Parafield Airport Air Traffic Control Tower

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LocationKittyhawk Lane, Parafield, South Australia, Australia
Coordinates34°47′27″S 138°38′11″E / 34.7908°S 138.6363°E / -34.7908; 138.6363
Parafield Airport Air Traffic Control Tower
LocationKittyhawk Lane, Parafield, South Australia, Australia
Coordinates34°47′27″S 138°38′11″E / 34.7908°S 138.6363°E / -34.7908; 138.6363
Official nameParafield Airport Air Traffic Control Tower
TypeListed place (Historic)
Designated22 January 2016
Reference no.106120
Parafield Airport Air Traffic Control Tower is located in South Australia
Parafield Airport Air Traffic Control Tower
Location of Parafield Airport Air Traffic Control Tower in South Australia

Parafield Airport Air Traffic Control Tower is a heritage-listed Air traffic control tower at Kittyhawk Lane, Parafield, South Australia, Australia. It was added to the Australian Commonwealth Heritage List on 22 January 2016.[1]

The first temporary ATC tower at Parafield Airport was constructed in 1937 and was a two-storey timber framed base supporting a pyramidal roofed cabin surrounded by an external balcony. By the time of its construction Parafield was handling regular passenger services to and from Perth, Melbourne and Sydney, as well as inland centres. Designed to replace the temporary towers, the "permanent buildings" referred to in the DCA Annual Report of 1937-39 were known as "Operations and Administration" buildings. These basically integrated most terminal, administration and air traffic control functions in a single building. The buildings, accommodated air traffic control towers, facilities for passengers (restaurant, rest rooms, lounge and a roof garden), airline operators, the Department of Civil Aviation, the flight-checking department, weather bureau and airport control officials.[1]

Between 1939 and 1941, these integrated facilities were erected at three locations across Australia, at Parafield (Adelaide), Mascot (Sydney) and Archerfield (Brisbane) airports. Constructed to essentially the same design, these were three-storey, symmetrical stepped Moderne-style buildings surmounted by vertically framed, flat-roofed control cabins. The buildings featured streamlined styling, including circular porthole windows and horizontal incisions in the render, and were notable for an emphasis on horizontality, evident in the flat roof and the cantilevered awnings at the base of the control cabin platform (airside) and the roof of the ground level entrance (on the roadside). The model, which was based on overseas examples of integrated control and administration facilities such as Croydon[2] and Le Bourget[3] was designed by Department of Civil Aviation draughtsmen in Canberra around 1936. The Operations and Administration buildings at Parafield and Mascot were completed first, while the Archerfield building was delayed due to higher than expected tender prices.[1]

Parafield's new Operations and Administration building was located on the site of the temporary elevated tower (1937), at the corner of the Kittyhawk Lane and Anderson Drive, facing due south, with views over the apron. Communication with aircraft was via visual aids, including flags, flares and large cane balls (yellow and black) mounted on a rooftop flagstaff. The controllers were also equipped with radio facilities, to co-ordinate activities on the ground and to communicate with airfields locally and on routes between airfields. During World War II, the airport at Parafield was used by the RAAF as a Flying Training Unit, using mainly Tiger Moth aircraft, with occasional use by a heavier general service aircraft such as the Liberator Bomber. By the end of the war, however, it was evident that Parafield would be unable to accommodate the future aviation needs of Adelaide, and an alternative site for a primary airport was investigated. After the war Parafield was returned to the Department of Civil Aviation. It continued to operate as Adelaide's primary civilian airport until 1955 when it was superseded by the new Adelaide Airport at West Torrens. At this time Parafield became Adelaide's general aviation airfield, a status that it retains today. In 1981, the original control cabin on top of the Operations and Administration building was removed and replaced with a larger octagonal cabin of the type typically used at the perimeter column-type towers common in Australia from the late-1970s.[1]

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