翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Harar
・ Harar Beer Bottling F.C.
・ Harar Brewery
・ Harar Meda Airport
・ Harar Wildlife Sanctuary
・ Harar-e Kalgah-e Shiraz
・ Hararan
・ Hararati Power Station
・ Harardhere
・ Harardhere District
・ Harare
・ Harare City F.C.
・ Harare Declaration
・ Harare East
・ Harare Institute of Technology
Harare International Airport
・ Harare International Festival of the Arts
・ Harare International School
・ Harare North
・ Harare North (constituency)
・ Harare Polytechnic
・ Harare Province
・ Harare Sports Club
・ Harare Tribune
・ Hararghe
・ Harari
・ Harari (clothing)
・ Harari (surname)
・ Harari College Worldwide
・ Harari language


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Harare International Airport : ウィキペディア英語版
Harare International Airport

Harare International Airport is an international airport in Harare, Zimbabwe. It is the largest airport in the country and serves as the base of Air Zimbabwe. The airport is operated by the Civil Aviation Authority of Zimbabwe.
==History==
Commissioned in 1956 and officially opened on 5 February 1957, Salisbury Airport cost £924,000 to build. According to the 1950 report of the Director of Civil Aviation, the city's original aerodrome, Belvedere Airport, had proved to be inadequate and had to be abandoned for the following reasons:〔(History of Civil aviation in Rhodesia )〕
* the runway was some 45° out of alignment, given that approaching aircraft had to enter through a gap in Warren Hills;
* because of the skewed alignment, aircraft were forced to take-off over the city centre which posed a real danger of accidents;
* the growing number of high-rise buildings in the city, particularly Milton Building, posed a risk to aircraft;
* Belvedere Airport had been built to accommodate the RAF Elementary Flying Training School, the layout and design of the buildings were not particularly suitable for commercial aviation.
A site therefore had to be found for the construction of an airport that would be safer and more suitable for commercial activities.
The Southern Rhodesian government had appointed a Southern Rhodesia Aerodrome Board as early as January 1947, whose task was to advise the government on the selection, acquisition, construction and maintenance of government aerodromes and landing grounds in Southern Rhodesia. Later the same year, an Airfield Construction Unit was formed to undertake an extensive search for a suitable site for a national airport.
In 1949 the government purchased Kentucky and Adair farms east of Salisbury (2,700 acres at a cost of £54,000) for the construction of the new airport. Also in 1949 the Minister of Mines and Transport set up an Airport Panel to co-ordinate the construction of the airport. The Panel comprised representatives of the interested government departments, the Municipality of Salisbury and Rhodesia Railways.
In 1951 the government announced that the airport would be developed as a joint user aerodrome for both civil aviation and the Southern Rhodesian Air Force (SRAF). Construction of the airport began soon afterwards and by September 1951, an 8,400 ft runway had been completed, enabling the first aircraft, an SRAF Anson, to land at the new airport.
Originally, it was anticipated that the airport would be completed by 1954. It was, however, not completed until two years later because the government ran out of funds in October 1952 and had to suspend the project temporarily. The new Salisbury Airport was finally commissioned on 1 July 1956 by the government of Rhodesia and Nyasaland. The cost of constructing the airport was £924,000.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=southern rhodesia - salisbury airport - terminal building - 1957 - 0287 - Flight Archive )
Because of a decline in tourism numbers, due to internal political conflicts since 2000, few major airlines now use the airport with KLM and Emirates being the only non-African users.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Harare International Airport」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.