China Bay Airport Explained

China Bay Airport
Nativename-A:Tamil: சீனக்குடா விமான நிலையம்
Sinhala; Sinhalese: චීන වරාය ගුවන්තොටුපළ
Iata:TRR
Icao:VCCT
Type:Military/Public
Owner:Government of Sri Lanka
Operator:Sri Lanka Air Force
City-Served:Trincomalee
Location:China Bay, Sri Lanka
Commander:H. M. S. K. Kotakadeniya
Metric-Elev:Yes
Elevation-F:7
Elevation-M:2
Coordinates:8.5396°N 81.1819°W
Pushpin Map:Sri Lanka
Pushpin Image:Sri Lanka relief location map.jpg
Pushpin Label:TRR
Pushpin Label Position:right
Metric-Rwy:Yes
R1-Number:06/24
R1-Length-F:7864
R1-Length-M:2397
R1-Surface:Asphalt

China Bay Airport (Tamil: சீனக்குடா விமான நிலையம்|translit=Cīṉakkuṭā Vimāṉa Nilaiyam; Sinhala; Sinhalese: චීන වරාය ගුවන්තොටුපළ|translit=Cīna Varāya Guvantoṭupaḷa;) is an air force base and domestic airport in China Bay in eastern Sri Lanka.[1] [2] Located approximately 7km (04miles) south west of the city of Trincomalee, the airport is also known as Trincomalee Airport and SLAF China Bay.

Originally built by the British and known as RAF China Bay, it was transferred to the Royal Ceylonese Air Force which later became the Sri Lanka Air Force.

History

During the 1920s the British built an airfield in China Bay in eastern Ceylon. The Royal Air Force (RAF) established an airfield called RAF Station China Bay in March 1942 which operated Consolidated Liberator bombers, Hawker Hurricane & Supermarine Spitfire fighters, Consolidated Catalina & Short Sunderland flying boats during its lifetime.[3]

A number of RAF squadrons and other units were stationed at the airfield during and immediately after the war:[4]

A number of Fleet Air Arm squadrons also used China Bay:

The airfield was bombed by the Japanese on 9 April 1942 during World War II.[5] [6] The airfield was upgraded to accommodate the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) Boeing B-29 Superfortress over the first half of 1944. After these upgrades were complete it was used to stage the B-29 attack force for the unsuccessful Operation Boomerang raid on oil refineries at Palembang, Dutch East Indies in August 1944.

After independence, the British maintained two military airfields in Ceylon, the RAF station at Katunayake and the Royal Navy base in Trincomalee, and camps at Diyatalawa. The naval base in Trincomalee included the airfield in China Bay. It was opened to civilian flights in 1952.[7] All British military airfields/barracks and sites in the country were transferred and taken over by the Ceylonese government in November 1957.[3] [8] RAF China Bay became RCyAF China Bay.[3] When Ceylon became the republic of Sri Lanka it became SLAF Base China Bay in May 1972.[3] The base was turned into the Sri Lanka Air Force Academy in March 1976.[3] The academy was made an air force base in January 1987 due to the civil war.[3]

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

Cargo

Lodger Units

Air Force Academy

The base houses the Sri Lanka Air Force Academy.[9] Established in 1976, the academy is where the Sri Lanka Air Force conducts its initial officer training. Currently there are three lodger formations carrying out training:

References

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: VCCT TRINCOMALEE / China-bay. Aeronautical Information Services of Sri Lanka, Airport & Aviation Services. 2013-09-08. https://web.archive.org/web/20131214070912/http://www.airport.lk/AIS/95.htm. 2013-12-14. dead.
  2. Web site: TRR - Airport. Great Circle Mapper.
  3. Web site: History of Air Force Base China Bay. Sri Lanka Air Force. https://web.archive.org/web/20080607190112/http://www.airforce.lk/est/cby/cbyhisbs.htm. 7 June 2008.
  4. Web site: RAF Stations - C. Air of Authority: A History of RAF Organisation.
  5. News: Devarajah. Lloyd Rajaratnam. Ceylon's Pearl Harbour attack. The Sunday Times (Sri Lanka). 11 April 2010.
  6. News: Wijenayaka. Walter. Bombing of Colombo during world war II. The Island (Sri Lanka). 5 April 2011.
  7. Web site: Sri Lankan Aviation History . Ministry of Civil Aviation, Sri Lanka . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20131212033745/http://www.aviationmin.gov.lk/en/sub_pgs/aboutus_SL%20Av.%20History.html . 2013-12-12 .
  8. News: Take over of Trincomalee a landmark event. The Sunday Times (Sri Lanka). 12 October 2008.
  9. News: Air Force takes wing. The Sunday Times (Sri Lanka). 9 March 2008.