Cleveland Burke Lakefront Airport

Coordinates: 41°31′03″N 81°41′00″W / 41.51750°N 81.68333°W / 41.51750; -81.68333

Cleveland Burke Lakefront Airport

Cleveland Burke Lakefront Airport control tower
IATA: BKLICAO: KBKLFAA LID: BKL
Summary
Airport type Public
Owner City of Cleveland
Operator Department of Port Control
Serves Cleveland, Ohio
Elevation AMSL 583 ft / 178 m
Website http://www.burkeairport.com/
Map
BKL
BKL

Location of airport in Ohio/United States

Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
6L/24R 6,198 1,889 Asphalt
6R/24L 5,197 1,584 Asphalt
Statistics (2011)
Aircraft operations 64,358
Based aircraft 31
Sources: FAA[1] & airport website[2]

Cleveland Burke Lakefront Airport (IATA: BKL, ICAO: KBKL, FAA LID: BKL) is a public airport situated on the shore of Lake Erie, in the northeast part of downtown Cleveland, in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, United States.[1] It classified as a general aviation airport and is an FAA designated reliever to Cleveland Hopkins International Airport (CLE), which is Greater Cleveland's primary airport. In 2008, based on FAA data, Burke Lakefront was the fourth busiest airport in the state of Ohio (after, in order, Cleveland Hopkins, Port Columbus International and Akron-Canton, up from 7th in 2007). It is named after former Cleveland mayor and U.S. senator Thomas A. Burke.

The airport is owned and operated by the city of Cleveland, which also operates Hopkins. It serves a growing number of corporate jets and air taxi services. Burke handled 20,618 air taxi operations in 2005, and 23,370 in 2006. BKL handled 18,595 air taxi operations in the first ten months of 2007. Burke Lakefront handles approximately 87,000 operations per year (average of 2000 to 2006). (60,013 for the first ten months of 2007). The airport is frequently used by NFL, MLB and NBA team charter flights due to its proximity to FirstEnergy Stadium (Cleveland Browns), Progressive Field (Cleveland Indians) and Quicken Loans Arena (Cleveland Cavaliers).

History

Originally envisioned in 1927 as a part of a plan for Cleveland's lakefront, a lakefront airport to include "landing places for land and amphibious planes," was included as part of Cleveland's "Official Lakefront Development Plan" in 1946 announced by then City Manager William R. Hopkins (namesake of Cleveland's other, primary airport).

Cleveland Burke Lakefront Airport (named for then Cleveland mayor Thomas A. Burke) opened in 1947 as the United States' first downtown airport and as its first municipally owned-and-operated airport. Designed to serve as a supplemental airfield for Cleveland Hopkins International Airport, it originally featured a 2,000-foot dirt runway and a small operations facility and hangar. A federal grant in 1950 from the Federal Airport Act permitted the installation of a 5,200-foot hard-surface runway in 1957.

A terminal, control tower, and passenger concourses were constructed between 1957 and 1968. In the 1970s, the airport expanded with new buildings, a new control tower, an additional runway and Aviation High School (which has since closed). The main terminal of the airport was renovated in 1993 to handle airline and air charter service. In 1998, the larger runway was rehabilitated and an instrument landing system was installed, allowing planes to land in poor weather.

Airlines and destinations

The airline Destination One briefly provided scheduled charter service between BKL and airports near the downtowns of Detroit and Cincinnati, and to Hilton Head, SC. However, this service was short-lived. Wright Airlines was based at BKL in the 1970s and 1980s, before declaring bankruptcy. In 1979, Midway Airlines operated service from BKL to MDW in Chicago, before moving their operations to Hopkins. In September 2015, Cincinnati based airline Ultimate Air Shuttle announced twice daily service to Cincinnati-Lunken.

Passenger

AirlinesDestinations
Ultimate Air Shuttle Cincinnati–Lunken

Cargo

AirlinesDestinations
AirNet Express Columbus–Rickenbacker
Central Air Southwest Dayton, Hamilton, Kalamazoo, Ypsilanti

Events

The airport was the site of the annual Grand Prix of Cleveland, last held in 2007, a Champ Car race which required the airport to be briefly shut down. Burke Lakefront Airport was the only airport in the country to host such a major car race which required careful maintenance of the runways in order to keep them safe for cars at high speeds.

Every Labor Day weekend, the airport hosts the annual Cleveland National Air Show attended by 60,000 to 100,000 visitors.[3]

On the evening of Thursday, October 25, 2012 President Barack Obama held a rally on the tarmac in front of Air Force Two for the 2012 Presidential election. He was greeted by a crowd of over 12,000 according to various Cleveland news outlets.[4][5]

Facilities and aircraft

Facilities

Cleveland Burke Lakefront Airport's terminal

Cleveland Burke Lakefront Airport covers an area of 450 acres (180 ha) which contains two asphalt paved runways: 6L/24R measuring 6,198 x 150 ft (1,889 x 46 m) and 6R/24L measuring 5,197 x 100 ft (1,584 x 30 m).[1] The airfield is fully capable of handling large jets including, 737s, 757s, and A320s along with the smaller general aviation aircraft operations.

The airport has two fixed-base operators on the grounds.

In 2005, the airport had 96,658 aircraft operations, an average of 264 per day: 76% general aviation, 24% air taxi, 1% military and <1% scheduled commercial.[6]

There are four flight schools located on the grounds of Burke Lakefront. These schools are, The Premier Flight Academy, T & G Flying Club, Inc., Top Gun Flight Training, and Precision Helicopters.

The International Women's Air & Space Museum is located throughout the terminal at BKL.[7]

Facilities at KBKL
Inside the Control Tower at KBKL
Control Tower and Employee Parking at KBKL

Aircraft

As of 2007, there are 74 aircraft based at this airport. These aircraft include 38 single-engine aircraft, 13 multi-engine aircraft, 13 helicopters and 10 jets. In percent form 51.3% of the based aircraft are single-engine, 17.5% are multi-engine, 17.5% helicopter and 13.5% jet.[1]

Incidents

See also

References

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