L.O. Simenstad Municipal Airport

L.O. Simenstad Municipal Airport (IATA: OEO[2], ICAO: KOEO, FAA LID: OEO) is a village owned public use airport located southeast of the central business district of Osceola, a village in Polk County, Wisconsin, United States.[1] It is included in the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2019–2023, in which it is categorized as a local general aviation facility.[3]

L.O. Simenstad Municipal Airport
Summary
Airport typePublic
OwnerVillage of Osceola
ServesOsceola, Wisconsin
Elevation AMSL906 ft / 276 m
Coordinates45°18′34″N 092°41′24″W
Map
OEO
Location of airport in Wisconsin, United States
OEO
OEO (the United States)
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
10/28 5,006 1,526 Asphalt
4/22 2,192 668 Turf
Statistics
Aircraft operations (2017)19,850
Based aircraft (2020)58

Facilities and aircraft

L.O. Simenstad Municipal Airport covers an area of 389 acres (157 ha) at an elevation of 906 feet (276 m) above mean sea level. It has two runways: 10/28 is 5,006 by 75 feet (1,526 x 23 m) with an asphalt surface, and approved GPS approaches, and 4/22 is 2,192 by 150 feet (668 x 46 m) with a turf surface.[1]

For the 12-month period ending August 18, 2017, the airport had 19,850 aircraft operations, an average of 54 per day: 93% general aviation, 4% air taxi and 3% military. In June 2020, there were 58 aircraft based at this airport: 48 single-engine, 2 multi-engine, 7 glider and 1 ultra-light.[1] The Red Wing Soaring Association is an active glider club based at Simenstad.[4]

gollark: Gold is supplied by a lens of the miner setup with some processing hooked to it. That dumps into the 28 or so storage caches.
gollark: Since I don't want to mine for those constantly, the machinery near the back grows redstone (and slime, string, cacti) and also produces several million wooden planks a day as byproduct. I don't know *what* to do with those.
gollark: I also wanted advanced computers (and tape drives and tapes) and turtles, so we need gold and redstone.
gollark: You see, this is designed to produce *infinite* computers. Glass and stone are easy. But computers need redstone.
gollark: It's about the right size.

References

  1. FAA Airport Master Record for OEO (Form 5010 PDF). Federal Aviation Administration. effective June 18, 2020.
  2. "Airline and Airport Code Search (OEO: Osceola / Municipal)". International Air Transport Association (IATA). Retrieved May 22, 2013.
  3. "NPIAS Report 2019-2023 Appendix A" (PDF). Federal Aviation Administration. October 3, 2018. Retrieved October 12, 2018.
  4. Red Wing Soaring Association Archived 2015-02-04 at the Wayback Machine


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