College of Air Traffic Control

The College of Air Traffic Control or CATC is the main British non-military training establishment for air traffic control (ATC). It also trains people from other countries.[1]

College of Air Traffic Control
CATC
The site in June 2007
Location within Hampshire
General information
TypeCollege
AddressHampshire, PO15 7FL
Coordinates50.882°N 1.241°W / 50.882; -1.241
Elevation15 m (49 ft)
Current tenantsNATS
CompletedSeptember 2011
Cost£10m
ClientNATS
Technical details
Floor area43,000 sq ft

History

The NATS College of Air Traffic Control was originally in Dorset, started by the Ministry of Aviation as the School of Air Traffic Control in 1949. The college was created by the National Air Traffic Control Service, which was a partly-military organisation. The college in the early 1970s was run by the Air Traffic Control Service.

The new college in Hampshire opened on Monday 26 September 2011.

Training

Once selected for the course, trainee air traffic controllers in the 1990s would take a 72-week-long course, followed by a year of on-site experience.

The training course is two months, from whence the path of training is either an Area Controller (nine months more training) or an Approach Controller (five months more training). There are 120 trainees per year.[2]

Since September 2015, all Norwegian air traffic controllers (for Avinor) train at the college.

Structure

It is situated in the main NATS building, north of junction 9 of the M27. It has six simulator rooms and a 3D aerodrome simulator.

See also

References

External lists

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.