Skopje Airport
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Skopje Airport Aerodrom Skopje Alexander the Great Airport Аеродром Скопје "Aлександар Вeлики" |
|||
---|---|---|---|
IATA: SKP – ICAO: LWSK | |||
Summary | |||
Airport type | Military/Public | ||
Owner/Operator | PEAS Macedonia | ||
Serves | Skopje, Republic of Macedonia | ||
Location | Petrovec | ||
Elevation AMSL | 781 ft / 238 m | ||
Coordinates | |||
Website | |||
Runways | |||
Direction | Length | Surface | |
m | ft | ||
16/34 | 2,450 | 8,038 | Asphalt |
Skopje Airport [1] (IATA: SKP, ICAO: LWSK) (Macedonian: Аеродром Скопје, Aerodrom Skopje), or Skopje Alexander the Great Airport[2] (Macedonian: Аеродром Скопје "Aлександар Вeлики", Aerodrom Skopje, "Aleksandar Veliki"), formerly known as Petrovec Airport (named after the village of Petrovec), is the largest and busiest international airport in the Republic of Macedonia. Serving the national capital Skopje, it is also the hub of MAT Macedonian Airlines.
In December 2006 the government of the Republic of Macedonia announced plans to rename the airport after Alexander the Great, sparking a renewed diplomatic spat with Greece, where both counties consider Alexander the Great as part of their own heritage (see Macedonia naming dispute).[3][4] The new name is argued to create confusion with the already existing Kavala International Airport, "Megas Alexandros",Alexander the Great which lies in the neighboring Greek region of Macedonia.[5]
Contents |
[edit] Skopje Airport development
Alexander The Great Airport in Skopje, the national gateway to the Republic of Macedonia, is undertaking an airport development programme that will triple the airport’s annual passenger capacity from around 650,000 at present, to 1.5 million passengers.
Moreover Alexander The Great Airport is refurbishing its current facilities, including improved electrical systems, x-ray equipment, development of the self-service check-in equipment and construction of an administrative area within the terminal.
The Public Enterprise for Airport Services in the Republic of Macedonia says the improved terminal is due to open in 2008. It plans to outsource catering and duty-free activities at Skopje Airport as well as at Macedonia’s second airport St. Paul the Apostle Airport in Ohrid.
[edit] Concession
Macedonia intends to privatise its two commercial airports in a bid to modernise and expand their facilities. Advertisements both in local and international newspapers will be published in order to attract investors. Macedonia will offer a twenty year concession for the airports and the successful company will be expected to modernise the infrastructure at both airports and expand the runway at Skopje. The Macedonian Transport Ministry says this has the potential to radically increase the frequency of passengers at the terminals. In addition to the concession for the two existing airports, the chosen company will also have to participate in the construction of a third airport intended for cargo transport near the eastern Macedonian town of Stip.[6]
[edit] Passenger numbers
The airport is expecting up to 1,500,000 passengers in 2008 after the new terminal facility is built.
In 2007 the airport handled a total of 626,144 passengers
[edit] Accident history
On 5 March 1993 a Palair Macedonian Airlines Fokker F-100 PH-KXL bound for Zürich crashed seconds after takeoff from runway 34. Investigation into the accident determined the cause of the accident to be the failure of the flight crew to have the aircraft deiced before departure. Of the 97 people on board, 81 perished.
[edit] Airlines and Destinations
The following airlines serve Skopje Airport (as of May 2008):
- Adria Airways (Ljubljana)
- Austrian Airlines (Vienna)
- B&H Airlines (Sarajevo)
- Bulgaria Air (Sofia, Tirana)
- Croatia Airlines (Zagreb)
- Czech Airlines (Prague)
- Germanwings (Cologne/Bonn)
- Helvetic Airways (Zurich)
- Jat Airways (Belgrade)
- Malev (Budapest)
- MAT Macedonian Airlines (Berlin-Schönefeld, Düsseldorf, Hamburg, Istanbul-Atatürk, Rome-Fiumicino, Ohrid, Vienna, Zurich)
- Turkish Airlines (Istanbul-Atatürk)
[edit] References
- ^ Airport information for LWSK at World Aero Data
- ^ Name as used at the official site
- ^ "Skopje's airport to be named "Alexander the Great"", Kathmerini, 2006-12-29. Retrieved on 2006-12-26.
- ^ Makfax
- ^ Kavala International Airport "Megas Alexandros" or in English: "Alexander the Great". Official site.
- ^ BalkanInsight.com - Macedonia Seeks To Modernise Airports
[edit] External links
|
|
This Republic of Macedonia-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |