Childress Municipal Airport

Childress Municipal Airport (IATA: CDS, ICAO: KCDS, FAA LID: CDS) is a public use airport located four nautical miles (5 mi, 7 km) west of the central business district of Childress, a city in Childress County, Texas, United States. The airport is owned by the City of Childress.[1]

Childress Municipal Airport

(former Childress Army Airfield)
Summary
Airport typePublic
OwnerCity of Childress
ServesChildress, Texas
Elevation AMSL1,954 ft / 596 m
Coordinates34°26′02″N 100°17′17″W
Map
CDS
Location of airport in Texas
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
18/36 5,949 1,813 Asphalt
4/22 4,425 1,349 Asphalt
Statistics (2009)
Aircraft operations3,040
Based aircraft15

History

The airport was opened in October 1942 as Childress Army Airfield and was used by the United States Army Air Forces as a training base.

Childress AAF operated as a bombardier-training school under the Central Flying Training Command. It occupied an area of 2,474 acres (10.01 km2). Construction of the field was announced on 2 May 1942, and began immediately thereafter. After the field was closed on December 21, 1945, it was donated to the city and transformed into a municipal airport.[2]

Facilities and aircraft

Childress Municipal Airport covers an area of 2,500 acres (1,012 ha) at an elevation of 1,954 feet (596 m) above mean sea level. It has two asphalt paved runways: 18/36 is 5,949 by 75 feet (1,813 x 23 m) and 4/22 is 4,425 by 60 feet (1,349 x 18 m).[1]

For the 12-month period ending July 27, 2009, the airport had 3,040 aircraft operations, an average of 253 per month: 99% general aviation and 1% military. At that time there were 15 aircraft based at this airport: 80% single-engine, 7% helicopter, and 13% ultralight.[1]

gollark: Maths is good, though - my maths set has a really good teacher and we do (well, did when school was running) interesting and challenging stuff a lot of the time without repeating the same topic over and over again.
gollark: English is awful because we mostly overanalyze literature and write essays and stuff, but we did writing one time and that was fun.
gollark: A lot of the chemistry and physics stuff we do at school is... somewhat interesting at first, but we end up going over it again and again and doing endless worksheets for some reason, which is not very interesting.
gollark: They might actually be actively negative in some areas, since for quite a lot of people being forced to learn the boring stuff they don't care about will make them ignore the interesting bits.
gollark: Personally I figure that schools are wildly inefficient at actually transmitting knowledge and skills anyway, so meh.

References

  1. FAA Airport Master Record for CDS (Form 5010 PDF). Federal Aviation Administration. Effective May 31, 2012.
  2. Shaw, Frederick J. (2004), Locating Air Force Base Sites History’s Legacy, Air Force History and Museums Program, United States Air Force, Washington DC, 2004.
  • "Childress Municipal (CDS)" (PDF). from Texas DOT Airport Directory
  • Aerial image as of March 1997 from USGS The National Map
  • FAA Terminal Procedures for CDS, effective August 13, 2020
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