Phoenix Goodyear Airport (IATA: GYR, ICAO: KGYR, FAA LID: GYR) (formerly Goodyear Municipal Airport) is a public airport in Goodyear, Arizona in Maricopa County, Arizona, United States.

Phoenix Goodyear Airport
Summary
Airport typePublic
OwnerCity of Phoenix
ServesPhoenix, Arizona
LocationGoodyear, United States
Hub for
Elevation AMSL971 ft / 296 m
Coordinates33°25′41″N 112°22′28″W / 33.42806°N 112.37444°W / 33.42806; -112.37444
Websitegoodyearairport.com
Map
GYR is located in Arizona
GYR
GYR
GYR is located in the United States
GYR
GYR
Map
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
3/21 8,500 2,591 Asphalt
Helipads
Number Length Surface
ft m
H1 64 20 Concrete
Statistics (2020)
Aircraft operations79,599
Based aircraft215

History

edit

It was built during World War II as a naval air facility, NAF Litchfield Park, then upgraded to naval air station status and renamed NAS Litchfield Park.[2] Its primary role after the end of World War II was storage and preservation of obsolete or excess U.S. Navy, U.S. Marine Corps and U.S. Coast Guard aircraft.[3] In 1968, all Department of Defense and U.S. Coast Guard aircraft preservation and storage was consolidated at the Military Aircraft Storage and Disposition Center (MASDC) at Davis-Monthan AFB in Tucson and NAS Litchfield Park was slated for closure.

 
Old World War II Radar Tower was built in 1941 and located in the Phoenix Goodyear Airport (formerly Goodyear Municipal Airport). The airport was used as a naval air facility during World War II.

Following the closure of NAS Litchfield Park in 1968, the Goodyear company discussed using it as its Aviation Products Division. The airport is not served by any airlines. Ultimately, the city of Phoenix purchased the airport as a general aviation reliever airport for Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport.[4] The airport is, however, a major keep and maintenance spot, and the aircraft of many airlines, both domestic and international, can be spotted there.[5]

Phoenix-Goodyear Airport is a Superfund site due to a number of soil and groundwater contaminants from its time as a military installation.[6]



Facilities

edit

Phoenix Goodyear Airport covers 789 acres (319 ha) at an elevation of 971 ft (296 m) above mean sea level. GYR has one asphalt runway and one concrete helipad:

  • Runway 3/21 measuring 8,500 ft × 150 ft (2,591 m × 46 m)
  • Helipad H1, measuring 64 ft × 64 ft (20 m × 20 m)[1]

In 2020 the airport had 79,599 aircraft operations, average 218 per day: 94% general aviation, <1% airline, 1% military and 4% air taxi. 215 aircraft were based at the airport: 183 single engine, 6 multi-engine, 19 jet, 6 military, and 1 helicopter.[1]

Tenants

edit
 
The Phoenix-Goodyear Airport "bone-yard" where planes no longer in use are kept

The airfield is home to several companies offering aircraft maintenance and commercial pilot training:

  • AerSale, Inc. operates a maintenance facility on the airfield which comprises maintenance, storage and disposal. The northern side of the airfield is used for storage and many Boeing 737, Airbus A340 and Boeing 747s are visible from the road as they await their fate.
  • Airline Training Center Arizona (ATCA) was the training facility for the Lufthansa Flight Training of German Lufthansa Airlines. Basic flight training for German Air Force student pilots was also conducted in Grob G 120 aircraft.
  • CAE Oxford Aviation Academy (CAE OAA) is the US name for CAE Oxford Aviation Academy, a British company specializing in training airline pilots for United Kingdom, British Airways and other European airlines. CAE OAA moved to Falcon Field in October 2013 and is no longer based at KGYR.
  • FLY Goodyear, formerly known as Buckeye Flight Experience, is a training center based at Lux Air Jet Center. They offer single-engine and multi-engine flight training for those looking to learn to fly for fun or those wanting to pursue a career in aviation.
  • Lux Air Jet Center, is the Fixed Base Operator (FBO) for the Phoenix Goodyear Airport. They provide, fuel and support services for government, military and emergency medical service operators, also hosts many of the arrivals and departures for major sporting events in the Phoenix area.
  • CTC Wings aviation academy started to use the airport as a training facility in 2014, in addition to its center in Hamilton, New Zealand.
  • United Aviate Academy, Opened in early 2022 is the main training center for new pilots for United Airlines and the newest flight school at Phoenix Goodyear Airport. They use an above the norm training aircraft, the Cirrus SR-20 similarly to the Lufthansa Flight Training Center. Which makes them quite unique compared to other flight schools.

Operational statistics

edit
Type of operation Number
Single-engine aircraft based on field 183
Multi-engine aircraft based on field 6
Annual commercial operations 184
Jet aircraft based on field 19
Annual commuter operations none
Helicopters based on field 1
Annual air taxi operations 3,324
Military aircraft based on field 6
Annual military operations 1,175
Gliders based on field none
Annual GA local operations 45,189
Ultralights based on field none
Annual GA itinerant operations 29,727

Through December 31, 2020.

edit

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c FAA Airport Form 5010 for GYR PDF, effective 2023-01-26
  2. ^ Cook, James E. (December 2, 1986). "Goodyear cuts deep tracks in Arizona history". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2023-09-11.
  3. ^ "NAS Litchfield Park". Flickr.
  4. ^ Dean, Paul (February 4, 1968). "Litchfield ready for mufti and golden eagle on label". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2023-09-11.
  5. ^ "Goodyear Photos Page 1". www.visitingphx.com.
  6. ^ US EPA, OSRTI. "PHOENIX-GOODYEAR AIRPORT AREA Site Profile". cumulis.epa.gov. Retrieved 2023-09-11.
edit