Barra Airport

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Barra Airport
Gaelic: Port-adhair Bharraigh
Code IATA: BRR, ICAO: EGPR
County Inverness-shire
Island Barra
Public
Operator Highlands and Islands Airports Limited
Location NF69590587
57°1’30"N, 7°26’51"W
Runway(s) 2,620 feet (Sand)
2,230 feet (Sand)
2,776 feet (Sand)
Website Barra Airport

Barra Airport ((IATA: BRR, ICAO: EGPR) (also known as Barra Eoligarry Airport) is a short-runway airport (or STOLport) laid out in the wide shallow bay of Traigh Mhòr at the northern tip of the island of Barra in the Outer Hebrides, and part of Inverness-shire. The airport is unique, being the only one in the world where scheduled flights use a tidal beach as the runway.[1] The airport is operated by Highlands and Islands Airports Limited, which owns most of the regional airports in mainland Scotland and the outlying islands.

Barra Airport opened in 1936. Its only destination is Glasgow.[2]


Infrastructure

The beach is set out with three runways in a triangle, marked by permanent wooden poles at their ends, in directions 07/25, 11/29, 15/33. This almost always allows the Twin Otters that serve the airport to land into the wind. At high tide these runways are under the sea: flight times vary with the tide. Emergency flights occasionally operate at night from the airport, with vehicle lights used to illuminate the runway and reflective strips laid on to the beach.[3]

Barra Airport also has a CAA Ordinary Licence (Number P792) that allows flights for the public transport of passengers or for flying instruction as authorised by the licensee (Highlands & Islands Airports Limited). The aerodrome is not licensed for night use.[4]

Trivia

  • The beach is also popular with visitors and cockle pickers, who are asked to observe the windsock to see if the airport is in operation.
  • In 2011, Barra Airport was voted No.1 in the world's top airport approaches by a poll conducted by PrivateFly.com.[5] The previous year, Barra took 10th place.

Pictures

Outside links

References

  • Calderwood, Roy: Times subject to Tides - The Story of Barra Airport (Kea Publishing, 1999) ISBN 978-0-9518958-3-2