Budget Car Rental Ireland Irish Hire Dublin Shannon Cork
Dublin Airport: Past
Situated just north of Dublin City, Dublin Airport (Aerfort Bhaile Atha Cliath in Irish) was built on the site of an old royal Air Force base at Collinstown. After the Irish Free State was established, Baldonnel Aerodrome was the airport of choice. It was used by Iona National Airways (1931) and Aer Lingus (1935) before transferring to the Collinstown site in 1940. Today Baldonnel Aerodrome is home to the Irish Army s Air Force division.
Construction began on the new airport at Collinstown in 1937 and within a couple of years there was a grass runway, roadways, car parking facilities and electrical infrastructure constructed. The first flight from Dublin Airport took place in 1940 and soon afterwards, construction work began on a new terminal building which subsequently opened in 1941. Today this building is still used, and still stands out as an excellent piece of architecture. Designed to replicate the bridge of a ship, the building is today listed as one of the buildings that must be preserved in Ireland.
During the 1950s Dublin Airport grew and improvements were added to the airport continuously, including a longer runway and improvements to the terminals in order to deal with the expanded traffic levels. New airlines started to fly out of Dublin Airport including Sabena and British European Airways.
By 1958 Aer Lingus was flying from Dublin Airport, through Shannon Airport to America. The airport continued to evolve to keep up with the traffic levels that were increasing every year. By 1969 nearly 2million passengers had travelled through Dublin Airport.
During the early 1970s, Dublin Airport had to evolve yet again to cope with more modern aircraft and increasing passenger numbers as Aer Lingus started operating Boeing 747 aircraft. The expected explosion in growth in this industry during the 70s fail to show because of concerns over rising prices of oil and the disturbing troubles in Northern Ireland.
The 80s for Dublin Airport was a period of expansion through increased routes between the UK and Ireland alongside the servicing of the regional airports in Ireland by Aer Lingus. Examples of these are Tralee, Sligo, Shannon, Cork and Galway. By the end of the 80s passenger numbers passing through Dublin Airport had swelled to over 5million annually.
During the 1990s Dublin Airport enjoyed rapid growth in passenger levels as the Celtic Tiger meant that people in Ireland had vast amounts of expendable income for the first time. Low cost operators such as Ryan Air fed into this expanded business. With passenger levels increasing annually, the future for Dublin Airport looked to be good.
Ryanair , The Low Fares Airline
Next page: Budget Car Rental Northern Ireland
Bookmark/Share This Page:
|
|
|
|
|
Budget Car Rental Ireland Irish Hire Dublin Shannon Cork News
First Hour: Tuesday 15 May, 2012
15 May 2012 at 7:00am Hollande to be inaugurated - Survivors give evidence in Breivik trial - USI "preferendum" on fees - Viable device on small aircraft in Fermanagh - National Volunteering Week - Did the BAI get new subtitling rules wrong? - Sport - BusinessRead more...
Second Hour: Tuesday 15 May, 2012
15 May 2012 at 7:00am What is daily life like for the Greeks? - Min Varadkar wants to ease common travel rules - Are ?Irish Driver? taxi stickers racist? - Referendum discussion - SportRead more...
Second Hour: Monday 14 May, 2012
14 May 2012 at 7:00am Greeks suffer as talks continue to form Govt - Politics roundup - Report from Niger - Dublin Chamber of Commerce and Irish Commercial Tenants Assoc discuss referendum - Dublin City Council remove bins - Katie Taylor wins China matchRead more...
First Hour: Wednesday 2 May, 2012
2 May 2012 at 7:00am BBC reports that Cardinal Sean Brady, primate of Ireland, had names of abused children and failed to protect them - Athlone welcomes Chinese trade hub - Closing day for Electoral register - Breastfeeding protects children from obesityRead more...
Second hour: Monday, 30 April 2012
30 Apr 2012 at 7:00am Sunday Times stands by IMF story - Without European support Ireland will have less funding? - Access sought to Lenihan papers - Pregnant teenager refused place in school - Red C poll in Sunday Business Post - Solar powered lighthouse to openRead more...




