| Naval Air Station Point Mugu Naval Base Ventura County (NBVC) |
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| IATA: NTD – ICAO: KNTD – FAA: NTD | |||
| Summary | |||
| Airport type | Military | ||
| Operator | United States Navy | ||
| Location | Point Mugu, California | ||
| Elevation AMSL | 13 ft / 4 m | ||
| Coordinates | 34°07′13″N 119°07′16″W / 34.12028°N 119.12111°WCoordinates: 34°07′13″N 119°07′16″W / 34.12028°N 119.12111°W | ||
| Runways | |||
| Direction | Length | Surface | |
| ft | m | ||
| 3/21 | 11,102 | 3,384 | Asphalt |
| 9/27 | 5,504 | 1,678 | Asphalt |
Naval Air Station Point Mugu or NAS Point Mugu (IATA: NTD, ICAO: KNTD, FAA LID: NTD) is an airbase located in Point Mugu, Ventura County, California, United States. Due to realignment actions which occurred in 2000, the base is now part of Naval Base Ventura County (NBVC), a consolidated organization that also includes CBC Port Hueneme and OLF San Nicolas Island.
The facility adjacent to Point Mugu, California was developed in the late 1940s as the U.S. Navy's major missile development and test facility. This facility was the site where most of the Navy's missiles were developed and tested during the 1950/1960 era, including the AIM-7 Sparrow family and the AIM-54 Phoenix air-to-air, Bullpup air-to-surface, and Regulus surface-to-surface missiles.
NAS Pt. Mugu has dominated the area since the 1940s, and is one of the few places in the area that is not agricultural. The base has been home to many ordnance testing programs, and the test range extends offshore to the Navy-owned San Nicolas Island in the Channel Islands.
In 1963 the U.S. Navy Marine Mammal Program was established on a sand spit between Mugu Lagoon and the ocean. The facility was relocated in 1967 to Point Loma in San Diego, California.
Point Mugu was the airfield used by former President Ronald Reagan during his presidency on visits to his Santa Barbara ranch. The airfield was also used during the state funeral honoring him in 2004, as the place where the former President's body was flown to Washington, D.C. to lie in state in the Capitol Rotunda. The body was flown back to Point Mugu aboard presidential aircraft SAM 28000 two days later. Until the late 1990s, the base hosted Antarctic Development Squadron SIX (VXE-6), the squadron of LC-130s equipped to land on ice in Antarctica, to supply the science stations there. Now, the New York Air National Guard's 109th Airlift Wing has assumed that responsibility.
Outside of the air station there is also Point Mugu State Park, a popular site for viewing birds, marine mammals, and wildflowers and provides about 15,000 acres (61 km²) of protected land including beaches, riparian areas, and coastal hills and canyons. Between the park and the naval base, Mugu Lagoon provides one of the largest coastal wetlands in Southern California that has not been largely developed.
Tenant Squadrons
- Carrier Airborne Early Warning Squadron 112
- Carrier Airborne Early Warning Squadron 113
- Carrier Airborne Early Warning Squadron 116
- Carrier Airborne Early Warning Squadron 117
- Fleet Logistics Support Squadron 55
- Fleet Logistics Support Squadron 30
- Air Test and Evaluation Squadron 9
- Air Test and Evaluation Squadron 30
References
- Naval Base Ventura County (NBVC), official site
- Point Mugu Air Station, GlobalSecurity.org
- FAA Airport Master Record for NTD (Form 5010 PDF)
External links
- Resources for this U.S. military airport:
- AirNav airport information for KNTD
- ASN accident history for NTD
- NOAA/NWS latest weather observations
- SkyVector aeronautical chart for KNTD
- FAA Airport Diagram(PDF), effective 22 Oct 2009
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