Victoria STOLport (IATA: YMY, ICAO: CYMY) was a short take-off and landing aerodrome near downtown Montreal during the mid-1970s. The STOLport had been constructed on the former parking lot for Expo 67. The airport operated a two-year STOL demonstration service, with the participation of the Ministry of Transportation, the Canadian Air Transport Administration and other Federal Agencies in order to obtain and evaluate the data on passengers and economics of the STOL service.[1] The choice of the route fell on the Montreal – Ottawa corridor, between which 2.5 million people travelled every year.
Victoria STOLport | |
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Summary | |
Owner | Government of Canada |
Serves | Montreal |
Location | Montreal, Quebec |
Time zone | EST (UTC−05:00) |
• Summer (DST) | EDT (UTC−04:00) |
Coordinates | 45°28′59″N 73°32′26″W / 45.48306°N 73.54056°W |
Map | |
The STOLport in Ottawa was Rockcliffe Airport because of its proximity to downtown. Airtransit Canada, a wholly owned subsidiary of Air Canada was incorporated on June 19, 1973[2] with six de Havilland DHC-6-300 (M.O.T.) Twin Otter, registered as CF-CST, CF-CSU, CF-CSV, CF-CSW, CF-CSX, CF-CSY, while regular flights started in early 1974. At the end of the demonstration, the service was discontinued and the STOLport decommissioned and eventually turned into the Montreal Technoparc technology park.
Airport code
editThe airport's IATA code, YMY, currently identifies Montreal's Central Station main passenger rail station.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Sae International Technical papers
- ^ "The Airtransit operation". Flight International. www.flightglobal.com. 28 November 1974. Retrieved 2009-01-05.