Clermont-Ferrand Auvergne Airport

Clermont-Ferrand Auvergne Airport (Aéroport de Clermont-Ferrand Auvergne) is an airport serving the French city of Clermont-Ferrand. It is located 6.7 km east of the city, in Aulnat, both communes of the Puy-de-Dôme department in the Auvergne region of France, in the middle of France. It is the main airport of the Auvergne region, the others are Aurillac Airport and Le-Puy-en-Velay Airport. In 2013, the airport handled 416,600 passengers making it the 29th busiest airport in France.

History
In 1916 the first hard runway was built on this site (now runway 08/26), the first terminal would open at the airport in 1937. The terminal had a size 200m². In 1975 the runway was extended to its current 3,015 m. A year later in 1976 the airport had a category 3 ILS system installed. The current terminal was built in 1992.

The airport used to be the hub of Regional Airlines, an important regional airline in France. Regional Airlines was bought by Air France in 2000 and Air France moved Regional's hub (now Hop!) to the airport of Lyon St Exupéry, about a hundred kilometers away.

Over 1 million passengers went to Clermont-Ferrand Auvergne airport in 2002, with more than 30 destinations in France and in Europe. More recently, there were only 14 destinations at the airport and 400,295 passengers in 2015.

Facilities
The airport resides at an elevation of 1090 ft above mean sea level. It has one asphalt paved runway designated 08/26 which measures 3015 x, plus two grass runways: one parallel to 08/26 which measures 909 x and one designated 01/19 which measures 705 x. The passenger terminal is 17600 m2 large.

Ground Transport
The train station serving Aulnat also serves the airport and is therefore named Aulnat-Aéroport.

Airlines and destinations
The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights to and from Clermont-Ferrand:

Incidents

 * On 28 December 1971, Vickers Viscount F-BOEA of Air Inter was damaged beyond economic repair when it departed the runway on a training flight during a simulated failure of #4 engine.
 * On 27 October 1972, Air Inter Flight 696Y, Vickers Viscount 724 F-BMCH, en route from Lyon to Clermont-Ferrand, crashed 4 km west of Noirétable during bad weather; 60 on board died, 8 survived. The subsequent investigation determined that the accident was caused by the flight crew's failure to notice that their plane's radio compass had shifted 180 degrees, most likely the result of electrical discharges in the rainstorm they were flying through. The crew may have followed the erroneous reading as they attempted to fly an approach pattern using Clermont-Ferrand's non-directional beacon (NDB). The aircraft descended too early and struck a mountain 44 km east of the airport.