About Blenheim Airport (Woodbourne Airport)
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Blenheim Airport (Marlborough Airport) » About

Woodbourne Airport (IATA: BHE, ICAO: NZWB) trading as Marlborough Airport is
a small, controlled airport located 3 nautical miles (8 km) west of Blenheim in
the Marlborough region of New Zealand, on State Highway Six, Middle Renwick
Road. It is co-located with RNZAF Base Woodbourne in the Wairau Valley on the
north-eastern corner of the South Island of New Zealand. The airport has a
single terminal and 7 tarmac gates.
Woodbourne was one of the first airports in New Zealand. Today it is one of the
few remaining air force bases (RNZAF Base Woodbourne); with general maintenance
and initial training conducted there. It also serves as the civil airport for
Blenheim. Runway 06R/24L was sealed for Fokker Friendships in 1961, and was one
of the first regional airports in the country to take turboprop aircraft.
Today it has more frequent operations, with Air New Zealand's regional
subsidiary Air Nelson using Bombardier Q300 and Mount Cook Airlines using ATR
72-600 aircraft. The busiest route from Blenheim remains across the Cook Strait
to Wellington, 80 km to the north-east; flights take only 25 minutes.
Air2there operates from Nelson and Kapiti Coast. Sounds Air operates Cessna
Caravan and Pilatus PC 12 aircraft from Wellington, Napier, Kapiti Coast,
Kaikoura and Christchurch.
The terminal building was renovated in 2014/15 to cope with growing passenger
demand and increased use by larger aircraft types. The redevelopment included an
extension of the apron along with new check-in, baggage clam facilities and
extension of the departure lounge.
The airport was the 13th busiest in New Zealand during 2015, based on passenger
numbers.
The airport resides at an elevation of 109 feet (33 m) above mean sea level. It
has one runway designated 06R/24L with bitumen surface measuring 4,675 feet
(1,425 m) in length.
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