Palmietfontein Airport
Palmietfontein Airport | |||||||||||||||||||
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IATA: none – ICAO: none | |||||||||||||||||||
Summary | |||||||||||||||||||
Location | Johannesburg, South Africa | ||||||||||||||||||
Opened | 1940s | ||||||||||||||||||
Closed | 1950s | ||||||||||||||||||
Elevation AMSL | 5,107 ft / 1,557 m | ||||||||||||||||||
Runways | |||||||||||||||||||
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Palmietfontein Airport was an airport situated to the south of Johannesburg, South Africa, in the mid-1940s to early 1950s.
Coordinates: 26°20′12″S 28°08′48″E / 26.33667°S 28.14667°E
History
Palmietfontein Airport was a wartime air force base which was converted to a temporary airport to serve Johannesburg whilst the new airport, Jan Smuts Airport (now OR Tambo International Airport), was being built. The airport serving Johannesburg at the time, Rand Airport, was unable to accommodate the size of aircraft to be operated on a new service to Great Britain. In 1948, South African Airways moved its terminal to Palmietfontein Airport.
Several historical flights terminated at Palmietfontein Airport. A Qantas Airways Avro Lancastrian completed an unprecedented flight from Sydney's Kingsford Smith Airport in Australia to Palmietfontein, landing on 20 November 1948 at 15h15, and having been in the air a total of 41 hours and 52 minutes at an average speed of 210 mph (180 kn; 340 km/h). En-route stops were made at Perth, Cocos Islands and Mauritius. The objective, to establish viable air links between South Africa and Australia, had been accomplished. The world’s first passenger jet service took place on 3 May 1952 when a BOAC de Havilland Comet 1 landed at Palmietfontein on a flight from the UK.[1]
Airport layout
There were three runways, the relative positions of which formed a triangle. Runway 17/35 was the longest, being 6,000 ft long (1,800 m) and 180 ft wide (55 m). Runway 04/22 was 4,500 ft in length (1,400 m) and runway 13/31 was 4,950 ft long (1,510 m). Both 17/35 and 04/22 were tarred; 13/31 was grass. The apron and control tower were situated to the west of runway 04/22. The airport elevation was given as 5,107 ft amsl (above mean sea level) (1,557 m). The information is derived from an old map and airport layout diagram courtesy of E. Du Plessis.[2][3]
Aircraft types that operated to and from Palmietfontein
- Douglas DC-3
- Lockheed Lodestar
- Lockheed Constellation
- de Havilland Comet
- Avro Lancastrian
- Handley Page Hermes[4]
Accidents and Incidents
Accidents at the airport
- On 5 January 1948, a Lockheed 18-08-01 Lodestar, ZS-ASW, was damaged beyond repair when it struck a water drain after running off the runway during the landing rollout.[5]
Aircraft bound to or from Palmietfontein
- On 15 May 1948, a Douglas C-49K (DC-3) ZS-BWY, was en route to Palmietfontein from Stamford Hill Airport, Durban, when it crashed into a hill in bad weather with the loss of all 13 on board.[6]
- On 15 September 1952, a South African Airways Douglas C-47A-30-DL(DC-3) ZS-AVI with 19 occupants was written off when they landed at Carolina after becoming lost on a flight from Livingstone, Zambia to Palmietfontein. The landing occurred at night and the strip was unlighted. There were no fatalities.[7]
Palmietfontein today
Palmietfontein was transformed into a motor racing circuit for the 1956 Rand Grand Prix, which was won by Peter Whitehead.[8] The township of Thokoza was eventually established on the site, although parts of the original runway are still visible on Google Earth to this day.
References
- ↑ "Huge Crowd To Greet Comet On Rand". The Star. Johannesburg Public Library. 3 May 1952.
- ↑ http://www.flickr.com/photos/8270787@N07/3603573583/
- ↑ "Map of Palmietfontein.". flikr.com. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
- ↑ "Handley-Page Hermes G-ALDI on its publicity flight to Africa". littlewhitebull.com. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
- ↑ "accident record". Retrieved 19 February 2016.
- ↑ "accident record". Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
- ↑ "accident record". Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
- ↑ Galpin, Darren. "Palmietfontein". GEL Motorsport Information Page. Retrieved 24 April 2013.