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What did Birmingham Airport used to be called?

The Airport, known as 'Elmdon Airport', was officially opened by HRH The Duchess of Kent on 8th July 1939, and was owned and operated by Birmingham City Council until the outbreak of the Second World War when civil aviation ceased and the Airport was requisitioned by the Air Ministry and used as an Elementary Flying ...



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The Airport, known as 'Elmdon Airport', was officially opened by HRH The Duchess of Kent on 8th July 1939, and was owned and operated by Birmingham City Council until the outbreak of the Second World War when civil aviation ceased and the Airport was requisitioned by the Air Ministry and used as an Elementary Flying ...

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Belfast International Airport (IATA: BFS, ICAO: EGAA) is an airport 11.5 NM (21.3 km; 13.2 mi) northwest of Belfast in Northern Ireland, and is the main airport for the city of Belfast. Until 1983, it was known as Aldergrove Airport, after the nearby village of Aldergrove in County Antrim.

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It is very uncommon to find in nature a strip of land that is perfectly flat and it is often too impractical or expensive to level it to build a flat runway on it. As a consequence, runways will very frequently have a longitudinal slope that is not null.

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1930s. June 1930: The airfield was declared operational. 1930 to 1939: The airfield was first called Harmondsworth Aerodrome, then The Great West Aerodrome, and sometimes Heathrow Aerodrome.

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Liverpool's international airport used to be called Speke Airport but, in 2001, it was renamed after John Lennon of The Beatles, who was born and raised in the city of Liverpool. This is the first airport in the UK to be named after a person.

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