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Alicante–Elche Miguel Hernández Airport

Coordinates: 38°16′56″N 00°33′29″W / 38.28222°N 0.55806°W / 38.28222; -0.55806
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Alicante–Elche
Miguel Hernández Airport

Aeropuerto de Alicante-Elche
Miguel Hernández

Aeroport d'Alacant-Elx
Miguel Hernández
Summary
Airport typePublic
Owner/OperatorAena
ServesAlicante, Elche, Costa Blanca, Murcia and Albacete
LocationElche (Province of Alicante)
Focus city for
Elevation AMSL43 m / 141 ft
Coordinates38°16′56″N 00°33′29″W / 38.28222°N 0.55806°W / 38.28222; -0.55806
Websitewww.aena.es/en/alicante-airport/index.html
Map
ALC is located in Spain
ALC
ALC
Location within Spain
Map
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
10/28 3,000 9,842 Asphalt / Concrete
Statistics (2023)
Passengers15,747,678
Passenger change 22-23Increase19.2%
Aircraft Movements100,547
Movements change 22–23Increase11.6%
Sources: Passenger Traffic, AENA;[1]

Alicante–Elche Miguel Hernández Airport[2] (IATA: ALC, ICAO: LEAL) is an international airport located about 9 km (5.6 mi) southwest of the city of Alicante and about 10 kilometres (6.2 miles) east of the city of Elche in Spain. Alicante–Elche is the busiest airport in south-eastern Spain and serves both the southern part of the Valencian Community and the Region of Murcia.

The airport is a base for Air Nostrum, Norwegian Air Shuttle, Ryanair and Vueling. Passenger traffic increased significantly in the 2010s, beating its own yearly record from 2013 to 2019; in 2019 it set a record at 15 million passengers. It is the largest airport in the Valencian Community (well ahead of Valencia and Castellón),[3] one of the 50 busiest in Europe and was Spain's fifth busiest airport in 2019.[4] Up to 80% of all passenger flights are international.[4] The largest numbers of passengers arrive from the United Kingdom, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, Belgium and Sweden.[5] Popular domestic destinations are Madrid, Palma de Mallorca and Barcelona.

History

[edit]

Foundation and early years

[edit]

El Altet airport opened on 4 May 1967, replacing the older aerodrome La Rabassa that had served Alicante since 1936. It took its name after the El Altet area (a part of Elche's countryside) where it was built. The first commercial flight that landed at the airport was Convair Metropolitan by Aviaco.[6] In November 1969, Iberia established regular connections to Madrid and Barcelona.[7]

Historically, up until 2003, Iberia was the leading airline at the airport.[8] With the decline of conventional airlines, low-cost EasyJet took the lead in 2004.[8] In June 2006, Avianca commenced a weekly flight from Bogotá to Barcelona whose outbound leg included a stop in Alicante. This was the city's first transatlantic service. Avianca flew the route with a Boeing 767.[9][10] In 2008, the airline ended service to Alicante after Spanish authorities granted it permission to operate the flight nonstop in both directions.[11]

In November 2007, Ryanair, the largest European low-cost airline, established a base at Alicante.[12] It has since grown to become one of the leading carriers at the airport, and by 2011 it had increased its presence further with eleven based aircraft, 62 routes, and had carried more than 3 million passengers.

Development since 2010

[edit]

In March 2011, Alicante-Elche's current terminal opened, which replaced the previous 2 terminals.[13]

The airport is located within Elche's comarca and so there had been a historical petition from Elche to include the city's name in the official name of the airport. On 12 July 2013, the name of the airport was officially changed from Aeropuerto de Alicante to Aeropuerto de Alicante–Elche[14] with the IATA airport code (ALC) remaining unchanged.

In 2015, the number of passengers increased by 5,1% to 10,574,484. The passenger traffic has increased in every year since 2000, with the exception of 2009, 2012 and 2020. By 2015 the largest number of passengers was carried by Ryanair (2,992,984), followed by EasyJet (1,285,221) and Vueling (1,093,494). Norwegian Air Shuttle (893,319) is the distant fourth.[1][15]

On 23 July 2016, the airport registered its busiest day of operations to date, handling 347 flights—with an average of one flight every 3 minutes—and about 58,000 passengers in a single day.[16]

In 2020, the airport recorded more than 11 million less passengers due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[1]

In 2021, the airport was renamed again, this time to Aeropuerto de Alicante–Elche Miguel Hernández, to mark the 110th anniversary of the birth of Spanish poet and playwright Miguel Hernández.[17]

In 2023, reached 15.75 million passengers, representing an increase of 19.2% compared to 2022.[citation needed]

Terminals

[edit]
Alicante Airport in 1972.
The former Terminal 1 prior to its closure in 2009.
Interior of Terminal N.

Terminal N

[edit]

Terminal N is the only terminal currently in public use. In November 2004, the airport's operator Aena approved plans to construct a new terminal for ALC, as a response to the airport's continuous passenger growth. Construction began in 2005, with an initial planned completion of 2009/10. After more than 5 years of construction, Terminal N (Nueva Área Terminal) officially opened on 23 March 2011. All flight operations were transferred to this terminal on the following day. The first flight to depart from Terminal N was a Ryanair flight to Memmingen. The terminal has an area of 333,500 square metres (3,590,000 sq ft), more than six times the size of the previous 2 terminals and has a capacity of 20 million passengers a year.[13] Terminal N was constructed to the east of terminals 1 and 2 and includes 96 check-in desks, 40 gates, including 15 with airbridges, and 16 baggage claim carousels.[18] The terminal is split into two areas, the processor where the C Gates are held, and the dock where the majority of B Gates are located. Flights within the Schengen Area use both areas of the terminal while flights to non-Schengen destinations only use the dock.

In October 2011, Ryanair terminated 31 routes after airport operator Aena demanded that Ryanair pay over €2 million a year for the use of Terminal N's air bridges, a facility that Ryanair had called "unnecessary" as the airline prefers to use mobile stairways for boarding and disembarking. However, Ryanair have since re-increased their number of routes from the airport.[19][20]

Former terminals

[edit]

By 1970, the airport was handling close to 1 million passengers, which prompted the construction of a new passenger terminal, the first phase opening in 1972 for international flights and the second phase opening in 1975 for domestic flights.[21] In 1978, passenger numbers exceeded 2 million.[22] In 1980, the runway was extended to three kilometres.[6]

During the 1990s, the terminals were modernised and expanded in order to accommodate the airport's rising passenger numbers. A new control tower and office building, together with operation and business centres, were constructed and five air bridges were installed to facilitate boarding. Car parking capacity was increased, the aircraft apron was expanded and a new runway exit was also constructed.[21]

While construction on Terminal N was underway, Aena approved plans for an extension to the existing terminal, which would act as an auxiliary until the new terminal was complete. The adjacent extension opened in January 2007 and was named Terminal 2 (T2) and the existing terminal was renamed Terminal 1 (T1).[22]

Terminals 1 and 2 have remained closed, yet structurally intact, since 2011. There has since been speculation that they may reopen in the future.[23][24] Terminal 1 (T1) had 39 check-in desks, 11 departure gates (5 with airbridges) and 9 baggage claim carousels, while terminal 2 (T2) had 14 check-in desks, 6 gates (none with airbridges), and 2 baggage claim carousels.

Airlines and destinations

[edit]

The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights at Alicante–Elche Airport:

AirlinesDestinations
Aer Lingus Dublin
Air Algérie Algiers, Oran
airBaltic Riga[25]
Air Europa Madrid, Palma de Mallorca
Air Nostrum Seasonal charter: Gran Canaria, Porto,[26] Tenerife–North
British Airways London–Gatwick[27]
Brussels Airlines Brussels[28]
easyJet Basel/Mulhouse, Belfast–International, Birmingham,[29] Bristol, Edinburgh, Geneva, Glasgow, Liverpool, London–Gatwick, London–Luton, London–Southend,[30] Manchester,[31]
Seasonal: Amsterdam, Athens (begins 31 March 2025),[32] Belfast–City,[33] Lille,[33] Lyon,[33] Nantes,[33] Naples (begins 17 December 2024),[34] Newcastle upon Tyne,[33] Nice,[33] Prague,[33] Southampton,[33] Zürich[33]
Eurowings Düsseldorf
Seasonal: Berlin,[35] Cologne/Bonn,[36] Dortmund, Hamburg,[36] Prague,[37] Stuttgart
Finnair Helsinki[38][39]
FlyOne Chișinău (begins 7 June 2025)[40]
Iberia Ibiza, Madrid[41]
Icelandair Reykjavík–Keflavík[42]
Jet2.com Belfast–International, Birmingham, Bournemouth (begins 3 May 2025),[43] Bristol, East Midlands, Edinburgh,[44] Glasgow, Leeds/Bradford, Liverpool,[45] London–Luton (begins 3 April 2025),[46] London–Stansted, Manchester,[47] Newcastle upon Tyne
KLM Amsterdam[48]
Lufthansa Frankfurt, Munich
Norwegian Air Shuttle[49] Ålesund, Bergen, Copenhagen, Gothenburg, Haugesund, Helsinki, Munich,[50] Oslo, Riga,[51] Sandefjord, Stavanger, Stockholm–Arlanda, Stockholm–Skavsta, Trondheim
Seasonal: Aalborg,[52] Aarhus,[50] Billund,[50] Växjö[50]
Play Reykjavík–Keflavík[53]
Ryanair[54] Beauvais, Belfast–International, Bergamo, Berlin, Billund, Birmingham, Bournemouth, Bremen, Bristol, Budapest,[55][56] Bydgoszcz (begins 31 March 2025),[57] Charleroi, Cologne/Bonn, Copenhagen, Cork, Dublin, East Midlands, Edinburgh, Eindhoven, Exeter, Gdańsk, Glasgow, Glasgow–Prestwick, Gothenburg, Hamburg, Hahn,[58] Helsinki, Ibiza, Karlsruhe/Baden-Baden, Katowice,[59] Kaunas, Klagenfurt,[60] Kraków, Leeds/Bradford, Linz (begins 1 April 2025), Lisbon,[61] Liverpool, Łódź,[62] London–Gatwick, London–Luton, London–Stansted,[63] Maastricht/Aachen, Manchester, Marrakech, Marseille, Memmingen, Milan–Malpensa,[64] Münster/Osnabrück,[65] Newcastle upon Tyne, Newquay, Norwich, [66][67] Nuremberg, Palma de Mallorca, Paderborn/Lippstadt, Pardubice, Porto,[68] Poznań, Rome–Fiumicino, Rzeszów,[69], Salzburg (begins 31 March 2025), Sandefjord, Santander, Santiago de Compostela, Seville, Shannon, Sofia,[70] Stockholm–Arlanda, Teesside, Tenerife–North, Tétouan, Toulouse, Treviso,[64] Vienna, Vitoria, Warsaw–Chopin,[71] Warsaw–Modlin, Weeze, Wrocław, Zagreb[72]
Seasonal: Aberdeen,[73] Barcelona,[74] Bari, Bologna,[75] Bordeaux, Cardiff,[76] Fès,[75] Kerry, Knock, Lanzarote,[75] Menorca, Stockholm–Västerås, Turin,[77] Växjö
Scandinavian Airlines Copenhagen, Gothenburg, Oslo, Stockholm–Arlanda
Seasonal: Bergen, Kristiansand, Stavanger, Trondheim
Swiss International Air Lines Zürich[78]
Seasonal: Geneva[79]
TAP Air Portugal Seasonal: Lisbon[80]
Transavia Amsterdam, Brussels,[81] Eindhoven, Paris–Orly, Rotterdam/The Hague
TUI Airways[82] Cardiff, East Midlands, Glasgow, Manchester, Newcastle upon Tyne
Seasonal: Birmingham, London–Gatwick
TUI fly Belgium Antwerp, Brussels,[83] Liège, Ostend/Bruges
Volotea Asturias, Bilbao
Seasonal: Luxembourg,[84] Lyon, Nantes
Vueling Amsterdam, Algiers, Barcelona, Bilbao, Brussels, Cardiff, Gran Canaria, Oran, Palma de Mallorca, Paris–Orly, Rome–Fiumicino, Santiago de Compostela, Tenerife–North
Seasonal: Ibiza, London–Gatwick[85]
Widerøe Bergen[86]
Wizz Air Bucharest–Otopeni, Budapest, Cluj-Napoca, Gdańsk,[87] Katowice,[87] Rome–Fiumicino,[88] Warsaw–Chopin

Statistics

[edit]

Annual traffic

[edit]
Traffic by calendar year
Passengers Aircraft movements Cargo (tonnes)
2000 6,038,266 56,427 7,745
2001 6,542,121 56,550 7,923
2002 7,010,322 59,268 6,548
2003 8,195,454 66,571 5,848
2004 8,571,144 71,387 6,036
2005 8,795,705 76,109 5,193
2006 8,893,720 76,813 4,931
2007 9,120,631 79,756 4,533
2008 9,578,304 81,097 5,982
2009 9,139,607 74,281 3,199
2010 9,382,935 74,474 3,112
2011 9,913,764 75,572 3,011
2012 8,855,764 62,468 2,527
2013 9,638,835 68,305 2,589
2014 10,066,067 71,571 2,637
2015 10,575,288 74,086 3,587
2016 12,344,945 87,113 5,461
2017 13,706,513 89,527 5,040
2018 13,981,320 96,734 4,013
2019 15,047,840 101,408 4,032
2020 3,739,499 37,153 3,519
2021 5,841,181 51,505 3,984
2022 13,202,880 90,109 4,641
2023 15,747,678 100,547 4,462
Source: Aena Statistics[89]

Busiest routes

[edit]
Busiest european routes from ALC (2023)
Rank Destination Passengers Change 2021 / 22
1 Manchester 848,435 Increase 17%
2 London-Gatwick 737,258 Increase 27%
3 Amsterdam 519,059 Increase 18%
4 Brussels 473,431 Increase 7%
5 Bristol 463,596 Increase 29%
6 London-Stansted 449,485 Increase 21%
7 Oslo-Gardermoen 393,376 Decrease 4%
8 Stockholm-Arlanda 382,082 Increase 8%
9 East Midlands 360,472 Increase 15%
10 Birmingham 346,054 Increase 4%
11 Eindhoven 331,246 Increase 9%
12 Leeds-Bradford 326,746 Increase 19%
13 Dublin 312,866 Increase 17%
14 London-Luton 305,893 Increase 26%
15 Newcastle 273,402 Increase 13%
16 Copenhagen 260,288 Increase 9%
17 Glasgow 257,504 Increase 9%
18 Liverpool 247,590 Increase 28%
19 Edinburgh 243,513 Increase 15%
20 Charleroi 228,210 Steady 0%
Source: Estadísticas de tráfico aereo[90]
Busiest intercontinental routes from ALC (2023)
Rank Destination Passengers Change 2022 / 23
1 Marrakech 57,309 Increase 96%
2 Tétouan 42,085 Increase 68%
3 Fez 28,399 Increase 901%
4 Oran 12,748 Increase 191%
5 Algiers 6,746 Increase 121%
Source: Estadísticas de tráfico aereo[90]
Busiest domestic routes from ALC (2023)
Rank Destination Passengers Change 2021 / 22
1 Palma de Mallorca 458,675 Increase 18%
2 Barcelona 431,736 Increase 18%
3 Madrid 325,081 Increase 16%
4 Santiago de Compostela 207,604 Increase 22%
5 Bilbao 190,438 Increase 1%
6 Ibiza 139,705 Increase 20%
7 Asturias 106,551 Steady 0%
8 Tenerife-North 103,451 Steady 0%
9 Seville 58,361 Increase 6%
10 Vitoria 57,358 Increase 80%
11 Gran Canaria 41,310 Decrease 10%
12 Lanzarote 33,912 Decrease 23%
13 Menorca 27,301 Decrease 36%
14 Santander 18,965 Increase 165%
15 Vigo 1,859 Increase 29%
Source: Estadísticas de tráfico aereo[90]

Ground transport

[edit]

Alicante airport is accessible by buses, taxis, and private cars on automobile road N-338. New car parking was opened in 2011 together with the new terminal. employs a modern sensor system with displays.

[edit]

The new terminal of the airport was built with space allocated for a railway station and an Alicante Tram stop. In 2019, the Generalitat Valenciana granted €50,000 towards a feasibility study in connecting Alicante Airport to the rail network. [91] The same year, the Ministry of Development put out to tender the contract to build the airport rail link to form part of the Cercanías Murcia/Alicante commuter rail network.[92]

Bus station

[edit]

Alicante airport has one bus stop for all the bus lines operating at the airport. The airport is connected with the city of Alicante by the C6 bus line.[93] There are also hourly bus services to Benidorm and Torrevieja.

Accidents and incidents

[edit]
  • In September 2013 a baby died at the airport shortly after arriving with relatives on a flight from London after the child's mother placed the baby in a carrier onto a conveyor belt used for bulky luggage items. The belt activated due to having detected the carrier's weight, and the baby became tangled in the machine's rollers.[94]
  • On April 10, 2017, a Jet2 Boeing 757-200 suffered a tailstrike during landing, damaging the area around the lower tail. The Spanish Civil Aviation Accident and Incident Investigation Commission determined the copilot, who was flying, left the nose too high during the landing and the captain failed to intervene. The copilot, who was on his final day of training after working for Jet2 for two years, reported to investigators he felt stressed due to pressure from Jet2 and was sleeping poorly. Jet2 fired the copilot following the accident.[95]
  • In January 2020 a fire in the international terminal's roof caused a 24-hour closure of the airport, with the diversion of 160 flights.[96]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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  2. ^ "Alicante-Elche airport to be named after iconic poet Miguel Hernández, victim of Franco's régime". thinkSPAIN. 7 November 2020.
  3. ^ "Los aeropuertos de la Comunidad Valenciana registran cifras históricas a un mes de que termine el año". 12 December 2023.
  4. ^ a b Antonio Martín (3 February 2018). "El Altet, de escala del correo francés a África al quinto aeropuerto español en 50 años". El Mundo. Retrieved 3 February 2018.
  5. ^ Alicante Plaza (11 January 2017). "El Altet cierra 2016 con 12.344.945, su récord histórico" (in Spanish). Alicante Plaza. Retrieved 11 January 2017.
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  8. ^ a b New terminal should help Alicante pass 10 million mark this summer; Ryanair now accounts for one-third of traffic anna.aero, Airport Analysis, 23 March 2011
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  66. ^ "Norwich destinations".
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  71. ^ "Ryanair potwierdza: Wracamy na Lotnisko Chopina. Na początek pięć kierunków". Rzeczpospolita.
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  86. ^ "Media | Widerøe".
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  88. ^ "Wizz Air NS24 Network Additions Summary – 14JUL24".
  89. ^ "Inicio". www.aena.es. Retrieved 18 May 2022.
  90. ^ a b c "Inicio". www.aena.es. Retrieved 1 March 2023.
  91. ^ "Los accesos a El Altet, la variante de Benissa y unir la A-31 con la A-35, las inversiones de Fomento en 2019". Alicante Plaza (in Spanish). 14 January 2019. Retrieved 18 March 2019.
  92. ^ "Contract for first phase of Murcia-Alicante Airport rail link put out to tender". Murcia Today. 28 August 2019. Retrieved 3 September 2019.
  93. ^ "Bus Travel to and from Alicante Airport". Alicante Airport Website. Retrieved 13 June 2019.
  94. ^ Williams, Rob (20 September 2013). "Five-month-old baby boy killed in freak accident on Spanish airport conveyor belt". The Independent. Archived from the original on 12 November 2020. Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  95. ^ Gildea, Samantha (7 November 2018). "'Stressed' Jet2 copilot was sacked after botched Alicante landing, report reveals". LeedsLive. Retrieved 9 May 2021.
  96. ^ "30,000 PASSENGERS AFFECTED BY ALICANTE-ELCHE AIRPORT FIRE". English Radio News. 16 January 2020. Retrieved 2 May 2021.
[edit]

Media related to Alicante Airport at Wikimedia Commons