The world's most bizarre airports revealed

(Source: Dailymail)

Want a journey that really is more interesting than the destination? Then you might want to fly to one of these bizarre airports. In the North Pole there's an airstrip built on floating ice and in South Africa a runway with a 2,000ft drop at the end. And if movie star John Travolta invites you to his Florida property, you've got the option of taking a private jet right to his front door. Here MailOnline Travel reveals from the four corners of the globe airports that are guaranteed to make the journey the trip of a lifetime.
 


John Travolta's private airport

John Travolta loves flying so much that he built two customised runways for his jets on his Florida property. While extravagant, such a multi-million-dollar home makeover makes sense for a man who owns seven planes, including a Boeing 707, a Boeing 727 and three Gulfstream jets. There is a private control center and also bed and breakfast accommodation for other pilots to stay overnight in case of late night or early morning flights. The house is located in Jumbolair Aviation Estates in Ocala, Florida, which is built on Greystone Airport, and plenty of the other residents in the estate also have fly-in and fly-out access. Travolta is also an honourary pilot for the Australian aircraft company Qantas, and has flown a staggering 35,000 miles on his own already.


The ice runway

Many travellers find plane landings a terrifying enough prospect ordinarily, but imagine if the runway was made of ice? That's a reality for anyone flying into Doris Lake Aerodrome - a privately owned ice runway located on Doris Lake in Nunavut, Canada. The aerodrome is open from January to April and it mainly operates for gold mining on the nearby Hope Bay greenstone belt.


 

The festival airport in the desert

Every August, tens of thousands descend on Nevada to enjoy the Burning Man festival, but arriving at the desert location can prove a little tricky. While many battle through the desert by car, every year, the festival's Black Rock Municipal Airport is constructed to include two mile-long runways roughly outlined in the desert especially for the event. The airport is non-towered and pilots communicate via a common traffic advisory frequency to relay safety information and critical landing pattern details. The hub officially holds the airport number 88NV, although all traces of it disappear into the sandy landscape mere days after being opened to the public.


 

The failed runway

The French tried to build a concrete airstrip at their Dumont D'Urville research station in the Antarctic more than two decades ago. But they failed when the area was badly damaged by a storm, just months before its completion, which caused part of it to crumble into the sea. Work was halted because attempts to rebuild the airstrip would have negatively affected local wildlife, but small aircraft still use the long, snow-free area to land.


The airstrip on top of the world

In early 2014, a new airport was opened on top of mountains in Hechi city, southern Guangxi province, China. Dozens of hilltops were levelled to clear the way for the airport, built 2,221ft above sea level. There is a single terminal and one runway extending 1.36 miles that can accommodate three flights an hour, compared to the 60 that the mainland's busiest airports handle.


The runway where planes have been known to drop off a cliff

Taking off at Matekane air strip in Lesotho, South Africa, is a harrowing experience, as the plane soars over a 1,968ft cliff-face after taking off. Matekane's runway sits 7,500 feet up on a mountain gully, so it takes nerves of steel to both land and set off. If a plane doesn't manage to get up enough speed on the 1,312 ft long strip, it falls off the cliff before it takes flight.


The world's highest airstrip

Daulat Beg Oldi is a military base in Ladakh, India, that is located on an ancient trade route connecting Ladakh to Uyghuristan. The site, which sits at 5,065 metres (16,614 feet), is also host to the world's highest airstrip. Landing planes on the strip can be tricky as the weather deteriorates frequently, with strong icy winds.

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