Springfield–Beckley Municipal Airport
Airport in Ohio, United States of America From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Airport in Ohio, United States of America From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Springfield–Beckley Municipal Airport | |||||||||||||||
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Summary | |||||||||||||||
Airport type | Public | ||||||||||||||
Owner | City of Springfield | ||||||||||||||
Serves | Springfield, Ohio | ||||||||||||||
Location | Green Township, Clark County, near Springfield, Ohio | ||||||||||||||
Occupants | 178th Wing | ||||||||||||||
Time zone | UTC−05:00 (-5) | ||||||||||||||
• Summer (DST) | UTC−04:00 (-4) | ||||||||||||||
Elevation AMSL | 1,051 ft / 320 m | ||||||||||||||
Website | www.airparkohio.com/... | ||||||||||||||
Map | |||||||||||||||
Runways | |||||||||||||||
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Statistics (2022) | |||||||||||||||
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Springfield–Beckley Municipal Airport (IATA: SGH, ICAO: KSGH, FAA LID: SGH) is a civil-military airport in Green Township in Clark County, Ohio, United States. It is owned by the city of Springfield, five miles (8 km) to the north.[1][2] It is named after the Beckley family, a member of which knew the Wright Brothers, and witnessed and photographed their first flights.
Three units of the Ohio Air National Guard, including the 178th Wing (formerly 178th Fighter Wing), are based at the co-located Springfield Air National Guard Base.[3]
The airport hosts events such as fly-ins and airshows with vintage airplanes.[4][5] The airport has hosted the Commemorative Air Force.[6]
The airport is home to flight schools. Flight training is available for students at the Clark State Community College.[4]
Springfield had scheduled airline flights on TWA from 1948 to 1950 and on Lake Central from 1953 to 1955.
In 2005, the 178th Fighter Wing lost its F-16 training mission due to the Base Realignment and Closure Act.[3]
The airport received an updated master plan in 2016.[7]
The airport was praised for record-breaking fuel sales during the onset of the covid-19 pandemic in 2020.[8]
The airport was named the 2023 Ohio Airport of the Year by the Ohio Aviation Association.[8][9]
The airport was formerly home to the Ohio Center for Precision Agriculture.[10]
The airport covers 1,516 acres (614 ha) and has two asphalt runways. Runway 06/24 measures 9,010 x 150 ft (2,746 x 46 m). Runway 15/33 measures 5,498 x 100 ft (1,676 x 30 m).[1] The airport has a fixed-base operator that sells fuel. It offers services such as catering, hangaring, and courtesy cars and amenities such as internet, conference rooms, vending machines, a crew lounge, snooze rooms, television, and more.[11]
In 2021, the airport received more than $2 million in federal grants to rehabilitate its runways and add runway lighting.[12] An additional $226,000 grant that year, approved to provide greater access to drive and parking areas for facilities at the airport, funded an electric charging station and a controlled flight simulator.[13][14]
In 2022, the airport removed and reinstalled a taxiway that had surpassed its useful life and did not conform to FAA standards. City officials approved money for more lighting upgrades.[15]
In 2023, new $1.2-million hangars opened and the aircraft parking ramp was expanded to accommodate the planned growth of a maintenance shop.[10][16]
The airport is home to the Ohio UAS Center, which is managed by the Ohio Department of Transportation.
Planning began in 2013 in an effort to secure one of six UAS test sites created by the Federal Aviation Administration.[3][17] The first UAS testing at the airport was approved in 2019, when the United States Air Force began testing drones at the airport through the Air Force Research Lab.[18]
The airport hosts flight testing for Amazon and Walmart home delivery services. It is also the site of the National Advanced Air Mobility Center of Excellence, which will focus on research into autonomous flight, electrical vertical takeoff and landing vehicles, and electric flight for the U.S. Department of Defense.[8][19]
The airport has specially-designed airspace to protect these operations as well as unique surveillance radar that operates out of a converted bus.[3]
In the year ending November 8, 2022, the airport had 32,770 aircraft operations, an average of 90 per day: 99% general aviation, <1% military, and <1% air taxi. That year, 32 aircraft were then based at this airport: 23 single-engine and seven multi-engine airplanes, one jet aircraft, and one helicopter.[1]
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