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Gold Coast Airport

1939 establishments in AustraliaAirports established in 1939Airports in New South WalesAirports in QueenslandBuildings and structures on the Gold Coast, Queensland
International airports in AustraliaPages with disabled graphsTourism on the Gold Coast, QueenslandTransport on the Gold Coast, QueenslandUse Australian English from May 2014
Gold Coast Airport 2022 terminal facade 04
Gold Coast Airport 2022 terminal facade 04

Gold Coast Airport (formerly known as Coolangatta Airport) (IATA: OOL, ICAO: YBCG) is an international Australian airport located at the southern end of the Gold Coast and approximately 90 km (56 mi) south of Brisbane, within the South East Queensland agglomeration. The entrance to the airport is situated in the suburb of Bilinga near Coolangatta. The main runway itself cuts through the state borders of Queensland and New South Wales. During summer, these states are in two different time zones. The Gold Coast Airport operates on Queensland Time (year-round AEST / UTC+10). For the 2015–16 financial year, Gold Coast Airport exceeded 6 million passengers. It is the seventh-busiest airport in Australia, and the busiest outside a state capital, in terms of passengers, and eighth-busiest in aircraft movements.

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

Gold Coast Airport
Gold Coast Highway, Tweed Shire Council

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Wikipedia: Gold Coast AirportContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -28.165 ° E 153.50611111111 °
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Address

Gold Coast Airport

Gold Coast Highway
2485 Tweed Shire Council, Tweed Heads West
New South Wales, Australia
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Website
goldcoastairport.com.au

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Gold Coast Airport 2022 terminal facade 04
Gold Coast Airport 2022 terminal facade 04
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Nearby Places

Currumbin Wildlife Sanctuary
Currumbin Wildlife Sanctuary

Currumbin Wildlife Sanctuary is a heritage-listed zoological garden at 28 Tomewin Street, Currumbin, Queensland, Australia. It was built in 1947 onwards. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 18 September 2009. The sanctuary is world-renowned for its feeding of huge flocks of free-flying wild rainbow lorikeets, which come to the sanctuary to feast off the special mixture which the lorikeets eat. The multitude of events, shows and attractions include dingo encounters, free flight bird shows and feeding of the park's massive saltwater crocodile. The park also contains a serious aspect of its work and exhibits, and behind the scenes includes a state-of-the-art veterinary and rehabilitation hospital. The sanctuary was opened as the Currumbin Bird Sanctuary by Alex Griffiths in 1947 as a scheme to stop the local lorikeet population destroying his flower plantations. The lorikeets still flock to the sanctuary twice daily to be fed by visitors. The sanctuary now houses one of the largest collections of Australian native species in the world. Exhibits include Tasmanian devils, a reptile house and in December 2017 the sanctuary opened their new exotics precinct Lost Valley which is home to lemurs, red pandas, capybara, cotton-top tamarins, tree kangaroos and one of largest walk-through aviary in the Southern Hemisphere with free flying birds. The sanctuary also has a miniature railway that has been operating since 1964. In May 2011, the hospital has appealed for donations and government support as it faces a funding shortage that may force it to turn away injured wildlife.