Neighbours complain about 200 weekly chopper flights into luxury resort
A luxury resort that has been shut for three years hopes to reopen by chauffeuring guests down a steep 4WD track and flying them in on more than 200 helicopter flights a week.
Emirates's Wolgan Valley resort hopes to increase its helicopter flights. (Supplied: Emirates Wolgan Valley)
Emirates has lodged an application to increase the number of helicopter flights for its Wolgan Valley resort from 28 per week to 210.
The company says it still plans to reopen this year with luxury four-wheel drives, even if the increase is not approved.
Emirates is preparing a report that will respond to submissions about the proposal.
A bid by a luxury resort near the Blue Mountains to increase its helicopter flights to more than 200 trips a week has been criticised as "excessive" and "unwarranted" by its neighbours.
Emirates has lodged a request with the New South Wales government to boost the number of helicopter trips to its Wolgan Valley site near Lithgow from a maximum of 28 per week to 210.
Increasing the flights to 30 per day would equate to a helicopter flying across the valley and nearby national parks every 22 minutes.
The Emirates resort was mothballed three years ago when the sole road into the valley was shut due to instability.
The company's application said the extra flights would be critical to reopening the site, despite announcing in January it would reopen with four-wheel-drive access only later this year.
The Emirates resort in the Wolgan Valley has been closed for three years. (Supplied: Emirates Wolgan Valley)
But now, Emirates has argued in its application that the increased flights would allow it to reopen with a minimum viable capacity of 68 guests at a time.
The company said once two-wheel-drive access was restored to the valley, expected later this year, it would permanently reduce the maximum number of flights to 100 per week.
Of the 130 submissions filed in response to the proposal, just one individual in Sydney supported it.
The Wolgan Valley Association (WVA) said in its submission that the flights would "significantly" affect the community, its ecology and character.
"The WVA is open to supporting a modest increase to flights into the resort while two-wheel-drive access remains cut off," it said.
The Airbus EC120 would most frequently be used to transport guests to and from the resort. (Supplied: Emirates Wolgan Valley)
Its submission said it was "immensely proud" to have Emirates as a neighbour and wanted to see it reopen, but not with a permanent increase in helicopter flights.
"In the longer term, [it] may actually be counter to the commercial interests of the resort to the extent that they diminish the reputation of the Valley as a place of quiet and solitude, two defining features of wilderne
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