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Melbourne Airport third runway could change direction

written by australianaviation.com.au | June 28, 2019

A supplied image of Melbourne Airport. (SITA)
A supplied image of Melbourne Airport. (SITA)

Melbourne Airport says it is considering changing the orientation of a planned third runway from the current east-west orientation to north-south.

The potential change of direction comes six years after Melbourne Airport stated its preferred orientation for the third runway to run east-west in its 2013 Master Plan. Those plans were reaffirmed in the 2018 Master Plan.

Melbourne Airport chief executive Lyell Strambi said that after a detailed review of the proposed east-west alignment there was strong evidence that a north-south runway would provide a superior outcome in terms of availability, capacity, long-term investment profile and community impacts.

Strambi said the third runway would be subject to further technical consultation with government, airlines and regulatory bodies through the second half of 2019.

“It is important to be clear that at this stage there has been no decision to change the direction of the runway,” Strambi said in a statement on Thursday.

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“Instead, we will enter a period of technical consultation with our airline customers, the federal government, regulatory bodies and other stakeholders to inform our final decision.”

Currently, Tullamarine operates with two runways. The longer Runway 16/34 measures 3.7km, while a shorter Runway 09/27 is 2.3km long.

Melbourne Airport’s 2018 Master Plan said the third runway was expected to be operational by 2023.

Meanwhile, the the long-term outlook for the airport was to eventually have four runways.

The third runway was to have been operational by 2023. (Melbourne Airport 2018 master plan)
The third runway was to have been operational by 2023. (Melbourne Airport 2018 master plan)

“Planning for Melbourne Airport has included four runways since the 1960s and the double parallel ‘hashtag’ layout has been in place since 1990,” Strambi said.

“Due to a number of factors, which have changed over time, we have undertaken a planning review over the last six months to assess whether east-west remains the preferred option for the third runway that we announced in 2013.”

Strambi said he recognised the community interest in the project.

“We are committed to communicating and listening to the community while fulfilling our responsibility to deliver this state and nationally significant infrastructure,” Strambi said.

The 2018 Master Plan can be found on the Melbourne Airport website.

The long-term development plan for Melbourne Airport is to have four runways. (Melbourne Airport 2018 master plan)
The long-term development plan for Melbourne Airport is to have four runways. (Melbourne Airport 2018 master plan)

Separately, Melbourne Airport said on Monday work on a new taxiway network had commenced.

The three-and-a-half-year Taxiway Zulu project involved about 250,000 square metres of taxiway pavement, adding extra space for aircraft traffic and make it easier for those aircraft to move about the airfield.

“The finished taxiway network will result in parallel taxiways in the north of the airfield in supporting wide-body aircraft movements in both the east-west and north-south directions,” Melbourne Airport said in a statement.

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Comments (5)

  • reeves35

    says:

    The N/S option always had significant benefits such as less noise footprint over developed areas, flatter existing topography. What has come out now is that prevailing winds mean it will be operational more than another E-W runway.

    The main attraction of a new E-W runway was accessibility; with parallel E-W runways operational, planes could access or exit their runway without having to cross an operational runway. The terminal layout means with 2 N-S runways, planes will have to cross the existing operational N-S runway to get to the new runway or alternatively they face a very long taxi around, as yet non-existent, taxiways circling the old N-S runway.

    • Kevin V Russell

      says:

      Reeves, except RUBBISH. The E-W runway is going to be built anyway. If not now, eventually. The issue is the plans have been on display for YEARS and they are now changing at the last minute. It’s offensive and should not be countenanced. Thank you for your time.

  • Guy

    says:

    Good summary Reeves. If only the pilots could properly follow the approach flight path from the South, some of the residents would not be so grumpy

  • Adam Muggleton

    says:

    Build both at the same time. Will save $$$$$ doing so.

  • Bill

    says:

    New runways need to be long enough so that foreign long haul carriers don’t keep REQUIRING the long runway for landing/takeoff, thereby disrupting the most efficient configuration for the prevailing conditions.

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