Airport With Runway Straddling The Border Of The U.S. And Canada Will Close

April 25, 1993 The grass runway at the Piney-Pinecreek Border Airport on April 25, 1993 near Roseau, Minn.  (Tom Sweeney/Star Tribune via AP)
April 25, 1993 The grass runway at the Piney-Pinecreek Border Airport on April 25, 1993 near Roseau, Minn. (Tom Sweeney/Star Tribune via AP)

ROSEAU, Minn. (AP) — The Piney-Pinecreek Border Airport has a unique claim to fame — its runway straddles the border of the U.S. and Canada. But after seven decades of operation, the small airport that sits near Roseau, Minnesota, and Piney, Manitoba in Canada, will close for good on Friday.

The Minnesota Department of Transportation said in a news release earlier this month that the airport “had very low use and faced large maintenance expenses including runway, apron and terminal reconstruction. The international agreement required to operate the airport expires on Dec. 26 and will not be renewed by either airport owner.”

The airport opened in 1953 with a grass runway — a paved runway was added in 1978. It is one of six airports straddling the border, but the only one with a paved runway. It was often used by Americans traveling to Canada to hunt and fish.

Under the international agreement, staff at the airport are allowed to cross between the two countries for their work without going through the typical customs process.