Capitol Airport

Capitol Airport (FAA LID: 02C) is a public use airport located three nautical miles (6 km) east of the central business district of Brookfield, a city in Waukesha County, Wisconsin, United States. It is privately owned by Wisconsin Aviation Investments LLC.[1] The airport is also known as, or formerly known as, Capitol Drive Airport.

Capitol Airport
Summary
Airport typePublic
OwnerWisconsin Aviation Investments LLC
ServesBrookfield, Wisconsin
Elevation AMSL850 ft / 259 m
Coordinates43°05′15″N 088°10′40″W
Map
02C is located in Wisconsin
02C
02C
Location of airport in Wisconsin
02C is located in the United States
02C
02C
02C (the United States)
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
3/21 2,994 913 Asphalt
9/27 3,387 1,033 Turf
18/36 1,602 488 Turf
Statistics
Aircraft operations (2022)13,010
Based aircraft (2023)100

It is included in the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2023–2027, in which it is categorized as a regional reliever airport facility.[2]

Facilities and aircraft

Capitol Airport covers an area of 207 acres (84 ha) at an elevation of 850 feet (259 m) above mean sea level. It has one asphalt paved runway designated 3/21 which measures 2,994 x 45 ft. (913 x 13 m), plus two turf runways: 9/27 measuring 3,387 x 100 ft. (1,033 x 30 m) and 18/36 measuring 1,602 x 80 ft. (488 x 24 m).[1]

The facility has no published instrument procedures and no instrument navigational aids.

For the 12-month period ending July 22, 2022, the airport had 13,010 aircraft operations, an average of 36 per day: 99% general aviation and less than 1% military. In September 2023, there were 100 aircraft based at this airport: 93 single-engine, 2 multi-engine and 5 helicopter.[1]

Brookfield Aero, LLC is the fixed-base operator.

Incidents

  • Two were killed on November 21, 1992, when their Piper PA-28-140 crashed while attempting to land in low visibility.[3]
  • A groundskeeper was seriously injured when he was struck by the propeller of a Cessna 120 taxiing prior to takeoff on September 6, 2002.[4][5]
  • One was killed and two were injured on January 4, 2017, when their plane crashed during takeoff.[6]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.