Wikipedia:

Daytona Beach International Airport

Coordinates: 29°10′48″N 081°03′29″W / 29.18, -81.05806

Daytona Beach International Airport

ASRDaytonBeach.jpg
The Daytona Beach Airport Surveillance Radar, located off-site

IATA: DAB – ICAO: KDAB – FAA: DAB
Summary
Airport type Public
Owner Volusia County
Location Daytona Beach, Florida
Elevation AMSL 34 ft / 10 m
Website www.flydaytonafirst.com
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
7L/25R 10,500 3,200 Asphalt
7R/25L 3,195 974 Asphalt
16/34 6,001 1,829 Asphalt
Statistics (2006)
Aircraft operations 258,616
Based aircraft 214
Source: Federal Aviation Administration[1]

Daytona Beach International Airport (IATA: DABICAO: KDABFAA LID: DAB) is a public county-owned airport located three miles (5 km) southwest of the central business district of Daytona Beach[1], adjacent to the Daytona International Speedway, in Volusia County, Florida, United States. The airport has 3 runways, a six-gate domestic terminal, and an international terminal. Daytona Beach serves as the headquarters of Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University. It is considered to be much more convenient for nearby residents than nearby larger airports such as Orlando International Airport and Jacksonville International Airport.

History

The Beach

Before airplanes landed on the beach, automobile races were held regularly. The beach provided a smooth, hard, and relatively clean surface to use for anything with wheels and speed. Pilots soon caught on and used the beach as a runway. Hangars were built later, and even aircraft service was provided on beach. This former airport is one of only two beach airports that were successful. The other, Old Orchard Beach, was located in Maine and was the starting point for at least five transatlantic flights during the 1920s and 1930s.[2]

The first flight on the beach occurred in 1906 by Charles K. Hamilton, using Israel Ludlow's glider. The glider was pulled by an automobile and actually took place in Ormond. He went as high as 150 feet on his first try, and 250 feet on the second, before crashing into a flagpole and surviving with only a bruised knee.[2]

Numerous flights followed, including John A. McCurdy, the United States's 5th license pilot, in 1911, Phillips Page in 1912, and Ruth Law in 1913. Phillips Page has been credited for taking the first aerial photographs in Florida, while flying around the Hotel Clarendon in Daytona Beach. Many other pilots took to the skies above Daytona Beach before it was closed during the winter of 1929-30.[2]

Bethune Point

All flights were moved to the new location at Bethune Point, right on the Halifax River. Eastern Air Transport was the first commercial service out of Daytona Beach. The airline was certified to fly mail to Tampa and Orlando. However, the first flight crashed just after takeoff, due to a mechanical failure. The pilot was uninjured, and the mail was collected and sent out on a different flight.[2]

Florida State Airways, Inc was an airline that formed in early 1930 in Daytona Beach. The airline provided service for passengers to other Florida cities and to the Bahamas, using Ryan aircraft. In January 1930, Vice President of Operations, Bill Lindley, piloted a flight to Palm Beach. While on the descent, he never pulled out of the dive and went into Lake Worth at full throttle. The combination of Lindley's death and the depression soon caused most aviation activity in Daytona Beach to stop.[2]

Municipal Airport

In late 1930, a 740-acre piece of land turned into the current airport, located just a few hundred feet from the main drag of International Speedway Blvd. The first name it was given was Schoetz Field, after the then Governor of Florida, who was from Daytona Beach. The airport began with two runways, both gravel. One runway was 1800 feet long, the other was 2100 feet long. Before too long the name was changed to Daytona Beach Municipal Airport.[2]

Eastern Air Lines began passenger service out of Daytona Beach, flying Kingbirds and Condors. But after only a few years, Eastern did not re-bid, after the airmail changes of 1934. In 1935, National Airlines won a bid on the cross-state route from Daytona Beach to St. Petersburg. In 1936, the airport was closed for repairs. National rerouted it's flights to Jacksonville but Eastern became upset and called it an act of "buccaneers". National Airlines was nicknamed the "Buccaneer Route".[2]

Expansion

In the late 1930s, four 4000 by 150 feet runways were built, all paved. This expansion allowed DC-2 and DC-3 aircraft to land at Daytona Beach. At the time, the terminal was located on the south side of the airport.[2]

For a short while in 1940, a zoo-keeper was hired to maintain the airport. When World War II broke out, the US Navy took over and used the airport for training. All runways were widened to 200 feet and the east-west runway was extended to 5500 feet. New buildings were constructed, some of which were later used by Embry-Riddle University after their move from Miami in 1965.[2][3]

The ownership was given back to the city of Daytona Beach in 1946. The first terminal wasn't built until 1952, but once complete in 1958, it brought in a great amount of traffic. A new control tower was built with the terminal. In 1969, Volusia County took over management and renamed the airport to Daytona Beach Regional Airport. Several years later, in 1992, a newer, more modern terminal was built, adding an international terminal, and a longer 10,500-foot runway. The new terminal and longer runway gave the airport its current status and name, Daytona Beach International Airport. The only daily direct flights out of the country are provided by Vintage Props and Jets using small, turbo-prop aircraft.[2][3]

Facilities and aircraft

Daytona Beach International Airport covers an area of 1,800 acres (728 ha) which contains three asphalt paved runways: 7L/25R measuring 10,500 x 150 ft. (3,200 x 46 m), 7R/25L at 3,195 x 100 ft. (974 x 30 m) and 16/34 which is 6,001 x 150 ft. (1,829 x 46 m).[1]

For the 12-month period ending July 31, 2006, the airport had 258,616 aircraft operations, an average of 708 per day: 96% general aviation, 2% scheduled commercial, 2% air taxi and <1% military. There are 214 aircraft based at this airport: 65% single engine, 24% multi-engine, 8% jet aircraft and 2% helicopters.[1]

Fixed Base Operators

Aviation Schools

Airlines and destinations

Past airlines

References

  1. ^ a b c d FAA Airport Master Record for DAB (Form 5010 PDF), effective 2007-07-05
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Brown, Warrren (1994). Florida's Aviation History, 187-189. 
  3. ^ a b DBIA History. Retrieved on 2007-06-26.

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