steingar
Taxi to Parking
I just hope that when my time comes (it does for all of us) I have the wherewithal to send the aircraft on its way rather than let it rot.
Fewer airports?
And, yea, tiedowns seem to have gone out of favor.
Yes, but not everyone is rich. I can’t afford a hangar or hangar rent. There are three C150s at my airport in hangars, and my C150 outside tied down. Mine has flown 60 times this year. The others have flown 0.As they should. For me, it is disturbing to see a nice airplane tied down in the weather to rot. If it were impossible for me to have, at the very least a hail shed, I would not own an airplane.
Yes, but not everyone is rich. I can’t afford a hangar or hangar rent. There are three C150s at my airport in hangars, and my C150 outside tied down. Mine has flown 60 times this year. The others have flown 0.
Which one is more disturbing?
similar happened not too far from me. Local government was planning to close the derelict airport. FAA rep was at the meeting. Needless to say, not only is the airport open, but has two brand new hangars, nice FBO, new self serve fuel, fresh repaved runway. Something about untold numbers of dollars to be paid back to the fed, immediately, or be used for what it was intended.Local politics can be like that unfortunately. That being said, the FAA regional or national offices are above local politics, and can cut through it. The airport manager or whoever is in charge will get the message when the federal funding not only gets cut off, but also have to repay the last 20 years of grants.
Pretty sure this is the right office
https://www.faa.gov/about/office_org/headquarters_offices/arp/offices/app/app500/app520/
Here the tiedowns are full, because the hangars are full. Not because folks would rather be tied down outside. We have a taxiway, about 2500 feet long, with space for hangars on each side. No-one is fool enough to build there, as once you build a hangar per the spec. set forth by the airport. It belongs to them.I can see that here, our tie downs are only used for transients anymore. Granted, in our climate zone your airplane would be unusable for months at a time if left outside, not to mention what it does to the plane.
But those folks are not fool enough to give away .5m to the airport, in addition to taxes, and fuel purchase.The reason there are not more t-hangars at "popular" airports is the airport is trying to hold space for the next big-box corporate hangar which will come with jet tenants who buy lots of gas and pay lots of property taxes.
The rabble with their piston rattletraps are not their preferred customers.
Take care of your own. Want a hangar? Buy one. Build one. Nobody owes you anything. If the other guy wants to tie outside? Not your business.
None for sale. So, must build one. Let's see; ~7k for site work, ~$25k for slab, and apron, $100-$150k for steel hangar, ~$25k+ to get it erected, $10-$25k for water, septic, and electrical. And there's probably another 20k for various, and sundries. So we'll ballpark $250k, plus land lease 5 years up front. And after 10 years the hangar belongs to the airport, and you get to pay them rent on it. That is why there is a 2500' taxiway here, with good level land on each side of it, with nothing on it. The rules don't allow covered tiedowns, and no wood frame construction.Take care of your own. Want a hangar? Buy one. Build one. Nobody owes you anything. If the other guy wants to tie outside? Not your business.
Well, much of the "hate" comes from the FAA. They believe grant-taking airports should only be for active aviation activities. Ancillary stuff like actually building aircraft or other encouragement of aviation are interlopers and should be banned. While I understand controlling some stuff that would interfere with the intent of the airport (and grants), some of the restrictions for both on-airport an ttf activities is really too restrictive.
None for sale. So, must build one. Let's see; ~7k for site work, ~$25k for slab, and apron, $100-$150k for steel hangar, ~$25k+ to get it erected, $10-$25k for water, septic, and electrical. And there's probably another 20k for various, and sundries. So we'll ballpark $250k, plus land lease 5 years up front. And after 10 years the hangar belongs to the airport, and you get to pay them rent on it. That is why there is a 2500' taxiway here, with good level land on each side of it, with nothing on it. The rules don't allow covered tiedowns, and no wood frame construction.
Well, much of the "hate" comes from the FAA. They believe grant-taking airports should only be for active aviation activities. Ancillary stuff like actually building aircraft or other encouragement of aviation are interlopers and should be banned. While I understand controlling some stuff that would interfere with the intent of the airport (and grants), some of the restrictions for both on-airport an ttf activities is really too restrictive.
At my airport, it’s because people that have nothing to do with aviation have figured out hangars are cheaper than any other space of similar size/door. Just for curiosity I’d love to know the percentage that have planes (flyable or not) vs those that don’t. That being said, I don’t know of anyone looking for a hangar in my area unable to acquire one and the hangar association/airport bills are being paid.
On the broader question by the OP, decades ago every little rural farm center town had an airport. With steady urbanization both the people and the best paying jobs to make money are now in the cities. That's probably concentrating the privately owned GA airplanes too, and putting pressure on the airports near urban centers where the desire to find hangar space is greatest.
Take care of your own. Want a hangar? Buy one. Build one. Nobody owes you anything. If the other guy wants to tie outside? Not your business.
Take care of your own. Want a hangar? Buy one. Build one. Nobody owes you anything. If the other guy wants to tie outside? Not your business.
What kind of changes would you suggest?I still contend that if the airports were properly managed it would be good for everyone.
So, why the hate towards homebuilders? Hangar next to mine used to be occupied by a guy building a RV something - other than the fact that he was at the airport more than 99.9% of the other owners, why is this a problem? You want a ghost town or a community?
What kind of changes would you suggest?
What kind of changes would you suggest?
What's really the kicker is that the airport recently built 2 more rows of T hangars, next to the existing t hangars. They had to flatten the hill to do it. Why they didn't build next to the taxiway on flat ground, is beyond me.I was gonna try and work your home airport's boondoggle into the conversation. A developer convinced the airport it was sitting on a gold mine, and at county/airport expense built a 2500' taxiway with hangar spaces surrounding it.
No hangars haves been built after 10 years because the restrictions, lease rates and terms are so extreme they don't even come close to making sense. I even have friends in the commercial construction industry who have looked at building hangars there for their own use and can't make the numbers work. But the developer was right. The airport is/was a goldmine. For them... (once).