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Yeager
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Yeager Airport




  IATA CRW
  ICAO KCRW - FAA : CRW
  Type Public
  Run By Central West Virginia Regional Airport Authority
  Closest Town Charleston, West Virginia
  Elevation Ft 981
  Elevation M 299


  Runway Angle 5/23
  Runway Length F 6,302
  Runway Length M 1,921
  Runway Width F 150
  Runway Width M 46
  Runway Surface Asphalt


  Runway Angle 15/33
  Runway Length F 4,750
  Runway Length M 1,448
  Runway Width F 150
  Runway Width M 46
  Runway Surface Asphalt


Yeager Airport is a public Airport located three miles (5 Km ) east of the Central Business District (CBD) of Charleston , a city in Kanawha County , West Virginia , USA . The airport covers 767 Acre s (3.1 km&2) and has two Runway s. It is also home to the nine C-130 s from the U.S. Air Force 's 130th Airlift Wing.

The airport sits on a hilltop over 300 feet (about 100 m) above the valleys of the Elk and Kanawha Rivers, and the hill drops off sharply on all sides. Due to the airfields unique location, passengers flying in to Yeager enjoy a scenic approach of either downtown Charleston, or the rolling hills to the north and east of the field.

A common belief is that due to the airport's runway lengths, it can not accommodate larger, transcontinental aircraft. This assumption lead to debate in 2000/2001 over whether or not a new regional airport, that was to be built in the Charleston-Huntington corridor, was needed (alternative plans called for an expansion and lengthening of Yeager's runways). However, aircraft performance statistics, direct from Boeing and Airbus, prove that newer generations of mid-sized aircraft, such as the Boeing 737 NG, Airbus A319 , and even the larger Boeing 757 can operate out of Yeager.


HISTORY

During World War II , Charleston's airport at that time, Wertz Field , closed when the airport's approaches were blocked once the federal government built a synthetic rubber plant next to the airport; this left the city without an airport. However, there were plans before the war to build a new Charleston airport, as Wertz Field was already becoming commercially obsolete.

The city started construction of its new airport in 1944; the facility opened in 1947 as Kanawha Airport. The airport received its current name in 1985, honoring Then-Brigadier General Chuck Yeager , a native of nearby Lincoln County who piloted the world's first supersonic flight in the Bell X-1 .

The airport's construction was one of the most remarkable engineering accomplishments of the 1940s. The original topography of the area where Yeager Airport now stands consisted of three large and four small hilltops on a ridge overlooking the Elk River. In order to create enough flat land for an airport, it was necessary to shear off the tops of all seven hills, and use the soil to fill in the valleys in between. At that time, the construction of Kanawha Airport was reportedly the second-largest earth-moving project in history, behind the construction of the Panama Canal .


AIRLINES AND DESTINATIONS



Concourse A

Gates A1-A7


Concourse B

Gates B1-B2


Concourse C

Gates C1-C5


REFERENCES



EXTERNAL LINKS