Iqaluit Airport

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Iqaluit Airport
IATA: YFB - ICAO: CYFB
Summary
Airport type Public
Operator Government of Nunavut
Serves Iqaluit
Elevation AMSL 110 ft (34 m)
Coordinates 63°45′23″N, 068°33′21″W
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
17/35 8,600 2,621 Asphalt

Iqaluit Airport (IATA: YFBICAO: CYFB) serves Iqaluit, Nunavut, Canada and is located adjacent to the town and operated by the government of Nunavut. It hosts scheduled passenger service from Ottawa, Montreal, Rankin Inlet and Kuujjuaq on carriers such as First Air and Canadian North, as well as from smaller communities throughout eastern Nunavut.

Contents

  • 1 hangers/cargo terminals - First Air
  • 1 two storey terminal building
  • 1 main runway
  • three aprons

The main terminal has:

  • check-in desks
  • 3 gates
  • 1 baggage claim belt
  • Gift Shop
  • Travel Agent
  • Tourist Help Desk
  • Car Rental
  • Taxi Service/Rank
  • Baby/Parent Room
  • Disabled Access/Facilities

There are 30 short term parking spaces at the airport.

On June 1, 1996, Virgin Atlantic flight 7 from London to Los Angeles made an emergency landing at Iqaluit after a passenger had a heart attack. The landing was executed safely - the first Boeing 747 ever to attempt to land at Iqaluit - but one of the 747's engines hit a fuel pump on the tarmac as it was taxiing, causing serious damage to the aircraft and a potentially dangerous fuel spill. The 397 stranded passengers were evacuated on two Virgin Atlantic charter jets after spending 16 hours in a local curling rink, and taken to New York City to catch connecting flights to Los Angeles. The original aircraft had its engines repaired and left four days after the accident.[1]

There is a persistent but false rumour that Iqaluit Airport is one of the emergency landing sites for NASA's Space Shuttle, due to the length of its runway and its geographic location.[2] This can easily be disproved by noting that Iqaluit's runway is less than 9,000 feet long.

The Airbus A380, the world's largest passenger jet, conducted cold weather testing from Iqaluit Airport during February 2006 - its first North American visit. They were hoping to experience -25 °C (-13 °F) weather to determine the effects on cabin temperatures and engine performance. Nunavut authorities hope that the importance of this test will put Iqaluit on the map as a centre for cold-weather testing.[3]

In December of 2005 the Government of Nunavut announced that they would spend $40 million to repair the runway, build a new emergency services facility and a new terminal.[4]

  1. ^ News Report about Virgin Atlantic 747
  2. ^ List of Space Shuttle emergency landing sites at GlobalSecurity.org
  3. ^ CBC report
  4. ^ Nunatsiaq News


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