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London’s Been Approved To Get Its SEVENTH International Airport

a bridge over a river with a clock tower and a castle

If you live in or near a large- or even medium-sized city in the U.S., chances are good you have a decent-sized airport near you. If you’re lucky, there may two airports that are a reasonable drive from home. Heck, if you live in the New York metropolitan area (population 23 million), you even have a choice of THREE nearby airports.

Meanwhile, if you look at the other side of the pond, London, England has SIX airports. How and why that happened is pretty interesting (click here to learn more about it). You’d think that six airports would be enough for a city with a population of about 9 million, right? Apparently not, because the country’s capital city has just been approved for airport #7.

Manston Airport, located on the Isle of Thanet in Kent, was a small, single-runway airport during its active years from the time of World War I until the year 2014. It was a Royal Air Force base during World War 2, but is now closed and being used as a space to park trucks.

The current owner of the property, RiverOak Strategic Partners (RSP), has been trying to get approval for the redevelopment of the airport, to once again be used as same, for the past 5 years. They just got approval.

Their goal is for the new airport to handle cargo, which will decrease the cargo load on the other 6 airports in the area. However, RSP director Tony Freudmann, told local outlet KentOnline that while it will primarily operate as a freight airport, talks are also underway with airlines (specifically KLM, Ryanair and EasyJet), regarding the possibility of also operating passenger flights.

“Looking at the way the passenger market is going, we are confident we can persuade one or more low-cost carriers to base their planes here,” said Freudmann.

RSP plans to invest up to £500 million ($588 million) into the airport, including ensuring it’s “net zero carbon from scratch.”

Surveys, planning and design work will be the next steps, followed by construction later next year. The first cargo planes are planned to take off in early 2025.

Feature Photo: Pixabay

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