A plane will land and take off from Sydney’s new international airport for the first time on Wednesday afternoon, in a historic milestone for the aviation hub which is quickly taking shape near the foothills of the Blue Mountains.
Marking a new phase in the development of Western Sydney Airport, a test pilot is due to land and take off repeatedly in a Piper PA-30 Twin Comanche aircraft as part of critical testing of about 3000 aeronautical ground lights on the airport’s runway and approach.
The twin-engine aircraft will take off and land from both ends of the 3.7-kilometre runway during daylight, dusk and night-time conditions on Wednesday.
It is a little over two years until the first passenger aircraft is due to take off from Australia’s first new major airport since Melbourne’s Tullamarine opened in 1970.
Giant “X” signs on the runway at Western Sydney Airport will be temporarily removed for the first aircraft on Wednesday – and later reinstated, apart from during further testing – until the airport is operational. When in place, the signs serve as a warning to planes that they cannot land at the airport.
The flight tests on Wednesday are required by the Civil Aviation Safety Authority, the national regulator, and will ensure the runway lighting is fit for purpose when the first passenger planes take off in late 2026.
About 330 high-intensity lights are located on the approach to the runway at both ends, while 2800 ground lights are embedded in the runway and taxiways.
Western Sydney Airport chief executive Simon Hickey said the first flight was a significant milestone, and signalled that the curfew-free airport was entering a new phase after years of construction.
Western Sydney Airport’s first plane to touch down on runway