'Ørland Main Air Station' (Norwegian: 'Ørland hovedflystasjon') is situated at the mouth of the Trondheimsfjord in the municipality of
Ørland, in the center of
Norway. Ørland is operated by the
Royal Norwegian Air Force and is an important
air base not only for Norway, but also for
NATO. The air station is the base of
F-16 fighter aircraft,
Sea King search and rescue helicopters and a location for
E-3A ''Sentry'' AWACS. It is also the host of many NATO exercises.
In addition,
Air Norway operates a scheduled route with
Fairchild Swearingen SA-227AC Metro III aircraft to
Oslo Airport, Gardermoen.
Operations
Air Wing 138 is stationed at the main air station. Under it are most operations at the air station, including Squadron 338, but not the Squadron 330.
The Norwegian F-16 IRF (Immediate Reaction Force) is stationed here together with support administration. The squadron can act independently without support from the host nation. The Squadron 338 has half the Royal Norwegian Air Force' 57 F-16 aircraft and has 22 pilots.
Ørland is the only air station in
Northern Europe that has ground handling equipment for the
E-3A ''Sentry'' AWACS (Airborne Warning and Control System). It is considered a forward operations location (FOL), but not a base for these aircraft.
There is also a detachment of four
Westland Sea King
search and rescue helicopters from the 330 Squadron at
Sola Air Station to assist any emergency at sea or in other unreachable places.
History
World War II
Ørland Main Air Station was built by the occupation forces in
1941 during the
German occupation of Norway in World War II, using
Prisoners of war. The Germans wanted an airfield so that they could terrorize the
allied convoys to
Murmansk. At first German
Focke-Wulf Fw 200 ''Condor''s were stationed here. In June
1942, a squadron of
Junkers Ju 87 ''Stuka''s rebased here, later a squadron of
Messerschmitt Bf 109s and then a squadron of
Focke-Wulf Fw 190 fighters.
The Germans decided to expand the airfield, and in addition to the runway they built first they made another one in
1944. This was later made the main runway. The Germans then made several taxiways and started planning a third runway. However, the war ended before the plans could be completed. 7000 Germans were stationed at Ørlandet during the war, with about 10 000 Prisoners of war as a work force. This meant that, at the end of the war, the Germans left a fully armed, defended airfield with docks, infrastructure and a cannon taken from the
battleship ''Gneisenau''.
Post War
After the war, a Norwegian
Spitfire squadron was stationed here, but in
1946 the airfield was closed. All buildings were torn down and the wood transported to northern Norway to help rebuild
Finnmark which the Germans had left in ruins. After that, the airfield was used for sporadic exercises.
It wasn't until
1950 that the government decided that the airfield should be made a permanent deployment-airfield. In
1952, a new runway had been made, and in 1954, it was expanded to handle NATO forces. It was then the airfield got today's looks. In October
1954, Squadron 338 was rebased from
Sola and remains as the only fighter force at the airfield.
In the summer of
1958, the
SAM battery was established, and in August
1970, the detachment from Squadron 330 arrived. In November
1983, the airfield was customized to handle the NATO E-3A AWACS which routinely visits from
Geilenkirchen to sustain the surveillance chain at the NATO border.
External links
★
Royal Norwegian Air Force page on Ørland (in Norwegian)