Vero Beach Municipal Airport

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Vero Beach Regional Airport
IATA: VRBICAO: KVRBFAA LID: VRB
Summary
Airport type Public use
Owner City of Vero Beach
Operator Eric Menger
Serves Vero Beach, Florida
Location Indian River County, Florida
Elevation AMSL 24 ft / 7 m
Website Vero Beach Regional Airport
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
4/22 4,974 1,516 Asphalt
12L/30R 3,504 1,068 Asphalt
12R/30L 7,314 2,229 Asphalt
Statistics (2008)
Aircraft operations 164,665
Based aircraft 224

Vero Beach Regional Airport (IATA: VRBICAO: KVRBFAA LID: VRB) is a public airport one mile northwest of Vero Beach in Indian River County, Florida, United States. The airport is publicly owned and is the home of Piper Aircraft.[1]

History

===1929-1941===In 1929, Bud Holman, whose sons and grandsons now operate Sun Aviation, was one of the members of the group that built the Vero Beach airport.[2] The Vero Beach Regional Airport was dedicated in 1930 and in 1932 Eastern Air Lines began refueling there. In 1935 EAL started passenger and mail service from Vero Beach,[3] continuing until around 1972. By the end of the 1930s and the airport got runway lights and radio and teletype machines. In 1939, using Public Assistance workers, the runways were extended and a year later the Civil Aviation Administration (CAA) spent $250,000 on more improvements.

NAS Vero Beach

In 1942 the U.S. Navy notified Vero Beach that it had selected its airport for a naval air station and purchased 1,500 acres (6.1 km2) surrounding the airport. The base was commissioned as Naval Air Station Vero Beach in 1942 and initially functioned as an operational training unit (OTU) training for Naval Aviators beginning in February 1943 with the SB2A Bucaneer aircraft.

In December 1944, the mission of NAS Vero Beach changed to night fighter training using F6F Hellcat and F7F Tigercat aircraft. Witham Field in Stuart was designated as Naval Auxiliary Air Station Witham Field and served as a subordinate base of NAS Vero Beach. Airfields at Sebastian/Roseland (OLF Roseland) and Fort Pierce (OLF Fort Pierce) also served as outlying landing fields. Air-sea rescue of downed pilots was provided from Fort Pierce. Over 237,100 hours of flight time occurred between 1942 and the base closing in 1946. Base personnel were quartered in the Beachland Hotel, The Sebastian Inn, and other facilities in the community. At its peak, NAS Vero Beach was home to 250 aircraft and 1,400 U.S. Navy and U.S. Marine Corps personnel, to include Navy WAVES and Woman Marines. After the war, the installation was reduced to a skeletal staff and in 1947 the Navy closed NAS Vero Beach and returned it to the city for use again as a civilian airport.[4][5]

Postwar to today

In 1948 major league baseball arrived as Bud Holman, a local businessman, invited the Brooklyn Dodgers to take over barracks facilities from the closed naval air station for winter and spring training. The Dodgers liked the area so much that Dodgertown was born, a 109-acre (0.44 km2) tract next to the airport, as their training grounds. The Dodgers continued to use the facility even after becoming the Los Angeles Dodgers until they moved to a new facility in Glendale, Arizona in 2008.

In 1957 Piper Aircraft selected Vero Beach for a research and development center at the former naval air station. In 1961 Piper moved administrative and manufacturing operations here. By 1967 Piper had expanded its facility to 11 acres (45,000 m2) and its workforce to over 2,000.[6] Manufacturing of Piper Aircraft at the Vero Beach facility ceased in the mid-1980s when, together with other sellers of light aircraft in the USA, as increasing product liability insurance premiums made continued operation financially impossible. Upon limitation of liability by new legislation by the U.S. Congress in the early 1990s, manufacturing re-commenced in 1995.

FlightSafety Academy, a leading flight training school and part of FlightSafety International, is also at VRB. The facility's focus is on ab initio flight training for prospective U.S. and international commercial airline pilots who are not graduates of a military flight training program.[7]

Today VRB is a 1,707-acre (6.91 km2) tower-controlled facility with an FAR Part 139 operating certificate. Although the airport has seen airlines (mainly regional) in the recent past.[8] It currently has scheduled less-than-daily service on Elite Airways to Newark Liberty International Airport.

Airlines and destinations

Airlines Destinations
Elite Airways Newark

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 FAA Airport Master Record for VRB (Form 5010 PDF), effective 2008-11-20
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  4. http://www.museumoffloridahistory.com/exhibits/permanent/wwii/sites.cfm?PR_ID=48
  5. http://www.irclibrary.org/pdf/vbnas.pdf
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External links