Heliports
Ryanboxer, if I may ask where this 6th from the top photo taken? Seams like an Gazelle on it
KahuluiHeliportWebcamBlueHawaiianHelicopters
However I'm not sure what the numbers above signify - the pad number perhaps?
Thread Starter
RPM - very nice for a private pad.
A more accommodating approach/departure path one would be hard pressed to find.
Would you at least tell us which county it is in!
A more accommodating approach/departure path one would be hard pressed to find.
Would you at least tell us which county it is in!
Avoid imitations
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RPM. I want them all to look like that!
(No, not the mower, or the driver).
(No, not the mower, or the driver).
Thread Starter
US-based Life Flite helipad (assistance requested in identifying the location of this pad)
Office block? Apartments to let? No ... but the home of Indian entrepreneur Anil Ambani and his (extended) family who are ensconced in this Mumbai-based building named 'Sea Wind' and which recently had a helipad installed for ease of access
Royal Melbourne Hospital's rooftop helipad
Civil Ops for DC Heliport?
The manager of Washington, D.C.’s South Capitol Street Heliport (09W) said he is optimistic that the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) will approve a plan that complies with security requirements which will permit the reopening of the facility to corporate traffic. Heliport manager Don Scimonelli said an interagency group is “working on a good solution” that would let security-cleared aircraft back in to 09W but that the development was “still brand new.”
The heliport is located on the Anacostia River one mile northeast of Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA) and is home base to D.C. Metro Police’s aviation unit and select transient medevac and military flights. The facility opened in 1988 and at its apex had 41 regular corporate operators. After 9/11 and until 2005, limited commercial operations were allowed at 09W provided they complied with FAA Notams and TSA requirements; however, since then they have been prohibited because of security concerns.
Scimonelli credited the intervention of D.C. congressional delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton for moving the TSA to reexamine its civil traffic ban on the heliport. Last November, Norton, a senior member of both the House Aviation Subcommittee and Homeland Security Committee, sent a letter to TSA Administrator John Pistole that urged a reconsideration. Norton said the government’s action amounted to “takeover of a private facility without compensation” despite “the willingness of the heliport to submit to whatever structures and regulations the government chose to impose on them.”
Her objection was echoed in an earlier, and unsuccessful, lawsuit brought against the federal government by Air Pegasus, the heliport’s operator between 1992 and 2002.
The U.S. Court of Claims dismissed the lawsuit that, in effect, charged the government with a de facto unlawful taking of property via regulation. The U.S. Court of Appeals upheld that ruling, noting that it is the government’s right to control airspace, and that a private party’s property rights do not extend to said airspace. The Appeals Court noted that while the FAA action may have adversely impacted Air Pegasus, “there was not a taking of any cognizable property interest of Air Pegasus.”
Norton is recommending that 09W be reopened with security requirements for private aircraft that mirror those already in place at DCA, including nonstop flights only, designated gateway airports and heliports, and passenger and crew screening. She said continuing to deny civilian use of 09W is “a violation of due process” and “punitive” to the local economy.
At the time civil service to the heliport was suspended there were plans in the works to establish scheduled helicopter service between it, the Wall Street Heliport in New York City and commercial airports in Washington, D.C., and New York.
Scimonelli said the heliport sees an average of two to three operations per day, but that some 15 corporate operators have expressed an interest in resuming flights there. If these flights do resume, he said he expectd they initially would amount to no more than one to two additional operations per day. “They will not be coming in droves,” he said.
For now, Scimonelli said the volume of military and medevac flights using the heliport is increasing. Medevac flights landing at 09W primarily are transporting patients to Washington’s George Washington or Children’s hospitals or the John Hopkins hospital in Baltimore. Occasionally, medevac helicopters are forced to remain overnight due to winter weather concerns. Scimonelli said those flights typically are cleared to the heliport under special VFR. Work on an instrument approach to 09W was suspended in 2005, he said, because the heliport owner “did not have the money to complete it. Our growth has been stunted.”
Washington DC’s South Capitol Street Heliport
The heliport is located on the Anacostia River one mile northeast of Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA) and is home base to D.C. Metro Police’s aviation unit and select transient medevac and military flights. The facility opened in 1988 and at its apex had 41 regular corporate operators. After 9/11 and until 2005, limited commercial operations were allowed at 09W provided they complied with FAA Notams and TSA requirements; however, since then they have been prohibited because of security concerns.
Scimonelli credited the intervention of D.C. congressional delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton for moving the TSA to reexamine its civil traffic ban on the heliport. Last November, Norton, a senior member of both the House Aviation Subcommittee and Homeland Security Committee, sent a letter to TSA Administrator John Pistole that urged a reconsideration. Norton said the government’s action amounted to “takeover of a private facility without compensation” despite “the willingness of the heliport to submit to whatever structures and regulations the government chose to impose on them.”
Her objection was echoed in an earlier, and unsuccessful, lawsuit brought against the federal government by Air Pegasus, the heliport’s operator between 1992 and 2002.
The U.S. Court of Claims dismissed the lawsuit that, in effect, charged the government with a de facto unlawful taking of property via regulation. The U.S. Court of Appeals upheld that ruling, noting that it is the government’s right to control airspace, and that a private party’s property rights do not extend to said airspace. The Appeals Court noted that while the FAA action may have adversely impacted Air Pegasus, “there was not a taking of any cognizable property interest of Air Pegasus.”
Norton is recommending that 09W be reopened with security requirements for private aircraft that mirror those already in place at DCA, including nonstop flights only, designated gateway airports and heliports, and passenger and crew screening. She said continuing to deny civilian use of 09W is “a violation of due process” and “punitive” to the local economy.
At the time civil service to the heliport was suspended there were plans in the works to establish scheduled helicopter service between it, the Wall Street Heliport in New York City and commercial airports in Washington, D.C., and New York.
Scimonelli said the heliport sees an average of two to three operations per day, but that some 15 corporate operators have expressed an interest in resuming flights there. If these flights do resume, he said he expectd they initially would amount to no more than one to two additional operations per day. “They will not be coming in droves,” he said.
For now, Scimonelli said the volume of military and medevac flights using the heliport is increasing. Medevac flights landing at 09W primarily are transporting patients to Washington’s George Washington or Children’s hospitals or the John Hopkins hospital in Baltimore. Occasionally, medevac helicopters are forced to remain overnight due to winter weather concerns. Scimonelli said those flights typically are cleared to the heliport under special VFR. Work on an instrument approach to 09W was suspended in 2005, he said, because the heliport owner “did not have the money to complete it. Our growth has been stunted.”
Washington DC’s South Capitol Street Heliport
Chief Bottle Washer
A reminder: as I asked in Post No 13:
As with all our Rotorheads threads and photos, don't use it as an excuse to put up a lot of photos that anyone can find by trawling t'internet. Unique, personal photos are what we're after
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heliport-pontoon?
Does anyone have pictures, links, info to share
about heliports on barges or pontoons?
I already searched the web, but it mostly comes up with the big ones,
London / NY etc... We're looking for something smaller.
It must have been done before...
Thanks!
about heliports on barges or pontoons?
I already searched the web, but it mostly comes up with the big ones,
London / NY etc... We're looking for something smaller.
It must have been done before...
Thanks!
Thread Starter
FFT: Find a copy of Stockholm's 'Gamla Stan' heli-pontoon here.
Have landed at this tiny floating pad on each occasion I have visited Stockholm, courtesy of Arlanda Helicopter
Have landed at this tiny floating pad on each occasion I have visited Stockholm, courtesy of Arlanda Helicopter
Thread Starter
The new helipad at St. Olav's Hospital in Trondheim, Norway, as seen during the evening of 18th August 2012. The light trail is from a departing AW139 (LN-OLS) belonging to Norway's Lufttransport (Photo: Kim Vanvik)
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I've found a useful list of heliport and general helicopter terms - there are also a number of illustrated links.
Should be useful for anyone involved in heliports or heliport planning.
Heliport Terminology
Should be useful for anyone involved in heliports or heliport planning.
Heliport Terminology
Helistudent,
Yes, but it does differ slightly from ICAO Annex 14 with which all design codes are suppposed to be in compliance.
Jim
Yes, but it does differ slightly from ICAO Annex 14 with which all design codes are suppposed to be in compliance.
Jim
Last edited by JimL; 11th Jul 2013 at 16:06.
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Thanks JimL
Some of the bits I found interesting and which don't seem to be much talked about - -
So if I've understood this correctly, to land a helicopter you need to follow a FATO to the FARA using a transitional surface before landing on a TLOF?
A new landing pad in Bolivia yes. I'm thinking that maybe the TLOF limits on this pad could be too small?
Some of the bits I found interesting and which don't seem to be much talked about - -
Final Approach and Takeoff Area (FATO): A defined area over which the final phase of an approach to a hover, or a landing, is completed and from which the takeoff is initiated. Also called the primary surface.
FATO diagram
Final Approach Reference Area (FARA): A 150-foot wide by at least 150-foot long obstacle-free area located at the end of a precision instrument approach with its center aligned on the final approach course.
Transitional Surface: An imaginary surface that extends up and out from the lateral boundaries of the primary surface and approach/departure surfaces. For heliports, the transitional surface's slope is two feet horizontal to one foot vertical. It extends laterally to 250 feet either side of the centerline of each designated approach/takeoff path.
Transitional Surface diagram
Touchdown and Liftoff Area (TLOF): A load-bearing area, normally centered in the FATO, on which the helicopter lands or takes off. The TLOF is frequently called a helipad or helideck.
FATO diagram
Final Approach Reference Area (FARA): A 150-foot wide by at least 150-foot long obstacle-free area located at the end of a precision instrument approach with its center aligned on the final approach course.
Transitional Surface: An imaginary surface that extends up and out from the lateral boundaries of the primary surface and approach/departure surfaces. For heliports, the transitional surface's slope is two feet horizontal to one foot vertical. It extends laterally to 250 feet either side of the centerline of each designated approach/takeoff path.
Transitional Surface diagram
Touchdown and Liftoff Area (TLOF): A load-bearing area, normally centered in the FATO, on which the helicopter lands or takes off. The TLOF is frequently called a helipad or helideck.
Any pictures of the brand new landing pad there?
Last edited by HeliStudent; 11th Jul 2013 at 20:03.
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MACCHIARELLA Heliport in Italy.
helicopterkits.********.com/2013/08/italys-incredibly-large-fleet-of-civil
Mansion in Hawaii with rooftop Helipad
Happy Heliport
helicopterkits.********.com/2013/08/italys-incredibly-large-fleet-of-civil
Mansion in Hawaii with rooftop Helipad
Happy Heliport
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