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Heathrow Airport: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 257 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, 16 colour illustrations & 70 black and white illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Jun-2019
  • Kirjastus: Pen & Sword Aviation
  • ISBN-10: 1526759187
  • ISBN-13: 9781526759184
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  • Hind: 30,00 €*
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 257 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, 16 colour illustrations & 70 black and white illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Jun-2019
  • Kirjastus: Pen & Sword Aviation
  • ISBN-10: 1526759187
  • ISBN-13: 9781526759184
Love it or loathe it, Heathrow is the United Kingdom's largest and most important airport by a distance. It currently serves over 190 routes to more than 80 countries. Over 100 billion of imports and exports are handled every year, making it the UK's primary port by value.

This fascinating book traces the often controversial development of the airport over the last 70 years from the most humble of beginnings. Thanks to the author's in-depth knowledge the arguments for and against the building of a third runway are thoroughly and objectively described. There have been, and indeed still are, those who advocate building a brand new hub airport for London but it is a fact that Heathrow has long been the cornerstone of the local economy, providing jobs for over 70,000 staff.

This entertaining, controversial and superbly illustrated book is about much more than the bitter third runway battle. It contains many amusing anecdotes and a wealth of statistics that serve to make Heathrow such a key part of the country's infrastructure.
Acknowledgements vii
Chapter 1 Heathrow Fly Past -- 1918-1933: How it all Began
1(10)
Chapter 2 3000 bc-1919: An Historic Fly-Past
11(10)
Chapter 3 1946-49: Professor Abercrombie's Vision
21(9)
Chapter 4 1919-44: The Fairey Flying Machines
30(8)
Chapter 5 1945-46: Wimpey's Wonderful Workforce
38(9)
Chapter 6 1 January 1946: Heathrow Takes Off
47(14)
Chapter 7 1945--46: Enter the Pathfinders
61(7)
Chapter 8 1946: Tented Terminals and `Piddle Pennies'
68(20)
Chapter 9 1947-49: Taking Part in Something Worthwhile
88(11)
Chapter 10 1950s: Silver Wings to Paris and Flying on the `Never-Never'
99(24)
Chapter 11 The New Elizabethan Age and the Russians are Coming
123(23)
Chapter 12 The Show that Must Go On
146(7)
Chapter 13 The Swinging Sixties and Plane-Spotting on the Queen's Building
153(9)
Chapter 14 Britain's New Front Door and BOAC in Debt
162(15)
Chapter 15 The Sad Tale of British Eagle
177(7)
Chapter 16 Heathrow Scoop!
184(5)
Chapter 17 The Supersonic Seventies: Jumbo Jets, Concordes, Terrorists and Time to Call in the Army
189(23)
Chapter 18 The 1980s: `We lived at the right time'
212(8)
Chapter 19 The 1990s: Dirty Tricks, the IRA and the Longest Public Inquiry
220(7)
Chapter 20 2000 and Beyond: Heathrow and the Third Runway
227(14)
Chapter 21 Alternative Airports and (possibly) the End of Heathrow!
241(3)
Chapter 22 The Airports Commission and the Third Runway
244(4)
Chapter 23 Where Shall We Put the New Runway?
248(3)
Bibliography 251(2)
Index 253
Alan Gallop is an author and journalist. In 1983 he founded his own PR company specialising in promoting organisations active in travel, transportation, freight logistics, public utilities and special events. He now specialises in writing books about amazing people and the events which made them famous. His Six for the Tolpuddle Martyrs is in print with the Pen and Sword History imprint. He is married with two grown up children and lives in Surrey.