Don Meuang (ดอนเมือง)
Thai. Name of an airport (fig.), named
after the zone or
khet in
Bangkok,
where it was built,
located on a high ground area, hence the name
Don, which
means ‘highland’
or ‘high ground’.
It initially opened as a Royal Thai Air Force
base and operations officially started on 8 March 1914, making it
Asia's oldest operating airport, whilst commercial flights
reportedly began in 1924. It was built as an alternate for the
Sanam Bin Sra Pathum
airstrip (fig.)
at the
Royal Bangkok Sports Club's (fig.)
in Pathumwan District, of which the central grass field of the horse
racetrack doubled as a
makeshift airfield, ever since
the Belgian pilot
Charles Van den Born
(fig.)
in
1911 used it for a flight demonstration with his airplane Henri
Farman
(fig.),
thus introducing aviation to
Thailand by carrying out the first powered
flight in the Kingdom.
In the 1920's,
certain models of
the
French Breguet 14B,
which in
the early days
served as
a mail plane (fig.)
were license-built by the Siamese at Don Meuang (fig.),
as was
Siam's
own
Boriphat
bomber aircraft (fig.)
designed and built by the
Royal Siamese Air Force in
1927.
Don Meuang remained Thailand's main airport with both an
international and domestic terminal, until the
opening of
Suwannaphum
Airport (fig.)
in September 2006. Though
commercial carriers initially discarded Don Meuang at the opening of
Suwannaphum, some eventually returned, due to overcapacity and
higher operating costs at the new airport. Don Meuang
has two airstrips: one used by the Royal Thai Air Force, the other
for civil aviation which today
handles mainly low-cost domestic flights, cargo and some chartered
flights. Uniquely, the military
and civilian airstrips are divided by a 18 holes golf course, known as
Kantarat and where beside
the military
brass also civilian golfers
are welcome
to play golf amidst the continues flow
of air traffic. See
also
meuang.
See also POSTAGE STAMPS and
MAP.
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