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London City Airport

London City Airport (IATA: LCY, ICAO: EGLC) is an international airport in London, England. It is located in the Royal Docks in the Borough of Newham, approximately 6 miles (9.7 km) east of the City of London and 3 miles (4.8 km) east of Canary Wharf. These are the twin centres of London's financial industry, which is a major user of the airport. The airport was developed by the engineering company Mowlem in 1986–87. In 2016 it was bought by a Canadian-led consortium of Alberta Investment Management Corporation (AIMCo), OMERS, the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan and Wren House Infrastructure Management of the Kuwait Investment Authority.[4]

London City Airport
Summary
Airport typePublic
OwnerConsortium of AIMCo, OMERS, OTPP and the Kuwait Investment Authority
OperatorLondon City Airport Ltd.
ServesGreater London and Kent
LocationRoyal Docks, Newham, London
Opened26 October 1987; 36 years ago (1987-10-26)
Focus city forBA CityFlyer
Elevation AMSL19 ft / 6 m
Coordinates51°30′19″N 000°03′19″E / 51.50528°N 0.05528°E / 51.50528; 0.05528
Websitelondoncityairport.com
Map
EGLC
Location within Greater London
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
09/27 1,508 4,948 Asphalt
Statistics (2022)
Passengers3,009,313
Passenger change 21-22 318%[1]
Aircraft Movements44,731
Movements change 21-22 246%[1]
Sources: UK AIP at NATS[2] WAD[3]
Statistics from the UK Civil Aviation Authority[1]

London City Airport has a single 1,508-metre-long (4,948 ft) runway, and a CAA Public Use Aerodrome Licence (Number P728) that allows flights for the public transport of passengers; this licence also allows training flights, but only for the purpose of training pilots to operate at this specific airport.[5] Only multi-engine, fixed-wing aircraft up to Airbus A318 size with special aircraft and aircrew certification to fly 5.5° approaches are allowed to conduct operations at London City Airport.[6][7] As of 2020, the airport is about 60 hectares (150 acres) in size.[8]

London City had over 4.5 million passenger movements in 2017. It is the fifth-busiest airport by passengers and aircraft movements serving the London area — after Heathrow, Gatwick, Stansted and Luton — and was the 14th-busiest in the UK in 2017.[1] In 2019, the airport handled over 5 million passengers.

History edit

Proposal and construction edit

The airport was first proposed in 1981 by Reg Ward, who was Chief Executive of the newly formed London Docklands Development Corporation (LDDC) that was responsible for the regeneration of the area. He in turn discussed the proposal with chairman of John Mowlem & Co Sir Philip Beck and the idea of an airport for Docklands was born. By November of that year Mowlem and Bill Bryce of Brymon Airways had submitted an outline proposal to the LDDC for a Docklands STOLport city centre gateway.[9]

 
Plaque commemorating the landing by Captain Harry Gee at Heron Quays DLR station in 1982

On 27 June 1982 Brymon's Captain Harry Gee landed a de Havilland Canada Dash 7 turboprop aircraft on Heron Quays, in the nearby West India Docks, in order to demonstrate the feasibility of the STOLport project. Later that year the LDDC published a feasibility study, an opinion poll amongst local residents showed a majority in favour of the development of the airport, and Mowlem submitted an application for planning permission.[9]

A 63-day planning inquiry started on 6 June 1983. By the middle of the following year, Nicholas Ridley the Secretary of State for Transport had indicated that he was "disposed to agree the application", but asked for further details. The Greater London Council brought an action in the High Court of Justice to reopen the inquiry. After the High Court dismissed the action in March 1985,[9] outline planning permission was granted in May of that year, followed by the grant of detailed planning permission in early 1986.[9] The airport site had an initial footprint of 37 hectares (92 acres) in area.[10]

Construction began on the site shortly after permission was granted, with Charles, Prince of Wales laying the foundation stone of the terminal building, designed by R Seifert and Partners, on 2 May 1986. The first aircraft landed on 31 May 1987, with the first commercial services operating from 26 October 1987. Queen Elizabeth II officially opened London City Airport in November of the same year.[9]

Opening and runway extension edit

In 1988, the first full year of operation, the airport handled 133,000 passengers. The earliest scheduled flights were operated to and from Plymouth, Paris, Amsterdam and Rotterdam. With a runway of only 1,080 m (3,543 ft) in length, and a slope of the glidepath of 7.5° (for noise abatement reasons), the airport could only be used by a very limited number of aircraft types, principally the Dash 7 and the smaller Dornier 228. In 1989, the airport submitted a planning application to extend the runway, allowing the use of a larger number of aircraft types.[9][11]

In 1990, the airport handled 230,000 passengers, but the figures fell drastically after the Gulf War and did not recover until 1993, when 245,000 passengers were carried. By this time the extended runway had been approved and opened (on 5 March 1992). At the same time the glide path was reduced to 5.5°, still steep for a European airport (the slope of an airport glide path is normally 3.0°), but sufficient to allow a larger range of aircraft, including the BAe 146 regional jet liner and Airbus A318, to serve the airport.[9]

By 1995, passenger numbers reached half a million, and Mowlem sold the airport to Irish businessman Dermot Desmond. Five years later passenger numbers had climbed to 1,580,000, and over 30,000 flights were operated. In 2002, a jet centre catering to corporate aviation was opened, as well as additional aircraft stands at the western end of the apron. In 2003, a new ground holding point was established at the eastern end of the runway, enabling aircraft awaiting takeoff to hold there whilst other aircraft landed.[9]

Further expansion edit

 
de Havilland Canada Dash 7 making its steep approach to LCY from the west as a London City Airways DHC-7 prepares to depart to Amsterdam (1988)

On 2 December 2005, London City Airport DLR station opened on a branch of the Docklands Light Railway, providing rail access to the airport for the first time, and providing fast rail links to Canary Wharf and the City of London. By 2006, more than 2.3 million passengers used London City Airport.

In October 2006, the airport was purchased from Dermot Desmond by a consortium comprising insurer AIG Financial Products and Global Infrastructure Partners (GIP). In the final quarter of 2008 GIP increased its stake in the airport to 75%, the remaining 25% belonging to Highstar Capital.[12]

London City Airport was granted planning permission to construct an extended apron with four additional aircraft parking stands and four new gates to the east of the terminal in 2001; they became operational on 30 May 2008. They are carried on piles above the water of the King George V Dock.[13]

British Airways commenced the first scheduled transatlantic flights from the airport in September 2009, with a twice a day service to New York City's John F. Kennedy International Airport via Shannon using a specially configured Airbus A318 aircraft. The A318 is the smallest airliner to operate transatlantic since BA's corporate predecessor, BOAC, began transatlantic jet flights on 4 October 1958, with the De Havilland Comet 4.

The first day of the service, one week after Willie Walsh of British Airways pledged to the United Nations that aviation would deliver deep cuts in carbon emissions, was disrupted by activists from Plane Stupid and Fight the Flights dressed up in business suits.[14][15][16]

London Olympics 2012 edit

 
Terminal building
 
Terminal interior
 
Apron view

Before the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, it was reported that over £7 million (in 2011) was invested in the terminal to extend the Central Search area and adding other improvements.[17] During the Games, however, the airport was only open for a few hours and there were street restrictions (for security), and the low capacity ramp and short runway excluded most long-range arrivals. However, it was the closest airport to Olympic Park, with normal scheduled travel by road of 15 minutes.[18]

Current expansion edit

In early 2013, work was expected to start on a £15m investment programme to refurbish the western pier with new departure gates and improved lounges and to redevelop the international arrivals hall and baggage handling areas.[19] In response to the UK government white paper The Future of Air Transport, the airport operators have produced a master plan outlining their vision for growth up to 2030. The plan was subject to public consultation during spring 2006, and has been republished incorporating comments from this consultation. The master plan shows a phased expansion of the airport, giving the capability of handling 8 million passengers per annum by 2030. It does not propose the addition of a second runway, or significant expansion of the airport boundaries.[20] Phase 1 of this development would be undertaken by 2015. It would include the in-progress construction of the eastern apron extension and provision of a finger pier to the south of this apron to provide passenger access to aircraft using the new parking stands. The terminal building would also be extended to use the triangle of land between it and the railway station. The existing jet centre serving corporate aviation would be extended, a new hangar built to allow aircraft maintenance, and a replacement fire station provided.[21]

Phases 2 and 3 would be undertaken between 2015 and 2030. Further aircraft parking stands would be built to the east of the terminal, and a taxiway would be constructed alongside and to the south of the runway, to avoid the need for aircraft to back-track on the runway. Both these developments would involve further reduction in the water area of the King George V Dock. The existing fuel farm would be relocated to a site at the east of the airport, where it could be supplied by barge, and linked to a hydrant based supply system, thus eliminating both road tanker deliveries and on-airport fuel bowser movements. The existing surface car park would be replaced by a multi-storey car park, allowing extension of the vehicle drop-off and pick up area. The jet centre and hangar facilities would be further extended. Finally the existing terminal building would be replaced.[21]

In line with phase 1 of the master plan, London City Airport made a planning application to the London Borough of Newham in August 2007. This would allow it to increase the number of flights per year from 80,000 to 120,000 by 2010.[22] In July 2008, the Planning Officer for Newham Council produced a report on the Planning Application, recommending that planning permission be granted.[23] The decision was deferred by the council's Development Control Committee at their meeting on 30 July 2008, following a request from Boris Johnson, the Mayor of London, that the decision be delayed until after a study by the National Air Traffic Services (NATS) has been published.[24]

Over 10,000 local residents were consulted by Newham Council over the plan of which 1,109 replied, 801 with objections and 308 in support.[23] The 801 objections mainly concerned increase in noise, increase in air pollution, surface transport, socio-economics and regeneration. The 308 supporters mainly concerned the reduction of air pollution, an alternative London and 2012 Olympic gateway, additional jobs, and benefiting to the local economy.[23] The residents campaign group HACAN East (formerly Fight the Flights) is opposed to expansion due to noise and pollution issues.[24]

On 29 September 2009, Fight the Flights took Newham Council to court in order to challenge their decision to allow a 50% increase from 76,000 to 120,000 flights.[25] On 20 January 2010, the challenge was dismissed, and a deadline of 14 days to appeal was set.[26] The plan was given the go-ahead in February 2015.[27] However this was overturned by Boris Johnson in March 2015.[28] On 27 July 2016 London City Airport was given approval by authorities for their £344m expansion plan.[29]

Recent developments edit

In October 2015, Global Infrastructure Partners which owned 75% of the facility, put it up for sale, with the agreement of Oaktree Capital Management which holds the remaining 25%.[30] A sale to a Canadian-led consortium of Alberta Investment Management Corporation (AIMCo), OMERS, the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan and Wren House Infrastructure Management of the Kuwait Investment Authority for £2 billion was confirmed in February 2016.[4] The sale was completed on 10 March 2016.[31]

In September 2016, British Airways announced the termination of one of its two daily long-haul all-business class services from the airport to New York City, citing economic reasons.[32]

Green Party candidate for the 2016 London mayoral election and member of the London Assembly Siân Berry has been vocal in calling for the closure of London City Airport and subsequent redevelopment of the area it occupies.[citation needed] Caroline Russell, the leader of the Green Party on the London Assembly and Scott Ainslie, former Green MEP for London and councillor on Lambeth Council have both called for its closure.[33]

In March 2020, British Airways suspended its daily service to New York due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In September 2020, the airline confirmed the service would not return.[34]

The decision was taken to relocate the control tower to a site 80 miles (130 km) away at Swanwick, Hampshire, utilising three cable links providing live video which will be a UK first by relocating air traffic controllers to a remotely operated digital control room.[35]

In January 2021, after a delay due to the COVID-19 pandemic, London City became the first major airport controlled by a remote air traffic control tower.[36]

In April 2023, London City became the first major UK airport to drop its 100-millilitre liquid rule. Passengers travelling through London City are now able to carry liquids of up to 2 litres in their carry-on luggage for the first time since the liquid rule was implemented in the UK in 2006.[37]

Operations edit

 
The airport during the night, with Canary Wharf visible in the background
 
Apron and runway overview, with The O2 dome in the distance

Served destinations edit

Owing to London City Airport's proximity to London's Docklands and financial district, the airport's primary users are business travellers with destinations such as Luxembourg and Frankfurt, although the number of leisure destinations served like Palma de Mallorca, Málaga or Chambéry has increased in recent years. London City is at its busiest during the winter months, when a number of airlines, most notably British Airways and Swiss International Air Lines, fly to ski resort gateway destinations. Zürich, Geneva, and Milan are among the destinations popular among winter sports enthusiasts.[38]

In July 2020, British Airways announced the termination of its all-business-class flights between City and New York-JFK, which had been operated since 2009.[39]

Facilities and utilized aircraft edit

Due to the airport's proximity to Central London, it has stringent rules imposed to limit the noise impact from aircraft operations. This, together with the physical dimensions of the 1,508-metre-long (4,948 ft) runway and the steep glideslope, limits the aircraft types that can use London City Airport. The size and layout of the airport and overall complexity caused by the lack of taxiways mean that the airport gets very busy during peak hours. The air traffic controllers have to deal with over 38 flights per hour on a runway which, prior to the opening of the full length taxiway at the end of 2020, required a lengthy backtrack for each aircraft needing to depart from runway 27 or land on runway 09. Operations are restricted to 06:30 to 22:30 Monday to Friday, 06:30 to 13:00 on Saturdays and 12:30 to 22:30 on Sundays. These restrictions are related to noise.[2] On 19 December 2022, the airport applied for the restriction on Saturday afternoon to be removed.[40]

Mid-range airliners seen at London City include the ATR 42 (both −300 and −500 variants), ATR 72, Airbus A318, Bombardier Dash 8 Q400, BAe 146/Avro RJ, Dornier 328, Embraer ERJ 135, Embraer 170,[41] Embraer 190 and Fokker 50. On 30 January 2009, trials were completed successfully with the ATR 72–500, leading to its approval for use at the airport.[42] The Embraer 190SR underwent trials from 28 March 2009, and thereafter gained approval.[42] The Fokker 70, BAe Jetstream 41, Saab 340 and Saab 2000 also have approval for scheduled operations at the airport. A number of airlines including Swiss and Odyssey have ordered the Airbus A220 with the intention of operating it from London City once delivered and approved. A220-100 operations for Swiss from City commenced in late 2017.[43][44]

On 22–23 March 2017, the A220-100 completed tests for the 5.5-degree approach in Wichita and Salina, Kansas.[45] The A220-100 was certified for the steep approach landing for London City in April 2017.[6] In 2023, Airbus confirmed working on certifying the larger A220-300 for operation at the airport. [46] Corporate aircraft such as the Beechcraft Super King Air, Cessna CitationJet series, Hawker 400, Hawker 800, Piaggio Avanti and variants of the Dassault Falcon business jets are increasingly common. The airport is not available for use by single-engine aircraft or helicopters; recreational flights and single-pilot operations are also not permitted.[5]

The size of the airport, constrained by the water-filled Royal Albert and King George V docks to the north and south respectively, also means that there are no covered maintenance facilities for aircraft. In the late 2000s, the airport was envisaged for use as a seaplane base by AirSea Lines.[47]

Terminal edit

With space limited in the London Docklands area, and comparatively low passenger volumes, London City Airport is small compared with several other airports serving London, such as Heathrow, Gatwick, Stansted, Southend and Luton. The airport has a single, two-storey passenger terminal building with 18 gates, all hardstands. The ground floor contains the check-in desks and some service facilities as well as a staircase leading to the security control on the upper level, after which the airside waiting area and several more shops can be found.[48] The waiting area is connected to piers on both sides where corridors on the upper floor lead to the departure gates on the ground level. As the airport has no jet bridges, walk-boarding is used on all stands.

Airlines and destinations edit

The following airlines operate regular services to and from London City Airport:[49]

Statistics edit

Passengers edit

Passenger numbers at London City Airport saw rapid growth between 2003 and 2008, doubling from around 1.5 million per year to over 3 million. Totals declined in 2009 and 2010, but have since recovered and in 2019 over 5.1 million passengers passed through London City.[1] In 2020, passenger numbers sharply dropped to below 1 million annually during the COVID-19 pandemic.

London City Airport passenger totals. See Wikidata query.
Number of
passengers[56]
Number of
movements[57]
1997 1,161,116 34,605
1998 1,360,187 39,078
1999 1,385,965 44,376
2000 1,583,843 52,643
2001 1,618,833 57,361
2002 1,602,335 56,291
2003 1,470,576 52,856
2004 1,674,807 61,029
2005 1,996,397 71,105
2006 2,358,184 79,436
2007 2,912,123 91,177
2008 3,271,716 94,516
2009 2,802,296 76,861
2010 2,793,813 68,640
2011 3,009,783 68,792
2012 3,030,005 70,781
2013 3,390,264 74,006
2014 3,702,032 76,260
2015 4,319,749 84,753
2016 4,526,059 85,169
2017 4,511,107 80,490
2018 4,820,292 78,036[1]
2019 5,100,025[58] 80,751
2020 908,105 18,850
2021 720,580 12,921
2022 3,009,313 44,731
Source: UK Civil Aviation Authority[1]

Routes edit

Busiest routes to and from London City (2022)[59]
Rank Airport Total
passengers
Change
2020/2021
1 Amsterdam 393,748   381.6%
2 Edinburgh 304,035   234.3%
3 Zurich 293,822   495.8%
4 Frankfurt 226,711   471.9%
5 Dublin 206,945   287.2%
6 Luxembourg 181,670   669.9%
7 Glasgow 176,763   204.1%
8 Berlin 136,281   428.8%
9 Belfast–City 121,502   61.4%
10 Düsseldorf 118,997   431.6%

Ground transport edit

Docklands Light Railway edit

 
London City Airport DLR station (2006)

London City Airport is served by London City Airport DLR station, which is an elevated station adjoining the terminal building. The station is on a branch of the Docklands Light Railway, which links the airport to Canary Wharf and the City of London as well as to Stratford International and Woolwich Arsenal stations with interchanges to London Underground, London Overground, Elizabeth line, Abellio Greater Anglia, c2c, Thameslink and Southeastern High Speed train services.[60]

Elizabeth line edit

 
The route of the Elizabeth line passes very close to the airport but no station serves it (2018 diagram)

Until 2006, Silvertown railway station on the North London line served the airport, but it was closed during the construction of Crossrail. The Elizabeth line, which opened in May 2022,[61] passes around 300 m to the south of the airport,[62] but does not stop there. Proposals were put forward that a new station should be opened on the Elizabeth line to serve the airport, but a London City Airport station was not included in TfL's Crossrail plans.[63][64][65][66]

Road access edit

The airport is served by the A1020 road and the A112 road. These give fast links to Canning Town, the City of London and Stratford, as well as connecting to the A13 and the North Circular Road, London (A406). Also the A13 provides easy access to the M25 motorway, as with the A406 connecting to the M11 motorway. The airport has both a short-term and a long-term car park, both within walking distance of the terminal and a taxi rank outside the terminal door.

Local buses edit

The airport is served by London Buses services:

The express shuttle buses, which formerly ran to various destinations, were withdrawn after the DLR line was built.

Riverboat edit

Thames Clippers services call at a new pier at the nearby residential development Royal Wharf, allowing travel into Central London using an Oyster card or contactless smart card.[67]

Accidents and incidents edit

  • On 13 February 2009, BA CityFlyer Flight 8456 (an Avro RJ100, registered G-BXAR, flying from Amsterdam) suffered a nose-gear collapse while landing at London City. None of the 67 passengers or five crew members were seriously injured in the incident, but three passengers suffered minor injuries; two of them were kept in hospital overnight.[68] The aircraft was damaged beyond economic repair, and was written off by insurers in May 2009.[69]
  • On 21 October 2016, 27 people were injured, two of them seriously, when a tear gas substance was released in London City Airport. Hundreds of other passengers reported experiencing temporary blindness and itching. Many flights were cancelled, leaving thousands stranded and causing major disruption around Europe. A few days later, police arrested a suspect under 'terror offences' and the media referred to the incident as a terror attack. Police later confirmed that tear gas bottles had deliberately been placed to 'cause harm or disruption'. Security was increased at the airport in the days following the attack.[70]

See also edit

References edit

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  70. ^ "Chemical attack at London City Airport 'was terror incident'". The Independent. 24 October 2016. Retrieved 18 December 2016.

External links edit

  •   Media related to London City Airport at Wikimedia Commons
  • Official website  

london, city, airport, redirects, here, political, party, league, communists, yugoslavia, airport, ontario, canada, london, international, airport, iata, icao, eglc, international, airport, london, england, located, royal, docks, borough, newham, approximately. LCY redirects here For the political party see League of Communists of Yugoslavia For the airport in Ontario Canada see London International Airport London City Airport IATA LCY ICAO EGLC is an international airport in London England It is located in the Royal Docks in the Borough of Newham approximately 6 miles 9 7 km east of the City of London and 3 miles 4 8 km east of Canary Wharf These are the twin centres of London s financial industry which is a major user of the airport The airport was developed by the engineering company Mowlem in 1986 87 In 2016 it was bought by a Canadian led consortium of Alberta Investment Management Corporation AIMCo OMERS the Ontario Teachers Pension Plan and Wren House Infrastructure Management of the Kuwait Investment Authority 4 London City AirportIATA LCYICAO EGLCSummaryAirport typePublicOwnerConsortium of AIMCo OMERS OTPP and the Kuwait Investment AuthorityOperatorLondon City Airport Ltd ServesGreater London and KentLocationRoyal Docks Newham LondonOpened26 October 1987 36 years ago 1987 10 26 Focus city forBA CityFlyerElevation AMSL19 ft 6 mCoordinates51 30 19 N 000 03 19 E 51 50528 N 0 05528 E 51 50528 0 05528Websitelondoncityairport comMapEGLCLocation within Greater LondonRunwaysDirection Length Surfacem ft09 27 1 508 4 948 AsphaltStatistics 2022 Passengers3 009 313Passenger change 21 22318 1 Aircraft Movements44 731Movements change 21 22246 1 Sources UK AIP at NATS 2 WAD 3 Statistics from the UK Civil Aviation Authority 1 London City Airport has a single 1 508 metre long 4 948 ft runway and a CAA Public Use Aerodrome Licence Number P728 that allows flights for the public transport of passengers this licence also allows training flights but only for the purpose of training pilots to operate at this specific airport 5 Only multi engine fixed wing aircraft up to Airbus A318 size with special aircraft and aircrew certification to fly 5 5 approaches are allowed to conduct operations at London City Airport 6 7 As of 2020 update the airport is about 60 hectares 150 acres in size 8 London City had over 4 5 million passenger movements in 2017 It is the fifth busiest airport by passengers and aircraft movements serving the London area after Heathrow Gatwick Stansted and Luton and was the 14th busiest in the UK in 2017 1 In 2019 the airport handled over 5 million passengers Contents 1 History 1 1 Proposal and construction 1 2 Opening and runway extension 1 3 Further expansion 1 4 London Olympics 2012 1 5 Current expansion 1 6 Recent developments 2 Operations 2 1 Served destinations 2 2 Facilities and utilized aircraft 3 Terminal 4 Airlines and destinations 5 Statistics 5 1 Passengers 5 2 Routes 6 Ground transport 6 1 Docklands Light Railway 6 2 Elizabeth line 6 3 Road access 6 4 Local buses 6 5 Riverboat 7 Accidents and incidents 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory editProposal and construction edit The airport was first proposed in 1981 by Reg Ward who was Chief Executive of the newly formed London Docklands Development Corporation LDDC that was responsible for the regeneration of the area He in turn discussed the proposal with chairman of John Mowlem amp Co Sir Philip Beck and the idea of an airport for Docklands was born By November of that year Mowlem and Bill Bryce of Brymon Airways had submitted an outline proposal to the LDDC for a Docklands STOLport city centre gateway 9 nbsp Plaque commemorating the landing by Captain Harry Gee at Heron Quays DLR station in 1982On 27 June 1982 Brymon s Captain Harry Gee landed a de Havilland Canada Dash 7 turboprop aircraft on Heron Quays in the nearby West India Docks in order to demonstrate the feasibility of the STOLport project Later that year the LDDC published a feasibility study an opinion poll amongst local residents showed a majority in favour of the development of the airport and Mowlem submitted an application for planning permission 9 A 63 day planning inquiry started on 6 June 1983 By the middle of the following year Nicholas Ridley the Secretary of State for Transport had indicated that he was disposed to agree the application but asked for further details The Greater London Council brought an action in the High Court of Justice to reopen the inquiry After the High Court dismissed the action in March 1985 9 outline planning permission was granted in May of that year followed by the grant of detailed planning permission in early 1986 9 The airport site had an initial footprint of 37 hectares 92 acres in area 10 Construction began on the site shortly after permission was granted with Charles Prince of Wales laying the foundation stone of the terminal building designed by R Seifert and Partners on 2 May 1986 The first aircraft landed on 31 May 1987 with the first commercial services operating from 26 October 1987 Queen Elizabeth II officially opened London City Airport in November of the same year 9 Opening and runway extension edit In 1988 the first full year of operation the airport handled 133 000 passengers The earliest scheduled flights were operated to and from Plymouth Paris Amsterdam and Rotterdam With a runway of only 1 080 m 3 543 ft in length and a slope of the glidepath of 7 5 for noise abatement reasons the airport could only be used by a very limited number of aircraft types principally the Dash 7 and the smaller Dornier 228 In 1989 the airport submitted a planning application to extend the runway allowing the use of a larger number of aircraft types 9 11 In 1990 the airport handled 230 000 passengers but the figures fell drastically after the Gulf War and did not recover until 1993 when 245 000 passengers were carried By this time the extended runway had been approved and opened on 5 March 1992 At the same time the glide path was reduced to 5 5 still steep for a European airport the slope of an airport glide path is normally 3 0 but sufficient to allow a larger range of aircraft including the BAe 146 regional jet liner and Airbus A318 to serve the airport 9 By 1995 passenger numbers reached half a million and Mowlem sold the airport to Irish businessman Dermot Desmond Five years later passenger numbers had climbed to 1 580 000 and over 30 000 flights were operated In 2002 a jet centre catering to corporate aviation was opened as well as additional aircraft stands at the western end of the apron In 2003 a new ground holding point was established at the eastern end of the runway enabling aircraft awaiting takeoff to hold there whilst other aircraft landed 9 Further expansion edit nbsp de Havilland Canada Dash 7 making its steep approach to LCY from the west as a London City Airways DHC 7 prepares to depart to Amsterdam 1988 On 2 December 2005 London City Airport DLR station opened on a branch of the Docklands Light Railway providing rail access to the airport for the first time and providing fast rail links to Canary Wharf and the City of London By 2006 more than 2 3 million passengers used London City Airport In October 2006 the airport was purchased from Dermot Desmond by a consortium comprising insurer AIG Financial Products and Global Infrastructure Partners GIP In the final quarter of 2008 GIP increased its stake in the airport to 75 the remaining 25 belonging to Highstar Capital 12 London City Airport was granted planning permission to construct an extended apron with four additional aircraft parking stands and four new gates to the east of the terminal in 2001 they became operational on 30 May 2008 They are carried on piles above the water of the King George V Dock 13 British Airways commenced the first scheduled transatlantic flights from the airport in September 2009 with a twice a day service to New York City s John F Kennedy International Airport via Shannon using a specially configured Airbus A318 aircraft The A318 is the smallest airliner to operate transatlantic since BA s corporate predecessor BOAC began transatlantic jet flights on 4 October 1958 with the De Havilland Comet 4 The first day of the service one week after Willie Walsh of British Airways pledged to the United Nations that aviation would deliver deep cuts in carbon emissions was disrupted by activists from Plane Stupid and Fight the Flights dressed up in business suits 14 15 16 London Olympics 2012 edit nbsp Terminal building nbsp Terminal interior nbsp Apron viewBefore the 2012 Summer Olympics in London it was reported that over 7 million in 2011 was invested in the terminal to extend the Central Search area and adding other improvements 17 During the Games however the airport was only open for a few hours and there were street restrictions for security and the low capacity ramp and short runway excluded most long range arrivals However it was the closest airport to Olympic Park with normal scheduled travel by road of 15 minutes 18 Current expansion edit In early 2013 work was expected to start on a 15m investment programme to refurbish the western pier with new departure gates and improved lounges and to redevelop the international arrivals hall and baggage handling areas 19 In response to the UK government white paper The Future of Air Transport the airport operators have produced a master plan outlining their vision for growth up to 2030 The plan was subject to public consultation during spring 2006 and has been republished incorporating comments from this consultation The master plan shows a phased expansion of the airport giving the capability of handling 8 million passengers per annum by 2030 It does not propose the addition of a second runway or significant expansion of the airport boundaries 20 Phase 1 of this development would be undertaken by 2015 It would include the in progress construction of the eastern apron extension and provision of a finger pier to the south of this apron to provide passenger access to aircraft using the new parking stands The terminal building would also be extended to use the triangle of land between it and the railway station The existing jet centre serving corporate aviation would be extended a new hangar built to allow aircraft maintenance and a replacement fire station provided 21 Phases 2 and 3 would be undertaken between 2015 and 2030 Further aircraft parking stands would be built to the east of the terminal and a taxiway would be constructed alongside and to the south of the runway to avoid the need for aircraft to back track on the runway Both these developments would involve further reduction in the water area of the King George V Dock The existing fuel farm would be relocated to a site at the east of the airport where it could be supplied by barge and linked to a hydrant based supply system thus eliminating both road tanker deliveries and on airport fuel bowser movements The existing surface car park would be replaced by a multi storey car park allowing extension of the vehicle drop off and pick up area The jet centre and hangar facilities would be further extended Finally the existing terminal building would be replaced 21 In line with phase 1 of the master plan London City Airport made a planning application to the London Borough of Newham in August 2007 This would allow it to increase the number of flights per year from 80 000 to 120 000 by 2010 22 In July 2008 the Planning Officer for Newham Council produced a report on the Planning Application recommending that planning permission be granted 23 The decision was deferred by the council s Development Control Committee at their meeting on 30 July 2008 following a request from Boris Johnson the Mayor of London that the decision be delayed until after a study by the National Air Traffic Services NATS has been published 24 Over 10 000 local residents were consulted by Newham Council over the plan of which 1 109 replied 801 with objections and 308 in support 23 The 801 objections mainly concerned increase in noise increase in air pollution surface transport socio economics and regeneration The 308 supporters mainly concerned the reduction of air pollution an alternative London and 2012 Olympic gateway additional jobs and benefiting to the local economy 23 The residents campaign group HACAN East formerly Fight the Flights is opposed to expansion due to noise and pollution issues 24 On 29 September 2009 Fight the Flights took Newham Council to court in order to challenge their decision to allow a 50 increase from 76 000 to 120 000 flights 25 On 20 January 2010 the challenge was dismissed and a deadline of 14 days to appeal was set 26 The plan was given the go ahead in February 2015 27 However this was overturned by Boris Johnson in March 2015 28 On 27 July 2016 London City Airport was given approval by authorities for their 344m expansion plan 29 Recent developments edit In October 2015 Global Infrastructure Partners which owned 75 of the facility put it up for sale with the agreement of Oaktree Capital Management which holds the remaining 25 30 A sale to a Canadian led consortium of Alberta Investment Management Corporation AIMCo OMERS the Ontario Teachers Pension Plan and Wren House Infrastructure Management of the Kuwait Investment Authority for 2 billion was confirmed in February 2016 4 The sale was completed on 10 March 2016 31 In September 2016 British Airways announced the termination of one of its two daily long haul all business class services from the airport to New York City citing economic reasons 32 Green Party candidate for the 2016 London mayoral election and member of the London Assembly Sian Berry has been vocal in calling for the closure of London City Airport and subsequent redevelopment of the area it occupies citation needed Caroline Russell the leader of the Green Party on the London Assembly and Scott Ainslie former Green MEP for London and councillor on Lambeth Council have both called for its closure 33 In March 2020 British Airways suspended its daily service to New York due to the COVID 19 pandemic In September 2020 the airline confirmed the service would not return 34 The decision was taken to relocate the control tower to a site 80 miles 130 km away at Swanwick Hampshire utilising three cable links providing live video which will be a UK first by relocating air traffic controllers to a remotely operated digital control room 35 In January 2021 after a delay due to the COVID 19 pandemic London City became the first major airport controlled by a remote air traffic control tower 36 In April 2023 London City became the first major UK airport to drop its 100 millilitre liquid rule Passengers travelling through London City are now able to carry liquids of up to 2 litres in their carry on luggage for the first time since the liquid rule was implemented in the UK in 2006 37 Operations edit nbsp The airport during the night with Canary Wharf visible in the background nbsp Apron and runway overview with The O2 dome in the distanceServed destinations edit Owing to London City Airport s proximity to London s Docklands and financial district the airport s primary users are business travellers with destinations such as Luxembourg and Frankfurt although the number of leisure destinations served like Palma de Mallorca Malaga or Chambery has increased in recent years London City is at its busiest during the winter months when a number of airlines most notably British Airways and Swiss International Air Lines fly to ski resort gateway destinations Zurich Geneva and Milan are among the destinations popular among winter sports enthusiasts 38 In July 2020 British Airways announced the termination of its all business class flights between City and New York JFK which had been operated since 2009 39 Facilities and utilized aircraft edit Due to the airport s proximity to Central London it has stringent rules imposed to limit the noise impact from aircraft operations This together with the physical dimensions of the 1 508 metre long 4 948 ft runway and the steep glideslope limits the aircraft types that can use London City Airport The size and layout of the airport and overall complexity caused by the lack of taxiways mean that the airport gets very busy during peak hours The air traffic controllers have to deal with over 38 flights per hour on a runway which prior to the opening of the full length taxiway at the end of 2020 required a lengthy backtrack for each aircraft needing to depart from runway 27 or land on runway 09 Operations are restricted to 06 30 to 22 30 Monday to Friday 06 30 to 13 00 on Saturdays and 12 30 to 22 30 on Sundays These restrictions are related to noise 2 On 19 December 2022 the airport applied for the restriction on Saturday afternoon to be removed 40 Mid range airliners seen at London City include the ATR 42 both 300 and 500 variants ATR 72 Airbus A318 Bombardier Dash 8 Q400 BAe 146 Avro RJ Dornier 328 Embraer ERJ 135 Embraer 170 41 Embraer 190 and Fokker 50 On 30 January 2009 trials were completed successfully with the ATR 72 500 leading to its approval for use at the airport 42 The Embraer 190SR underwent trials from 28 March 2009 and thereafter gained approval 42 The Fokker 70 BAe Jetstream 41 Saab 340 and Saab 2000 also have approval for scheduled operations at the airport A number of airlines including Swiss and Odyssey have ordered the Airbus A220 with the intention of operating it from London City once delivered and approved A220 100 operations for Swiss from City commenced in late 2017 43 44 On 22 23 March 2017 the A220 100 completed tests for the 5 5 degree approach in Wichita and Salina Kansas 45 The A220 100 was certified for the steep approach landing for London City in April 2017 6 In 2023 Airbus confirmed working on certifying the larger A220 300 for operation at the airport 46 Corporate aircraft such as the Beechcraft Super King Air Cessna CitationJet series Hawker 400 Hawker 800 Piaggio Avanti and variants of the Dassault Falcon business jets are increasingly common The airport is not available for use by single engine aircraft or helicopters recreational flights and single pilot operations are also not permitted 5 The size of the airport constrained by the water filled Royal Albert and King George V docks to the north and south respectively also means that there are no covered maintenance facilities for aircraft In the late 2000s the airport was envisaged for use as a seaplane base by AirSea Lines 47 Terminal editWith space limited in the London Docklands area and comparatively low passenger volumes London City Airport is small compared with several other airports serving London such as Heathrow Gatwick Stansted Southend and Luton The airport has a single two storey passenger terminal building with 18 gates all hardstands The ground floor contains the check in desks and some service facilities as well as a staircase leading to the security control on the upper level after which the airside waiting area and several more shops can be found 48 The waiting area is connected to piers on both sides where corridors on the upper floor lead to the departure gates on the ground level As the airport has no jet bridges walk boarding is used on all stands Airlines and destinations editThe following airlines operate regular services to and from London City Airport 49 AirlinesDestinationsAurignyGuernsey begins 31 March 2024 50 British AirwaysAmsterdam Barcelona Belfast City Berlin Billund 51 Dublin Dusseldorf ends 30 March 2024 52 Edinburgh Florence Frankfurt Glasgow Ibiza Malaga Palma de Mallorca Rotterdam San Sebastian Zurich Seasonal Bergerac Chambery Faro Geneva Milan Linate 53 Mykonos Nice Prague Salzburg Skiathos Split ThessalonikiITA AirwaysMilan Linate Rome Fiumicino begins 31 March 2024 54 KLMAmsterdamLoganairIsle of ManLOT Polish AirlinesVilniusLufthansaFrankfurtLuxairAntwerp 55 LuxembourgSwiss International Air LinesZurich Seasonal GenevaStatistics editPassengers edit Passenger numbers at London City Airport saw rapid growth between 2003 and 2008 doubling from around 1 5 million per year to over 3 million Totals declined in 2009 and 2010 but have since recovered and in 2019 over 5 1 million passengers passed through London City 1 In 2020 passenger numbers sharply dropped to below 1 million annually during the COVID 19 pandemic Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org London City Airport passenger totals See Wikidata query Number ofpassengers 56 Number ofmovements 57 1997 1 161 116 34 6051998 1 360 187 39 0781999 1 385 965 44 3762000 1 583 843 52 6432001 1 618 833 57 3612002 1 602 335 56 2912003 1 470 576 52 8562004 1 674 807 61 0292005 1 996 397 71 1052006 2 358 184 79 4362007 2 912 123 91 1772008 3 271 716 94 5162009 2 802 296 76 8612010 2 793 813 68 6402011 3 009 783 68 7922012 3 030 005 70 7812013 3 390 264 74 0062014 3 702 032 76 2602015 4 319 749 84 7532016 4 526 059 85 1692017 4 511 107 80 4902018 4 820 292 78 036 1 2019 5 100 025 58 80 7512020 908 105 18 8502021 720 580 12 9212022 3 009 313 44 731Source UK Civil Aviation Authority 1 Routes edit Busiest routes to and from London City 2022 59 Rank Airport Total passengers Change 2020 20211 Amsterdam 393 748 nbsp 381 6 2 Edinburgh 304 035 nbsp 234 3 3 Zurich 293 822 nbsp 495 8 4 Frankfurt 226 711 nbsp 471 9 5 Dublin 206 945 nbsp 287 2 6 Luxembourg 181 670 nbsp 669 9 7 Glasgow 176 763 nbsp 204 1 8 Berlin 136 281 nbsp 428 8 9 Belfast City 121 502 nbsp 61 4 10 Dusseldorf 118 997 nbsp 431 6 Ground transport editDocklands Light Railway edit nbsp London City Airport DLR station 2006 London City Airport is served by London City Airport DLR station which is an elevated station adjoining the terminal building The station is on a branch of the Docklands Light Railway which links the airport to Canary Wharf and the City of London as well as to Stratford International and Woolwich Arsenal stations with interchanges to London Underground London Overground Elizabeth line Abellio Greater Anglia c2c Thameslink and Southeastern High Speed train services 60 Elizabeth line edit nbsp The route of the Elizabeth line passes very close to the airport but no station serves it 2018 diagram Until 2006 Silvertown railway station on the North London line served the airport but it was closed during the construction of Crossrail The Elizabeth line which opened in May 2022 61 passes around 300 m to the south of the airport 62 but does not stop there Proposals were put forward that a new station should be opened on the Elizabeth line to serve the airport but a London City Airport station was not included in TfL s Crossrail plans 63 64 65 66 Road access edit The airport is served by the A1020 road and the A112 road These give fast links to Canning Town the City of London and Stratford as well as connecting to the A13 and the North Circular Road London A406 Also the A13 provides easy access to the M25 motorway as with the A406 connecting to the M11 motorway The airport has both a short term and a long term car park both within walking distance of the terminal and a taxi rank outside the terminal door Local buses edit The airport is served by London Buses services 473 to Stratford via Plaistow and North Woolwich 474 to Canning Town and Manor Park via Beckton and East HamThe express shuttle buses which formerly ran to various destinations were withdrawn after the DLR line was built Riverboat edit Thames Clippers services call at a new pier at the nearby residential development Royal Wharf allowing travel into Central London using an Oyster card or contactless smart card 67 Accidents and incidents editOn 13 February 2009 BA CityFlyer Flight 8456 an Avro RJ100 registered G BXAR flying from Amsterdam suffered a nose gear collapse while landing at London City None of the 67 passengers or five crew members were seriously injured in the incident but three passengers suffered minor injuries two of them were kept in hospital overnight 68 The aircraft was damaged beyond economic repair and was written off by insurers in May 2009 69 On 21 October 2016 27 people were injured two of them seriously when a tear gas substance was released in London City Airport Hundreds of other passengers reported experiencing temporary blindness and itching Many flights were cancelled leaving thousands stranded and causing major disruption around Europe A few days later police arrested a suspect under terror offences and the media referred to the incident as a terror attack Police later confirmed that tear gas bottles had deliberately been placed to cause harm or disruption Security was increased at the airport in the days following the attack 70 See also editList of airports in the United Kingdom and the British Crown Dependencies Airports of LondonReferences edit a b c d e f g Annual airport data 2022 Civil Aviation Authority www caa co uk a b London City EGLC Nats uk ead it com Archived from the original on 27 May 2020 Retrieved 7 April 2012 CITY World Aero Data WorldAeroData com Archived from the original on 2 March 2020 Retrieved 2 March 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link a b London City Airport bought for 2bn by Canadian led group BBC News 26 February 2016 Archived from the original on 28 February 2016 Retrieved 26 February 2016 a b The UK Integrated Aeronautical Information Package IAIP London City EGLC Nats uk ead it com Archived from the original on 27 May 2020 Retrieved 29 August 2013 a b Certification requirements for London City Airport PDF Isle of Man Aircraft Registry Archived from the original PDF on 14 September 2011 Retrieved 22 January 2011 Wallsworth Dave 7 November 2017 Airbus A318 at London City Airport Captain Dave Archived from the original on 13 January 2019 Retrieved 12 January 2019 1 2 The airport site An international airport in London s Royal Docks PDF London City Airport master plan 2020 London City Airport Report 4 December 2020 p 17 Retrieved 27 February 2023 a b c d e f g h Airport History London City Airport Consultative Committee Archived from the original on 12 February 2012 Retrieved 2 January 2008 Warden Anne 18 November 1986 Traffic jams today transport tomorrow Focus London Docklands A special report The Times No 62618 London England UK p 20 ISSN 0140 0460 Constructing the Airport London City Airport Consultative Committee Archived from the original on 28 October 2007 Retrieved 2 January 2008 London City Airport Corporate Information Archived from the original on 22 August 2010 London City Airport Master Plan PDF London City Airport November 2006 p 13 Archived from the original PDF on 27 February 2008 Retrieved 2 January 2008 BA aims to launch London City JFK A318 service in Oct Flightglobal com 27 May 2009 Archived from the original on 1 June 2009 Retrieved 7 April 2012 Can son of Concorde succeed The Independent UK 26 September 2009 Archived from the original on 29 September 2009 Retrieved 26 September 2009 Green groups slam BA over new business class only flights The Guardian 29 September 2009 Archived from the original on 25 October 2009 Retrieved 22 October 2009 London City Airport expects Olympics boost Candm co uk Archived from the original on 10 January 2014 Retrieved 7 March 2014 Jason Hayward 16 January 2012 6 Important Tips for Successful 2012 London Olympic Games Planning Universalweather com Archived from the original on 10 January 2014 Retrieved 7 March 2014 London City Airport Airliner World 7 February 2013 London City Airport Master Plan London City Airport Archived from the original on 13 March 2012 Retrieved 2 January 2008 a b London City Airport Master Plan PDF London City Airport November 2006 pp 24 26 Archived from the original PDF on 27 February 2008 Retrieved 2 January 2008 London City Airport Planning Application London City Airport Archived from the original on 2 January 2008 Retrieved 2 January 2008 a b c Planning Officer s report on Planning Application London Borough of Newham Retrieved 2 July 2008 a b City flights decision is delayed BBC 30 July 2008 Retrieved 12 August 2008 Council sued on City flights rise BBC 29 September 2009 Retrieved 29 September 2009 Residents lose City Airport flights court battle BBC News 20 January 2011 Archived from the original on 13 November 2018 Retrieved 20 June 2018 Plan agreed for London City Airport despite objections BBC News 7 February 2015 Archived from the original on 14 November 2018 Retrieved 20 June 2018 London City Airport Mayor rejects expansion plan BBC News 27 March 2015 Archived from the original on 13 November 2018 Retrieved 20 June 2018 Tovey Alan 13 August 2020 London City airport puts expansion on hold The Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 13 August 2020 City Airport on the Market Airliner World 6 October 2015 Global Infrastructure Partners Announces The Sale of London City Airport PDF Global Infrastructure Partners 26 February 2016 Archived PDF from the original on 1 March 2016 Retrieved 26 February 2016 British Airways cancels one of its London City to New York all business class services Businesstraveller com 31 August 2016 Archived from the original on 14 January 2018 Retrieved 2 June 2017 News from Caroline Russell London no place for expanded City Airport Greater London Authority 9 July 2018 British Airways confirms end of all business class LCY JFK service Business Traveller Retrieved 14 April 2022 London City first UK airport to get remote digital air traffic control BBC News 19 May 2017 Archived from the original on 22 August 2018 Retrieved 20 June 2018 London City Becomes First Major Airport Controlled by Remote Digital Tower Travel Radar Travel Radar Aviation News 30 April 2021 Retrieved 21 August 2021 London City Airport Becomes First Major UK Airport to Drop Liquid Carry on Rule www travelmarketreport com Retrieved 5 April 2023 History of London City Airport Flightsnetwork co uk Archived from the original on 18 February 2012 Retrieved 7 April 2012 aero de German 31 July 2020 Orban Andre 23 December 2022 London City Airport requests authorisation of Saturday flights and increase of passenger cap ERJ 170 Approved for LCY Aviation Today 22 June 2007 Archived from the original on 5 March 2008 Retrieved 3 January 2008 a b Kaminski Morrow David 10 February 2009 Authorities clear ATR 72 for London City operations Flightglobal Archived from the original on 14 February 2009 Retrieved 15 April 2010 Ghim Lay Yeo 2 June 2013 Bombardier appears to name Odyssey as CSeries customer Flightglobal Archived from the original on 25 June 2013 Retrieved 17 June 2013 Ghim Lay Yeo 17 June 2013 Odyssey confirmed as CSeries customer Flightglobal Archived from the original on 27 April 2014 Retrieved 17 June 2013 Kraft Melanie 28 March 2017 Airlive Archived from the original on 31 March 2017 Retrieved 1 April 2017 Boynton Christine Air Baltic orders 30 A220 300 as Airbus works on LCY certification Retrieved 18 November 2023 Seaplanes to fly once more 22 April 2007 Archived from the original on 9 July 2019 Retrieved 9 July 2019 Terminal Map www london city airport guide co uk Archived from the original on 24 May 2015 Retrieved 24 May 2015 londoncityairport com Timetables retrieved 24 May 2021 https engine aurigny com prod VARS public b flightCal aspx British Airways Relaunches London City Billund London Air Travel 7 July 2022 Retrieved 7 July 2022 BA Cityflyer stellt London City Dusseldorf ein 11 December 2023 https www britishairways com en gb flights and holidays flights new routes ITA Airways aprira Londra City non stop anche da Roma 11 December 2023 Noeth Bart 27 October 2022 Luxair reconnects Antwerp Airport Belgium with London City Number of passengers including both domestic and international Number of movements represents total aircraft takeoffs and landings during that year More than 5m passengers traveled through London City Airport in 2019 CityAM 10 January 2020 Annual airport data 2021 UK Civil Aviation Authority 21 March 2023 Tables 12 1 CSV and 12 2 CSV Retrieved 25 March 2023 Simons Graham Bowman Martin W 2011 London s Airports Casemate Publishers p 132 ISBN 9781848843943 Archived from the original on 19 September 2018 Retrieved 19 September 2018 Phased Opening Crossrail Archived from the original on 24 May 2022 Retrieved 24 May 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Smale Katherine 21 May 2019 London City Airport in talks with TfL about Crossrail station New Civil Engineer Archived from the original on 24 May 2022 Retrieved 24 May 2022 Transforming East London Together 2013 2023 PDF London City Airport Archived from the original PDF on 26 January 2017 Retrieved 1 April 2018 Broadbent Giles 31 May 2016 Why is TfL so hostile to a Crossrail station at LCY The Wharf InYourArea co uk Archived from the original on 19 September 2018 Retrieved 19 September 2018 Regeneration Archived from the original on 20 March 2017 Retrieved 28 November 2015 Silvertown Station Crossrail Proposals Archived 5 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine Crossrail Ltd January 2012 Work begins on new riverboat stop near London City Airport Archived from the original on 12 January 2019 Retrieved 11 January 2019 Air Accidents Investigation Avro 146 RJ100 G BXAR Aaib gov uk 13 February 2009 Archived from the original on 8 April 2015 Retrieved 9 April 2016 BA jobs go after plane write off BBC News 25 May 2009 Archived from the original on 1 September 2017 Retrieved 8 April 2016 Chemical attack at London City Airport was terror incident The Independent 24 October 2016 Retrieved 18 December 2016 External links edit nbsp Media related to London City Airport at Wikimedia Commons Official website nbsp London City Airport Consultative CommitteePortals nbsp London nbsp United Kingdom nbsp Aviation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title London City Airport amp oldid 1196786355, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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