Locomotive Springs | Utah Back Country Pilots Association

Locomotive Springs

UT94
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Airstrip Info

Frequency 122.90
Elevation 4232 ft
Lat/Long 41.7074, -112.9192
41° 42.444' , -112° 55.152'
Runway 11/29 2716 ft x 43 ft
Dirt
Ownership UDWR

Amenities

Weather

See more at the National Weather Center

Information updated December 11, 2025 @ 9:08pm

Description: A historic airstrip on the north end of the Great Salt Lake. The UBCP, and in large part board member Cory Wolf, worked with local representatives to accomplish quite a historic event...the re-opening of a transcontinental airmail route airport - Locomotive Springs. Locomotive Springs was used as a transitionary stop between Salt Lake and Idaho but when range of aircraft began improving, it quickly fell by the wayside. The UBCP has restored the two dirt airstrips, along with the directional concrete arrow, put up a windsock, and is looking forward to additional future improvements. As always, pilots are requested to adhere to the UBCP's Code of Conduct to help us maintain our strong working agreements with the BLM.

Runways: 2,716' long x 43' wide runway running east/west (11/29). Mostly compacted dirt with 1 foot tall berm on all sides. Second Runway 1,884' x 50' running north/south (18/36).

Approach Considerations: Sign placed on approach end of runway 11 approximately 3 feet tall right next to cattle fence. Old brick chimney located north of final approach path for Runway 11 approximately 600' west northwest of the approach end approximately 15 feet tall. Please be courteous of fishermen near the springs on final approach for Runway 11.

Amenities: None.

Windsock: Yes, located between the runways halfway down the east/west runway, surrounded by a white compass rose.

Weather: YES! You can view real-time weather by visiting this link: https://saywxair.com/airport/ut94

 

 

 

 

Tobias Burch visited 6 years ago in a CarbonCub with 26 tires

Easy landing strip in good condition.

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Roy Evans II visited 6 years ago in a PA11 with 8.00 tires

Airstrip is in good condition. Be weary of bushes with semi-flexible thorns near the intersections of the two runways. Runway surface hard packed and smooth for a majority of the usable length on both runways.

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Michael Muntean visited 6 years ago in a C172 with 600x6 tires

11/29 is clean and smooth, 18/36 is bumpier and has plants up to a foot tall growing throughout it. Parking area is ok, some ruts, plants, and a bit of gravel on it but ok with a nosewheel.

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Cory Wolf visited 6 years ago in a C205 with 850s tires

Both runways are smooth and dry. Windsock and signs are still in good shape. However, someone fairly recently seems to have liked the dragger that we took out there, because it has been dragged off. I flew the roads and other spring areas to see if I could spot it from the air but no luck. The drag marks were still pretty fresh so I think it was done pretty recently. Also, very little dust was kicked up on landing or takeoff.

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Rick Porter visited 6 years ago in a Husky with 26 tires

Landed west, first 1/3 damp with a large water puddle which I landed past. Took off south, dry and good condition.

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Make your Flight Plan at SkyVector.com

The Locmotive Springs airport, one known as the Locomotive Springs Intermediate Field, was likely constructed sometime between around the 1930s, as part of the Department of Commerce's network of airfields created to provide emergency landing opportunities for commercial aircraft. It has been seen on old airway maps as early as May 1930. As technology in aviation advanced, the requirement for airstrips such as this was no longer needed, and less than 20 years since charted, the airstip ceased to exist in any official capacity, albeit was later recognized as a "landing field" on the 1969 Locomotive Springs 1:24000 map which you can download by clicking here. Presumably the sporadic use of these landing surfaces were part of why it was recharted on the USGS topographic maps, as aviators would visit the area to practice off-field landings, or perhaps to enjoy the fishing in the nearby springs.

In April of 2019, the UBCP, together with Utah State Aeronautics, worked on a plan to rehabilitate the airstrip. Collaborating with the Utah Division of Natural Resources and the county road crew, the two runways and a small parking area were graded and the airstrip was reopened for recreational usage shortly thereafter. The airstrip, since then, has served as a place for pilots to practice their off-field landings, and with two cross runways, provides opportunities to experience crosswinds in a forgiving obstruction-free environment.

In December of 2022, the airstrip was recognized by the FAA and was designated UT94. This is part of an on-going effort for all of Utah's backcountry airstrips to be added to the FAA Facilities Directory and VFR sectional charts to educate pilots on the existence of these historic airstrips while aiding in their preservation for future backcountry pilots to enjoy. In 2023, the airstrip was then added to the 2023 edition of the Locomotive Springs 1:24000 map. You can download a PDF of this map by clicking here

 

Works Cited:

Abandoned and Little Known Airfields, Paul Freeman, 2016