Clinton Municipal Airport (Iowa)

Clinton Municipal Airport (IATA: CWI, ICAO: KCWI, FAA LID: CWI) is seven miles southwest of Clinton, in Clinton County, Iowa.[1] The FAA's National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems (2017-2021) categorizes it as a general aviation airport.[2]

Clinton Municipal Airport
USGS aerial image, 1994 (North is to the right)
Summary
Airport typePublic
OwnerCity of Clinton
ServesClinton, Iowa
Elevation AMSL708 ft / 216 m
Coordinates41°49′52″N 090°19′45″W
Websitewww.clintonairport.us
Map
CWI
CWI
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
3/21 5,204 1,586 Asphalt
14/32 4,201 1,280 Asphalt
Statistics
Aircraft operations (2015)15,400
Based aircraft (2017)40

Clinton had scheduled airline flights from 1951-52 until 1975: Braniff until 1955, then Ozark.

Facilities

Clinton Municipal Airport, January 2011

Clinton Municipal Airport covers 556 acres (225 ha) at an elevation of 708 feet (216 m). It has two asphalt runways: 3/21 is 5,204 by 100 feet (1,586 x 30 m) and 14/32 is 4,201 by 100 feet (1,280 x 30 m).[1]

In the year ending September 10, 2015 the airport had 15,400 aircraft operations, average 42 per day: 95% general aviation, 3% military and 2% air taxi. In April 2017, 40 aircraft were based at the airport: 30 single-engine, 3 multi-engine, 1 jet and 6 ultralight.[1]

Other Uses

The airport is the site of the annual Cessna 150 and Cessna 152 fly-in, which began in 2001. The fly-in is open to owners, pilots and enthusiasts who share a common interest in those types of airplanes.[3]

gollark: Are you sure it wasn't just a LyricTech™ one? Does your monitoring system notice if one utterly stops sending data?
gollark: It says theirs are working fine too.
gollark: GTech™ facilities are all operating at 106% efficiency, I'll check the HTech™ IRC monitoring system/
gollark: We use supertask executor devices.
gollark: GTech™ beams are, however, not Turing machines.

References

  1. FAA Airport Master Record for CWI (Form 5010 PDF), effective Apr 27, 2017.
  2. FAA National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems: 2009-2013. Federal Aviation Administration. Published 1 October 2008.
  3. http://www.cessna150152flyin.org/
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.