London Oxford Airport (IATA: OXF, ICAO: EGTK), formerly known as Kidlington Airport, is a privately owned airport located near Kidlington in Cherwell District, Oxfordshire, 6 NM (11 km; 6.9 mi) northwest by north of Oxford,[1] 62 mi (100 km) from Central London.[2]
London Oxford Airport Oxford Airport Kidlington Airport | |||||||||||
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Airport type | Private-owned, public-use | ||||||||||
Owner/Operator | Oxford Aviation Services Limited / OxfordJet | ||||||||||
Serves | Oxford | ||||||||||
Location | Kidlington, Oxfordshire | ||||||||||
Elevation AMSL | 270 ft / 82 m | ||||||||||
Coordinates | 51°50′13″N 001°19′12″W | ||||||||||
Website | oxfordairport.co.uk | ||||||||||
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![]() ![]() EGTK Location in Oxfordshire | |||||||||||
Runways | |||||||||||
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Statistics (2021) | |||||||||||
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Sources: UK AIP at NATS[1] |
It specialises in general and business aviation and is home to CAE Oxford, formerly Oxford Aviation Training, Volare Aviation and Leading Edge Aviation. It is the only ICAO-listed civilian airport in Oxfordshire. Historically dominated by pilot training, in 2008, flying activity fell to just 48,000 movements, the lowest level on record and a 70% decline in 10 years, however, growth in business aviation was the fastest of any UK airport for the years up to 2012. After the COVID-19 pandemic the airport saw an increase in movements, totalling 65,265, over 20,000 more than 2019.[3]
Oxford (Kidlington) Aerodrome is an EASA Certified Airport that allows flights for the public transport of passengers or for flying instruction as authorised by the Certificate Holder (Oxford Aviation Services Limited).
The airport was originally established in 1935 by Oxford City Council to act as municipal airport, but following RAF use (as RAF Kidlington) during World War II, it became established as a centre for aviation education, charter and maintenance facilities.
The following units were here at some point:[4]
By 1968, it had become the second busiest airfield in the UK, with 223,270 movements – just 10% fewer than Heathrow. For 5 years just after World War II (1951–1956) Kidlington was base of operations for the Oxford Gliding Club. They later moved due to an increase of powered aircraft activity. They relocated to RAF Weston-On-The-Green.[5]
In 1981, the airport freehold was sold by the council and later owned by BBA Aviation plc. In July 2007 the airport was sold for £40m to property entrepreneurs David and Simon Reuben.[6]
A new Saturday-only summer service to Jersey, operated by Air Southwest, ran from July to September 2009.[7] The summer service came back in 2010, operated by CityJet.
In August 2009 the airport was rebranded as London Oxford Airport despite its distance from the capital. The move attracted much press comment,[8][9][10] and criticism from the Oxford Civic Society, which described the new name as misleading;[11] the airport is 60 miles (97 km) from Marble Arch in central London and generally considered to be well outside the London area.[12] However, it was argued that highlighting proximity to London would make the airport more attractive to the overseas business aviation community and now the airport hosts the fourth busiest business aviation handling facility (FBO) in the UK.[12]
In October 2009, London Oxford Airport was approved as a UK entry point for pets, under the Pet Travel Scheme (PETS).[13] It was one of only two UK business aviation centres to offer this service at the time.
Swiss airline Baboo's weekly Saturday service from Oxford to Geneva commenced in December 2009. The service was augmented by a link to Rome through Alitalia Airlines; passengers were thus able to travel from Oxford to Rome, via Geneva.[14]
In January 2010 the airport announced the launch of daily flights to Edinburgh to be operated by new start-up, Varsity Express. However flights were suspended within a week, and the airline ceased operations on 8 March 2010.[15] A spokesman for Oxford Airport later confirmed that talks were under way with other operators, with a view to re-establishing the Oxford-Edinburgh route.[16] It was emphasised that only well-established operators would be invited to service the route.
Plans for a 17,800 m2 (192,000 sq ft) expansion of high-strength apron and a new 4,400 m2 (47,000 sq ft) hangar were outlined at the end of July 2010.[17] The intention was to create capacity for up to 40 medium to large executive jets, in order to cater for major public events such as the Olympic Games.
In January 2012, Manx2 announced the start of a scheduled service from Oxford to the Isle of Man, beginning in May 2012. By 2013, this became a short-term seasonal service focussed around the Isle of Man TT motorcycling event.
From March 2013 to August 2013, Minoan Air flew from Oxford to both Dublin and Edinburgh.
35% of the airport's activity is accounted for by training flights; mostly from Leading Edge Aviation, CAE Oxford and Pilot Flight Training. 10% is business aviation, both private and charter, and the remaining 55% is mainly private and recreational general aviation activity.[3]
The airports close proximity to Silverstone Circuit attracts an increase in business aviation activity during the British Grand Prix. As well as the Formula One event, the Moto GP also brings many Air charter flights for passengers and teams attending the event.
Principal companies based at Oxford Airport include CAE Oxford, Leading Edge Aviation,[18] Airbus Helicopters, Volare Aviation, Go Fly Oxford,[19] Pilot Flight Training[20] and Capital Air Services.[21]
In December 2009, London Oxford Airport was voted the 'Best British Business Aviation Airport' at the Airport Operators Association Annual Awards Ceremony in London.
In late 2021, a new hangar was completed. At 63,000ft, 140m long, it can hold several Bombardier Global 7500, Gulfstream G650/G700/G800 and Dassault Falcon 7X aircraft, complete with an attached office block. 7 new helipads were built at the same time, catering for the expansion of rotary aircraft traffic.[22]
A new Fuel Farm Facility was opened in early 2022, allowing for an increased capacity of Jet A1 and Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF). A new airside Self Service Avgas facility was also installed, allowing for visiting light aircraft to easily refuel using a Credit Card.
The airport upgraded its promulgated RFFS (Rescue Fire Fighting Service) Category to CAT 6, allowing for short notice diversions and acceptance of larger aircraft that frequent the airport such as the Boeing 737-700 BBJ, Airbus A320 and Embraer E-Jet E2 family.
The airport has considered new scheduled routes, including flights to Amsterdam, Belfast, Edinburgh, Frankfurt, Glasgow, Jersey, Munich and Paris.[citation needed] These markets are said to be the more viable routes for the airport. In December 2015, the UK government confirmed funding support for a proposed reinstatement of the Oxford – Edinburgh route.[23]
However, the primary focus today is the London region business aviation market where the airport is the sixth busiest for this sector in the UK, but hosts the fourth-busiest FBO (Fixed-Base Operation – VIP aircraft handling facility) with over 5,500 business aircraft movements a year. Within the private and business aviation sector, the airport handled over 8,000 private passengers in 2015 whilst such flights were originating from or destined for well over 50 different overseas airports including the US, Canada, African and Middle-Eastern cities.
The airport is currently undergoing a modernisation and expansion program with a new Fire Station being constructed, enhancing the airports CAT 6 fire cover capability, along with 3 RFFS Tenders, the first of which is expected to be delivered in late 2022.[22]
A joint construction of a new MRO facility is underway for the UK headquarters of Airbus Helicopters. The 14 acre, £40+ million site is expected to be completed in 2024.[24]
The northern taxiway is being rerouted and extended to the end of the runway, removing the need for backtracking for departure, and moving the noise away from local residents. This was completed and the first aircraft used the taxiway on 8th November 2022.[25]
The main runway (Code 3C) is fully grooved and 1,552 m (5,092 ft).[26] In 2007 the airport re-surfaced, strengthened and widened the main runway, taxiways and aprons, and installed new airfield ground lighting and a CAT 1 instrument landing system (ILS).[26] In early 2012, a new state-of-the-art Thales primary and secondary radar system was installed.
In 2008 a new £2.5m business aviation terminal was completed (FBO) and is operated by OxfordJet. The airport can handle aircraft up to and including the Boeing BBJ and Airbus ACJ series.[26] For the business aviation operator, the airport is an approximately 90-minute drive time from the West End area of central London but offers helicopter shuttles in 25 minutes to central London's Battersea Heliport which is co-owned with London Oxford Airport.[27]
Oxford Airport is served by a seven-day Oxford Airport Shuttle bus service to and from Oxford Parkway railway station, Oxford city railway station and Oxford bus station. Other local bus services operated by the Oxford Bus Company and Stagecoach West connect the airport to the town. Although Oxford Airport is located approximately 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) from the Cherwell Valley Line, it has no direct rail service. The nearest railway stations are Oxford Parkway, Hanborough, Tackley and Islip.[28]
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