Montréal-Mirabel International Airport
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Montreal-Mirabel International Airport Aéroport international Montréal-Mirabel Montreal International (Mirabel) Airport |
|||
|---|---|---|---|
| IATA: YMX – ICAO: CYMX | |||
| Summary | |||
| Airport type | Public | ||
| Owner | Transport Canada[1] | ||
| Operator | Aéroports de Montréal | ||
| Serves | Montreal, Quebec | ||
| Location | Mirabel, Quebec | ||
| Elevation AMSL | 270 ft / 82 m | ||
| Coordinates | |||
| Website | |||
| Runways | |||
| Direction | Length | Surface | |
| ft | m | ||
| 06/24 | 12,000 | 3,658 | Concrete |
| Statistics (2007) | |||
| Aircraft Movements | 26,227 | ||
| Sources: Canada Flight Supplement[2] Statistics from Transport Canada.[3] |
|||
Montreal-Mirabel International Airport, (or Montreal International (Mirabel) Airport) (IATA: YMX, ICAO: CYMX) originally called Montreal International Airport and widely known simply as Mirabel is an airport located in Mirabel, Quebec, near Montreal and was opened 4 October 1975. Currently it is the second largest airport in the world in terms of area, only surpassed by the King Fahd International Airport.[citation needed] The predominant role of the airport is cargo flights but it is also home to MEDEVACs[4] and general aviation[5][2] flights as well as being a manufacturing base for Bombardier Aerospace, where final assembly of regional jet (CRJ700 and CRJ900) aircraft is conducted.
It was intended to replace the existing Dorval Airport (now Montreal-Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport) as the eastern air gateway to Canada; from 1975 to 1997, all international flights to/from Montreal were required to use Mirabel. However, Mirabel's distant location and lack of transport links, as well as Montreal's economic decline relative to Toronto, made it unpopular with airlines and travelers, so Dorval was not closed as originally planned. Eventually, Mirabel was relegated to the simple role of a cargo airport. Initially a source of pride, the airport eventually became an embarrassment widely regarded in Canada as being a boondoggle and a white elephant.
The airport is classifed as an airport of entry by NAV CANADA and is staffed by the Canada Border Services Agency. CBSA officers at this airport currently can handle general aviation aircraft only with no more than 15 passengers.[2]
Technically speaking, it is still the only airport in Canada with sufficient right-of-way that can be expanded to accommodate 50 million passengers per year, though a lack of traffic meant that Mirabel was never expanded beyond its first phase. It is the only non-capital airport with fewer than 200,000 passengers a year to be part of the National Airports System.
Contents |
[edit] Development
| This section does not cite any references or sources. (February 2007) Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. |
The 1960s saw Montreal experience a tremendous economic boom. Massive construction projects, including the Montreal Metro coupled with the hosting of Expo 67 brought the city international status. More and more visitors were arriving to the city, especially by airplane, though not always by choice. The federal government required that European airlines make Montreal their only Canadian destination. This resulted in 15–20% annual growth in passenger traffic at the city's Dorval Airport. Optimistic about the city's future and its continuing ability to attract more and more visitors, government officials decided to build a new airport that would be more than able to absorb increased passenger traffic well into the 21st century.
The Canadian Ministry of Transport studied five possible sites for Montreal's new airport: Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu (50 km to the southeast), Vaudreuil (40 km to the west), Joliette (70km to the north), St-Amable (30 km to the northeast), and St. Scholastique (60 km to the northwest).
The federal government proposed that the airport should be located at Vaudreuil. This location was well connected by existing road and rail routes, as well as being close enough to serve the population of the city; furthermore it could serve as the gateway to Ottawa as well as Montreal. Quebec Premier Robert Bourassa, who had a frosty relationship with Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, reportedly did not want such an important project to be placed so close to the Ontario border. The Bourassa government preferred that the new airport be situated in Drummondville (100 km to the east).
[edit] Expropriation
In March 1969, the federal as well as provincial governments reached a compromise to locate at the St. Scholastique site, and proposals were drawn up to expropriate 97,000 acres (392 km²), an area larger than the entire city of Montreal. It is served only by a long road link via Autoroute 15 and Autoroute 50. An additional link via Autoroute 13 was planned but never completed. Also planned but not finished was the connection of Autoroute 50 to the Ottawa/Gatineau area.
The federal government expropriation resulted in making Mirabel the world's largest airport by property area. (King Fahd International Airport in Saudi Arabia later surpassed Mirabel as the world's largest airport by property area, a record it still retains). This attracted the ire of local residents who were forced to move. The airport's operations zone, which encompassed what was eventually built plus expansion room, amounted to only 17,000 acres (69 km²), or about 19% of the total area of the airport. The federal government planned to use the excess land as a noise buffer and as an industrial development zone that was never started. The people of St. Scholastique protested vehemently against the expropriation of their land. Nevertheless, construction started in June 1970 under the auspices of BANAIM, a government organization formed to build the airport.
High-speed rail transit (the system was to be capable of speeds from 60 to 75 mph (100 to 120 km/h) for the Montreal-Mirabel run), initially to be called TRRAMM (Transport Rapide Régional Aéroportuaire Montréal-Mirabel), was intended to be completed at a later date. However, it never got beyond the drawing board. The TRRAMM system was also intended to eventually be expanded to other parts of the Montreal region. The major stumbling block for the TRRAMM project was funding. The federal, provincial, and municipal governments never managed to find enough cash to fund the highly ambitious and expensive rapid transit project. Thus, Mirabel was forced to cope with an inadequate road system and non-existent rail transit, supplemented only by express buses run by Société de transport de Montréal (Montreal Transit Corporation).
[edit] Operational History
Montreal International Airport opened for business on October 4, 1975, in time for the 1976 Summer Olympics. In the rush to get the airport open in time for the Olympics, it was decided to transfer flights to Mirabel in two stages. International flights would be transferred immediately, while domestic and transborder flights would continue to be served by Dorval airport until 1982.
[edit] Later years
The federal government predicted that Dorval would be completely saturated by 1985 as part of its justification for building Mirabel. They also projected that 20 million passengers would be passing through Montreal's airports annually, with 17 million through Mirabel. That claim never materialized, for by 1991 Mirabel and Dorval handled a total of 8 million passengers and 112,000 tons of cargo annually, while Toronto was handling 18.5 million passengers and 312,000 tons of cargo. Mirabel alone never managed to exceed 3 million passengers per year in its existence as a passenger airport. (Dorval, now renamed Montreal-Pierre Trudeau, recently completed a $716 million expansion plan that enables the terminal to have a capacity of 20 million passengers per year, and further improvements that started in 2007 would allow it to handle 26 million travellers.)
After 1976, the airport began to decline in importance due to the increasing use in the 1980s of longer-range jets that did not need to refuel in Montreal before crossing the Atlantic. This trend, commenced during the airport's planning stages, coupled with Montreal's decline as Canada's leading business centre in favour of Toronto, dramatically reduced the amount of projected air traffic into Dorval. The result was that a second airport was no longer needed.
To ensure the airport's survival, all international flights for Montreal were banned from Dorval from 1975 to 1997. This created resentment among Montrealers who were forced to travel far out of town for their flights, and to take long bus rides for connections from domestic to international flights. Many international airlines, faced with the stark economic reality of operating two Canadian points of entry, opted to overfly Montreal by landing in Toronto instead with its better domestic and US connections.
No legislation similar to the Wright Amendment was enacted that would force airlines to use Mirabel instead of Dorval, due to public pressure in support of Dorval. However, Dorval's continued existence made Mirabel comparatively expensive and unattractive to airlines and travelers alike (Dorval was only 20 minutes away from the city core, while a taxi ride to Mirabel was $55 in 1990s dollars). Supporters of making Mirabel the sole international airport of Montreal pointed out that it had the capacity to be expanded significantly to meeting growing demand, unlike Dorval. They also noted that Dorval could be closed and its land be developed for prime real estate, the profits which could go towards improving access to Mirabel. Combined with Montreal's decline in comparison with Toronto and the failure of passenger numbers to grow at the rates expected, Mirabel became a pariah airport in Canada, with only Air Transat holding out until the very end. Even the large resort hotel known as Chateau Aeroport-Mirabel, built at the same time as the airport and located directly within it, was forced to permanently close in 2002 as a result of air traffic and passenger decline.
The initial location of Mirabel was supposed to be a selling point, not only because of expansion room, but as the afforded buffer would significantly reduce noise pollution in urban areas. However, advances in engine technology have significantly reduced aircraft noise. Inner city airports such as Dallas Love Field and San Diego International Airport are examples of successful inner-city airports that live with city-dwellers around them.
One resident whose farm was expropriated was interviewed in the late 1990s by Maclean's. He was particularly critical of the federal government for not closing Dorval as well as failing to recognize Mirabel's potential, saying that his land was "sacrificed to save the city".
[edit] Today
Today, Montreal-Mirabel International Airport is used almost exclusively for cargo flights, with passenger operations having ceased on October 31, 2004, twenty-nine years after the airport's opening and many years of limited, primarily charter service. Bombardier Aerospace launches newly constructed units from its factory at Mirabel, and Bell Helicopter operates a commercial helicopter facility at Mirabel.
With very little or, later, no airline service, and with many empty spaces inside its terminal, Mirabel has been the setting of several movies, TV series, and commercials for many years. The movie The Terminal features the mezzanine overlooking the immigration desks and the baggage carousels directly behind them, the tarmac and the main terminal entrance (with a digitally added New York skyline reflection). All other terminal scenes were shot elsewhere.
In 2006, I-Parks Creative Industries, a French firm that specializes in the creation of urban tourist attractions, and Oger International SA, the global engineering company owned by the family of slain former Lebanese prime minister and entrepreneur Rafik Hariri, entered into an agreement to turn Mirabel into a theme park. The proposed concept of the park is based on the theme of water and outer space.[6][7] As of February, 2008, negotiations, market research, and technical assessments are ongoing, and construction has not started. [8]
In December 2006, in a move he called "correcting a historical injustice," Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced the return of 4,450 hectares of farmland expropriated to build Mirabel airport. About 125 farmers, who rent their land from the federal government, were permitted to buy it back. Harper said he was pleased to finish the work started by former prime minister, Brian Mulroney, who unlocked a major parcel of expropriated land during his first term in office in 1985.
In May 2007, it was reported that the International Center of Advanced Racing had signed a 25 year lease with Aéroports de Montréal to use part of the airport as a race track.[9][5] At the same time fixed base operator, Hélibellule, opened a facility at the site to cater for the private jets that were expected. The company also provides a passenger service from Mirabel to destinations in Canada and the United States.[10][11] They operate three different types of helicopters; Bell 222, Robinson R22 and Aérospatiale Gazelle.[10]
In August 2007, AirMédic moved from its base at Montreal/Saint-Hubert Airport to Mirabel. AirMédic is a non-profit humane foundation serving the population of Quebec and its visitors with the service of air ambulances. It offers MEDEVAC flights using a Eurocopter Dauphin.[4][12]
[edit] Architecture and layout
Mirabel was designed to be eventually expanded to six runways as well as six terminal buildings. The expansion was supposed to occur in a number of phases and be completed by 2025. However, the airport never got beyond the first phase of construction, and by October 2005 runway 11/29 was closed leaving only runway 06/24 operational.
From the furthest reach of the parking lot to the airplane seat, one can walk as little as 200 meters. A train station was also built in the basement for the planned TRRAMM service, right below the main passenger concourse. Today, it is used as an employee parking lot.
Designed by architects Papineau-Gérin-Lajoie, Mirabel's terminal carried over their creator's award-winning Expo 67 Quebec pavilion design. A simple minimalist dark glass box sitting on top of a concrete bunker housing maintenance services, the terminal was hailed as an architectural triumph when it first opened. The first and only terminal was designed to handle six million passengers per year.
Passengers walked as little as 100 meters going from the curb to the gate. Once there, passengers would be transported to their aircraft by Passenger Transfer Vehicles (PTVs), rather than walking through jetways. The PTVs, similar to those at Washington Dulles International Airport, ran from the terminal to the aircraft parking spot on the ramp. It was reported by Radio-Canada/Canadian Broadcasting Corporation that each of these vehicles had cost up to C$ 400,000 at the time.[13] To eventually make connections between flights easier, the terminal also included a few jetways, in a smaller concourse called the Aeroquay, accessible via an underground tunnel and later connected directly to the main concourse.
[edit] Airlines and destinations
Mirabel initially opened with service from local airlines Air Canada, Canadian Pacific Airlines and Nordair (Quebecair), as well as airlines from more than fifteen countries, including Aer Lingus, Aeroflot, Air France, Alitalia, British Airways, Czech Airlines, El Al, Iberia Airlines, KLM, Lufthansa, Olympic Airlines, Sabena, Scandinavian Airlines System, Swissair and TAP Portugal. These airlines had their national country flags posted in front of the terminal on the inauguration of Mirabel.
Other airlines to have flown to Mirabel at some point were Aerolíneas Argentinas, Aeroméxico, Air India, Cubana de Aviación, Finnair, Jaro International, Jat Airways, LOT Polish Airlines, Peoplexpress Airlines, Royal Air Maroc, Royal Jordanian, TAROM, and Varig. Most gradually lost faith in Mirabel and either transferred to Dorval in 1997 or pulled out of Montreal altogether.
Several charter airlines also served Mirabel, such as Wardair, Nolisair, Canada 3000 and Royal Aviation. All four have either merged or gone out of business. Air Transat is the only charter airline that started operations at Mirabel and stayed until the end of passenger service in 2004.
Today, the major transport users of Mirabel are cargo airlines, which include:
- Air Georgian
- Cargojet Airways (Hamilton, Winnipeg)
- DHL
- FedEx Express (Indianapolis, Memphis, Newark)
- Kelowna Flightcraft Air Charter (Moncton, Ottawa, Winnipeg)
- Morningstar Air Express (Moncton, Quebec City, Toronto-Pearson)
- Nolinor Aviation
- SkyLink Aviation (Quebec City)
- UPS Airlines (Louisville)
[edit] Incidents and accidents
The following accidents occurred either at the airport, or involved aircraft using the airport:
- June 23, 1985: Air India Flight 182, a Boeing 747-200 enroute from Mirabel to London Heathrow Airport was blown up by a terrorist bomb off the coast of Ireland, killing 307 passengers and 22 crew.
- January 21, 1995: Royal Air Maroc Flight 205, a Boeing 747-400 preparing to depart for New York City and Casablanca, was being deiced by Canadian Airlines groundcrew, while its engines were running. Due to a communications error, the pilot believed deicing was complete and started taxiing forward. Two deicing vehicles that were still in place in front of both horizontal stabilizers were knocked down, causing fatal injuries for three deicing crew members and serious injuries to the two drivers.[14]
- June 18, 1998: Propair Flight 420, a Fairchild Swearingen Metroliner flying from Dorval International Airport (now Trudeau International Airport) to Peterborough Airport in Peterborough, Ontario, experienced an engine fire and controlling problems during the initial climb. It attempted an emergency landing at Mirabel, but crashed near the beginning of the runway, in part due to a landing gear failure. The two pilots and the nine passengers on board were killed.[15]
- On October 23, 2003, an El Al Boeing 767 flying from Tel Aviv to Los Angeles via Toronto was diverted to Mirabel International Airport and then on to Hamilton/John C. Munro International Airport, where Royal Canadian Mounted Police tactical teams were ready. The diversion was the result of a "severe security threat", which was later clarified as a possible surface-to-air missile attack on the aircraft upon landing in Toronto.[16]
[edit] See also
[edit] Notes
- ^ Airport Divestiture Status Report
- ^ a b c Canada Flight Supplement. Effective 0901Z 10 April 2008 to 0901Z 5 June 2008
- ^ Aircraft Movement Statistics: NAV CANADA Towers and Flight Service Stations: Annual Report 2007
- ^ a b It's liftoff for AirMédic ambulance
- ^ a b Mirabel redécolle
- ^ Airport to be turned into amusement park (21 February 2006). CTV News. Accessed March 25, 2006.
- ^ Delean, Paul (22 February 2006). Mirabel may take off as theme park. The Montreal Gazette.
- ^ Mirabel AeroDream Aéroports de Montréal. Accessed February 22, 2008.
- ^ ICAR - a new motorsport facility in Quebec
- ^ a b Hélibellule fleet
- ^ Hélibellule fait revivre le transport des passagers à Mirabel
- ^ AirMédic
- ^ Mirabel looks for new role–again (28 April 2004). CBC News. Accessed September 22, 2005.
- ^ Collision with Vehicle Royal Air Maroc
- ^ Swearingen SA.226TC Metro II
- ^ 'Severe security threat' diverts El Al aircraft to Hamilton
[edit] References
- Financial Times of Canada. (1975). Mirabel. Special ed. Don Mills, ON: Financial Times of Canada.
- Durivage, Simon."Mirabel, airport of the year 2000." Montreal, Montreal. 8 Sep 1992. Video Archive.
- Sergio Ortega (December 1999). Mirabel: The Airport where the Future is Past. AirOdyssey.net.
[edit] External links
- Aéroports de Montréal
- Page about Mirabel Airport in the Canadian Owners & Pilots Association Places to Fly Airport Directory
- The airport whose demise was caused by rail absence a critique of the Mirabel Airport
- Past three hours METARs, SPECI and current TAFs for Montreal-Mirabel International Airport from NAV CANADA as available.
- New York Times feature
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||

