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Showing posts with label 1994. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1994. Show all posts

Monday, 22 January 2024

Wellington Airport: the saga of the domestic terminal

The saga of Wellington's domestic airport terminal was one from the 1960s through to the end of the 1990s, and one that more recent generations know not of, but it was the embarrassment of the 1970s and 1980s for Wellington in the way that water infrastructure is looking like in the mid 2020s.

When Wellington Airport was opened in 1959, its (then only) terminal was a temporary building, having been a De Havilland aircraft factory from the 1920s.  It has a range of characteristics that became infamous over the years. It would leak, it was draft ridden and in winter, cold.  All aircraft were boarded using steps as entrance onto the tarmac was at ground level.  In 1977 a new international terminal was built adjacent, as part of a plan to rebuild the whole terminal, but as it was a joint central/local government venture, there was no agreement on which entities would pay how much to pay for new capital investment. The international terminal served on average one or two flights a day at the most, and only to Australia.  It wasn't until Ansett New Zealand emerged on the scene in 1987, intending to build its own separate new terminal (adjacent to international), that the old terminal got significantly refurbished, at the cost of Air NZ, keen to not be seen to have a second-rate terminal.  It introduced airbridges, carpet, a lounge and improved the lighting and heating considerably.

However, the present day terminal emerged as a result of reforms starting in 1988 to corporatise and subsequently in 1998 part privatise the airport, so that it could operate as a business, borrow against landing charges and revenue raised from airlines, retail concessions and parking.  Political arguments and finger pointing between central and local government ended immediately, as it was clear the airport could raise the finance and pay for a new terminal itself.

In 1999 the new terminal opened, integrating the international and Ansett buildings into one, and is the terminal known today.

Below is a series of clippings highlighting some of the moments in recent history surrounding the debate over replacing the terminal.  I have a great deal more of this in my files that I have yet to dig out, so apologies for the haphazard nature of it...


The "Tin Shed Report" was a multipart series of articles in the Evening Post in 1985 questioning why there has been no progress on a new terminal.  The first was the Managing Director of Challenge Properties (which would later merge with Fletchers to become Fletcher Challenge) proposing that it be a property development that it could lead, but local politicians thought its proposals were "unrealistic". The second article was the then WCC Design Engineer discussing the Challenge plan, including plans for commuter airlines to use the international terminal check-in (which was underutilised with only one or two flights a day). The third article was then Miramar electorate MP, Labour's Peter Neilson describing how the Council had prioritised the international terminal and then a runway extension over the domestic terminal replacement.  WCC had called for the Government to fund its proposed runway extension as a priority, but the Government had rejected it (the local pressure at the time was due to Air NZ having dropped international flights from Wellington, as it had disposed of its McDonnell Douglas DC-8 aircraft and neither DC-10s nor Boeing 747-200s could operate 

The then Lange Government had proposed that funding for a new terminal would be split evenly between Central Government and WCC, and was dependent on WCC accepting a more corporate structure for Wellington Airport (within three years the Government corporatised the airport, along with corporatisation of multiple airports around the country).  At the time the concern was that WCC was delaying progress in agreeing on a new corporate structure.


2 October 1985 Wellington airport terminal

This truncated part of the editorial in 1985 had the Evening Post view of the time, which was that WCC wanted Wellington to be a "special case" that should get full government funding for a new terminal, which was not the government's position at the time.
14 October 1994 - success of Wellington Airport company


The corporatisation of Wellington Airport was reported by the Evening Post to be a success, with a modest profit.  Note at the time it was 66% owned by the Crown and 33% by Wellington City Council.  The editorial notes some would say "who would want to buy it" if it were privatised, given constraints on its location.  It noted the airport company has increased landing fees, increased income from retail concessions and parking, and cut spending. It notes new airport terminals will be built in four years.  The editorial indicates if more airlines are to come to Wellington, the airport has to improve.




Cook Strait News 25 July 1994

Cook Strait News was a local eastern suburbs newspaper in Wellington. This ad from the airport company reports on its twenty-year masterplan depicting visually how it intends to use its land.  Perhaps the most notable part that did not proceed, is bridging over the Cobham Drive end of the runway.






On the eve of the opening of the new terminal in June 1999, the Evening Post produced this two page cutaway of the terminal, with some history and statistics. By this time Wellington International Airport Limited was 66% privately owned (Wellington City Council retains a 33% shareholding). It would be fair to say, the transformation is unrecognisable compared to the "old tinshed"





Thursday, 9 November 2023

Air New Zealand comments on Australia withdrawing from a single Trans Tasman Aviation Market

Although the 'underarm incident' in cricket was once described as the lowest point in Trans-Tasman relations, it was actions by Australian Minister of Transport, Laurie Bremerton, in 1994, that took things close to that point.  

In 1988, the Closer Economic Relations (CER) agreement between Australian and New Zealand added the Trade in Services Protocol, but Australia expressly excluded aviation.  That was in part because Australia's domestic aviation market was still heavily regulated (the "Two Airline Policy"), but New Zealand had already removed capacity restrictions in 1983. 

In 1992, both countries concluded a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU), which lifted capacity restrictions across the Tasman, introduced multiple designation and a double disapproval tariff regime, and set out a phased liberalisation towards full trans-Tasman market access and greater beyond rights by 1994. The MOU also contained a commitment to consult on the subsequent full exchange of beyond rights and cabotage rights.  In effect it would mean Air New Zealand could fly domestically in Australia, which was reciprocity for Ansett New Zealand operating domestically in New Zealand (and of course Qantas could fly domestically in New Zealand as well, if it wished).

Australia withdrew in 1994, through a fax sent to the New Zealand Minister of Transport, Maurice Williamson.  The reason was because the Australian Treasury recommended withdrawal because it would affect the price to be obtained for the pending privatisation of Qantas. Australia would sign a single aviation market agreement in 2001.

After Australia withdrew, Air New Zealand bought this full page ad to comment.








Wednesday, 1 November 2023

DC-3s - Fieldair ends and Classic Air proposes to fly DC-3s

 

29 March 1993 Evening Post DC3 grounded


The Douglas DC-3 was one of the most revolutionary airliners in history, which enabled the rapid expansion of airline services in many countries, including in New Zealand, for NAC, expanding domestic services across the country.  The DC-3 first flew with NAC in 1947, and 27 flew with the airline before it was phased out on main trunk routes by the Vickers Viscount from 1958 and by the Fokker F-27 Friendship from 1960, but NAC flew DC-3 aircraft until 1974, with remaining aircraft used to service airports with unsealed runways (notably Timaru and Oamaru).  After withdrawal by NAC, DC-3s were used by a handful of other operators including notably Fieldair which converted some for aerial topdressing.

This first article reports in 1993 on what were, at the time, the last commercial flights by Douglas DC-3s in New Zealand. Fieldair shut down its Cook Strait freight service. Fieldair had previously used the aircraft for topdressing.  3rd Level NZ blog tells more about its history.

The second article (below) is a report about Classic Air, which proposed to operate passenger DC-3 aircraft equipped with a luxury cabin for organised tours for wealthy tourists. It is unknown what happened to the venture

3 February 1994 - Evening Post- Classic Air