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The Deborah Lawrie Flyover: Australia’s first female pilot takes naming honour at Sydney Airport

Sydney Airport’s new flyover into the domestic terminals has been named after Australia’s first female commercial airline pilot, women's rights campaigner and aviation trailblazer, Deborah Lawrie AM.

Sydney Airport’s new flyover into the domestic terminals has been named after Australia’s first female commercial airline pilot, women’s rights campaigner and aviation trailblazer, Deborah Lawrie AM.

The Deborah Lawrie Flyover has been named in recognition of her significant service to aviation and her advocacy for gender equality.

Deborah Lawrie AM was the first woman in Australia to become a pilot for a commercial airline, but this only happened after a ground-breaking legal battle with Ansett in 1979.

Despite being qualified, Deborah Lawrie’s applications to be a pilot were repeatedly rejected due to her gender.

In 1979, she won Australia’s first successful High Court sex discrimination case for employment, a decision that paved the way for women to get equal rights in workplaces across the country.

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Deborah Lawrie AM

Deborah Lawrie made history on 22 January 1980 when she co-piloted an Ansett flight from Alice Springs to Darwin.

The Deborah Lawrie Flyover is adorned with Aboriginal artwork designed by Dennis Golding and Carmen Glynn-Braun from the Re-Right Collective, in partnership with the La Perouse elders and cultural advisors, to make it an eye-catching piece of infrastructure.

Pilot Deborah Lawrie AM said: “If someone had said to me way back when I was 25, taking on Ansett in the High Court to become a commercial airline pilot, that one day there would be a flyover into Sydney Airport named after me, I would have thought they were mad.”

“I am very honoured and humbled by the incredible gesture to name this impressive flyover after me, and I hope I can continue to inspire future generations of aviators.

“To me, the flyover is like a gentle descending turn onto final approach, an engineering masterpiece.

An icon that continues to soar into the history books

Deborah Lawrie 2

In a cheeky nod to fate’s sense of humour, the fresh-off-the-drawing-board Deborah Lawrie Flyover will soar over Sir Reginald Ansett Drive as it ushers commuters to the domestic terminals.

“Friends and colleagues are delighted when they hear that the flyover passes right over the top of Sir Reginald Ansett Drive.

“I’ve walked beside and been fascinated by the construction of the flyover many times on my way to work, but since I found out it will carry my name, I’ve stopped to take photos.”

Sydney Airport CEO Geoff Culbert said, “It is an honour to name this impressive piece of infrastructure after Australia’s first commercial female pilot, Deborah Lawrie.”

“Deborah Lawrie didn’t just pave the way for women in aviation, but her High Court win was the catalyst for change in workplaces across Australia to give women equal opportunities and rights.

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Deborah Lawrie AM opens the new Deborah Lawrie Flyover at Sydney Airport

“More than four decades after that landmark case, Deborah Lawrie has notched up an impressive 20,000 flying hours, and we love seeing her come through Sydney Airport flying planes for Virgin.

“She fought hard for her wings, and the Deborah Lawrie Flyover has now cemented her place as one of the most significant aviation pioneers in Australia.”

NSW Minister for Roads, John Graham, said, “The fact that the Deborah Lawrie Flyover will cast a little shade over Sir Reginald Ansett Drive is most fitting for a woman who refused to be grounded by the era she grew up in and the man who said she would never make a commercial airline pilot.