Picton Aerodrome
41°20′41″S 173°57′29″E / 41.3447°S 173.9580°E / -41.3447; 173.9580
Direction | Length | Surface | |
---|---|---|---|
m | ft | ||
18/36 | 840 | 2,755 | Bitumen |
Picton Aerodrome (IATA: PCN, ICAO: NZPN) is a Non-Certificated Aerodrome located at Koromiko 4 NM (7.4 km; 4.6 mi) south of Picton township in the Marlborough District of the South Island in New Zealand. Sounds Air has 5 flights per day to Wellington. The Marlborough Sounds Airpark is located nearby offering 16 private hangars adjacent to the main runway with remote control access for the owners to park their aircraft.[1]
History
On 2 January 1986, seven people died when a Cessna aircraft crashed on takeoff near Picton. This was an engine failure in the climb after takeoff and unrelated to the Airport itself. In another accident on 29 January 1996, five died when a Cessna Caravan crashed on approach to Picton. A Coroner's inquest found that the en-route accident could have been prevented had the Caravan been able to fly IFR, as happens now.[2]
Airlines and destinations
Airlines | Destinations |
---|---|
Sounds Air | Wellington |
Operational information
1. Severe turbulence and windshear during moderate wind conditions. Extreme care should be exercised with low powered aircraft.
2. To comply with noise abatement requirements, no landings or run-ups permitted within 100m of northern and southern boundaries.
3. Frequent scheduled (passenger) air transport operations. Pilots transiting or joining advise intentions on 123.0 MHz prior to entering the Koromiko Valley.
4. Landings and take-offs prohibited while aircraft are parked outside terminal building.
5. Parking available along western boundary at northern end.
6. Sounds Air aircraft may use right hand circuit due to local wind condition.[3]
See also
Sources
- NZAIP Volume 4 AD
- AIP New Zealand (PDF)
References
- ^ Beacon Hill Design Ltd. "Sounds Air Park | Residential airpark development located at Picton Airport in Marlborough, New Zealand". soundsairpark.com. Retrieved 9 February 2014.
- ^ "History of NZ plane crashes". Stuff. Retrieved 9 February 2014.
- ^ "Welcome to AIP New Zealand | AIP New Zealand". www.aip.net.nz. Retrieved 6 August 2024.
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