Mulhouse–Habsheim Airport

Mulhouse–Habsheim Airport
Aérodrome de Mulhouse-Habsheim
IATA: noneICAO: LFGB
Summary
Airport type Public
Location Habsheim, France
Elevation AMSL 787 ft / 240 m
Coordinates 47°44′17″N 007°25′56″E / 47.73806°N 7.43222°E / 47.73806; 7.43222 (Mulhouse–Habsheim Airport)Coordinates: 47°44′17″N 007°25′56″E / 47.73806°N 7.43222°E / 47.73806; 7.43222 (Mulhouse–Habsheim Airport)
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
02/20 1,120 3,675 Asphalt

Mulhouse–Habsheim Airport (ICAO: LFGB) is a small airport near the town of Habsheim in France. The airport is a former military base, and is now mainly used for light aircraft. The airport also houses the Aéro-Club des Trois Frontières, Aéro-Club du Haut-Rhin, Aéro-Club de Mulhouse.

Incidents & accidents

On 26 June 1988, Mulhouse–Habsheim Airport was the site of the crash of Air France Flight 296. It was the first ever crash of an Airbus A320 type aircraft. The aircraft was doing a low flypast over the airport as part of an air show, but crashed into trees at the northern end of the airport. Three people were killed, and the airliner destroyed.[1]

See also

References

  1. Accident description at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on 2007-02-03.


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