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I get on the tarmac at Southampton Airport to see why 164m of new runway is a big deal

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On a sunny Tuesday afternoon, whilst the north of the country was dealing with snow, I headed down to Southampton Airport to see their new runway extension.

Rob has written before about the convenience of Southampton Airport, not just from the local area but from London as well. I didn’t quite believe him until I stepped off the train from Waterloo (which takes just over an hour) and saw the airport terminal literally about 100 metres away!

Sadly, I wasn’t flying anywhere. I’d been invited down for a tour by the team at the airport.

Southampton Airport behind the scenes tour

When I arrived at around 1pm the airport was in one of it’s afternoon lulls, before the next bank of flights around 4pm. It was exceptionally quiet, so I asked if we could drive down the runway ….. and to my surprise, the answer was yes.

I’ve never stood on an active runway before (outside of an aircraft, that is ….) so this was a novelty.

The reason was to have a closer look at the runway extension that was opened last year. You can see this in the photo above, starting with the zebra crossing.

In the context of a 1.8km runway, a 164m extension may seem inconsequential. In reality it makes a huge difference.

It will let larger aircraft such as easyJet’s A320s operate from Southampton, which the airport hopes will increase the number of airlines and destinations on offer. Historically the airport has been restricted to the smaller aircraft operated by BA Cityflyer, Loganair, Eastern and the ex-Flybe.

Southampton Airport behind the scenes tour

I did ask our driver if he could do a ‘Top Gear’ style drag race down the runway but he politely declined …..

Depending the wind, the runway can operate in either direction, swapping between ’02’ and ’20’ designations.

Inside the terminal at Southampton Airport

After my trip down the tarmac we headed into the terminal building.

A number of changes are happening at the airport this year, including reconfiguration of the duty free area. This will be extended slightly, with the area for passengers needing assistance being moved as well.

Southampton Airport behind the scenes tour

There are just nine boarding gates at Southampton Airport, although depending on aircraft size they can’t all be in use at once.

The wave-shaped building ensures that plenty of light gets into the departure lounge, which features its own waves of comfy-looking seating. The only thing missing is charging ports.

Southampton Airport behind the scenes tour

Upstairs, you’ll find the dining area with a Costa cafe, an airport-run restaurant-pub called The Olive Tree and the The Spitfire Lounge which I’ll be reviewing separately.

Southampton Airport behind the scenes tour

Where can I fly from Southampton Airport?

Passenger numbers at Southampton remain at around 50% of where they were pre-covid. This isn’t as much a pandemic story as a Flybe story, as the airline used to operate 80% of flights from Southampton.

The airport has worked hard since then to add new carriers. Airlines such as Eastern Airways and Loganair offer domestic connections whilst BA Cityflyer and and easyJet offer popular holiday routes. The BA Cityflyer operation uses aircraft which would otherwise be unused during the weekend closure of London City Airport.

The list of destinations is here and currently includes:

  • Alderney
  • Alicante
  • Amsterdam
  • Belfast
  • Bergerac
  • Chambery
  • Dublin
  • Edinburgh
  • Faro
  • Geneva
  • Glasgow
  • Guernsey
  • Jersey
  • Malaga
  • Mallorca
  • Newcastle
  • Paris

If you live in London and have easy access to Waterloo or Clapham Junction railway stations, Southampton Airport is well worth checking out. There are also direct trains from Oxford, Leamington Spa, Reading and even Coventry and Birmingham.

The connection from train to plane is exceptionally fast and the terminal impressively quiet. It’s also an option for hiring a car to tour the south coast if you want to save the slow crawl in and out of central London.

Thank you to the Southampton Airport team for hosting me.

Comments (61)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • kevin says:

    My father flies BHD-SOU and loves it. Both small airports with sub-100 passenger aircraft means less people over all – for security, shops, food etc. and a better experience.

    One lesson we learnt at BHD was that once you start to add several B737/A320 flights a day, the numbers go up very quickly.

    Fifteen years ago Ryanair opened a base here at BHD with the intention of expanding the network to European sun destinations. Unfortunately the runway wasn’t long enough and they flew with the last few rows empty. Michael O’Leary issued an ultimatum that he would pull out if he didn’t get the runway extension. The runway extension still isn’t built. Ryanair actually started using 737s with Short Field Performance which allowed him to fill the planes. It wasn’t enough and and he followed up on his promise 3 years later.

    Back to my original point. Essentially for those 3 years BHD had an extra few thousand passengers to process every day and the airport was too small. God knows how they allowed it to pass fire escape rules etc. There has since been extensive improvements made as easyJet is here. We did lose heavily with Flybe and Flybe Part Deux but it’s one of my favourite airports. Any airport that takes less that 5 minutes from drop off to lounge is always good in my book!

    It is great to see SOU also invest in the terminal facilities as well as extend the runway. Fair play to them. Thanks for the story Rhys.

  • zapato1060 says:

    Maybe Global Airlines can have a slot…………………………

  • Jday says:

    I usually fly to Guernsey from Southampton because of convenience and ease of security. However before Christmas our plane went tech which meant an 8 hour delay in the terminal. With a 2 year old. What a lovely experience that was…

    • Fuller says:

      Oh I know that experience all too often, Jersey or Guernsey once delayed a nighmare insues. Worst was SOU to Guernsey, was supposed to be the 1415 flight ended up being on the late Jersey Flight with a plane be taken to Jersey to meet us to fly 15 people back to Guernsey skimmin on the water!

      Problem is you can’t claim from Aurigny

  • Lady London says:

    I remember when Luton Airport was that small. I didn’t use it but an airline there (not EZ) had one of our computers to visit.

    It could rapidly saturate, I sincerely wish SOU luck in building a set of airlines that can maybe be sharing a subcontracted set of ground providers so they will not be too much in the clutches of one airline in the future.

    One thing that could have got me looking at options out of SOU sooner is a line or two about which hotels are convenient to SOU and what is the choice in parking arrangements.

    • Dubious says:

      There are both Short-Term parking in a multistory car park next to the terminal building, and Long-Term parking at the far end of the airfield, serviced by a transfer bus.
      Alternatively there’s the station car park but I’m not sure they let you park there long term.

  • cin4 says:

    Deary me, surely Rhys knows the difference between “it’s” and “its”?

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