Stoney Point, CA 🇨🇦 Closed Airport
CRJ2
-
630 ft
CA-ON
Loading...
Loading...GPS Code: Not available
Local Code: Not available
Location: 42.288887° N, -82.598335° E
Continent: NA
Type: Closed Airport
Keywords: CRJ2
Loading weather data...
Designation | Length | Width | Surface | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|
10/28 |
2100 ft | 30 ft | TURF | Active |
Type | Description | Frequency |
---|---|---|
CTAF | - | 122.9 MHz |
The aerodrome was officially delisted from the Canada Flight Supplement (CFS) and closed circa 2007. It was present in the 2006 edition of the CFS but had been removed by the 2008 edition, placing the closure within that timeframe.
As a privately owned airfield, the exact reason for its closure is not officially documented. However, the closure is consistent with common reasons for small, private aerodromes, such as the owner's retirement, the sale of the property for other uses (in this case, agriculture), or the rising costs and liability associated with maintaining a private aviation facility. There is no evidence to suggest it was closed due to a specific accident, military conversion, or broader economic downturn.
The site of the former Trepanier Aerodrome has been fully converted back to agricultural land. Satellite imagery of the coordinates (42.288887, -82.598335) clearly shows that the area is now an active farm field. While the faint, straight-line outline of the former runway is still visible from the air due to soil compaction and history, the land itself is plowed and used for crops. There are no remaining airport structures like hangars or markings.
Trepanier Aerodrome was a registered private aerodrome that served the general aviation community in the Lakeshore (Stoney Point) region of Ontario. Its operations were typical for a small, private field:
- **Primary Use:** It primarily supported recreational flying for local pilots who owned small, single-engine aircraft.
- **Facilities:** It featured a single turf/grass runway, designated 09/27, with a length of approximately 2,600 feet (792 meters).
- **Operations:** The aerodrome did not handle commercial, scheduled, or cargo traffic. It was a VFR (Visual Flight Rules) only field, meaning pilots operated in clear weather conditions by sight. Its significance was purely local, providing a convenient and accessible landing strip for a small number of aviation enthusiasts.
There are no known plans or prospects for reopening Trepanier Aerodrome. The land has been successfully and completely repurposed for agriculture. Re-establishing an airfield on the site would require the landowner to cease farming operations and make a significant private investment to meet modern standards, which is highly unlikely. The aerodrome is considered permanently closed.
No comments for this airport yet.
Leave a comment