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Published on 18 Jun 2025

From slippery to safe – airstrip upgrade supports RFDS visits to remote community

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A $5 million Department of Transport project to seal the airstrip at the remote Aboriginal community of Warmun has transformed aviation access for the community.

During the wet season, the community’s previously unsealed airstrip became non-serviceable, isolating residents from essential health services, including emergency evacuations by the Royal Flying Doctor Service (RFDS). In such instances, RFDS operations were often redirected to the Argyle mine site, over 65 kilometres or approximately an hour’s drive away.

The upgrade of the Warmun airstrip, completed in 2023 in collaboration with Main Roads Kimberley Region, has replaced the red dirt and rocks with a new asphalt surface and clear line markings.

RFDS Senior Pilot Finely (Fin) Garside said prior to the upgrade, the RFDS would ask Warmun community members to conduct the ‘Landcruiser test’ by driving down the dirt airstrip to check its condition after heavy rain.

“If the surface was too soft or unstable for the RFDS plane to land safely, patients would need to be transported approximately one hour to the nearest operational airstrip,” he said.

Thankfully, the ‘Landcruiser test’ is now a thing of the past and the new surface supports year-round safe landings.

“With the dirt strip, we constantly worried about potholes and slippery conditions. Now at the Warmun airstrip, during the daytime, you can land pretty much any time, which is incredibly important for a remote community like Warmun,” said Fin.

Learn more about how DoT is supporting aviation infrastructure that keeps communities connected.