Sisimiut Airport
For scheduled flights, the airport is served exclusively by Air Greenland, serving as a fly-through destination with no aircraft stationed onsite. Operated by Mittarfeqarfiit, it is also used for general aviation purposes.
Airlines and destinations
Airlines | Destinations |
---|---|
Air Greenland | Ilulissat, Kangerlussuaq, Nuuk |
Roads in Sisimiut, including the road to the airport, are surfaced, but there is no road linking Sisimiut to any other settlement.
With 5,460 inhabitants in 2010, Sisimiut is the second-largest town in Greenland, one of the few towns in the country exhibiting growth patterns, with corresponding increasing passenger traffic at Sisimiut Airport. Air Greenland pledges to maintain a relatively high number of flights at the airport even should the construction of the road to Kangerlussuaq commence. Apart from the connecting flights to Kangerlussuaq, the busiest routes are the routes to Nuuk, the capital of Greenland, and to Ilulissat, the cultural and business center of Avannaata, the northernmost and second-largest municipality in the country.
History
Before the airport was opened in the 1990s, Sisimiut had been served by the now-closed heliport, located on the eastern outskirts of the town, in Sisimiut valley.
The construction of Sisimiut Airport was part of the regional airport network extension in Greenland, with several airports built to serve STOL aircraft of Air Greenland − the venerable De Havilland Canada Dash-7s acquired in the preceding decade − planes particularly suited to the often severe weather conditions in Greenland. The other new additions were Maniitsoq Airport in the southern part of the Qeqqata municipality, Aasiaat Airport in western Greenland; Qaarsut Airport and Upernavik Airport in northwestern Greenland.
Since 2000, construction of a 170 km (110 mi) road to Kangerlussuaq has been discussed. The road would be the first of its kind in Greenland, connecting two settlements, and reducing the need for passenger exchange at Kangerlussuaq Airport, the airline hub and the need for the Sisimiut Airport. It would link the then national hub with a ship port, allowing goods to be transported by road and ship from Kangerlussuaq. In 2016 there was a decision by the municipality to build a very simple road for 4x4 vehicles between Sisimiut and Kangerlussuaq. This road was finished in 2022. In the mean time Nuuk Airport was rebuilt into a large airport, opened 2024, reducing the need of the Kangerlussuaq airport.
Future
In the short term, there are plans to extend the runway a little, in connection with the replacement of the Air Greenland fleet.
Facilities
There is no deicing equipment at the airport, which is costly and problematic in Greenlandic winter. All passengers connecting through the airport and continuing with the same plane to another destination are required to disembark and undergo regular boarding process checks before they can re-board and continue the flight.
At the terminal there is a Post Greenland box, a soft drink machine and television, and a small exhibition from the Sisimiut Museum. A workstation in kiosk mode provides tourist, municipal and airport related information. Taxis as well as an infrequent town bus service connect the airport with the center of Sisimiut.
References
- ^ Greenland AIP for BGSS – Sisimiut Airport from Naviair
- ^ "Booking system". Air Greenland. Retrieved 9 June 2010.
- ^ Statistics Greenland, Greenland in Figures, 2010
- ^ "Grønlandsfly 1990-99" (in Danish). Air Greenland. Archived from the original on 28 May 2010. Retrieved 1 July 2010.
- ^ "Grønlandsfly 1980-89" (in Danish). Air Greenland. Archived from the original on 28 May 2010. Retrieved 1 July 2010.
- ^ Michael Binzer (Air Greenland) (2003). Air Greenland Airbus A330-200, Boeing 757-200, Dash 7 & Sikorsky 61 (DVD). Just Planes Videos. ISBN 1-931438-85-4.
- ^ Sisimiut.gl Archived 2008-09-07 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Kommunalbestyrelsen i Qeqqata arbejder videre på et ATV-spor mellem Sismiut og Kangerlussuaq
- ^ "Defective equipment costs Air Greenland millions". Sermitsiaq. 18 November 2008. Retrieved 17 May 2010.