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M. Graham Clark Downtown Airport

M. Graham Clark Downtown Airport[1][2] (IATA: PLK, ICAO: KPLK, FAA LID: PLK) is a county-owned, public-use airport in Taney County, Missouri, United States.[2] It is located one nautical mile (2 km) south of the central business district of Branson, Missouri,[2] one nautical mile (2 km) northeast of Point Lookout, Missouri,[3] and a few yards west of the old downtown area of Hollister, Missouri. It was formerly known as M. Graham Clark Field – Taney County Airport.[3]

M. Graham Clark Downtown Airport
Aerial view, June 2009
Summary
Airport typePublic
Owner/OperatorTaney County, Missouri
ServesBranson / Hollister
LocationBranson, Missouri
Elevation AMSL940 ft / 287 m
Coordinates36°37′33″N 093°13′44″W / 36.62583°N 93.22889°W / 36.62583; -93.22889
Website[1]
Map
PLK
Location of airport in Missouri
PLK
PLK (the United States)
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
12/30 3,738 1,139 Asphalt
Statistics (2011)
Aircraft operations11,200
Based aircraft68
Sources: Airport[1] and FAA[2]

History edit

M. Graham Clark Field was originally developed as a private airport by the College of the Ozarks for use in their aviation science department, and was originally officially associated with the village of Point Lookout, Missouri, a small village on a bluff overlooking the White River Valley which was later completely bought out and overwhelmed by the development of the college. The airport identifier, PLK, was based on the name of the town officially associated with the facility under a federal grant through which the college originally developed the airport.

The airport was named after M. Graham Clark, the president of the college at the time the airport was originally constructed.

College of the Ozarks closed down its aviation science department in 2003. Shortly thereafter, the airport was donated by the college to Taney County so that the Branson and Hollister community would not lose its important general aviation airport.

A private entity had contracted with the college to provide commercial airline service to Clark Field, serving Branson, in the late 1990s, but the venture failed and the terminal building, fire department building, and associated ramp were turned over to the college. The airport currently does not have any scheduled commercial airline service. Since the opening of the newly developed Branson Airport and the construction of new terminal facilities at the Springfield-Branson National Airport there is no expectation of airline service at Clark Field.

Name confusion edit

The airport was named after a person, M. Graham Clark, and the donation agreement between the college and the county calls for the airport to always be named M. Graham Clark Field, though it is usually referred to as Clark Field, or simply as "Clark." The official Facilities Directory lists the airport under the name of the town it was originally officially associated with, Point Lookout, so some pilots will refer to the airport as "Point Lookout." The Kansas City Sectional Chart depicts the airport as "Clark–Taney County", but on two lines, so some pilots refer to it as "Clark County." Some local pilots refer to it as "Taney County." Some transient pilots associating the airport with the principal city of Branson refer to it as "Branson," despite the proximity of the newly developed Branson Airport about eight miles to the southeast. Most recently, there has been a proposal to officially rename the airport as "M. Graham Clark Branson Downtown Taney County Airport" as a marketing move to attract some of the low end corporate traffic from nearby Boone County Airport or the Branson Airport. Although the airport board has never adopted the proposal, many local pilots pushing for the change have been referring to the airport as "Branson Downtown" or simply "Downtown". The use of so many names for the same airport has also been known to cause radio confusion in dense traffic. It is not unusual for approaching traffic making an initial call to refer to the airport as "Clark Point Lookout Branson Downtown Taney County . . ." in an attempt to be specific, and use a shorter name on subsequent calls.

Facilities and aircraft edit

M. Graham Clark Downtown Airport covers an area of 40 acres (16 ha) at an elevation of 940 feet (287 m) above mean sea level. It has one runway designated 12/30 with an asphalt surface measuring 3,738 by 100 feet (1,139 x 30 m). A GPS Approach is published and the runway provides both Medium Intensity Runway Lights (MIRL) and Runway End Identifier Lights (REIL).

For the 12-month period ending December 31, 2011, the airport had 11,200 aircraft operations, an average of 30 per day: 96% general aviation, 4% air taxi, and <1% military. At that time there were 68 aircraft based at this airport: 78% single-engine, 13% multi-engine, 2% jet, and 7% helicopter.[2]

The FBO is operated by the Taney County Airport Board. Repair services are available from Branson Aircraft Repair, LLC. Helicopter charter, touring, and flight training are offered, as well.

General aviation traffic edit

Clark Field has at times been one of the busiest general aviation airports in the region. It was at one time ranked the fourth busiest airport by number of aircraft operations in the state of Missouri behind Lambert-St. Louis International Airport, Kansas City Downtown Airport, and Spirit of St. Louis Airport, outranking Kansas City International Airport and Springfield-Branson National Airport. The airport serves helicopter operations. Also, there is a substantial antique airplane collector on the field and the field is popular with other operators flying aircraft without radios. There is no control tower as it is an uncontrolled field. It is not uncommon for there to be several aircraft in the pattern at the same time.

Prevailing winds edit

The direction of the prevailing winds are typically from the north or from the southwest. The runway was constructed west-northwest and east-southeast due to the terrain, creating a prevailing crosswind. This "built-in crosswind" was considered a desired attribute when the airport was used to train pilots, allowing them to obtain extensive crosswind procedure training, although there were several relatively minor crosswind accidents.

2011 runway changes edit

Around March 10, 2011, the runway numbers at M. Graham Clark Field were changed from 11/29 to 12/30.[3]

Incidents edit

This airport was free of any fatal accident history for several decades, but there have been a few fatal accidents associated with the field in recent years, including:

  • A CitationJet (Cessna-525, or CJ1) crashed on approach to the airport in winter 1999. Approach Control had lost radar contact with the aircraft at 2,100 feet msl five miles from the airport. The crash occurred on a mountaintop about four miles west of the airport at about 1,100 feet msl "within 50 feet of the centerline of the instrument approach" but at an altitude several hundred feet below what was specified for that portion of the approach. There was significant public controversy associated with this accident. The aircraft was owned by the College of the Ozarks (which owned the airport at the time) and six employees and students of the college were killed. The pilot was also the airport manager and an administrator associated with the aviation science department of the college. Pilot fatigue was cited as a factor in the accident by the NTSB, possibly aggravated by toxicological factors and an alleged "feud" that the pilot was having with the FAA in the days leading up to the accident. It is thought [by whom?] that this accident was a factor in the decision by the college to phase out its aviation science department and donate the airport to the county.[4]
  • A Piper Cherokee Six (PA-32) based in Texas crashed in a ravine and burned, killing all five occupants, after a balked take-off that overran the east end of the field in 2004.[5]
  • A Piper PA-34 Seneca also based in Texas crashed and burned after departure a few miles from the field (thought to be attempting to return to the airport for unknown reasons) in low weather, killing all four occupants, in 2006.[6]
  • A homebuilt Tri-Q2 from Florida crashed shortly after departing the field in 2006. The cause was thought to be due to structural problems with the aircraft.[7]

Other incidents at the airport include:

  • On January 12, 2014, Southwest Airlines flight 4013 from Midway Airport in Chicago, a Boeing 737-700, landed at Clark Field (on Runway 12) apparently in error instead of at the nearby Branson Airport (on Runway 14). The runway at Clark Field is only 3,738 feet in length, more than 3,000 feet shorter than the runway at the intended airport.[8] The Boeing 737 carried 124 passengers and 5 crew members, and it was reported to have landed "safely and without incident". The aircraft was able to take off again the next day,[9] after all passenger seats were removed and the aircraft was fueled minimally for a nearby Southwest facility.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "M. Graham Clark Downtown Airport". Retrieved October 19, 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d e FAA Airport Form 5010 for PLK – M. Graham Clark Downtown PDF. Federal Aviation Administration. Effective October 17, 2013.
  3. ^ a b c . FAA Information Effective July 29, 2010. AirNav. Archived from the original on September 12, 2010.
  4. ^ "NTSB Identification: CHI00FA040". Accident Database & Synopses. National Transportation Safety Board. June 12, 2001. Retrieved January 13, 2014.
  5. ^ "NTSB Identification: CHI04FA205". NTSB. July 7, 2005. Retrieved January 13, 2014.
  6. ^ "NTSB Identification: CHI06FA094". NTSB. November 29, 2007. Retrieved January 13, 2014.
  7. ^ "NTSB Identification: CHI06LA268". NTSB. November 29, 2007. Retrieved January 13, 2014.
  8. ^ Martin, Grant (January 12, 2014). "Southwest Airlines Plane Lands At Wrong Airport, Almost Careens Off Cliff". Forbes. Retrieved January 13, 2014.
  9. ^ Welch, William M. (January 13, 2014). "Southwest suspends pilots after landing at wrong airport". USA Today. Retrieved January 13, 2014.

External links edit

  • M. Graham Clark Downtown Airport
  • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-08-19. Retrieved 2012-06-26. at Missouri DOT Airport Directory
  • Aerial image as of April 1996 from USGS The National Map
  • FAA Terminal Procedures for PLK, effective May 16, 2024
  • Resources for this airport:
    • FAA airport information for PLK
    • AirNav airport information for KPLK
    • ASN accident history for PLK
    • FlightAware airport information and live flight tracker
    • SkyVector aeronautical chart for KPLK

graham, clark, downtown, airport, iata, icao, kplk, county, owned, public, airport, taney, county, missouri, united, states, located, nautical, mile, south, central, business, district, branson, missouri, nautical, mile, northeast, point, lookout, missouri, ya. M Graham Clark Downtown Airport 1 2 IATA PLK ICAO KPLK FAA LID PLK is a county owned public use airport in Taney County Missouri United States 2 It is located one nautical mile 2 km south of the central business district of Branson Missouri 2 one nautical mile 2 km northeast of Point Lookout Missouri 3 and a few yards west of the old downtown area of Hollister Missouri It was formerly known as M Graham Clark Field Taney County Airport 3 M Graham Clark Downtown AirportAerial view June 2009IATA PLKICAO KPLKFAA LID PLKSummaryAirport typePublicOwner OperatorTaney County MissouriServesBranson HollisterLocationBranson MissouriElevation AMSL940 ft 287 mCoordinates36 37 33 N 093 13 44 W 36 62583 N 93 22889 W 36 62583 93 22889Website 1 MapPLKLocation of airport in MissouriShow map of MissouriPLKPLK the United States Show map of the United StatesRunwaysDirection Length Surface ft m 12 30 3 738 1 139 AsphaltStatistics 2011 Aircraft operations11 200Based aircraft68Sources Airport 1 and FAA 2 Contents 1 History 2 Name confusion 3 Facilities and aircraft 3 1 General aviation traffic 3 2 Prevailing winds 3 3 2011 runway changes 4 Incidents 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory editM Graham Clark Field was originally developed as a private airport by the College of the Ozarks for use in their aviation science department and was originally officially associated with the village of Point Lookout Missouri a small village on a bluff overlooking the White River Valley which was later completely bought out and overwhelmed by the development of the college The airport identifier PLK was based on the name of the town officially associated with the facility under a federal grant through which the college originally developed the airport The airport was named after M Graham Clark the president of the college at the time the airport was originally constructed College of the Ozarks closed down its aviation science department in 2003 Shortly thereafter the airport was donated by the college to Taney County so that the Branson and Hollister community would not lose its important general aviation airport A private entity had contracted with the college to provide commercial airline service to Clark Field serving Branson in the late 1990s but the venture failed and the terminal building fire department building and associated ramp were turned over to the college The airport currently does not have any scheduled commercial airline service Since the opening of the newly developed Branson Airport and the construction of new terminal facilities at the Springfield Branson National Airport there is no expectation of airline service at Clark Field Name confusion editThe airport was named after a person M Graham Clark and the donation agreement between the college and the county calls for the airport to always be named M Graham Clark Field though it is usually referred to as Clark Field or simply as Clark The official Facilities Directory lists the airport under the name of the town it was originally officially associated with Point Lookout so some pilots will refer to the airport as Point Lookout The Kansas City Sectional Chart depicts the airport as Clark Taney County but on two lines so some pilots refer to it as Clark County Some local pilots refer to it as Taney County Some transient pilots associating the airport with the principal city of Branson refer to it as Branson despite the proximity of the newly developed Branson Airport about eight miles to the southeast Most recently there has been a proposal to officially rename the airport as M Graham Clark Branson Downtown Taney County Airport as a marketing move to attract some of the low end corporate traffic from nearby Boone County Airport or the Branson Airport Although the airport board has never adopted the proposal many local pilots pushing for the change have been referring to the airport as Branson Downtown or simply Downtown The use of so many names for the same airport has also been known to cause radio confusion in dense traffic It is not unusual for approaching traffic making an initial call to refer to the airport as Clark Point Lookout Branson Downtown Taney County in an attempt to be specific and use a shorter name on subsequent calls Facilities and aircraft editM Graham Clark Downtown Airport covers an area of 40 acres 16 ha at an elevation of 940 feet 287 m above mean sea level It has one runway designated 12 30 with an asphalt surface measuring 3 738 by 100 feet 1 139 x 30 m A GPS Approach is published and the runway provides both Medium Intensity Runway Lights MIRL and Runway End Identifier Lights REIL For the 12 month period ending December 31 2011 the airport had 11 200 aircraft operations an average of 30 per day 96 general aviation 4 air taxi and lt 1 military At that time there were 68 aircraft based at this airport 78 single engine 13 multi engine 2 jet and 7 helicopter 2 The FBO is operated by the Taney County Airport Board Repair services are available from Branson Aircraft Repair LLC Helicopter charter touring and flight training are offered as well General aviation traffic edit Clark Field has at times been one of the busiest general aviation airports in the region It was at one time ranked the fourth busiest airport by number of aircraft operations in the state of Missouri behind Lambert St Louis International Airport Kansas City Downtown Airport and Spirit of St Louis Airport outranking Kansas City International Airport and Springfield Branson National Airport The airport serves helicopter operations Also there is a substantial antique airplane collector on the field and the field is popular with other operators flying aircraft without radios There is no control tower as it is an uncontrolled field It is not uncommon for there to be several aircraft in the pattern at the same time Prevailing winds edit The direction of the prevailing winds are typically from the north or from the southwest The runway was constructed west northwest and east southeast due to the terrain creating a prevailing crosswind This built in crosswind was considered a desired attribute when the airport was used to train pilots allowing them to obtain extensive crosswind procedure training although there were several relatively minor crosswind accidents 2011 runway changes edit Around March 10 2011 the runway numbers at M Graham Clark Field were changed from 11 29 to 12 30 3 Incidents editThis airport was free of any fatal accident history for several decades but there have been a few fatal accidents associated with the field in recent years including A CitationJet Cessna 525 or CJ1 crashed on approach to the airport in winter 1999 Approach Control had lost radar contact with the aircraft at 2 100 feet msl five miles from the airport The crash occurred on a mountaintop about four miles west of the airport at about 1 100 feet msl within 50 feet of the centerline of the instrument approach but at an altitude several hundred feet below what was specified for that portion of the approach There was significant public controversy associated with this accident The aircraft was owned by the College of the Ozarks which owned the airport at the time and six employees and students of the college were killed The pilot was also the airport manager and an administrator associated with the aviation science department of the college Pilot fatigue was cited as a factor in the accident by the NTSB possibly aggravated by toxicological factors and an alleged feud that the pilot was having with the FAA in the days leading up to the accident It is thought by whom that this accident was a factor in the decision by the college to phase out its aviation science department and donate the airport to the county 4 A Piper Cherokee Six PA 32 based in Texas crashed in a ravine and burned killing all five occupants after a balked take off that overran the east end of the field in 2004 5 A Piper PA 34 Seneca also based in Texas crashed and burned after departure a few miles from the field thought to be attempting to return to the airport for unknown reasons in low weather killing all four occupants in 2006 6 A homebuilt Tri Q2 from Florida crashed shortly after departing the field in 2006 The cause was thought to be due to structural problems with the aircraft 7 Other incidents at the airport include On January 12 2014 Southwest Airlines flight 4013 from Midway Airport in Chicago a Boeing 737 700 landed at Clark Field on Runway 12 apparently in error instead of at the nearby Branson Airport on Runway 14 The runway at Clark Field is only 3 738 feet in length more than 3 000 feet shorter than the runway at the intended airport 8 The Boeing 737 carried 124 passengers and 5 crew members and it was reported to have landed safely and without incident The aircraft was able to take off again the next day 9 after all passenger seats were removed and the aircraft was fueled minimally for a nearby Southwest facility See also editBoone County Airport Arkansas Branson Airport Branson West Airport List of airports in MissouriReferences edit a b M Graham Clark Downtown Airport Retrieved October 19 2013 a b c d e FAA Airport Form 5010 for PLK M Graham Clark Downtown PDF Federal Aviation Administration Effective October 17 2013 a b c KPLK M Graham Clark Taney County Airport Point Lookout Missouri FAA Information Effective July 29 2010 AirNav Archived from the original on September 12 2010 NTSB Identification CHI00FA040 Accident Database amp Synopses National Transportation Safety Board June 12 2001 Retrieved January 13 2014 NTSB Identification CHI04FA205 NTSB July 7 2005 Retrieved January 13 2014 NTSB Identification CHI06FA094 NTSB November 29 2007 Retrieved January 13 2014 NTSB Identification CHI06LA268 NTSB November 29 2007 Retrieved January 13 2014 Martin Grant January 12 2014 Southwest Airlines Plane Lands At Wrong Airport Almost Careens Off Cliff Forbes Retrieved January 13 2014 Welch William M January 13 2014 Southwest suspends pilots after landing at wrong airport USA Today Retrieved January 13 2014 External links editM Graham Clark Downtown Airport M Graham Clark Taney County PLK PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2012 08 19 Retrieved 2012 06 26 at Missouri DOT Airport Directory Aerial image as of April 1996 from USGS The National Map FAA Terminal Procedures for PLK effective May 16 2024 Resources for this airport FAA airport information for PLK AirNav airport information for KPLK ASN accident history for PLK FlightAware airport information and live flight tracker SkyVector aeronautical chart for KPLK Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title M Graham Clark Downtown Airport amp oldid 1174040587, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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