Gregorio Luperón International Airport

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Gregorio Luperón
International Airport

Aeropuerto Internacional Gregorio Luperón
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IATA: POPICAO: MDPP
Summary
Airport type Public / Military
Operator Aeropuertos Dominicanos Siglo XXI S.A. (Aerodom)
Location Sosua, Puerto Plata in Puerto Plata Province, Dominican Republic
Elevation AMSL 15 ft / 5 m
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Website aerodom.com
Map
MDPP is located in the Dominican Republic
MDPP
MDPP
Location of airport in Dominican Republic
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
08/26 3,081 10,108 Asphalt
Statistics (2012)
Passengers 744,754
Aircraft Operations 4,811
Sources: Departamento Aeroportuario[1] and DAFIF[2][3]

Gregorio Luperón International Airport (Spanish: Aeropuerto Internacional Gregorio Luperón) (IATA: POPICAO: MDPP), also known as Puerto Plata Airport, is located in Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic. It is the Dominican Republic's fourth busiest airport by passenger traffic and aircraft movements, after Punta Cana, Santo Domingo and Santiago de los Caballeros airports. The airport is named after General Gregorio Luperón, a Dominican military and state leader.

Capable of handling planes of all sizes, Puerto Plata Airport has benefited from being in an area with many beaches, which are popular among charter airline passengers. The popularity of the city where it is located has also drawn a number of regularly scheduled passenger airlines over the years.

Facilities

The main terminal building has 10 gates; 5 with boarding bridges on the satellite concourse, and 2 boarding bridges and 3 without in the frontal concourse. The terminal can support 4 Boeing 747-400s simultaneously after renovations to the airport made in 2013/14.

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

Airlines Destinations
Air Berlin Düsseldorf, Munich (ends 24 April 2016)[4]
Air Canada Seasonal: Halifax
Air Canada Rouge Montréal–Trudeau, Toronto–Pearson
Air Transat Montréal–Trudeau
Seasonal: Hamilton, Québec City, St. John's, Thunder Bay, Toronto–Pearson
American Airlines Miami
Seasonal: Charlotte
Condor Frankfurt
Seasonal: Munich
Seasonal charter: Stockholm–Arlanda
Eurowings
operated by SunExpress Deutschland
Cologne/Bonn[5]
Finnair Seasonal: Helsinki
JetBlue Airways New York–JFK
Seasonal: Boston
Nordwind Seasonal charter: Moscow-Sheremetyevo[6]
Novair Seasonal charter: Copenhagen, Oslo–Gardermoen, Stockholm–Arlanda
Sunwing Airlines Montréal–Trudeau, Ottawa, Québec City, Sudbury, Toronto–Pearson
Thomas Cook Airlines Glasgow–International, London–Gatwick, Manchester
Thomson Airways London–Gatwick, Manchester (UK)
Seasonal: Glasgow–International Copenhagen
TUI Airlines Netherlands Amsterdam
United Airlines Newark
WestJet Toronto–Pearson
XL Airways France Paris–Charles de Gaulle

Cargo

File:PuertoPlataCrew.JPG
Puerto Plata ground crew attending to a flight.
Airlines Destinations
Amerijet Miami, Santiago de los Caballeros
DHL Aviation Santiago de los Caballeros, Santo Domingo–Las Américas
IBC Airways Miami

Incidents

  • On February 6, 1996, Birgenair Flight 301 was bound for Frankfurt, Germany, but crashed shortly after take-off from Puerto Plata Airport into the Atlantic Ocean 26 kilometres off-shore. All 176 passengers and 13 crew members, among them 164 Germans, were killed. It was discovered later that one of the air speed indicators of the Boeing 757-200 was not working properly, confusing the pilots about whether the plane's speed was too fast or too slow. Birgenair went bankrupt later that same year.
  • On January 22, 2009, Air Turks and Caicos flight 5103 landed in Puerto Plata and punched one of the gears in the middle of the runways; as a result the airport had to be closed for 5 hours and all incoming flights had been diverted to Santiago, Punta Cana and Santo Domingo. No injures were reported.

See also

References

  1. Departamento Aeroportuario - 2008 passenger statistics
  2. Airport information for MDPP at World Aero Data. Data current as of October 2006.Source: DAFIF.
  3. Airport information for POP at Great Circle Mapper. Source: DAFIF (effective October 2006).
  4. http://www.airberlin.com/de-DE/flightplan
  5. http://www.airliners.de/weiteres-langstreckenziel-eurowings/35225
  6. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links

Media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at Wikimedia Commons