Kamigotō Airport

(Redirected from Kamigoto Airport)

Kamigotō Airport (ICAO: RJDK) is a public aerodrome located on Kashiragashima Island (頭ヶ島), a smaller bridge-linked island just off the far east coast of Nakadorijima in the Gotō Islands, Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan. The site is about 8 km (5.0 mi) northeast[1] of Kamigotō town office, Shinkamigotō. The terminal was renovated in July 2015 and the airport remains active for emergency medical shuttles, but commercial passenger routes have been suspended for several years. Given the airport's lack of traffic and its unusually remote location, the runway has been used occasionally as a venue for 'dark sky' appreciation tours with tourists lying on the runway and staring at the cosmos above.[2]

Kamigotō Airport
Summary
Airport typePublic
OperatorNagasaki Prefecture
LocationShinkamigotō, Japan
Elevation AMSL263 ft / 80 m
Coordinates33°00′49″N 129°11′33″E / 33.01361°N 129.19250°E / 33.01361; 129.19250
Map
RJDK is located in Nagasaki Prefecture
RJDK
RJDK
RJDK is located in Japan
RJDK
RJDK
Map
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
17/35 800 2,625 Asphalt concrete
Source: Japanese AIP at AIS Japan[1]

History

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The airport opened in April 1981 (Showa 56) with a 800m long, 25m wide landing strip built along the entire north–south flattened top of Kashiragashima.[3] Nagasaki Airways, rebranded after March 2001 as Oriental Air Bridge, operated small passenger planes to Fukuoka Airport (until March 2004) and to Nagasaki Airport (until March 2006).[4] By this time, new fast ferry services, combined with a falling island populations and the ever unreliable weather conditions (strong winds often causing cancellations), led to the suspension of commercial passenger flights. The nearest active airport is Gotō-Fukue Airport which continue to serve the Island. [5]

References

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  1. ^ a b AIS Japan Archived 2016-05-17 at the Portuguese Web Archive
  2. ^ Announcement of the second star-gazing event on Kamigoto runway
  3. ^ "Japan local airports". Archived from the original on 2015-12-28. Retrieved 2021-01-18.
  4. ^ Oriental Air Bridge history
  5. ^ 2011 Nagasaki News article