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Orangefield House, South Ayrshire

Former country houses in ScotlandHistory of South AyrshireScottish country houses destroyed in the 20th centuryUse British English from May 2013
MacRae Memorial, Monkton, Ayrshire
MacRae Memorial, Monkton, Ayrshire

Orangefield House, previously known as 'Monkton House', was located near the village of Monkton, Ayrshire in the Parish of Monkton and Prestwick in South Ayrshire, Scotland; the settlement borders upon Glasgow Prestwick Airport, for which it served for a while as the control tower.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Orangefield House, South Ayrshire (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Orangefield House, South Ayrshire
B739,

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Wikipedia: Orangefield House, South AyrshireContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 55.5164 ° E -4.6028 °
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Address

B739
KA9 2RJ
Scotland, United Kingdom
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MacRae Memorial, Monkton, Ayrshire
MacRae Memorial, Monkton, Ayrshire
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Glasgow Prestwick Airport
Glasgow Prestwick Airport

Glasgow Prestwick Airport (IATA: PIK, ICAO: EGPK) (Scottish Gaelic: Port-adhair Ghlaschu Phreastabhaig), commonly referred to as Prestwick Airport, is an international airport serving the west of Scotland, situated one nautical mile (two kilometres) northeast of the town of Prestwick in South Ayrshire and 32 miles (51 kilometres) southwest of Glasgow. It is the less busy of the two airports serving the western part of Scotland's Central Belt, after Glasgow Airport in Renfrewshire, within the Greater Glasgow conurbation. The airport serves the urban cluster surrounding Ayr, including: Kilmarnock, Irvine, Ardrossan, Troon, Saltcoats, Stevenston, Kilwinning, and Prestwick itself. Glasgow Prestwick is Scotland's fifth-busiest airport in terms of passenger traffic, although it is the largest in terms of land area. Passenger traffic peaked at 2.4 million in 2007 following a decade of rapid growth, driven in part by the boom in low-cost carriers, particularly Ryanair, which uses the airport as an operating base. In recent years, passenger traffic has declined; around 670,000 passengers passed through the airport in 2016.There has been much public debate and speculation over the association of the airport with Glasgow due to the fact Prestwick and Glasgow are considerably far apart. Calls have been made for the airport to be renamed Robert Burns International Airport, however, this was ruled out by the Scottish Government in 2014.