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Cherry Capital Airport Connect

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The Kombucha Connection: Mother Knows Best - Cherry Capital Foods
photo src: cherrycapitalfoods.com

Cherry Capital Airport (IATA: TVC, ICAO: KTVC, FAA LID: TVC) is a public use airport located two nautical miles (4 km) southeast of the central business district of Traverse City, in Grand Traverse County, Michigan, United States. It is owned by Grand Traverse and Leelanau counties.

It is included in the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2017-2021, in which it is categorized as a non-hub primary commercial service facility.f>

Cherry Capital Airport had 190,286 passenger boardings (enplanements) in calendar year 2013, an increase from 182,616 enplanements in 2012 and 167,488 in 2010.

The airport had 429,364 passengers travel in and out in the 2015 calendar year.


Cherry Capital Airport - TVC
photo src: www.tvcairport.com


Maps, Directions, and Place Reviews



History

The airport's facility was previously on the north side of the East - West runway having the entrance on Parsons Ave. The airport recently added a new and larger airport tower next to the older one.

In the fall of 2004, Cherry Capital opened a new terminal demolishing the old one and reconfiguring the runways. Since then, Cherry Capital Airport has continued to grow with various carriers adding seasonal service and destinations.

Cherry Capital Airport was the recipient of the 2003-04, 2004-05, and 2005-06 Balchen/Post Awards for outstanding achievement in snow and ice control in the small commercial service airport category.

Soon, the airport will implement the first biometric access systems in the country. The airport is the ninth to implement the advanced security measures suggested after the September 11, 2001, attacks. This terminal is able to comply better with security regulations and supports a greater number of flights and passengers.


The Kombucha Connection: Mother Knows Best - Cherry Capital Foods
photo src: cherrycapitalfoods.com


Facilities and aircraft

The Airport has one concourse with six gates. Cherry Capital Airport covers an area of 1,026 acres (415 ha) at an elevation of 624 feet (190 m) above mean sea level. It has two asphalt paved runways: 10/28 is 6,901 by 150 feet (2,103 x 46 m) and 18/36 is 5,378 by 150 feet (1,639 x 46 m).

For the 12-month period ending December 31, 2012, the airport had 83,970 aircraft operations (down from 92,483 in 2008), an average of 230 per day: 79% general aviation, 10% scheduled commercial, 11% military, and <1% air taxi. In November 2016, there were 97 aircraft based at this airport: 73 single-engine, 15 multi-engine, 2 jet and 7 helicopter.

In February 2009, Forbes magazine ranked Cherry Capital Airport second in their list of the top ten "rip-off" airports in the United States, citing an average cost per mile to travelers departing TVC of 41 cents.

The airport has two Fixed-Based Operators (FBOs): (1) Harbour Air Services, LLC, an Air Elite, diamond-level service FBO, and (2) AvFlight.


Capital Connection Podcast (podcast)
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Airlines and destinations

Air service reflects the tourism season in Traverse City. In the winter, there are as few as 8 daily flights, and in the summer, there are nearly 30 daily flights. The following passenger airlines provide scheduled service to and from Cherry Capital Airport:


Cherry Capital Airport - Wikiwand
photo src: www.wikiwand.com


Top domestic destinations

FedEx Feeder is operated at the field by CSA Air. UPS flights are operated by Freight Runners Express and AmeriFlight.


Dennos Museum in Traverse City to Expand Thanks to Milock Gift ...
photo src: mynorth.com


Accidents and incidents

  • Northwest Airlink Flight 4712 (operated by Pinnacle Airlines) was a Bombardier CRJ200 from Minneapolis-St. Paul "which overran the runway while landing at TVC during a snowstorm on April 12, 2007. The aircraft received substantial damage, but the 52 people on board were not injured. The Board determined that the probable cause of this accident was the pilots' decision to land at TVC without performing a landing distance assessment, which was required by company policy. This poor decision-making likely reflected the effects of fatigue produced by a long, demanding duty day, and, for the captain, the duties associated with check airman functions. Contributing to the accident were 1) the Federal Aviation Administration pilot flight and duty time regulations that permitted the pilots' long, demanding duty day and 2) the TVC operations supervisor's use of ambiguous and unspecific radio phraseology in providing runway braking information. Four safety recommendations were issued to the FAA addressing timely post accident drug testing, training on landing distance assessment performance, ground operations personnel communications, and criteria for runway closures in snow and ice conditions. The NTSB adopted the report on June 10, 2008."

Source of the article : Wikipedia



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