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ERA References & Case-Studies

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Amsterdam Schiphol International Airport (Luchthaven Schiphol in Dutch), is the Netherlands’ main international airport, located 9 kilometers southwest of Amsterdam, the capital of the country. During the first several years of 21st century, Amsterdam’s Schiphol has grown to become one of the largest airports in the world. In 2005, before the need of providing an efficient vehicle tracking occurred, Schiphol ranked fourth in Europe in terms of passenger traffic with over 44 million passengers and third in cargo with 1.5 million tons.

Now Schiphol is the world’s 16th busiest by total passenger traffic, 51 million passengers passed through it in 2012. Schiphol has 6 operational runways, approximately 165 boarding gates available and is the primary hub for KLM airlines as well as for Arkefly, Corendon Dutch Airlines, Martinair and Transavia. The airport also serves as a European hub for Delta Air Lines and as a base for Vueling. The airport occupies an area of 13 square kilometers.

Challenges

  • Surface management
  • Incursion risk
  • Growth of operations
  • Safety enhancements
  • Low-visibility locations

Solutions

  • Vehicle tracking units SQUID
  • 407 pieces in use by 2013

Benefits

  • Seamless integration with existing A-SMGCS
  • Highly scalable
  • Constant vehicle location and identification
  • All-weather functionality
  • Small dimensions and weight

Standards

  • ICAO standard Annex 10, Volume III and IV

Challenge

The growth in operations at Schiphol has placed a premium on surface control and safety. Schiphol’s controllers are constantly monitoring aircraft in all movement areas, both visually and on screen. Due to Schiphol’s extremely low position (the lowest point sits at 3.4 m below sea level) and its proximity to the ocean, visibility is often limited for the air traffic controllers, making it extremely difficult to always see aircraft movements.

However, not just aircraft roam the airport surface - hundreds of ground-based vehicles are necessary to carry out the myriad of everyday airport operations. Baggage carts, tugs, emergency vehicles, and catering trucks are just some of the vehicles found on Schiphol’s surface, notwithstanding temporary surface obstacles that might not be known to all pilots. Avoiding a collision between these vehicles is difficult enough, but when you add in large planes with a much higher field of vision, the risk of ground incursions increases dramatically. When coupled with Amsterdam’s frequent low visibility conditions, the likelihood of surface incidents increases even further.

Thus, Schiphol airport officials decided that in order to achieve safe and efficient surface control, they needed to equip vehicles with a highly reliable tracking unit to give a complete view of the entire airport surface.

Solution

LVNL placed an order for more than 300 SQUID units to equip their fleet of airport vehicles. In the following years (2005 – 2013) the number of SQUIDs has grown to 407 pieces which are used now.

One of the greatest benefits of the SQUID solution was its ability to work seamlessly with the existing A-SMGCS. SQUID units transmit spontaneous Mode S reply and are equipped with a GPS receiver, which tracks the vehicle location. These two capabilities work together to provide a constant, automatic stream of position and vehicle identification information for display in the control tower.

Because SQUID is lightweight, compact and easy-to-install (it is either permanently or magnetically mounted beacon), Schiphol was able to equip all vehicles in a short period of time.

Netherlands Netherlands

Client

"SQUID units allow us to take full advantage of our A-SMGCS, providing air traffic controllers with a complete view of each vehicle’s location, largely increasing safety levels at all areas on the airport’s surface"

Ruud van Halm

Partner

Air Traffic Control the Netherlands LVNL

LVNL provides air traffic services in the Dutch civil airspace. LVNL’s area control unit handles about 500,000 flights yearly and its TWR and APP control units handle about 400,000 flights yearly.

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