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At the time, the MD-83 was the largest airliner ever scheduled to Santa Rosa; as of October 19, 2016, Allegiant switched from the 166 seat MD-83 to the 155 seat Airbus A319. Allegiant ended flights to Phoenix-Mesa on January 2, 2017 and to Las Vegas on June 30, 2017 and no longer serves Santa Rosa.
It operates two runways: runway 14/32 and runway 2/20. The Santa Rosa airport operates in a class D tower controlled airspace during the hours of 1500-0400, and is a class G airspace at all other times. It is a popular destination for pilots departing from the Petaluma Municipal Airport. [15]
Santa Rosa Route 66 Airport in Santa Rosa, New Mexico, United States; Naval Outlying Landing Field Santa Rosa in Milton, Florida, United States; Charles M. Schulz - Sonoma County Airport in Santa Rosa, California, United States
Dec. 18—A single-engine plane carrying three people made an emergency landing in a field in the Cañoncito area late Monday afternoon after the pilot reportedly struggled with engine troubles ...
Sonoma County Airport station is a Sonoma–Marin Area Rail Transit train station in Santa Rosa, 1.1 miles (1.8 km) east of Charles M. Schulz–Sonoma County Airport. It opened to preview service on July 1, 2017; [4] full commuter service commenced on August 25, 2017. Until Phase 2 is completed, this will be the northern terminus of rail ...
Peter Prince Field (FAA LID: 2R4) is a public-use airport located 3 miles (4.8 km) east of the central business district of the city of Milton in Santa Rosa County, Florida, United States. The airport is publicly owned. [1]
The museum planned to fully restore the plane and make it the centerpiece of an exhibit. [11] The museum intends to build and move to a new larger facility, still at the airport. One possibility is a location on Airport Boulevard at the main entrance to the county airport, a five-acre garden tilled by inmates at Sonoma County's low-security ...
The Santa Rosa airfield was relinquished by the US Navy between 1946–48 and reactivated in 1951 for the Korean War. It was abandoned by the Navy between 1952 and 1954. It was reopened between 1966 and 1967 as a civilian airport named the Santa Rosa Air Center, and it permanently closed in 1991.