11 World’s Most Dramatic Runways – Arriving at any international air terminal is rarely a memorable occasion. All the more reason to book a flight touching down at one of these hairy or awesome airstrips.
11. Princess Juliana International Airport, St. Maarten, Caribbean
Vacationers flock to the Caribbean for a laid-back vacation. But arriving at the region’s airports can have the opposite effect the compact, rugged nature of many of the islands forces runways to be built in inventive locations. Maybe everything sense all the more serene after landing.
On St. Maarten, Princess Juliana Airport named after Dutch royalty has people gnawing their fingernails in the air and on the ground whenever a plane lands. The runway begins just meters from the edge of the ocean, with aircraft coming in almost low enough over the beach to spike a volleyball set. Princess Juliana airport was started as a military airstrip in 1942 but converted to a civilian airport in 1943.
In 1964 the airport was remodeled and relocated, with a new terminal building and control tower. Airport facilities were upgraded in 1985 and 2001. The airport is probably best known for very low-altitude flyover landing approaches due to one end of its runway being extremely close to the shore and Maho Beach.
10. Courchevel Altiport, France
Not like Caribbean-bound passengers, skiers and snowboarders touching down at Courchevel are typically geared up for an adrenaline fix. They would better be. In winter, the tarmac airstrip at the French resort’s altiport, over 2,000 meters above sea level, is often the only thing not covered in snow.
Aircraft fly in through a channel between mountains, landing on a short, steeply sloping runway, complete with vertical drop-off, that could almost double as a ski jump. The sight is so spectacular, and it was specially featured as a stunt location in the James Bond movie “Tomorrow Never Dies.”
09. Matekane Air Strip, Lesotho
There’s a modest chance of extending this runway very far it ends suddenly at the edge of a 600-meter drop. Only light aircraft make use of the airstrip on this isolated tabletop plateau in the tiny southern African kingdom. Planes sometimes fail to ascend at the end of the runway, conjuring images of a Wile E. Coyote hover and fall before, thankfully, achieving flying speed and soaring away.
08. Juancho E. Yrausquin Airport, Saba, Caribbean
Rivaling St. Maarten for Caribbean airport excitement, Juancho E. Yrausquin Airport, on the island of Saba, has one of the world’s shortest landing strips, wedged on a rocky outcrop at the foot of a mountain and with the finish of the tarmac plunging into the sea; touchdown melodramatic experience here.
07. Gibraltar International Airport
You just hope that your pilot has landed at Gibraltar before flying toward an enormous limestone monolith on a landing approach is never easy on the nerves, but in the 6.2-square-kilometer British overseas territory of Gibraltar, there’s nowhere else to put an airport except in the shadow of the Rock. In adequate apace on the southern tip of the Iberian peninsula that the runway bisects the territory’s main highway. As aircraft get priority over automobiles in the vehicular pecking order, most amazingly the road is closed every time a plane takes off or arrives.
06. Barra International Airport, Outer Hebrides, Scotland
Where else in the world can you pick cockles on a runway? Rather than think about where to build a tarmac airstrip when you are limited in space, the Outer Hebridean island of Barra took a different approach it didn’t bother with one. Pilots wait until the tide is out and then land on the beach reportedly the only airport in the world where scheduled flights touch down on the sand. In between flights to and from Glasgow, the public has open access to the beach runway.
05. Paro Airport Bhutan’s
Bhutan’s Paro Airport deserves an award for its beautiful airport surroundings. If there were awards for remote airways surrounded by remarkable scenery, the Himalayas would be filling a shelf. In pride of place might stand the only international airport in the mountainous kingdom of Bhutan Descending into a slender, high-altitude bowl amid 6,000-meter peaks, pilots who have to be particularly trained to land at this difficult airport bank their jets in a sharp right turn before swooping in low over farmhouses?
04. Kansai International Airport, Osaka, Japan
Landing on an aircraft carrier seems thrilling, but you usually have to link the armed services to do it. You may be familiar a good second best at Japan’s Kansai International Airport, where the 2 runways appear to float on the water way out in Osaka Bay.
Actually positioned on a purpose-built artificial island, to minimize noise pollution for city residents, the runways are in fact sizeable affairs both over 3 KM long and connected to the mainland by a four-kilometer bridge. But from the air, this is the best way to get that “Top Gun” feeling on a commercial carrier.
03. Harstad Airport/Narvik, Norway
On the approach to Harstad/Narvik Airport in the region of Evenes, planes skirt through fjord-land, over frozen lakes, and between snow-covered mountains. Arriving at the settlement of Hammerfest, in the country’s extreme northeast, feels like touching down on an ice rink at certain times of the year. Atlantic turbulence and a runway extended on stilts make for a touchy touchdown in Madeira.
02. Madeira Airport, Funchal, Portugal
Madeira’s international airport seems as if it’s been cheating in a tricky-runway competition. Sandwiched among a steep hillside and the sea, its radically short tarmac strip is extended on stilts over the water to make it long enough for a safe touchdown. Throw in incessant Atlantic turbulence and you have got an arrival striking enough to make the calmest passenger reach for the fortified wine.
01.Malé Airport, Maldives
Malé Airport seems a perfect drama, built on its very own atoll, Hulhulé, the runway is only six feet above sea level. After descending over the 26-island Maldives archipelago, undercarriages feel so close to the sea on touchdown, it’s as if they are skimming along the water.