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Bandon State Airport

1958 establishments in OregonAirports in Coos County, OregonOregon airport stubsOregon building and structure stubs
Bandon State Airport pano
Bandon State Airport pano

Bandon State Airport (IATA: BDY, FAA LID: S05), is a public airport located two miles (3.2 km) southeast of the city of Bandon in Coos County, Oregon, USA. It has one asphalt runway, 16/34 that is 3,601 feet (1,098 m) long by 60 feet (18 m) wide and medium intensity runway edge lights. The airport has a fixed based operator, Bandon Aviation, LLC, that sells aviation gasoline and can provide major airframe and engine repairs.The airport began operations in 1958, and had an average of 136 airport operations per week in the 12 months ending August 25, 2021.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Bandon State Airport (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Bandon State Airport
Kehl Road,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 43.086461111111 ° E -124.40786388889 °
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Bandon State Airport

Kehl Road
97411
Oregon, United States
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Bandon State Airport pano
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Bullards Bridge
Bullards Bridge

The Bullards Bridge (or simply Bullards Bridge) is a vertical-lift bridge that spans the Coquille River near where the river empties into the Pacific Ocean, just north of Bandon, Oregon, United States. One of only two vertical-lift bridges on the Oregon Coast Highway (U.S. Route 101), it was completed in 1954. The lift span is flanked by two camelback truss spans. It is located immediately east of Bullards Beach State Park. The bridge was built to replace Bullards Ferry, a ferry service whose slip was located about 80 feet (24 m) upstream from the bridge that replaced it. The name originates with the Bullard family, who were among the early settlers in the area. The Oregon Highway Commission awarded a contract for construction of the bridge and a 0.49-mile (0.79 km) new section of highway in October 1952. The completed bridge was dedicated on September 20, 1954.The overhead clearance for vehicles on the bridge deck originally was between 14 feet 10 inches (4.52 m) and 15 feet 2 inches (4.62 m), but after multiple instances of tall trucks striking the bridge, work was undertaken in 2006–07 to move certain cross pieces in order to increase the vertical clearance on the roadway by about 2 feet.Average daily traffic on the bridge was about 6,000 vehicles in 2004, but had grown to about 8,300 by 2007.In late 2009, the Oregon Department of Transportation was planning a $3.4 million rehabilitation of the Bullards Bridge for 2010–11. The bridge's draw span is very rarely opened now; as of 2009, it had not been raised for marine traffic in seven years, being operated only for annual test openings for maintenance.