedestrian access to the smaller tunnels has been discontinued with the free bus services being used instead Bicycle Edit There are mainly off road bicycle routes to some of the terminals 143 Free bicycle parking places are available in car parks 1 and 1A at Terminal 4 and to the North and South of Terminal 5 s Interchange Plaza Cycling is not currently allowed through the main tunnel to access the central area and Terminals 2 and 3 144 Incidents and accidents EditOn 3 March 1948 Sabena Douglas DC 3 OO AWH crashed in fog Three crew and 19 of the 22 passengers on board died 145 On 31 October 1950 BEA Vickers Viking G AHPN crashed at Heathrow after hitting the runway during a go around Three crew and 25 passengers died 146 On 16 January 1955 a BEA Vickers Viscount registered as G AMOK crashed into barriers whilst taking off in the fog from a disused runway strip parallel to the desired runway There were two injuries 147 On 22 June 1955 a BOAC de Havilland Dove registration G ALTM crashed just short of the runway during a filming flight when the pilot shut down the incorrect engine There were no casualties 148 On 1 October 1956 XA897 an Avro Vulcan strategic bomber of the Royal Air Force crashed at Heathrow after an approach in bad weather The Vulcan was the first to be delivered to the RAF and was returning from a demonstration flight to Australia and New Zealand The pilot and co pilot ejected and survived but the four other occupants were killed 149 On 7 January 1960 Vickers Viscount G AOHU of BEA was damaged beyond economic repair when the nose wheel collapsed on landing A fire then developed and burnt out the fuselage There were no casualties among the 59 people on board 150 On 27 October 1965 BEA Vickers Vanguard G APEE flying from Edinburgh crashed on Runway 28R while attempting to land in poor visibility All 30 passengers and six crew on board died 151 152 On 8 April 1968 BOAC Flight 712 Boeing 707 G ARWE departing for Australia via Singapore suffered an engine fire just after take off The engine fell from the wing into a nearby gravel pit in Staines before the plane managed to perform an emergency landing with the wing on fire However the plane was consumed by fire once on the ground Five people four passengers and a flight attendant died while 122 survived The flight attendant Barbara Harrison who helped with the evacuation was posthumously awarded the George Cross 153 On 3 July 1968 the port flap operating rod of G AMAD an Airspeed Ambassador operated by BKS Air Transport failed due to fatigue thereby allowing the port flaps to retract This resulted in a rolling movement to the port which could not be controlled during the approach causing the aircraft to contact the grass and swerve towards the terminal building It hit two parked British European Airways Hawker Siddeley Trident aircraft burst into flames and came to rest against the ground floor of the terminal building Six of the eight crew died as did eight horses on board Trident G ARPT was written off 154 and Trident G ARPI was badly damaged but subsequently repaired only to be lost in the Staines crash in 1972 On 18 June 1972 Trident G ARPI operating as BEA548 crashed in a field close to the Crooked Billet Public House Staines two minutes after taking off All 118 passengers and crew on board died 155 On 5 November 1997 an Airbus 340 300 G VSKY operated by Virgin Atlantic made an emergency landing from Los Angeles after trying to shake free the main landing gear It failed to do so The plane landed but the undersides of engines 1 2 and 4 were damaged The plane broke runway lights as well as causing damage to the runway and the right landing gear was torn off the plane Seven people sustained minor injuries in the evacuation but no more injuries were reported British Airways Flight 38 which crash landed just short of the runway on 17 January 2008 On 17 January 2008 a British Airways Boeing 777 236ER G YMMM operating flight BA038 from Beijing crash landed at Heathrow The aircraft landed on grass short of the south runway then slid to the edge of the runway and stopped on the threshold leading to 18 minor injuries The aircraft was later found to have suffered a loss of thrust caused by fuel icing 156 On 28 September 2022 there was a ground collision involving a Korean Air Boeing 777 that was about to take off to Seoul and an Icelandair Boeing 757 which had landed from Reykjavik The 777 aborted its takeoff and no injuries were reported but the aircraft suffered minor damage 157 Terrorism and security incidents Edit On 8 June 1968 James Earl Ray the man convicted of the 4 April 1968 assassination of Martin Luther King Jr was captured and arrested at Heathrow Airport while attempting to leave the United Kingdom for Rhodesia now Zimbabwe on a false Canadian passport 158 On 6 September 1970 El Al Flight 219 experienced an attempted hijack by two PFLP members One hijacker was killed and the other was subdued as the plane made an emergency landing at Heathrow Airport On 19 May 1974 the IRA planted a series of bombs in the Terminal 1 car park Two people were injured by the explosions 159 On 26 November 1983 the Brink s Mat robbery occurred in which 6 800 gold bars worth nearly 26 000 000 were taken from a vault near Heathrow Only a small amount of the gold was recovered and only two men were convicted of the crime 160 On 17 April 1986 semtex explosives were found in the bag of a pregnant Irishwoman attempting to board an El Al flight The explosives had been given to her by her Jordanian boyfriend and the father of her unborn child Nizar Hindawi The incident became known as the Hindawi Affair 161 On 21 December 1988 Pan Am Flight 103 exploded mid air over the town of Lockerbie killing all 259 onboard and eleven people on the ground The flight originated from Frankfurt as a feeder flight with a change of aircraft at Heathrow and was on its transatlantic leg to New York s JFK airport at the time of the incident An unaccompanied suitcase containing a boombox radio cassette player which housed the explosive was checked in at Malta and forwarded as interline baggage for this flight at Frankfurt wherein it made its way to the transatlantic leg In 1994 over six days Heathrow was targeted three times 8 10 and 13 March by the IRA which fired 12 mortars Heathrow was a symbolic target due to its importance to the UK economy and much disruption was caused when areas of the airport were closed over the period The gravity of the incident was heightened because the Queen was being flown back to Heathrow by the RAF on 10 March 162 In March 2002 thieves stole US 3 000 000 that had arrived on a South African Airways flight Just a few weeks earlier a similar amount of money was stolen from a British Airways flight that arrived from Bahrain 163 In February 2003 the British Army was deployed to Heathrow along with 1 000 police officers in response to intelligence reports suggesting that al Qaeda terrorists might launch surface to air missile attacks at British or American airliners 164 On 17 May 2004 Scotland Yard s Flying Squad foiled an attempt by seven men to steal 40 000 000 in gold bullion and a similar quantity of cash from the Swissport warehouse at Heathrow 165 On 25 February 2008 Greenpeace activists protesting against the planned construction of a third runway managed to cross the ramp and climb atop a British Airways Airbus A320 which had just arrived from Manchester Airport At about 09 45 GMT the protesters unveiled a Climate Emergency No Third Runway banner over the aircraft s tailfin By 11 00 GMT four arrests had been made 166 In October 2010 an Angolan national was being deported on a British Airways plane Security guards were heavy handed with him and they put him in a dangerous position leading to asphyxia He did not survive 167 On 13 July 2015 thirteen activists belonging to the climate change protest group Plane Stupid managed to break through the perimeter fence and get onto the northern runway They chained themselves together in protest disrupting hundreds of flights All were eventually arrested 168 169 In June 2022 many protesters gathered at Heathrow and Gatwick airports to protest the UK Rwanda deal A flight which was supposed to carry asylum seekers from the UK to Rwanda was cancelled 170 Other incidents Edit On 18 December 2010 heavy 9 cm according to the Heathrow Winter Resilience Enquiry 171 snowfall caused the closure of the entire airport causing one of the largest incidents at Heathrow of all time Some 4 000 flights were cancelled over five days and 9 500 passengers spent the night at Heathrow on 18 December following the initial snowfall 172 The problems were caused not only by snow on the runways but also by snow and ice on the 198 parking stands which were all occupied by aircraft 173 On 12 July 2013 the ELT on an Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 787 Dreamliner parked at Heathrow airport caught fire due to a short circuit 174 There were no passengers aboard and no injuries 175 176 From 12 September 2019 the climate change campaign group Heathrow Pause attempted to disrupt flights into and out of Heathrow Airport in London by flying drones in the airport s exclusion zone The action was unsuccessful in disrupting flights and nineteen people were arrested 177 Future expansion and plans EditRunway and terminal expansion Edit Main article Expansion of Heathrow Airport British Airways aircraft queuing for take off There is a long history of expansion proposals for Heathrow since it was first designated as a civil airport Following the cancellation of the Maplin project in 1974 a fourth terminal was proposed but expansion beyond this was ruled out However the Airports Inquiries of 1981 83 and the 1985 Airports Policy White Paper considered further expansion and following a four year long public inquiry in 1995 99 Terminal 5 was approved In 2003 after many studies and consultations the Future of Air Transport White Paper was published which proposed a third runway at Heathrow as well as a second runway at Stansted Airport 178 In January 2009 the Transport Secretary at the time Geoff Hoon announced that the British government supported the expansion of Heathrow by building a third 2 200 metre 7 200 ft runway and a sixth terminal building 179 This decision followed the 2003 white paper on the future of air transport in the UK 180 and a public consultation in November 2007 181 This was a controversial decision which met with widespread opposition because of the expected greenhouse gas emissions impact on local communities as well as noise and air pollution concerns 182 Before the 2010 general election the Conservative and Liberal Democrat parties announced that they would prevent the construction of any third runway or further material expansion of the airport s operating capacity The Mayor of London then Boris Johnson took the position that London needs more airport capacity favouring the construction of an entirely new airport in the Thames Estuary rather than expanding Heathrow 183 After the Conservative Liberal Democrat coalition took power it was announced that the third runway expansion was cancelled 184 Two years later leading Conservatives were reported to have changed their minds on the subject 185 Another proposal for expanding Heathrow s capacity was the Heathrow Hub which aims to extend both runways to a total length of about 7 000 metres and divide them into four so that they each provide two full length runways allowing simultaneous take offs and landings while decreasing noise levels 186 187 In July 2013 the airport submitted three new proposals for expansion to the Airports Commission which was established to review airport capacity in the southeast of England The Airports Commission was chaired by Sir Howard Davies He at the time of his appointment was in the employ of GIC Private Limited formerly known as Government Investment Corporation of Singapore and a member of its International Advisory Board GIC Private Limited was then 2012 as it remains today one of Heathrow s principal owners Sir Howard Davies resigned from these positions upon confirmation of his appointment to lead the Airports Commission although it has been observed that he failed to identify these interests when invited to complete the Airports Commission s register of interests Each of the three proposals that were to be considered by Sir Howard Davies s commission involved the construction of a third runway either to the north northwest or southwest of the airport 188 The commission released its interim report in December 2013 shortlisting three options the north west third runway option at Heathrow extending an existing runway at Heathrow and a second runway at Gatwick Airport After this report was published the government confirmed that no options had been ruled out for airport expansion in the South east and that a new runway would not be built at Heathrow before 2015 189 The full report was published on 1 July 2015 and backed a third north west runway at Heathrow 190 Reaction to the report was generally adverse particularly from London Mayor Boris Johnson One senior Conservative told Channel 4 Howard Davies has dumped an utter steaming pile of poo on the Prime Minister s desk 191 On 25 October 2016 the government confirmed that Heathrow would be allowed to build a third runway however a final decision would not be taken until winter of 2017 18 after consultations and government votes The earliest opening year would be 2025 On 5 June 2018 the UK Cabinet approved the third runway with a full vote planned for Parliament 192 On 25 June 2018 the House of Commons voted 415 119 in favour of the third runway The bill received support from most MPs in the Conservative and Labour parties 193 A judicial review against the decision was launched by four London local authorities affected by the expansion Wandsworth Richmond Hillingdon and Hammersmith and Fulham in partnership with Greenpeace and London mayor Sadiq Khan 194 Khan previously stated he would take legal action if it were passed by Parliament 195 In February 2020 the Court of Appeal ruled that the plans for a third runway were illegal since they did not adequately take into account the government s commitments to the Paris climate agreement 196 However this ruling was later overturned by the Supreme Court in December 2020 197 New transport proposals Edit Main article Heathrow Airport transport proposals One of the transport projects being considered is the Western Rail Approach to Heathrow Currently all rail connections with Heathrow airport run along an east west alignment to and from central London and a number of schemes have been proposed over the years to develop new rail transport links with other parts of London and with stations outside the city 198 This mainline rail service is due to be extended to central London and Essex when the Elizabeth line currently under construction opens 199 A 2009 proposal to create a southern link with London Waterloo via the Waterloo Reading line was abandoned in 2011 due to lack of funding and difficulties with a high number of level crossings on the route into London 200 201 and a plan to link Heathrow to the planned High Speed 2 HS2 railway line with a new station Heathrow Hub was also dropped from the HS2 plans in March 2015 202 203 204 Among other schemes that have been considered is a rapid transport link between Heathrow and Gatwick Airports known as Heathwick which would allow the airports to operate jointly as an airline hub 205 206 In 2018 the Department for Transport began to invite proposals for privately funded rail links to Heathrow Airport 207 Projects being considered under this initiative include the Western Rail Approach to Heathrow a proposal for a spur from the Great Western Main Line to link Heathrow to Reading Slough the South West South Wales and the West Midlands 208 Heathrow Southern Railway a similar scheme to the abandoned Airtrack proposal which would connect Terminal 5 station with Chertsey or Virginia Water Staines London Waterloo Guildford and Clapham Junction 209 HS4Air a proposal for a new high speed railway line which would link HS2 to the High Speed 1 line and the Channel Tunnel via a southern route with stations at Heathrow and Gatwick Airports 210 See also EditAirports of London Heathrow Worldwide Distribution Centre List of airports in the United Kingdom and the British Crown DependenciesNotes Edit Melbourne service is a continuation of Perth service as same flight number Sydney service is a continuation of the Singapore service as the same flight number Number of passengers including domestic international and transitReferences EditCitations Edit Facts and figures Heathrow a b Aircraft and passenger traffic data from UK airports UK Civil Aviation Authority 3 March 2018 Archived from the 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Policy Indecision decision and counter decision ICE Publishing ISBN 9780727763655 Sherwood Philip 1990 The History of Heathrow Uxbridge London Borough of Hillingdon ISBN 0 907869 27 0 Sherwood Philip editor 1993 The Villages of Harmondsworth West Middlesex Family History Society ISBN 0 9511476 2 5 Sherwood Philip 1999 Heathrow 2000 Years of History Stroud Sutton Publishing ISBN 0 7509 2132 3 Sherwood Philip 2006 Around Heathrow Past amp Present Sutton Publishing ISBN 0 7509 4135 9 Contains many pairs of photographs old or in one case a painting and new each pair made from the same viewpoint Sherwood Philip 2009 Heathrow 2000 Years of History Stroud The History Press ISBN 978 0750921329 Sherwood Philip 2012 Around Heathrow Through Time Amberley Publishing ISBN 978 1 4456 0846 4 Sherwood Tim 1999 Coming in to Land A Short History of Hounslow Hanworth and Heston Aerodromes 1911 1946 Heritage Publications Hounslow Library ISBN 1 899144 30 7 Smith Graham 2003 Taking to the Skies the Story of British Aviation 1903 1939 Countryside ISBN 1 85306 815 2 Smith Ron 2002 British Built Aircraft Vol 1 Greater London Tempus ISBN 0 7524 2770 9 Sturtivant Ray 1995 Fairey Aircraft in Old Photographs Alan Sutton ISBN 0 7509 1135 2 Taylor H A 1974 Fairey Aircraft since 1915 Putnam ISBN 0 370 00065 X Taylor John WR 1997 Fairey Aviation Archive Photographs Chalford ISBN 0 7524 0684 1External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to London Heathrow Airport Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Heathrow Airport Official website Heathrow Community Engagement Board website Portals United Kingdom London Aviation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Heathrow Airport amp oldid 1140058496, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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