Gisborne Airport

Current runway direction forecast: landing, takeoff and runway use.

The forecast for Gisborne Airport in Gisborne shows the likely direction aircraft land from and take off towards. Actual runway use can differ because of air traffic control, traffic, weather and local procedures.

Airport data
GIS Medium airport
City Gisborne
Country New Zealand
Codes NZGS · GIS
Runways 5 runways
Elevation 5 m
Scheduled service yes
Lighted runway yes
Region NZ-GIS
Landing Takeoff Wind Airport
The map shows a simplified view of where aircraft are likely to land from and where they take off towards. Actual use can differ.

Runway direction at Gisborne Airport

What the forecast means and how it is calculated.

What does runway direction mean?

Runway direction describes which runway direction an airport is likely to use. At Gisborne Airport, this means aircraft land from a certain compass direction and take off towards the matching runway direction.

How is the forecast calculated?

The calculation compares current wind direction with known runway headings. The runway with as much headwind and as little crosswind as possible is preferred.

Airport facts

Gisborne Airport is located near Gisborne in New Zealand. The airport has 5 runways, the longest is about 1.310 m. Field elevation is about 5 m.

Important to know

The actual decision is made by air traffic control. Closed runways, traffic, storm cells, noise abatement procedures or operational rules can make real runway use differ from the forecast.