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germanblonde Mar 9th, 2006 06:53 AM

London Gatwick Airport - Which side
 
I will be flying to/form LGW on a transatlantic flight. Which side of the plane should I sit on to get a view of London when the plane lands/takes off? Thanks in advance.

PalQ Mar 9th, 2006 06:55 AM

Interesting question - one would think the left side if the plane goes straight over London suburbs.

germanblonde Mar 9th, 2006 07:00 AM

PalQ thanks for your response, are you referring to an arriving or departing flight? I have heard from some of my freinds that they have had great views of London on flights to/from Heathrow airport. I would love to see London from the air if possible when flying to/from Gatwick.

PalQ Mar 9th, 2006 07:04 AM

Arriving, would be contrary on taking off i think. But planes may not land in a straight line or may take off to the south - i'm not sure just seems a logical answer if they fly fairly straight in. hope someone else is more precise in this knowledge - like a pilot!

Kate Mar 9th, 2006 07:04 AM

Gatwick is south of london, so 'if' your plane flew over central London on its flight path (and I couldn't tell you if it did) then I guess it makes sense that the view would be LEFT side on arrival at Gatwick and RIGHT side on departure.

I don't know if these sites will help you:
www.baa.com
www.gatwickairport.com

Intrepid1 Mar 9th, 2006 07:05 AM

It may literally depend on which way the wind is blowing and what direction the plane actually takes off in.

grsing Mar 9th, 2006 07:09 AM

I doubt it would really make much difference; I think Gatwick is too far from the city to see much of anything (maybe if it was a really clear day, and then it would depend on the wind).

Where2Travel Mar 9th, 2006 07:12 AM

Yes, you heard right that it's a LHR descent over central London that gets the top views. I am struggling to think of any approach to a city I have been to that is consistently as good as this one into LHR. On the odd occasion I have approached from the other side and had a cracking view over Windsor.

Gatwick however is a different story. I can't recall any London views on taking-off or landing at LGW, even approaching or heading north. Plenty of views of the south London suburbs on these flights which looks promising. Many a time, we have been above clouds by the time I thought we would be nearing the centre of London.

grsing Mar 9th, 2006 07:15 AM

Reagan into DC might give it a run for its money; comes in straight down the Potomac, past the Mall and everything.

Robespierre Mar 9th, 2006 07:40 AM

Looking at the approach plate for LGW, I see that arrivals fly final approach courses of 098°, 196°, 256°, and 311°.

The only course that promises any views of Big Ben is the 196°, and passes to the east of London - so you would want to be seated on the right side.

(None of this accounts for where ATC might vector a flight before committing it to a final approach. That's pretty much a crapshoot.)

PalQ Mar 9th, 2006 07:46 AM

On Heathrow flights you often get a swell view of Windsor Castle if when departing you sit on the right side of the plane - i've often seen it in all its majesty. But now to think i agree that Gatwick, 30 some miles south of London may not yield views to worry about which side of plane to be on - in fact seems they may skim the southern coast in which more delectable views would be on right side, views of coast.

CotswoldScouser Mar 9th, 2006 09:58 PM

I've never seen anything of London arriving or departing Gatwick.

What IS sometimes a shock, if you've been out of England for a few months, is the Sussex countryside. Although, driving around Gatwick on the ground feels really pretty suburban, from the air it looks astonishingly green, hedge-y, rural and almost timeless. Well, it's obviously the result of Enclosures and therefore must be post-Tudor, but who's being pedantic?

The view's the same on either side of the plane.

Intrepid1 Mar 10th, 2006 12:55 AM

As I said earlier, it depends on which way the wind is blowing..thank you for confirming this, Robespierre.


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