This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/aug/26/dublin-airport-suspends-flights-after-hangar-fire

The article has changed 3 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 0 Version 1
Dublin airport suspends flights after hangar fire Dublin airport reopens after hangar fire
(about 2 hours later)
Flights have been suspended at Dublin airport after a fire engulfed a hangar. Dublin airport has reopened to flights after a major fire in a hangar forced planes to be diverted to Shannon and Belfast on Wednesday morning.
Officials are urging passengers to contact their airline for the most up-to-date information after the fire on Wednesday, but both inbound and outbound flights are not expected to resume until lunchtime. No one was reported injured in the blaze, which was in an area of the airport estate in north Dublin usually cordoned off from passengers.
No injuries have been reported as a result of the blaze, which airport authorities described as being in a hangar “separate from the passenger facilities”. Smoke billowing from the fire in hangar three, which started around 7am, forced the temporary closure of the runway, Dublin Airport Authority said. Pictures tweeted from the scene showed large flames engulfing one side of the metal hangar.
Airport fire crews rushed to the hangar after the fire was reported at about 7am, with crews from the Dublin Airport Authority reaching the scene first before other vehicles were dispatched from Dublin. Flights Have Suspended After Fire In Hangar At Dublin Airport, Ireland http://t.co/0QgKiXKEpz pic.twitter.com/CuMMBZLI4Q
“All flight operations were suspended because all emergency services have been brought to fight the fire and as a result if something happens on the airfield the fire cover is not available. This is standard procedure,” the spokeswoman said. Six flights scheduled to land in Dublin on Wednesday morning were diverted to Shannon airport in Ireland’s south-west. A further four planes were told by air traffic control to fly further north into the George Best/Belfast City airport.
Flights suspended at Dublin Airport over hangar fire: Dublin Airport have temporarily suspended flights on Wed... http://t.co/UKWecrRGxc A DAA spokesman saidflights were disrupted for around 90 minutes before services into and from Dublin airport were able to return to normal. So far a cause for the blaze had yet to be determined, the DAA spokesman added.
“The fire is in a hangar in a restricted area of the airport, which is separate from the passenger facilities,” the airport said. The owner of hangar three, Eirtech Aviation, also confirmed that no one had been injured in the fire on its premises.
The last plane to land at the airport was a Ryanair flight from Leeds Bradford airport at 7.26am while the last departure before the airport closed was a Ryanair service to Wroclaw at 7.25am. In a statement, Eirtech Aviation said: “The fire is limited to a section of roofing and the Dublin Airport Fire Brigade is on site managing the situation.
“We understand from the emergency services that the fire has been contained (as at 8.35am).
“We can confirm that there have been no injuries and all personnel on site have been evacuated and are safe.”
The company statement added: “The aircraft in the hangar are not affected but will be fully inspected in due course, as safety is Eirtech Aviation’s number one priority.
“We are working closely with the authorities at Dublin airport and apologise to all passengers for the disruption caused as a result of the fire.”
Two “Whisper” jets – one of which is operated by CityJet that runs an air route from Dublin to the City of London airport and Paris – were in hangar three at the time. However it is understood that no major damage was caused to either aircraft.
Dublin airport is the hub for some of the busiest routes in Europe and is now also a major centre for transatlantic air traffic. In the first six months of this year the DAA reported that 11.5 million passengers had passed through its doors – a 15% increase in numbers compared with the same period last year.
Airlines such as Aer Lingus and Ryanair fly to 25 different destinations in the UK alone from Dublin airport. Just over a million passengers between January and June 2015 flew across the Atlantic from Dublin, with the airport now operating 22 new routes to different destinations in North America, Britain, Europe and the Middle East.
Flight operations are temporarily suspended due to a fire in a hangar. http://t.co/UsayTd1Q89Flight operations are temporarily suspended due to a fire in a hangar. http://t.co/UsayTd1Q89
The fire that broke out in a hangar this morning has now been contained. Flight operations remain temporarily suspended @DublinAirport.The fire that broke out in a hangar this morning has now been contained. Flight operations remain temporarily suspended @DublinAirport.
The fire that broke out in a hangar this morning has now been contained. Flight operations remain temporarily suspended @DublinAirport.The fire that broke out in a hangar this morning has now been contained. Flight operations remain temporarily suspended @DublinAirport.
It is understood that the fire broke out in hanger three, where two planes are stored. Both are short-haul 146 aircraft, one of which was believed to have been operated by CityJet.
The fire service reported that the blaze had been contained by about 8.15am.