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Liverpool John Lennon Airport

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Template:Short description Template:Redirect Template:Third-party Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Template:Infobox airport

Liverpool John Lennon Airport Template:Airport codes is an international airport serving Liverpool, England, on the estuary of the River Mersey Template:Convert south-east of Liverpool city centre.<ref name="aip">Template:Cite web</ref> Scheduled domestic, European, North African and Middle Eastern<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> services are operated from the airport. The airport comprises a single passenger terminal, three general use hangars, a FedEx Express courier service centre as well as a single runway measuring Template:Convert in length, with the control tower south of the runway.

Originally called Speke Airport, it was operated by the Royal Air Force as RAF Speke in World War II. Between 1997 and 2007, annual passenger numbers increased from 689,468 to 5.47Template:Nbspmillion. It was renamed after Liverpudlian musician John Lennon of The Beatles in 2001.<ref name="stats" /> The airport handled 4.19Template:Nbspmillion passengers in 2023, making it the 12th-busiest airport in the UK.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

History

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Imperial Airways

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Built in part of the grounds of Speke Hall, Liverpool (Speke) Airport, as the airport was originally known, started scheduled flights in 1930 with a service by Imperial Airways via Barton Aerodrome near Eccles, Salford and Castle Bromwich Aerodrome, Birmingham to Croydon Airport near London. The airport was officially opened on 1 July 1933.<ref name="liverpoolecho.co.uk">Template:Cite web</ref> By the late 1930s, air traffic from Liverpool was beginning to take off with increasing demand for Irish Sea crossings, and a distinctive passenger terminal, control tower and two large aircraft hangars were built.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Second World War

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At the beginning of 1937, Liverpool City Council leased between Template:Convert of their Speke Estate on a 999-year lease to the Air Ministry. The price included at all times the use of Speke Airport next to the shadow factory site. The LMS Railway provided a siding. Erection of the building was planned to take 30Template:Nbspweeks and when complete it would provide employment for more than 5,000Template:Nbsppeople. It was to be managed by Rootes Securities on behalf of the Air Ministry. Work started Monday 15 February 1937.<ref>Liverpool Aeroplane Factory. The Times, Saturday, 13 February 1937; pg. 9; Issue 47608</ref>

During the Second World War, Speke was requisitioned by the Royal Air Force and known as RAF Speke. Rootes built in a "shadow factory" by the airport to produce Bristol Blenheims and 1,070 Handley Page Halifax bombers.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Lockheed Aircraft Corporation assembled many types of planes at the airport, including Hudsons and Mustang fighters, that had been shipped from the United States in parts to Liverpool Docks. The airport was also home to the Merchant Ship Fighter Unit.<ref name="liverpoolecho.co.uk" />

On 8 October 1940, Speke was witness to what is thought to be the fastest air-to-air combat "kilo" in the Battle of Britain and possibly of all time. Flight Lieutenant Denys Gillam took off in his Hawker Hurricane from Speke to be confronted by a Junkers Ju 88 passing across him. He shot the Junkers down while his undercarriage was still retracting, and, along with Alois Vašátko and Josef Stehlík, all of 312 Squadron, was credited with the kill. The moment has been caught in a painting by Robert Taylor called Fastest Victory.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="ahfv">Template:Cite web</ref>

Civil airport

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Normal civil airline operations resumed after VE Day and passengers increased from 50,000 in 1945 to 75,000 in 1948, remaining ahead of Manchester Airport. Ownership by the Ministry of Aviation proved to be a drag on the airport's progress thereafter, and Manchester gained the lead from 1949, resulting in Liverpool's loss of the only ground-controlled radar approach unit available to North West airports, further hampering operation.Template:Citation needed

During the post-war years, Speke Airport hosted an annual air display in aid of the Soldiers, Sailors, and Air Force Association, a charity for veterans. The displays were immensely popular and attracted a huge crowd. On one such occasion on 21 May 1956, tragedy struck with the death of Léon Alfred Nicolas "Léo" Valentin, billed as the Birdman, when his balsa wood wings struck the opening of the aircraft from which he was exiting and he was hurtled into an uncontrollable spin. He attempted to deploy his emergency parachute, but it became entangled and 'Roman candled', leaving Leo to fall to his death. The local newspaper headlined the story with "The world has been robbed of a daring personality." Ironically, a few years earlier Valentin had been attributed with discovering the free-fall stable position still used by sports parachutists today for safe deployment.Template:Citation needed

New runway

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The city took over control of the airport on 1 January 1961 and prepared development plans. In 1966, a new Template:Convert runway was opened by Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh on a new site to the southeast of the existing airfield. It enabled the airport to be open for business around the clock and is in use to this day. Control of the airport transferred to Merseyside County Council from Liverpool Corporation in the mid-1970s and then, ten years later, to the five Merseyside councils following the abolition of Merseyside County Council. In 1982, Pope John Paul II visited and met crowds at the old Liverpool airport.

Old terminal (1989)

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File:THE FORMER TERMINAL BUILDING AT SPEKE AERODROME NOW THE CROWNE PLAZA HOTEL LIVERPOOL JULY 2013 (9231676102).jpg
The old terminal building, used between the 1930s and 1986, now the Crowne Plaza Liverpool John Lennon Airport Hotel

A modern passenger terminal adjacent to the new runway opened in 1986 followed by the closure of the original 1930s building.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The original terminal building dating from the late 1930s, famously seen on early television footage with its terraces packed with Beatles fans, was left derelict until converted into a hotel, opening in 2001, preserving its Grade II listed Art Deco style. It was part of the Marriott chain of hotels, but is currently the Crowne Plaza Liverpool John Lennon Airport Hotel after a renovation in August 2008.<ref name="fola">Template:Cite web</ref> The former apron of the terminal is also listed and retained in its original condition, although it is no longer connected to the airport or subject to airside access control. It is the home of several aircraft, including BAe Jetstream 41 prototype G-JMAC and Bristol Britannia G-ANCF, preserved by the Speke Aerodrome Heritage Group.Template:Citation needed The two art-deco-style hangars that flank the terminal and apron have also been converted for new uses: one is now a David Lloyd leisure centre, the other the headquarters of the Very Group, called Skyways House.<ref name="fola" /><ref name="marriott">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="jscb">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="jgw">Template:Cite web</ref>

In 1990, the airport was privatised, with British Aerospace taking a 76% shareholding in the new company. Subsequently, the airport has become a wholly owned subsidiary of Peel Holdings.<ref name="liverpoolecho.co.uk" />

New terminal and renaming (2000)

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File:Liverpool John Lennon Airport (Terminal Interior).jpg
Check-in hall interior.
File:Aerial View of John Lennon Airport 2020.jpg
Aerial view of the airport - the passenger terminal, parking and general aviation hangars (in the top-right corner)

In 2000, work on a £42.5Template:Nbspmillion passenger terminal began, tripling its size and passenger capacity, completed in 2002 and opened by Queen Elizabeth II. There have since been further extensions to the airport terminal and airside.

In 2001, 21 years after his death, the airport was renamed in honour of The Beatles' John Lennon.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> A Template:Convert tall bronze statue stands overlooking the check-in hall. On the roof is painted the airport's motto, "Above us, only sky"; a line from Lennon's song "Imagine".<ref>Peter Adey, ""Above Us Only Sky": Themes, Simulations, and Liverpool John Lennon Airport," pp. 153–166 in The Themed Space: Locating Culture, Nation, and Self, ed. Scott A. Lukas (Lanham, MD, Lexington Books, 2007), Template:ISBN</ref>

In 2005, the Yellow Submarine, a large-scale work of art, was installed on a traffic island at the entrance to the airport. A permanent exhibition of photographs of The Beatles in India, taken by Paul Saltzman in 1968 at the ashram of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, can be seen above the retail units in the departure lounge.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

In 2005, a new apron was constructed exclusively for EasyJet, to the east of the terminal with six stands and a pier with six boarding gates.

In September 2006, reconstruction started on the main runway and taxiways. This was the first time the runway had been reconstructed (as opposed to resurfaced) since it was opened in 1966. This work was completed in 2007.<ref name="surface">Template:Cite news</ref> In addition to runway and shoulder work was the upgrade of the 40-year-old airfield group lighting with a new system, intended to upgrade the runway to ILS Category III standards.<ref name="surface"/>

In May 2007, Flyglobespan commenced a seasonal flight to Hamilton, Template:Convert from Toronto. This was the Liverpool airport's first transatlantic air service.<ref>Template:Cite press release</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Later that month, the carrier launched a route to New York City using a Boeing 757. Four of the seven weekly flights were nonstop, while the other three operated via Knock, Ireland. Yoko Ono, the widow of John Lennon, attended the inauguration ceremony.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Several problems beset the service, including technical issues with the aircraft, lengthy delays and low passenger numbers.<ref name="echo707">Template:Cite news</ref> Flyglobespan ended up replacing the Boeing 757 with a smaller 737 due to the poor patronage.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The company ended flights to both New York and Hamilton in October 2007.<ref name="le308">Template:Cite news</ref>

In 2007, construction of a multi-level car park<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and a Hampton by Hilton hotel started. The hotel opened in October 2009.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In June 2010, Vancouver Airport Services announced that it reached an agreement with The Peel Group to acquire 65% share in its airports, including Liverpool.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 2008, the airport hosted a public art exhibit. Liverpool 08 Collection, when Liverpool was the European Capital of Culture. Airside improvements include additional retail units and a more advanced security area aiming at reducing waiting times, completed in autumn 2010.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In April 2014, Peel repurchased the 65% stake it had sold in the airport giving it 100% ownership once more.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In March 2016, Peel sold a 20% stake in the airport to Liverpool City Council for a reported £12M. This valued the airport at £60M.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> From 2019 to early 2020, the airport completed some renovation works which made it even easier to get around and also more aesthetically pleasing.<ref>Template:Cite webTemplate:Cbignore</ref> This included changing the gate numbers from gates 30–43 to gates 11–17, in order to make the gates larger and more spacious, which also involved removing two by merging gates together. In addition, the departure hall, security hall and the entire experience throughout the airport has been altered massively by new decorations and images promoting the surrounding region.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Template:As of, the airport is 47% owned by Peel, 47% by investment manager Ancala Partners, and 6% by Liverpool City Council.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Future expansion

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Possible future developments include an investment of perhaps £100Template:Nbspmillion in the airport infrastructure: this might include a runway extension (enabling transatlantic/long-haul flights)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> as well as a new cargo area south of the runway, new taxiway, terminal expansion (including new food/drink outlets, larger security areas as well as 3 new piers/concourses), hotel/parking expansion as well as the plans for a new A-road to enhance motorway connections to the facilities.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In addition, the airport wants to build a nature reserve on the coastal perimeter of the Oglet Shore.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Plans also include schemes to improve public transport connections to the airport, including new bus and rail services to South Parkway.

Terminal

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The single terminal at Liverpool John Lennon Airport has a capacity of 7Template:Nbspmillion passengers a year<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and consists of an arrivals and a departures hall, both connected within short walking distance of each other. There are no jet bridges or travelators at Liverpool, requiring passengers to walk to/from the departure/arrival halls and gates. There are a number of retail and food outlets in the airport such as Boots, Burger King, Greggs, Starbucks, WHSmith and a number of bars and cafés. There is also a walk-through World Duty Free retail section for departing passengers.Template:Cn

Airport directors

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Captain Harold James Andrews was appointed as the first airport manager in July 1932, and he was effectively the first full-time professional co-ordinator for the whole project. Jack Chadwick took over many of the management functions post-war until 1961. That year there was a traffic increase of 42%, attributed to the first airport marketing campaign initiated by the new airport director, Wing Commander H.W.G.Andrews.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

In the late 1960s, Brian Trunkfield was the assistant director, and Keith Porter took over as airport director in the days when The Beatles were regular passengers.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Chris Preece, a former executive of British Aerospace, was airport director during much of the British Aerospace years of ownership, replaced by Rod Rufus and then Rod Hill, who brought in Direct Holidays, part of the MyTravel Group on a commercial deal which was to prove the market for easyJet. Neil Pakey took over as managing director in 2002, taking the airport through its major passenger growth years.Template:Cn

On selling the airport to Vancouver Airport Services in 2010, the former operations director for Vancouver Airport, Craig Richmond, took over, and on 1 March 2013, Matthew Thomas, also from Vancouver Airport Services (by then renamed Vantage Airport Group), was appointed to the role.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Andrew Cornish held the CEO position from September 2014 until the end of June 2017.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> John Irving became the new CEO with effect from 12 March 2018.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Airlines and destinations

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The following airlines operate regular scheduled flights to and from Liverpool:<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Template:Airport-dest-list

Statistics

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Passengers and aircraft movements

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Year Passenger numbers Aircraft movements
Total % change
(year on year)
Total % change
(year on year)
1997 689,468 83,354
1998 873,172 Template:Increase 26.6 86,871 Template:Increase 4.2
1999 1,304,959 Template:Increase 49.5 75,489 Template:Decrease 13.1
2000 1,982,711 Template:Increase 51.9 76,257 Template:Increase 1.0
2001 2,253,398 Template:Increase 13.7 74,659 Template:Decrease 2.1
2002 2,835,871 Template:Increase 25.8 74,313 Template:Decrease 0.5
2003 3,177,009 Template:Increase 12.0 84,405 Template:Increase 13.6
2004 3,353,350 Template:Increase 5.6 85,393 Template:Increase 1.2
2005 4,411,243 Template:Increase 31.5 92,970 Template:Increase 8.9
2006 4,963,886 Template:Increase 12.5 91,263 Template:Decrease 1.8
2007 5,468,510 Template:Increase 10.2 86,668 Template:Decrease 5.0
2008 5,334,152 Template:Decrease 2.5 84,890 Template:Decrease 2.1
2009 4,884,494 Template:Decrease 8.4 79,298 Template:Decrease 6.6
2010 5,013,940 Template:Increase 2.7 68,164 Template:Decrease 14.0
2011 5,251,161 Template:Increase 4.7 69,055 Template:Increase 1.3
2012 4,463,257 Template:Decrease 15.0 60,270 Template:Decrease 12.7
2013 4,187,439 Template:Decrease 6.2 55,839 Template:Decrease 7.4
2014 3,986,654 Template:Decrease 4.8 52,249 Template:Decrease 6.4
2015 4,301,495 Template:Increase 7.9 55,905 Template:Increase 7.0
2016 4,778,939 Template:Increase 11.1 62,441 Template:Increase 11.7
2017 4,901,157 Template:Increase 3.0 56,643 Template:Decrease 9.0
2018 5,042,312 Template:Increase 3.0 59,320 Template:Increase 5.0
2019 5,043,975 Template:Steady 0.0 58,968 Template:Decrease 1.0
2020 1,338,000 Template:Decrease 73.5 13,300 Template:Decrease 77.5
2021 1,165,508 Template:Decrease 1.1 13,233 Template:Decrease 1.0
2022 3,490,844 Template:Increase 199.5 26,766 Template:Increase 102.2
2023 4,193,623 Template:Increase 20.1 49,436 Template:Increase 84.7
2024<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> 5,074,266 Template:Increase 21.0 51,715 Template:Increase 4.6

Route statistics

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Busiest routes to and from Liverpool (2022)<ref name="routestats">Template:Cite web</ref>
Rank Airport Total
passengers
Change
2021–22
1 Belfast–International 412,179 Template:Increase 56.1%
2 Dublin 338,156 Template:Increase 369.3%
3 Alicante 192,050 Template:Increase 163.6%
4 Málaga 190,534 Template:Increase 164.2%
5 Palma de Mallorca 156,364 Template:Increase 196.7%
6 Isle of Man 154,439 Template:Increase 149.1%
7 Amsterdam 143,256 Template:Increase 1,237.7%
8 Faro 141,824 Template:Increase 151.3%
9 Barcelona 117,838 Template:Increase 466.5%
10 Jersey 99,937 Template:Increase 108.4%
11 Ireland West Airport 83,846 Template:Increase 180.7%
12 Kraków 73,898 Template:Increase 216.4%
13 Tenerife–South 71,690 Template:Increase 510.4%
14 Geneva 58,743 Template:Increase 3,147.3%
15 Cork 56,486 Template:Increase 477.5%
16 Bucharest 52,704 Template:Increase 477.5%
17 Rome–Fiumicino 47,261 Template:Increase 842.6%
18 Warsaw–Modlin 46,869 Template:Increase 152.1%
19 Lanzarote 46,378 Template:Increase 266.6%
20 Nice 41,833 Template:Increase 924.1%

Ground transport

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File:-2023-02-02 Bus interchange at Liverpool South Parkway.jpg
Liverpool South Parkway railway station was built to improve links to the airport.
File:-2023-02-02 Transport for Wales Class 197 at Liverpool South Parkway.jpg
Platform view at Liverpool South Parkway Station.

Liverpool John Lennon Airport is within Merseytravel Area C, for local public transport tickets. Plusbus tickets are also available. Arriva North West provides buses to Liverpool City Centre. There is also an express service Arriva North West 500 that connects the airport with the city centre every 30 minutes<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Road

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The airport is accessible from the A533/Runcorn Widnes Bridge and Mersey Gateway Bridge to the south and from the M57 and Knowsley Expressway to the north.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Rail

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The nearest Merseyrail Northern Line station is Hunts Cross at Template:Convert away, where there are frequent services to Liverpool Central and Southport.

Liverpool South Parkway at Template:Convert from the airport is the closest intercity railway station, where there are East Midlands Railway, London Northwestern Railway, Merseyrail, Northern Trains, TransPennine Express and Transport for Wales regular services.

Bus and coach

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Regular bus services link the airport with surrounding urban areas, operated by Arriva North West and Merseytravel.

Facilities

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Hotels

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File:John lennon airport hilton.jpg
The Hampton by Hilton Liverpool John Lennon Airport

The original terminal building dating from the late 1930s, famously seen on 1960s television footage with its terraces packed with Beatles' fans, was part of the Marriott chain of hotels. It became the Crowne Plaza Liverpool John Lennon Airport Hotel after a renovation in August 2008.

The Hampton by Hilton Liverpool/John Lennon Airport is one of four Hilton Worldwide hotels in Liverpool. It is situated directly opposite the main terminal building, and is the second largest hotel serving the complex after the Crowne Plaza.<ref name=hilton1>Template:Cite web</ref> The hotel was constructed as part of a £37Template:Nbspmillion development by Peel Holdings at John Lennon Airport (which also included a multi-storey car park).

There is also a Premier Inn and a Travelodge UK within walking distance to the airport terminal.

Accidents and incidents

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See also

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Bibliography

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  • Phil Butler Liverpool Airport - an Illustrated History. Tempus Publishing, Stroud, 2004. Template:ISBN.
  • Gabi Dolff-Bonekämper: Berlin-Tempelhof in: Berlin-Tempelhof, Liverpool-Speke, Paris-Le Bourget. Années 30 Architecture des aéroports, Airport Architecture of the Thierties, Flughafenarchitektur der dreißiger Jahre. Éditions du patrimoine, Paris 2000, Template:ISBN, S. 32–61.
  • Bob Hawkins (ed.): Historic airports. Proceedings of the international "L'Europe de l'Air" conferences on Aviation Architecture Liverpool (1999), Berlin (2000), Paris (2001). English Heritage, London 2005, Template:ISBN.

References

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Template:Reflist

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Template:Portal bar Template:Airports in the United Kingdom Template:Liverpool B&S Template:John Lennon Template:Transport in Merseyside

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