Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/ireland

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Weston Airport

General aviation facility near Dublin, Ireland

Weston Airport

Summary

General aviation facility near Dublin, Ireland

FieldValue
nameWeston Airport
nativenameAerfort Weston
imageLogo weston airport white bg.jpg
image-width250
image2View of Weston Airport from North.jpg
IATA
ICAOEIWT
typePublic
ownerPrivate investors
operatorWeston Airport Ltd.
city-servedDublin
locationLeixlip, County Kildare / Lucan, Dublin
elevation-f155
elevation-m47
timezoneGMT
utcUTC±00:00
summerIST
utcsUTC+01:00
coordinates
websitewestonairport.ie
metric-rwyy
r1-number07/25
r1-length-m924 + Stopway 457 = 1381
r1-length-f
r1-surfaceAsphalt
pushpin_mapDublin#Ireland
pushpin_labelEIWT
pushpin_map_captionLocation of Weston Airport, west of Dublin##Location of Weston Airport in Ireland
image_mapsize250
image_map_captionAirport diagram as of January 2016.
footnotesSource: Irish AIS

| image-width = 250 | city-served = Dublin | elevation-f = 155 | elevation-m = 47 | metric-rwy = y | r1-number = 07/25 | r1-length-m = 924 + Stopway 457 = 1381 | r1-length-f = | r1-surface = Asphalt

Weston Airport, also called Dublin Weston Airport, is a publicly licensed general aviation (GA) airport serving Dublin and its environs since the early 1930s. It is located, between Lucan in Dublin and Leixlip in County Kildare, approximately 8 NM west of Dublin city. Its traffic is primarily private and commercial flight training as well as business/executive travel. It is the only general aviation airport in the greater Dublin region, and is home to one of Ireland's two approved training organisations for ab-initio professional pilot training.

The runway lies across the border between counties Kildare and Dublin. The facility is located on the Dublin side of the line. The airport operator's mailing address is in Lucan.

History

Weston Ltd [[De Havilland Dragon Rapide]] on a charter flight from Weston at [[Liverpool Airport]] in 1949
Darby Kennedy in 1956

Weston Aerodrome was founded in 1931 (licensed circa 1937) by Darby Kennedy (1915-2016) who, from 1946, operated a de Havilland Dragon and several Dragon Rapide aircraft commercially from the Weston flying field, operated under the name Weston Ltd. The charter flights took the biplane airliners to airfields in the United Kingdom. The commercial flight operation ceased in the late 1950s, and Weston Ltd continued as a training provider for private and commercial licences. Darby Kennedy was chief instructor and also became chief pilot of Aer Lingus, Ireland's flag-carrier airline.

In 1988, Kennedy was presented with a crystal memento by then Irish president Patrick Hillery, at a ceremony to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the founding of the airfield. During the event, which was recorded by RTÉ television, President Hillery took to the air in a replica of the de Havilland DH84 Dragon "Iolar" (Eagle) which flew Aer Lingus's first ever flight, from Dublin (Baldonnel) to Bristol in 1936.

Also operated from the airfield was a flying school, Leinster Aero Club for private pilots with several de Havilland Tiger Moth trainer biplanes, an Auster 5J/1 Autocrat high-wing monoplane and from 1960 two Morane-Saulnier-Rallye four-seater low-winged aeroplanes. The airport was upgraded from a grass runway in the 1980s when a tarmac runway was laid. The main terminal was completed in 2005 along with the control tower and other services.

In January 2014, then Transport Minister Leo Varadkar launched a new Coast Guard Sikorsky S92 helicopter for the East Coast region at Weston Airport. The airport owner announced it was in talks with Kildare and Dublin councils and local groups about providing a walk-way and park.

The airport is used as a staging point for aircraft displaying in the annual Bray Air Display.

In late 2023, as part of a joint Revenue Customs and Garda Drugs and Organised Crime Bureau operation, €8m worth of heroin was seized from a private aircraft at the airport.

Ownership

The airport was acquired in 2000 and developed by Jim Mansfield. It was taken over by the National Asset Management Agency (NAMA) in 2011. In 2013, the airport was sold by NAMA to Brian Conneely and Co., who announced plans to "upgrade the radar system and buildings, with a focus on aviation education courses". Conneely and Co said they were hopeful the sale would "mark a turning point" in Irish aviation and said that they were "delighted" with the purchase due to its "proud tradition in Irish aviation".

In August 2021, it was announced that a group of investors, which included tech entrepreneur and aviation enthusiast John Collison, had bought a majority stake in Weston Airport. Final sale to this group was confirmed later in 2021 and the new co-owners subsequently applied for planning permission for additional upgrade works on the site.

Location and facilities

Aircraft at Weston Airport in 2003

The airport lies between Celbridge and Lucan, just off Exit 5 on the M4 motorway, on the R403 regional road. It is located on approximately 250 acre of land and incorporates about 9000 m2 of operations buildings, an air traffic control tower, and three large aircraft hangars.

Straddling the border between counties Dublin and Kildare, the airport lies predominantly within South Dublin County and is bordered to the north by the River Liffey and Leixlip Reservoir.

Irish aviation training infrastructure at the airport includes the National Flight Centre Pilot Academy (NFC), which maintains a fleet of Cessna 152, Cessna 172 and Beechcraft BE76 fixed wing aircraft, and Robinson 44 and Bell JetRanger helicopters. NFC also operates jet, fixed wing and helicopter simulators, and is both an Approved Training Organisation and an approved Air Operator.

The airport has also been headquarters to other training organisations, including Weston Ltd., Trim Flying Club, Leinster Flying Club, AIB Flying Club, and Garda Siochana (Irish police) Aviation Club.

References

References

  1. {{AIP_IE. EIWT. 3ac6fdfb-f8d1-4c26-a58e-176d9daff327. weston
  2. [https://itouchmap.com/latlong.html "Latitude & Longitude of a Point"] {{Webarchive. link. (2017-01-08 , itouchmap.com; accessed 8 May 2018.)
  3. "Darby Kennedy: A founding father of civil aviation in Ireland". The Irish Times.
  4. Merton Jones A.C., British Independent Airlines since 1946, Merseyside Aviation Society, 1977; {{ISBN. 0-902420-10-0.
  5. "Weston Aerodrome 50th Anniversary - Broadcast: 1988.NOV.28". RTÉ.
  6. "About Our Club".
  7. "Gulf airline Etihad Airways inks training deal with Conneely's Weston Airport".
  8. "Bray Air Display".
  9. (1 December 2023). "Airplane and €8m worth of drugs seized at airport in Dublin". RTÉ News.
  10. (8 January 2011). "Liquidation of firm blackest day in colourful career of controversial businessman". Irish Independent.
  11. (20 September 2011). "NAMA's Weston airport starting to turn around as buyer sought". [[Irish Independent]].
  12. (2013-02-21). "Weston Airport sold for €3.5m".
  13. (3 August 2021). "Stripe founder among group that bought Weston Airport".
  14. (27 April 2023). "John Collison co-owned Weston airport gets go-ahead for upgrade works". Irish Independent.
  15. Richard Bach, "I Shot Down the Red Baron, and So What" in "A Gift of Wings", Dell Reissue 1989, First edition 1974; Kindle pp. 23, 27 and 29 {{ISBN. 0-440-20432-1
  16. (2018). "In Weston Skies: A personal memoir of flying at Weston in the 1950s".
  17. "South Dublin County Council Dev Plan 2016-2022 Index Map".
  18. "National Flight Centre".
  19. "Flying In Ireland: Aircraft Owner Search".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Weston Airport — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report