• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
General Aviation News

General Aviation News

Because flying is cool

  • Pictures of the Day
    • Submit Picture of the Day
  • Stories
    • News
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Products
    • NTSB Accidents
    • ASRS Reports
  • Comments
  • Classifieds
    • Place Classified Ad
  • Events
  • Print Archives
  • Subscribe
  • Show Search
Hide Search

KAPF Begins Project To Keep Airport Operational In A Storm Surge

By General Aviation News Staff · May 14, 2026 · Leave a Comment

Elevated LED runway edge lights at Naples Airport (KAPF) for storm surge protection.
The new elevated lighting system will include 1,080 edge lights along runways and taxiways.

Naples Airport (KAPF) in Florida has launched a first-of-its-kind project to enhance resiliency and post-storm recovery by elevating its lighting system across the airfield.

The $25.4 million Airfield Lighting Rehabilitation and Electrical Vault Replacement Project will include the installation of 1,080 elevated edge lights along runways and taxiways. According to airport officials, watertight lights will be positioned 20 inches off the ground to protect against potential storm surge flooding. The new lights will be LED, which will be brighter and provide energy savings compared to the airfield’s current incandescent lights.

The elevated lights will be 20 inches above ground level, significantly higher than the existing lighting system.

Additionally, Naples Airport will reconstruct its electrical vault with a storm-resilient design, which includes raising equipment above the base flood elevation and five feet higher than currently situated, airport officials said.

“After a natural disaster, Naples Airport serves as a base for rescue operations and humanitarian missions, so it’s imperative that the airfield reopens as quickly as possible after a hurricane or tropical storm,” said Chris Rozansky, Executive Director of the Naples Airport Authority. “An elevated lighting system will help keep the airport operational during a period when the community needs immediate access to critical resources like food, water, and relief supplies.”

Once complete, Naples Airport will be the first coastal airport in the South to elevate its lighting through a resiliency initiative designed to keep the airfield operational after a flood, airport officials noted.

Elevating airfield lights is a common practice at northern airports so pilots and air traffic controllers maintain visibility during and after snowstorms. However, lights at many airports in the South are mounted flush to the ground or just above ground level, potentially putting them at risk during a flood.

“Airports do a lot of lighting rehabilitation work, but it’s not often that an airport gets to redo the entire airfield,” said Sandeep Singh, president and CEO of AVCON, an Orlando-based company that provides planning, engineering, and construction management needs for airports. “Every inch matters when water is coming up.”

During Hurricane Ian in 2022, portions of Naples Airport were inundated with storm surge, destroying airfield lighting and navigational aids. Storm surge came within inches of flooding the airport’s lighting vault, a breach that potentially could have knocked out all lighting systems and prevented nighttime and low-visibility operations for weeks or even months, airport officials said.

The $25.4 million in funds for the project come from a combination of insurance proceeds, grants from the Florida Department of Environmental Protection’s Resilient Florida Program, allocations from the FAA’s Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, a Florida Department of Transportation Public Transportation Grant, and capital funds included in the Naples Airport Authority’s annual budget. Naples Airport receives no local taxpayer dollars to fund operations or capital projects.

The airfield lighting project, which was approved in October 2025 and is expected to take 20 months to complete, is Naples Airport’s latest initiative aimed at building resilience. In August 2025, the airport received delivery of its new Tiger Dam flood barrier system, which consists of 3,000 feet of flexible tubing that, when filled with water, forms a strong, airtight barrier. The Tiger Dam system can be deployed within hours to protect buildings, equipment and technology against potential flooding, airport officials explained.

For more information: FlyNaples.com

Reader Interactions

Share this story

  • Share on Twitter Share on Twitter
  • Share on Facebook Share on Facebook
  • Share on LinkedIn Share on LinkedIn
  • Share on Reddit Share on Reddit
  • Share via Email Share via Email

Become a better informed pilot.

Join 110,000 readers each month and get the latest news and entertainment from the world of general aviation direct to your inbox, daily.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Curious to know what fellow pilots think on random stories on the General Aviation News website? Click on our Recent Comments page to find out. Read our Comment Policy here.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

© 2026 Flyer Media, Inc. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy.

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Comment Policy
  • Submit Press Release
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Writer’s Guidelines
  • Photographer’s Guidelines