Renfrew Airport was the domestic airport serving the city ofGlasgow until it was decommissioned in 1966. It was located in the Newmains area of Renfrew, approximately 2 kilometres east of Abbotsinch Airfield which would eventually replace it. It consisted of a main terminal building and ancillary buildings, and a main runway which ran west south-west of the terminal. Already in existence as a military facility during the First World War, it first handled scheduled flights in 1933 with the first regular destination being Campbeltown. In World War II it served as RAF Renfrew. Despite the construction of a new terminal building in 1954, it became evident that the airport was unable to cope with the increasing demands for domestic air travel in the 1960s. The final departure took place on 2 May 1966 – its destination being the new Glasgow Airport a few hundred metres away. The site is now occupied by a Tesco supermarket and the M8 motorway; this straight and level section of motorway occupies the site of the runway. Opened in March 1968, the M8 connected the new Glasgow Airport to Bishopton in the west and Glasgow city centre in the east. The entire airport was demolished in 1978. Arkleston Primary School and a Tesco superstore were built on the former terminal site, and the whole of the surrounding area is now covered with housing. The only trace left of the airport is the Flying Scotsman pub which was the Hertz car rental building, opposite the terminal building.
The airport handled 138,146 passengers in its first year of operations. By the end of the decade, the airport was handling more than half a million passengers annually; one million passengers passed through the airport for the first time in the year 1964. In the year of the airport's closure, it handled 1.4 million passengers.
Year
Number Of Passengers
% Change
1950
138,146
1951
139,599
1
1952
156,916
12.4
1953
210,023
33.8
1954
258,481
23.1
1955
305,574
18.2
1956
373,948
22.4
1957
436,561
16.7
1958
443,481
1.6
1959
528,682
19.2
1960
652,180
23.4
1961
741,398
13.7
1962
854,988
15.3
1963
996,264
16.5
1964
1,150,506
15.8
1965
1,240,066
7.8
1966
1,406,879
13.5
combined with the new Glasgow Airport
In fiction
The airport features briefly in the second novel of a space opera series by Angus MacVicar, Return to the Lost Planet. One of the characters is about to fly back from Scotland to Berlin, but the hero and his companion join him at the last minute on the bus from St. Enoch, Glasgow, to the airport, and persuade him to stay and help them.