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La Palma Airport

Coordinates: 28°37′35″N 017°45′20″W / 28.62639°N 17.75556°W / 28.62639; -17.75556
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La Palma Airport

Aeropuerto de La Palma
Summary
Airport typePublic
Owner/OperatorAena
ServesLa Palma
LocationBreña Baja and Villa de Mazo
Elevation AMSL33 m / 108 ft
Coordinates28°37′35″N 017°45′20″W / 28.62639°N 17.75556°W / 28.62639; -17.75556
Map
SPC is located in Canary Islands
SPC
SPC
Location of airport in Canary Islands
Map
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
18/36 2,200 7,218 Asphalt
Statistics (2018)
Passengers1.420.277 Increase9.0%
Operations22.033 Increase24.1%
Cargo (t)565 Decrease8.4%
Source: Spanish AIP at EUROCONTROL,[1] Aena[2][3]

La Palma Airport (Spanish: Aeropuerto de La Palma) (IATA: SPC, ICAO: GCLA) is an airport located in Breña Baja and Villa de Mazo, 8 km (5.0 mi) south of the city of Santa Cruz de La Palma on La Palma in the Canary Islands.[1] It is operated by Aeropuertos Españoles y Navegación Aérea (AENA), who operate the majority of civil airports in Spain.

The airport is served mainly by Binter Canarias and CanaryFly with island-hopping flights from Tenerife and Gran Canaria, but there are flights to the main Europe cities and charter flights from mainland Europe such as Germany, United Kingdom, Scandinavia and the Netherlands. In 2018, the airport had 1,420,277 passengers in the 22,033 operations handled. Cargo traffic totalled 565 tonnes.[4]

History

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Control tower of the old airport

On February 19, 1921, the then company Marítimo Canaria received authorization from the Ministry of Transport to establish an air service on the coast of Tazacorte. In the early 1950s, plans were made for a new airfield. However, the choice of location was difficult, since the island of La Palma is very mountainous and offers little flat land near the capital. So it was decided to build the airfield called Buenavista de Arriba, also known as Buena Vista, about three kilometers west of the island's capital, Santa Cruz, at an elevation of 350 meters. This airfield was opened on September 22, 1955 for civil aviation and the first tourist flights. In 1958, the runway 03/21, about 1000 meters long, received an asphalt surface. Aircraft of the type Junkers Ju 52/3m and Douglas DC-3 operated there. The former runway and control tower as well as the airport terminal building, which has since been converted into a private house, still exist today.

As Buenavista Airport was not sustainable in the long term due to difficult wind and weather conditions, a new airport was opened near Mazo, about eight kilometers south of Santa Cruz, on April 15, 1970. Due to the large volume of traffic, the runway was later extended by about 500 meters to the north. It was completed on April 1, 1980, and has remained unchanged to this day.

However, the airport's location is also susceptible to dangerous winds - during rare westerly wind conditions, downdrafts from the mountain slopes can occur several times a year, during which air traffic has to be partially or completely shut down. In one of the longest incidents of this kind, between April 6 and 10, 2008, about three quarters of all flight movements were cancelled, and the airport had to be completely closed temporarily. Many charter flights were diverted to Tenerife South Airport. More than 1,500 passengers had to use ferry connections or stay on Tenerife or one of the other islands.

In 2021, the airport was affected by the eruption of the Cumbre Vieja volcano. Due to volcanic ash on the airport grounds, operations had to be completely shut down for a time.[5]

New terminal

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Terminal interior
Airport overview

A new terminal building opened in July 2011, giving the airport an ultimate capacity of 3 million passengers per year. The new terminal has 25 check-in desks, 4 baggage carousels, and 9 boarding gates. The new terminal is farther back than the old terminal, meaning that apron space is maximised. There are still no plans to build a taxiway parallel to the runway, so aircraft still have to backtaxi on the runway, limiting capacity to 10 operations per hour. The airport also has a new control tower.[6]

Airlines and destinations

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The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights at La Palma Airport:

AirlinesDestinations
Binter Canarias Gran Canaria, Lanzarote, Tenerife–North, Tenerife–South
Seasonal: Fuerteventura
CanaryFly Gran Canaria, Tenerife–North
Condor Düsseldorf, Frankfurt, Hamburg, Munich
Discover Airlines Seasonal: Frankfurt[7]
easyJet Seasonal: Berlin[8]
Edelweiss Air Seasonal: Zurich
Eurowings Seasonal: Düsseldorf, Hamburg, Stuttgart
Iberia Madrid
Seasonal: Málaga,[9] Santiago de Compostela[10]
Luxair Seasonal: Luxembourg[11]
Marabu Munich
Smartwings Seasonal: Prague
Transavia Amsterdam
TUI Airways London–Gatwick, Manchester
TUI fly Netherlands Seasonal: Amsterdam, Eindhoven
Vueling Barcelona

Incidents

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The 2021 Cumbre Vieja volcanic eruption on La Palma caused the airport to temporarily shut down operations.[12]

Statistics

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Busiest routes

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Busiest international routes from SPC (2023)
Rank Destination Passengers Change 2022 / 23
1 Düsseldorf 26,165 Increase 29%
2 Frankfurt 18,724 Decrease 20%
3 Munich 16,663 Increase 38%
4 Amsterdam 16,652 Decrease 37%
5 Hamburg 16,259 Increase 21%
6 London-Gatwick 16,045 Increase 36%
7 Billund 10,280 Increase 109%
8 Copenhagen 9,058 Increase 160%
9 Stuttgart 8,715 Increase 43%
10 Manchester 7,109 Decrease 41%
Source: Estadísticas de tráfico aereo[13]
Busiest Spanish routes from SPC (2023)
Rank Destination Passengers Change 2022 / 23
1 Tenerife-North 688,879 Increase 9%
2 Gran Canaria 228,790 Increase 8%
3 Madrid 179,014 Decrease 4%
4 Tenerife-South 53,392 Increase 110%
5 Barcelona 17,974 Decrease 58%
6 Lanzarote 17,030 Increase 32%
7 Bilbao 8,640 Increase 55%
8 Fuerteventura 5,872 Decrease 5%
9 Santiago de Compostela 1,254 Decrease 92%
10 Málaga 1,115 Steady New Route
Source: Estadísticas de tráfico aereo[13]

References

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  1. ^ a b "EAD Basic - Error Page". www.ead.eurocontrol.int.
  2. ^ "Estadísticas - Aeropuertos Españoles - aena.es". www.aena.es.
  3. ^ "Presentación - Aeropuerto de La Palma - Aena.es". www.aena.es.
  4. ^ "La Palma Airport: Introduction". AENA. Retrieved 3 December 2016.
  5. ^ Orban, André (2021-12-25). "La Palma Airport has carried out 74% of the scheduled operations during the volcanic eruption which has officially ended after 3 months". Aviation24.be. Retrieved 2024-07-23.
  6. ^ Some infrastructural data are from an old AENA website page that is no longer available. General airport information from AENA as of 2015 is here: La Palma Airport SPC 2015
  7. ^ "EUROWINGS DISCOVER ADDS FRANKFURT – SANTA CRUZ DE LA PALMA IN NW23".
  8. ^ "EasyJet NW23 Network Additions – 09JUL23".
  9. ^ "Iberia NS23 Domestic / Spain Network Additions". Aeroroutes.
  10. ^ "Iberia NS23 Domestic / Spain Network Additions". Aeroroutes.
  11. ^ "La Palma Flugplan Winter 2023/2024". May 2023.
  12. ^ "Volcano island flights resume after ash closed airport".
  13. ^ a b Cite error: The named reference Inicio was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
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