Showing posts with label Birmingham Airport at 25. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Birmingham Airport at 25. Show all posts

BHX - 25 years ago today!! - on Wednesday 30 May 1984 the Queen officially opened the "new" terminal

Twenty five years ago today - on Wednesday 30 May 1984 -
the Queen officially opened the "new" terminal building....

.... after arriving on RAF Queens Flight Andover XS790 which had
parked next to British Airways Concorde G-BOAA - the tail of a
Wardair Boeing 747 can be see parked behind the Pier
. .
Over the previous Bank Holiday weekend an Air Show had been held
at the Airport to mark the opening of the new site
.
The Malboro Pitts Specials taxy for departure with the old
Elmdon terminal in the background....
. .... while Concorde G-BOAA performed a number of "supersonic"
flights out over the English Channel seen here landing back at BHX
with Air Atlantique Dakota GAMPO in the foreground
.
The new terminal had opened of Wednesday 4 April 1984 and some
more photos and a video of the first day of operation can be seen at -
.

Birmingham Airport celebrates 25th Anniversary at current terminal site‏

Long-serving Airport staff (left to right) John Aitken, Don Jaggs,
Pete Sheppard, Paul MacDonald, Pete Turton, James Jackson,
Neil Streeter, Pat McBride and Bob Spittle
.
It may have been the year when Torvill and Dean skated into
the record books and Duran Duran were rocking the charts, but
closer to home 1984 was also the year when Birmingham Airport
was put firmly on the map, with the official opening of its "new"
£29m terminal, a milestone celebrated on 30 May 2009
.
The project was completed 12 weeks ahead of schedule and put
Birmingham in the vanguard of airport development, with one of
the most modern terminal facilities to be found anywhere in Europe
.
Opening to the public on 4 April 1984, the new terminal was
officially opened on 30 May 1984 by Her Majesty the Queen,
accompanied by His Royal Highness the Duke of Edinburgh,
and comprised of what is now Terminal 1 as well as new
taxiways and related infrastructure. This included the
construction of car parks and improved commuter links,
a stark contrast to the original Elmdon site which had
served Birmingham so well since 1939
.
By 1984 the Airport had grown to handle just over 1.7 million
passengers annually, while 25 years later the Midlands’
gateway to the world edges ever closer to the 10 million
mark, as local travellers continue to make Birmingham their
airport of choice
.
To mark the occasion a number of employees who have
worked at the Airport since before the move to the current
site met up to share their memories of the last quarter of a
century, a time which has seen much change, not just at
Birmingham but across the aviation industry as a whole
.
Paul Kehoe, Birmingham Airport’s Chief Executive Officer,
said, "It is poignant that at a time when we are focusing on
the future, with planning permission secured for a runway
extension, that we should also be looking back to the opening
of the Airport’s current site. It certainly doesn’t seem 25 years
since the Airport unveiled its new terminal and it has seen
plenty of changes throughout the years!"
."This year also marks the Airport’s 70th anniversary and
the opening of our new £40 million International Pier, so it
certainly promises to be a busy 12 months, which will see a
number of milestones marked. Hopefully people will look
back in another 25 years and recognise 2009 as a historic
year in the development of the Airport"
.
Wednesday 3 June 2009

Birmingham Airport - 25 years ago today!!

Twenty five years ago today saw the start of the "modern era"
at Birmingham Airport - on Wednesday 4 April 1984 the "new"
terminal site opened for business - over the previous night a
major operation had taken place to relocate all the airlines, their
aircraft and equipment from the Elmdon site to the new facility
on the eastern side of the airfield
. An aerial view of the new terminal
.A view of aircraft parked on the new pier taken on the opening day
- the old "Elmdon" terminal can be seen in the distance
.
A team of reporters from BBC "Midlands Today" spent the opening
day at the airport and the programme that evening was broadcast
live from the new terminal - what better way to look back at that
day than to go "live" to 1984 - just "click" the video below!! -




By the mid 1970's Birmingham Airport was handling over a million
passengers and the existing terminal on the Elmdon site was already
bursting at the seems. A long planning and consultation exercise thus
began to build a completely new terminal on a site on the eastern side
of the airfield adjacent to the main Birmingham to London railway
line and the recently completed National Exhibition Centre - NEC
.

An artists impression of the "proposed" new terminal


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