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Maastricht Aachen Airport

Maastricht Aachen Airport (IATA: MST, ICAO: EHBK) is a regional airport in Beek in Limburg, Netherlands, located 5 NM (9.3 km; 5.8 mi) northeast of Maastricht[2] and 15 NM (28 km; 17 mi) northwest of Aachen, Germany.[3] It is the second-largest hub for cargo flights in the Netherlands. As of 2016, the airport had a passenger throughput of 176,000 and handled 60,000 tons of cargo.[4]

Maastricht Aachen Airport
Summary
Airport typePublic
OperatorMaastricht Aachen Airport BV
ServesMaastricht, Netherlands and Aachen, Germany
LocationBeek, Limburg, Netherlands
Focus city forCorendon Dutch Airlines
Elevation AMSL375 ft / 114 m
Coordinates50°54′57″N 005°46′37″E / 50.91583°N 5.77694°E / 50.91583; 5.77694
Websitewww.maa.nl
Map
MST
Location of airport in Netherlands
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
03/21 2,750 9,022 Asphalt
Statistics (2021)
Passengers97,646
Cargo (tonnes)127,994

The Maastricht Upper Area Control Centre (MUAC) of the European Organisation for the Safety of Air Navigation (EUROCONTROL) is also located at the airport.

History

Pre-World War II

Plans for an airport in southern Limburg date back as far as 1919, with various locations being considered. Years of debate among various municipalities over the location and funding of the airport delayed its construction. In July 1939 the Limburg provincial government agreed to financially back the airport, however, the start of World War II meant the plans were put on hold once more.[5]

Advanced Landing Ground Y-44

 
IX Engineering Command constructing an advanced landing ground

After the allied invasion of Normandy, the USAAF Ninth Air Force, specifically the IX Engineer Command, was tasked with constructing temporary airfields close to the advancing front. The area around Maastricht was liberated in 1944. In October 1944, the advance headquarters of the XIX Tactical Air Command and the 84th and 303rd Fighter Wings were moved to Maastricht to keep up with the Ninth Army.[6]

Because of the proximity to the new headquarters, the decision was made to create a temporary airfield between the towns of Beek, Geulle and Ulestraten. Several orchards which had suffered damage from a tank battle were commandeered and cleared. Rubble from the nearby town of Geleen, which had been unintentionally bombed in 1942, was used to level the area.[7]

The runway was 5,565 feet (1,696 m)[8] and reinforced with pierced steel planks.

The field was built in less than 2 months and was operational on 22 March 1945,[9] and was designated Y-44.

The first unit to be based at the field was the 31st Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron, flying the F-6, a reconnaissance version of the P-51 Mustang. The unit arrived on 22 March 1945.[7][10]

As Nazi Germany was rapidly collapsing, the front was already well into Germany by the time the field was ready, and no direct combat sorties were operated from Y-44. 31st TRS was moved to Y-80 near Wiesbaden on 19 April 1945.[7][11]

Units operating at the field

After World War II

Authority over what was to become known as Beek airfield (vliegveld Beek), was officially transferred to the Dutch government on 1 August 1945. It was decided to keep it open rather than re-open the pre-war debate over the location of an airport in the Maastricht area. The first civilian aircraft landed on 26 September 1945 and were operated by the Regeeringsvliegdienst, a government service with the purpose of carrying government officials and other people with urgent business, because the war had left many roads and railroads heavily damaged. The service used six de Havilland Dragon Rapides made available by the British government.[15]

In 1946, the service was taken over by KLM, using DC-3 Dakotas.[16] However, as repairs to the Dutch infrastructure progressed, demand for the service dropped and it was stopped in 1949.[17] The first semi-permanent airport terminal was completed in 1947.[17] The runway was paved in 1949, and a second paved runway was completed in 1950.[17] In 1951, an agreement between the airport and the Dutch Air Force allowed for rapid expansion of the facilities.[18] Runway 04/22 was lengthened to 1,850 m (6,070 ft), and permanent runway lighting was installed in 1960.

1950s and 1960s

The late 1950s and early 1960s brought significant expansion in commercial operations at the airport. Operators included KLM, Airnautical, Skytours, Euravia, Tradair and Transair.[19] The airport was also used as an intermediate stop for services from London and Manchester to Switzerland, Austria, Italy and Yugoslavia.[20] A local airline based at the airport, Limburg Airways, had a contract with the International Herald Tribune for distributing the newspaper's European edition, which was printed in Paris. Limburg Airways was taken over by Martin's Air Charter (now Martinair) in 1962.[21]

A promotion campaign by the Dutch tourist board for the nearby town of Valkenburg aan de Geul, aimed at British tourists, was highly successful and brought services by Invicta Airlines, Britannia and Channel Airways.

Domestic travel picked up as well, and newly created NLM CityHopper started to operate a service between Maastricht and Amsterdam Schiphol in 1966. The service would continue after KLM acquired NLM in 1992, and would last until 2008. When it was cancelled, it was the last remaining domestic service in the Netherlands.[22]

An ILS system, which allows landings in poor weather, was built in 1967, for runway 22 only.

1970s

In 1973, the airport was expanded again to handle bigger aircraft. The main runway was lengthened to 2500 m (8,200 ft), taxiways were widened, and aprons were enlarged.[23] This mostly offset the negative effects of the 1973 oil crisis, passenger volume remained the same and cargo operations expanded.[24]

The international air traffic control area control centre for EUROCONTROL was built at the airport. It started operations on March 1, 1972.[25]

1980s

Around 1980, the airport changed its name to "Maastricht Airport". In 1983, the aging passenger terminal and air traffic control tower were replaced by new buildings[26] The new terminal was later expanded and is still in use as of 2010.

On 14 May 1985, Pope John Paul II held an open-air mass for 50,000 people at the airport, as part of his visit to the Netherlands.[27]

Plan for an east–west runway

In 1981, a development plan for the airport recommended constructing a 3,500m east–west runway to facilitate growth in cargo operations, particularly during the night hours.[28] The new runway would greatly reduce noise impact over the towns of Beek, Meerssen and the city of Maastricht. Although some night operations are allowed (including distribution of the European edition of The Wall Street Journal), runway length limits intercontinental operations.[29] The Dutch government initially approved plans for the runway in 1985,[30] however, the new runway would mean increased noise over other towns and parts of Belgium as well, and the final decision was delayed. As the new east–west runway would require substantial investment, it would only be profitable if night operations were permitted and increasingly the debate became focused on whether or not night flights should be allowed.[31] Successive cabinets could not reach a final decision, and in 1998, after some 25 years of debate and postponement, the plan was aborted altogether.[32]

1990–2009

In 1992, the Belgian town of Tongeren became shareholder of the airport. Two years later, the board of trade or chamber of commerce of the nearby German city of Aachen became shareholder. This interest eventually became prominent and in October 1994 the airport's name was changed to "Maastricht-Aachen Airport".[citation needed]

In July 2004, a 100% share in the airport was acquired by OmDV, a consortium of airport investment company Omniport and the construction company Dura Vermeer, making it the first fully privatised airport in the Netherlands.[33]

Substantial investments in the airport infrastructure have been made since the privatization. Between August and October 2005, the runway was resurfaced and renamed to 03/21 (from 04/22) to compensate for changes in the earth's magnetic field. The airport originally had two runways; the second (shorter, 1,080 m (3,540 ft)) runway (07/25) was closed and removed to make room for a new cargo terminal and additional aircraft maintenance facilities. Construction of the new facilities started in April 2008.

On 7 May 2005, Air Force One carrying US president George W. Bush landed at the airport.[34] Bush visited the Netherlands American Cemetery in nearby Margraten the next day.[35]

The instrument landing system (ILS) for runway 21 was upgraded to category III in 2008, which allows landings in very low visibility conditions.[citation needed] Amsterdam Airport Schiphol is the only other airport in the Netherlands that has category III ILS.[citation needed]

2010s

In March 2011, the airport was certified to handle the upcoming Boeing 747-8, as two of the airport's major airlines—Cargolux and AirBridge Cargo—have placed orders for this aircraft.[36]

Ryanair announced on July 3, 2012, that Maastricht will become a new Ryanair base from December 2012, the first on Dutch soil, with one Boeing 737-800 being based at the airport and three new routes being launched: Dublin, London-Stansted and Treviso.

In late October 2012, start-up Dutch airline, Maastricht Airlines, announced plans to base six Fokker 50 aircraft at the airport, initially operating to Berlin, Munich, and Amsterdam, before adding Copenhagen, Paris Charles de Gaulle and Southend in 2014. This did not happen and the company declared bankruptcy.[37]

Also in 2013, the airport was helped by the province with a 4.5 million euro contribution. The airport was very close to bankruptcy during this period. Later on, in March 2014, the same province of Limburg believed that closure was never an option. They decided that they would like to take over the airport.[38]

In December 2013, a spokesperson of the airport confirmed the closure of the Ryanair base from March 2014, entailing the ending of the Bergamo, Brive, Dublin, London-Stansted and Málaga flights.[39][40]

In 2017, Corendon Dutch Airlines announced that they would open a base on the airport with one aircraft based in summer 2018. In late 2018 renovations started on the passenger terminal. Also, freight carriers as Emirates SkyCargo and Saudia Cargo found their way to the airport, while Turkish Airlines Cargo, Silk Way Airlines and Sky Gates Airlines further expanded their operations in Maastricht. Meanwhile, both Corendon Dutch Airlines and Ryanair announced that they would expand their number destinations. Corendon Dutch Airlines even based a second aircraft during the summer season.

Aircraft movements

The number of aircraft movements decreased significantly between 2005 and 2007 compared to previous years due to relocation of a major Dutch flight school, the Nationale Luchtvaartschool, nowadays better known as CAE Oxford Aviation Academy. The flight school, which was originally based at this airport, moved all flight operations to Évora Airport in Portugal. In the summer of 2007, flight training at the airport resumed as the Stella Aviation Academy moved into the facilities previously used by the NLS.

In 2009, there were a total of 40,621 aircraft movements, up 13.9% from 2008.[41] In 2008, there were a total of 35,668 aircraft movements, up 83.4% from 2007.[42] In 2007, there were a total of 19,454 aircraft movements, up 35% from 2006.[43]

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights to and from Maastricht/Aachen:

Cargo

Statistics

Annual passenger traffic at MST airport. See Wikidata query.
Year Passengers Cargo
2006 270,086 54,000
2007 134,579   58,000  
2008 231,824   55,000  
2009 135,696   53,000  
2010 226,635   62,000  
2011 333,910   65,000  
2012 305,439   52,000  
2013 429,545   54,000  
2014 241,473   57,000  
2015 195,180   57,000  
2016 176,562   60,000  
2017 167,544   87,000  
2018 274,986   125,000  
2019 430,030   109,000  
2020 81,000   136,000  
2021 98,000   128,000  
2022[58] 266,000   108,000  

Source: Statistics Netherlands[59]

Passenger evolution

Cargo evolution

Other facilities

Jet Center - Maastricht Aachen Airport (MAA) provides handling for general aviation aircraft. Jet Center operates from a hangar situated on the East side of the airport.

Maas Aviation has operated an aircraft painting facility at the airport since the late 1980s. In 2017 it doubled its capacity when it opened a second adjacent paint shop hangar.

The Maastricht Upper Area Control Centre (MUAC) of the European Organisation for the Safety of Air Navigation (EUROCONTROL) is located next to the airport.

Samco Aircraft Maintenance B.V. operates from a hangar on the east side of the airport and supports a wide range of aircraft maintenance activities. Building work on a second adjacent hangar was completed in 2018.

The Aviation Competence Centre (ACC) is a training organization for aircraft mechanics and is located at the airport.

Facilities

Construction of a hotel adjacent to the passenger terminal building started in 2019. The GR8 hotel opened 2021. [60]

Ground transportation

Car

The airport is located along motorway A2, exit 50. Taxis are available at the airport.

Bus

There is bus service (line 30), operated by Arriva, running between Sittard and Maastricht. This line also covers transport between the Maastricht railway station and the airport.

KLM operates a bus connection service to Amsterdam Airport Schiphol. Tickets to use this service are an add-on to a KLM flight ticket.

Bicycle

The airport is situated along the Sittard-Maastricht fast cycling route, which is designed to encourage more people to cycle.

Weather Station

Not far from the airport lies an official weather station of the KNMI (Dutch meteorological institute) The weather station was put into use in 1906.

Weather extremes

On 25 July 2019 a temperature of 39.6°C was recorded.

On 29 June 2021, 87.2mm of precipitation was recorded.

On 25 January 1990 a wind gust of 34m/s was recorded.

On 14 February 1929 a temperature of -21.4°C was recorded.

These are the official heat, precipitation, wind & cold records at this weather station.

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ Luchtvaart; maandcijfers Nederlandse luchthavens van nationaal belang
  2. ^ EHBK – MAASTRICHT/Maastricht Aachen. AIP from AIS the Netherlands, effective 29 December 2022
  3. ^ Distance and heading from Aachen (50°46'N 006°06'E) to EHBK (50°54'57"N 005°46'37"E).
  4. ^ "MAA website, Press release". Maastricht Aachen Airport. Retrieved 2011-05-27.[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ Vleugels 1987, p. 12-13
  6. ^ McKillop, Jack. . Archived from the original on 2003-10-31. Retrieved 2010-02-03.
  7. ^ a b c Vleugels 1987, p. 14
  8. ^ Little, David. . Archived from the original on 2019-06-09. Retrieved 2010-02-03.
  9. ^ Vleugels 1987, p. 15
  10. ^ a b McKillop, Jack. . Archived from the original on 2013-06-02. Retrieved 2010-02-03.
  11. ^ a b c d e McKillop, Jack. . Archived from the original on 2010-03-07. Retrieved 2010-02-03.
  12. ^ McKillop, Jack. . Archived from the original on 2010-03-07. Retrieved 2010-02-03.
  13. ^ Air Force Historical Research Agency. . Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2010-02-03.
  14. ^ a b McKillop, Jack. . Archived from the original on 2010-03-07. Retrieved 2010-02-03.
  15. ^ Vleugels 1987, p. 18
  16. ^ Vleugels 1987, p. 22
  17. ^ a b c Vleugels 1987, p. 28
  18. ^ Vleugels 1987, p. 32
  19. ^ Vleugels 1987, p. 36
  20. ^ Vleugels 1987, p. 43
  21. ^ Vleugels 1987, p. 45
  22. ^ Het Nieuwsblad. . Archived from the original on 2011-06-11. Retrieved 2010-02-06.
  23. ^ Vleugels 1987, p. 60
  24. ^ Vleugels 1987, p. 61
  25. ^ Eurocontrol. . Archived from the original on 2010-03-16. Retrieved 2010-02-06.
  26. ^ Vleugels 1987, p. 85
  27. ^ De Limburger. . Archived from the original on 2011-07-17. Retrieved 2010-02-08.
  28. ^ Vleugels 1987, p. 77
  29. ^ Vleugels 1987, p. 78
  30. ^ Vleugels 1987, p. 95
  31. ^ De Volkskrant. "1996-10-03: Jorritsma en De Boer onverzoenlijk over nachtvluchten op Beek". Retrieved 2010-02-11.
  32. ^ De Volkskrant. "1998-11-19: Oost-westbaan vliegveld Beek niet langer hoogstnoodzakelijk". Retrieved 2010-02-11.
  33. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-05-07. Retrieved 2008-04-11.
  34. ^ Elsevier.nl. . Archived from the original on 2011-06-11. Retrieved 2010-05-31.
  35. ^ De Volkskrant. "Bezoek Bush beëindigd na herdenking in Margraten". Retrieved 2010-05-31.
  36. ^ "MAA Website News (dutch)". Retrieved 2011-05-27.[permanent dead link]
  37. ^ "Maastricht Airlines failliet verklaard". nu.nl. 2013-06-04. Retrieved 20 August 2016.
  38. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-04-02. Retrieved 2015-03-05.
  39. ^ "Budget airline Ryanair to close Maastricht base - DutchNews.nl". dutchnews.nl. 17 December 2013. Retrieved 20 August 2016.
  40. ^ . bookryanair.com. Archived from the original on 2017-09-03. Retrieved 20 August 2016.
  41. ^ LVNL (Air Traffic Control the Netherlands). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-24. Retrieved 2010-06-01.
  42. ^ LVNL (Air Traffic Control the Netherlands). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-11-26. Retrieved 2009-10-29.
  43. ^ Air Traffic Control the Netherlands (2008-04-11). Jaarverslag 2007 (Yearly Report 2007).
  44. ^ a b https://www.corendon.com/. Retrieved 1 April 2022. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  45. ^ "Book cheap flights using Fare Finder | Ryanair".
  46. ^ "Ryanair unveils summer network expansion". routesonline.com. 2021-03-17.
  47. ^ "Rayanir website". Ryanair.com.[not specific enough to verify]
  48. ^ http://www.goedkoopvliegenclub.nl/
  49. ^ "Nu bevestigd: Ryanair start ook lijndienst tussen Maastricht en Zadar". luchtvaartnieuws.nl. 2021-03-30.
  50. ^ Woerkom, Klaas-Jan van (11 December 2017). "Emirates start vrachtvluchten vanaf Maastricht Aachen Airport".
  51. ^ . Archived from the original on 2020-01-27. Retrieved 2020-01-01.
  52. ^ "Flexport turns to air cargo charters as it faces a robust market". 3 February 2022.
  53. ^ qrcargo.com - Schedules retrieved 20 July 2020
  54. ^ rj-cargo.com - Destinations retrieved 20 July 2020
  55. ^ saudiacargo.com - Schedules retrieved 20 July 2020
  56. ^ turkishcargo.com - Flight Schedule retrieved 16 November 2019
  57. ^ "Maastricht routes and destinations". retrieved 25 December 2021
  58. ^ https://luchtvaartnieuws.nl/nieuws/categorie/3/airports/maastricht-aachen-airport-in-2022-meer-passagiers-minder-vracht
  59. ^ "Dutch Statistics Office Data on Maastricht Aachen Airport". www.cbs.nl.
  60. ^ "Gr8 Hotels opent volgend jaar hotel op Maastricht Airport - Maastricht Aachen Airport". 27 August 2019.

Bibliography

  •   This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency.
  • Vleugels, M (1987). Maastricht Airport 1919-1947-1987, De Limburger.

External links

  Media related to Maastricht Aachen Airport at Wikimedia Commons

maastricht, aachen, airport, aachen, airport, redirects, here, minor, airport, serving, aachen, merzbrück, airport, iata, icao, ehbk, regional, airport, beek, limburg, netherlands, located, northeast, maastricht, northwest, aachen, germany, second, largest, ca. Aachen Airport redirects here For the minor airport serving Aachen see Merzbruck Airport Maastricht Aachen Airport IATA MST ICAO EHBK is a regional airport in Beek in Limburg Netherlands located 5 NM 9 3 km 5 8 mi northeast of Maastricht 2 and 15 NM 28 km 17 mi northwest of Aachen Germany 3 It is the second largest hub for cargo flights in the Netherlands As of 2016 the airport had a passenger throughput of 176 000 and handled 60 000 tons of cargo 4 Maastricht Aachen AirportIATA MSTICAO EHBKSummaryAirport typePublicOperatorMaastricht Aachen Airport BVServesMaastricht Netherlands and Aachen GermanyLocationBeek Limburg NetherlandsFocus city forCorendon Dutch AirlinesElevation AMSL375 ft 114 mCoordinates50 54 57 N 005 46 37 E 50 91583 N 5 77694 E 50 91583 5 77694Websitewww maa nlMapMSTLocation of airport in NetherlandsRunwaysDirection Length Surfacem ft03 21 2 750 9 022 AsphaltStatistics 2021 Passengers97 646Cargo tonnes 127 994Source Statistics Netherlands 1 The Maastricht Upper Area Control Centre MUAC of the European Organisation for the Safety of Air Navigation EUROCONTROL is also located at the airport Contents 1 History 1 1 Pre World War II 1 2 Advanced Landing Ground Y 44 1 2 1 Units operating at the field 1 3 After World War II 1 4 1950s and 1960s 1 5 1970s 1 6 1980s 1 6 1 Plan for an east west runway 1 7 1990 2009 1 8 2010s 2 Aircraft movements 3 Airlines and destinations 3 1 Passenger 3 2 Cargo 4 Statistics 4 1 Passenger evolution 4 2 Cargo evolution 5 Other facilities 6 Facilities 7 Ground transportation 7 1 Car 7 2 Bus 7 3 Bicycle 8 Weather Station 8 1 Weather extremes 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Bibliography 11 External linksHistory EditPre World War II Edit Plans for an airport in southern Limburg date back as far as 1919 with various locations being considered Years of debate among various municipalities over the location and funding of the airport delayed its construction In July 1939 the Limburg provincial government agreed to financially back the airport however the start of World War II meant the plans were put on hold once more 5 Advanced Landing Ground Y 44 Edit IX Engineering Command constructing an advanced landing ground After the allied invasion of Normandy the USAAF Ninth Air Force specifically the IX Engineer Command was tasked with constructing temporary airfields close to the advancing front The area around Maastricht was liberated in 1944 In October 1944 the advance headquarters of the XIX Tactical Air Command and the 84th and 303rd Fighter Wings were moved to Maastricht to keep up with the Ninth Army 6 Because of the proximity to the new headquarters the decision was made to create a temporary airfield between the towns of Beek Geulle and Ulestraten Several orchards which had suffered damage from a tank battle were commandeered and cleared Rubble from the nearby town of Geleen which had been unintentionally bombed in 1942 was used to level the area 7 The runway was 5 565 feet 1 696 m 8 and reinforced with pierced steel planks The field was built in less than 2 months and was operational on 22 March 1945 9 and was designated Y 44 The first unit to be based at the field was the 31st Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron flying the F 6 a reconnaissance version of the P 51 Mustang The unit arrived on 22 March 1945 7 10 As Nazi Germany was rapidly collapsing the front was already well into Germany by the time the field was ready and no direct combat sorties were operated from Y 44 31st TRS was moved to Y 80 near Wiesbaden on 19 April 1945 7 11 Units operating at the field Edit 31st Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron F 6 Mustang 22 March 1945 10 19 April 1945 11 39th Photographic Reconnaissance Squadron F 5 Lightning 2 April 1945 11 20 April 1945 11 67th Tactical Reconnaissance Group 155th Photographic Reconnaissance Squadron Night F 3 4 April 1945 11 10 July 1945 12 13 387th Bombardment Group Medium 556 557 558 and 559th Squadrons B 26 Marauder 4 May 1945 14 30 May 1945 14 After World War II Edit Authority over what was to become known as Beek airfield vliegveld Beek was officially transferred to the Dutch government on 1 August 1945 It was decided to keep it open rather than re open the pre war debate over the location of an airport in the Maastricht area The first civilian aircraft landed on 26 September 1945 and were operated by the Regeeringsvliegdienst a government service with the purpose of carrying government officials and other people with urgent business because the war had left many roads and railroads heavily damaged The service used six de Havilland Dragon Rapides made available by the British government 15 In 1946 the service was taken over by KLM using DC 3 Dakotas 16 However as repairs to the Dutch infrastructure progressed demand for the service dropped and it was stopped in 1949 17 The first semi permanent airport terminal was completed in 1947 17 The runway was paved in 1949 and a second paved runway was completed in 1950 17 In 1951 an agreement between the airport and the Dutch Air Force allowed for rapid expansion of the facilities 18 Runway 04 22 was lengthened to 1 850 m 6 070 ft and permanent runway lighting was installed in 1960 1950s and 1960s Edit The late 1950s and early 1960s brought significant expansion in commercial operations at the airport Operators included KLM Airnautical Skytours Euravia Tradair and Transair 19 The airport was also used as an intermediate stop for services from London and Manchester to Switzerland Austria Italy and Yugoslavia 20 A local airline based at the airport Limburg Airways had a contract with the International Herald Tribune for distributing the newspaper s European edition which was printed in Paris Limburg Airways was taken over by Martin s Air Charter now Martinair in 1962 21 A promotion campaign by the Dutch tourist board for the nearby town of Valkenburg aan de Geul aimed at British tourists was highly successful and brought services by Invicta Airlines Britannia and Channel Airways Domestic travel picked up as well and newly created NLM CityHopper started to operate a service between Maastricht and Amsterdam Schiphol in 1966 The service would continue after KLM acquired NLM in 1992 and would last until 2008 When it was cancelled it was the last remaining domestic service in the Netherlands 22 An ILS system which allows landings in poor weather was built in 1967 for runway 22 only 1970s Edit In 1973 the airport was expanded again to handle bigger aircraft The main runway was lengthened to 2500 m 8 200 ft taxiways were widened and aprons were enlarged 23 This mostly offset the negative effects of the 1973 oil crisis passenger volume remained the same and cargo operations expanded 24 The international air traffic control area control centre for EUROCONTROL was built at the airport It started operations on March 1 1972 25 1980s Edit Around 1980 the airport changed its name to Maastricht Airport In 1983 the aging passenger terminal and air traffic control tower were replaced by new buildings 26 The new terminal was later expanded and is still in use as of 2010 On 14 May 1985 Pope John Paul II held an open air mass for 50 000 people at the airport as part of his visit to the Netherlands 27 Plan for an east west runway Edit In 1981 a development plan for the airport recommended constructing a 3 500m east west runway to facilitate growth in cargo operations particularly during the night hours 28 The new runway would greatly reduce noise impact over the towns of Beek Meerssen and the city of Maastricht Although some night operations are allowed including distribution of the European edition of The Wall Street Journal runway length limits intercontinental operations 29 The Dutch government initially approved plans for the runway in 1985 30 however the new runway would mean increased noise over other towns and parts of Belgium as well and the final decision was delayed As the new east west runway would require substantial investment it would only be profitable if night operations were permitted and increasingly the debate became focused on whether or not night flights should be allowed 31 Successive cabinets could not reach a final decision and in 1998 after some 25 years of debate and postponement the plan was aborted altogether 32 1990 2009 Edit In 1992 the Belgian town of Tongeren became shareholder of the airport Two years later the board of trade or chamber of commerce of the nearby German city of Aachen became shareholder This interest eventually became prominent and in October 1994 the airport s name was changed to Maastricht Aachen Airport citation needed In July 2004 a 100 share in the airport was acquired by OmDV a consortium of airport investment company Omniport and the construction company Dura Vermeer making it the first fully privatised airport in the Netherlands 33 Substantial investments in the airport infrastructure have been made since the privatization Between August and October 2005 the runway was resurfaced and renamed to 03 21 from 04 22 to compensate for changes in the earth s magnetic field The airport originally had two runways the second shorter 1 080 m 3 540 ft runway 07 25 was closed and removed to make room for a new cargo terminal and additional aircraft maintenance facilities Construction of the new facilities started in April 2008 On 7 May 2005 Air Force One carrying US president George W Bush landed at the airport 34 Bush visited the Netherlands American Cemetery in nearby Margraten the next day 35 The instrument landing system ILS for runway 21 was upgraded to category III in 2008 which allows landings in very low visibility conditions citation needed Amsterdam Airport Schiphol is the only other airport in the Netherlands that has category III ILS citation needed 2010s Edit In March 2011 the airport was certified to handle the upcoming Boeing 747 8 as two of the airport s major airlines Cargolux and AirBridge Cargo have placed orders for this aircraft 36 Ryanair announced on July 3 2012 that Maastricht will become a new Ryanair base from December 2012 the first on Dutch soil with one Boeing 737 800 being based at the airport and three new routes being launched Dublin London Stansted and Treviso In late October 2012 start up Dutch airline Maastricht Airlines announced plans to base six Fokker 50 aircraft at the airport initially operating to Berlin Munich and Amsterdam before adding Copenhagen Paris Charles de Gaulle and Southend in 2014 This did not happen and the company declared bankruptcy 37 Also in 2013 the airport was helped by the province with a 4 5 million euro contribution The airport was very close to bankruptcy during this period Later on in March 2014 the same province of Limburg believed that closure was never an option They decided that they would like to take over the airport 38 In December 2013 a spokesperson of the airport confirmed the closure of the Ryanair base from March 2014 entailing the ending of the Bergamo Brive Dublin London Stansted and Malaga flights 39 40 In 2017 Corendon Dutch Airlines announced that they would open a base on the airport with one aircraft based in summer 2018 In late 2018 renovations started on the passenger terminal Also freight carriers as Emirates SkyCargo and Saudia Cargo found their way to the airport while Turkish Airlines Cargo Silk Way Airlines and Sky Gates Airlines further expanded their operations in Maastricht Meanwhile both Corendon Dutch Airlines and Ryanair announced that they would expand their number destinations Corendon Dutch Airlines even based a second aircraft during the summer season Aircraft movements EditThe number of aircraft movements decreased significantly between 2005 and 2007 compared to previous years due to relocation of a major Dutch flight school the Nationale Luchtvaartschool nowadays better known as CAE Oxford Aviation Academy The flight school which was originally based at this airport moved all flight operations to Evora Airport in Portugal In the summer of 2007 flight training at the airport resumed as the Stella Aviation Academy moved into the facilities previously used by the NLS In 2009 there were a total of 40 621 aircraft movements up 13 9 from 2008 41 In 2008 there were a total of 35 668 aircraft movements up 83 4 from 2007 42 In 2007 there were a total of 19 454 aircraft movements up 35 from 2006 43 Airlines and destinations EditPassenger Edit The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights to and from Maastricht Aachen AirlinesDestinationsAlMasria Universal Airlines 44 Seasonal charter HurghadaBH Air 44 Seasonal charter BurgasCorendon AirlinesAntalya Seasonal BodrumCorendon Dutch AirlinesSeasonal Gran Canaria Heraklion Kos Malaga Rhodes ZakynthosRyanair 45 Alicante Barcelona 46 Bari London Stansted Porto 47 Seasonal Krakow begins 2 July 2023 48 Zadar 49 Cargo Edit AirlinesDestinationsEmirates SkyCargo 50 Dubai Al Maktoum Nairobi Jomo Kenyatta New York JFK Columbus RickenbackerEthiopian Cargo 51 Addis Ababa Guangzhou New York JFK ZhengzhouLongtail Aviation 52 Dubai Al Maktoum Ho Chi Minh City Hong Kong New York JFKQatar Airways Cargo 53 Atlanta Basel Mulhouse Chicago O Hare Doha Lyon Oslo Panama City Tocumen Paris Charles de Gaulle ViennaRoyal Jordanian Cargo 54 Amman Queen Alia LarnacaSaudia Cargo 55 Dammam Istanbul Jeddah RiyadhTurkish Cargo 56 Accra Basel Mulhouse Bogota Chicago O Hare Entebbe Izmir Istanbul Kuwait City London Stansted Miami Nairobi Jomo Kenyatta Oslo Riyadh Toronto Pearson WillemstadVietnam Airlines 57 Hanoi Ho Chi Minh CityStatistics EditAnnual passenger traffic at MST airport See Wikidata query Year Passengers Cargo2006 270 086 54 0002007 134 579 58 000 2008 231 824 55 000 2009 135 696 53 000 2010 226 635 62 000 2011 333 910 65 000 2012 305 439 52 000 2013 429 545 54 000 2014 241 473 57 000 2015 195 180 57 000 2016 176 562 60 000 2017 167 544 87 000 2018 274 986 125 000 2019 430 030 109 000 2020 81 000 136 000 2021 98 000 128 000 2022 58 266 000 108 000 Source Statistics Netherlands 59 Passenger evolution Edit Cargo evolution EditOther facilities EditJet Center Maastricht Aachen Airport MAA provides handling for general aviation aircraft Jet Center operates from a hangar situated on the East side of the airport Maas Aviation has operated an aircraft painting facility at the airport since the late 1980s In 2017 it doubled its capacity when it opened a second adjacent paint shop hangar The Maastricht Upper Area Control Centre MUAC of the European Organisation for the Safety of Air Navigation EUROCONTROL is located next to the airport Samco Aircraft Maintenance B V operates from a hangar on the east side of the airport and supports a wide range of aircraft maintenance activities Building work on a second adjacent hangar was completed in 2018 The Aviation Competence Centre ACC is a training organization for aircraft mechanics and is located at the airport Facilities EditConstruction of a hotel adjacent to the passenger terminal building started in 2019 The GR8 hotel opened 2021 60 Ground transportation EditCar Edit The airport is located along motorway A2 exit 50 Taxis are available at the airport Bus Edit There is bus service line 30 operated by Arriva running between Sittard and Maastricht This line also covers transport between the Maastricht railway station and the airport KLM operates a bus connection service to Amsterdam Airport Schiphol Tickets to use this service are an add on to a KLM flight ticket Bicycle Edit The airport is situated along the Sittard Maastricht fast cycling route which is designed to encourage more people to cycle Weather Station EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Not far from the airport lies an official weather station of the KNMI Dutch meteorological institute The weather station was put into use in 1906 Weather extremes Edit On 25 July 2019 a temperature of 39 6 C was recorded On 29 June 2021 87 2mm of precipitation was recorded On 25 January 1990 a wind gust of 34m s was recorded On 14 February 1929 a temperature of 21 4 C was recorded These are the official heat precipitation wind amp cold records at this weather station See also EditAdvanced Landing GroundReferences EditCitations Edit Luchtvaart maandcijfers Nederlandse luchthavens van nationaal belang EHBK MAASTRICHT Maastricht Aachen AIP from AIS the Netherlands effective 29 December 2022 Distance and heading from Aachen 50 46 N 006 06 E to EHBK 50 54 57 N 005 46 37 E MAA website Press release Maastricht Aachen Airport Retrieved 2011 05 27 permanent dead link Vleugels 1987 p 12 13 McKillop Jack USAAF Chronology October 1944 Archived from the original on 2003 10 31 Retrieved 2010 02 03 a b c Vleugels 1987 p 14 Little David IX Engineer Command Archived from the original on 2019 06 09 Retrieved 2010 02 03 Vleugels 1987 p 15 a b McKillop Jack USAAAF Chronology March 1945 Archived from the original on 2013 06 02 Retrieved 2010 02 03 a b c d e McKillop Jack USAAF Chronology April 1945 Archived from the original on 2010 03 07 Retrieved 2010 02 03 McKillop Jack USAAF Chronology July 1945 Archived from the original on 2010 03 07 Retrieved 2010 02 03 Air Force Historical Research Agency 45 Reconnaissance Factsheet Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2010 02 03 a b McKillop Jack USAAF Chronology May 1945 Archived from the original on 2010 03 07 Retrieved 2010 02 03 Vleugels 1987 p 18 Vleugels 1987 p 22 a b c Vleugels 1987 p 28 Vleugels 1987 p 32 Vleugels 1987 p 36 Vleugels 1987 p 43 Vleugels 1987 p 45 Het Nieuwsblad KLM vliegt niet meer naar Amsterdam Archived from the original on 2011 06 11 Retrieved 2010 02 06 Vleugels 1987 p 60 Vleugels 1987 p 61 Eurocontrol Eurocontrol MUAC About Us Archived from the original on 2010 03 16 Retrieved 2010 02 06 Vleugels 1987 p 85 De Limburger Toen en nu 14 Mei 1985 Archived from the original on 2011 07 17 Retrieved 2010 02 08 Vleugels 1987 p 77 Vleugels 1987 p 78 Vleugels 1987 p 95 De Volkskrant 1996 10 03 Jorritsma en De Boer onverzoenlijk over nachtvluchten op Beek Retrieved 2010 02 11 De Volkskrant 1998 11 19 Oost westbaan vliegveld Beek niet langer hoogstnoodzakelijk Retrieved 2010 02 11 MAA website Shareholders page Archived from the original on 2008 05 07 Retrieved 2008 04 11 Elsevier nl Amerikaanse president aangekomen in Nederland Archived from the original on 2011 06 11 Retrieved 2010 05 31 De Volkskrant Bezoek Bush beeindigd na herdenking in Margraten Retrieved 2010 05 31 MAA Website News dutch Retrieved 2011 05 27 permanent dead link Maastricht Airlines failliet verklaard nu nl 2013 06 04 Retrieved 20 August 2016 GS Maastricht Aachen Airport overnemen Archived from the original on 2015 04 02 Retrieved 2015 03 05 Budget airline Ryanair to close Maastricht base DutchNews nl dutchnews nl 17 December 2013 Retrieved 20 August 2016 Ryanair com bookryanair com Archived from the original on 2017 09 03 Retrieved 20 August 2016 LVNL Air Traffic Control the Netherlands Jaarverslag 2009 Yearly Report 2009 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 24 Retrieved 2010 06 01 LVNL Air Traffic Control the Netherlands Jaarverslag 2008 Yearly Report 2008 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2010 11 26 Retrieved 2009 10 29 Air Traffic Control the Netherlands 2008 04 11 Jaarverslag 2007 Yearly Report 2007 a b https www corendon com Retrieved 1 April 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Book cheap flights using Fare Finder Ryanair Ryanair unveils summer network expansion routesonline com 2021 03 17 Rayanir website Ryanair com not specific enough to verify http www goedkoopvliegenclub nl Nu bevestigd Ryanair start ook lijndienst tussen Maastricht en Zadar luchtvaartnieuws nl 2021 03 30 Woerkom Klaas Jan van 11 December 2017 Emirates start vrachtvluchten vanaf Maastricht Aachen Airport Maastricht Aachen Airport Presents Expansion Plans Archived from the original on 2020 01 27 Retrieved 2020 01 01 Flexport turns to air cargo charters as it faces a robust market 3 February 2022 qrcargo com Schedules retrieved 20 July 2020 rj cargo com Destinations retrieved 20 July 2020 saudiacargo com Schedules retrieved 20 July 2020 turkishcargo com Flight Schedule retrieved 16 November 2019 Maastricht routes and destinations retrieved 25 December 2021 https luchtvaartnieuws nl nieuws categorie 3 airports maastricht aachen airport in 2022 meer passagiers minder vracht Dutch Statistics Office Data on Maastricht Aachen Airport www cbs nl Gr8 Hotels opent volgend jaar hotel op Maastricht Airport Maastricht Aachen Airport 27 August 2019 Bibliography Edit This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency Vleugels M 1987 Maastricht Airport 1919 1947 1987 De Limburger External links Edit Media related to Maastricht Aachen Airport at Wikimedia Commons Official website Current weather for EHBK at NOAA NWS Accident history for MST at Aviation Safety NetworkPortals Netherlands Aviation World War II Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maastricht Aachen Airport amp oldid 1133397835, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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