Gran Canaria Airport Aeropuerto de Gran Canaria | |||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Summary | |||||||||||||||
| Airport type | Public | ||||||||||||||
| Owner/Operator | AENA | ||||||||||||||
| Serves | Gran Canaria | ||||||||||||||
| Location | Telde and Ingenio, Spain | ||||||||||||||
| Hub for | |||||||||||||||
| Focus city for | |||||||||||||||
| Elevation AMSL | 24 m / 78 ft | ||||||||||||||
| Coordinates | 27°55′55″N 015°23′12″W / 27.93194°N 15.38667°W | ||||||||||||||
| Website | www | ||||||||||||||
| Map | |||||||||||||||
| Runways | |||||||||||||||
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| Statistics (2021) | |||||||||||||||
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| Sources: Passenger Traffic, AENA[3] Spanish AIP, AENA[4] | |||||||||||||||
Gran Canaria Airport (IATA: LPA, ICAO: GCLP) (Spanish: Aeropuerto de Gran Canaria) is a passenger and freight airport on the island of Gran Canaria, Spain. It is owned and managed by a public enterprise, AENA, and it holds the sixth position in terms of passengers, and fifth in terms of operations and cargo transported. It also ranks first of the Canary Islands in all three categories, although the island of Tenerife has higher passenger numbers overall if statistics from the two airports located on the island are combined.[5][6][7] The facility covers 553 hectares (1,370 acres) of land and contains two 3,100 m runways.[8]
The airport is located in the eastern part of Gran Canaria on the Bay of Gando (Bahía de Gando), 19 km (12 mi) to the south[9] of Las Palmas, and 25 km (16 mi) from the popular tourist areas in the south. In 2014, it handled over 10.3 million passengers, ranking 1st in the Canary Islands and 5th in Spain by passenger traffic.[10] Gran Canaria Airport is an important hub for passengers travelling to West Africa (Morocco, Mauritania, Senegal, Cape Verde, among others), and to the Atlantic Isles of Madeira and the Azores. It serves as base for Binter Canarias, Canaryfly, Ryanair, Norwegian Air Shuttle and Vueling. Other airlines use it as a base to operate charter flights to Cape Verde and Gambia (TUI fly Deutschland and TUI fly Nordic), but only in the winter.
History
editThis section needs additional citations for verification. (July 2019) |
In 1919, Frenchman Pierre George Latécoère was granted clearance from the French and Spanish governments to establish an airline route between Toulouse and Casablanca. This also included stopovers in Málaga, Alicante and Barcelona. The airport opened on 7 April 1930, after King Alfonso XIII signed a royal order announcing that the military air force installations on the Bay of Gando would become a civilian airfield. In its existence, the airport has become the largest gateway into the Canary Islands, as well as the largest in terms of passenger and cargo operations, although the island of Tenerife has higher passenger numbers overall between the two airports located on the island.[5][6][7]
In 1946, the old passenger terminal opened, which took two years to build.[11]
In 1963, improvements to the airport were made. This included new parking spaces, enlargement of the terminal and the provision of a visual approach slope indicator system. In 1964, a transmission station was built. In 1966 a new control tower was completed, replacing the old control tower that was constructed in 1946.[12] In 1970, work began on the current passenger terminal which opened in March 1973. During this time, a second runway was being built and this was completed in 1980.[12]
In December 2010, low-cost carrier Ryanair announced the opening of 3 new bases on the Canary Islands.[13] In addition to Gran Canaria these include Lanzarote and Tenerife South. Ryanair presently operates 30 routes from Gran Canaria. The airport was an official alternative (emergency) landing site for the NASA Space Shuttle, before the ending of the Space Shuttle programme in July 2011.[14]
As of 2011, there was a programme to expand the airport, extending the terminal and creating a new runway.[15]
Airlines and destinations
editThe following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights at Gran Canaria Airport:
Statistics
editTraffic figures
edit| Passengers | Aircraft movements | Cargo (tonnes) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2000 | 9,376,640 | 98,063 | 43,706 |
| 2001 | 9,332,132 | 93,291 | 40,860 |
| 2002 | 9,009,756 | 93,803 | 39,638 |
| 2003 | 9,181,229 | 99,712 | 40,050 |
| 2004 | 9,467,494 | 104,659 | 40,934 |
| 2005 | 9,827,157 | 110,748 | 40,389 |
| 2006 | 10,286,726 | 114,949 | 38,360 |
| 2007 | 10,354,903 | 114,355 | 37,491 |
| 2008 | 10,212,123 | 116,252 | 33,695 |
| 2009 | 9,155,665 | 101,557 | 25,994 |
| 2010 | 9,486,035 | 103,087 | 24,528 |
| 2011 | 10,538,829 | 111,271 | 23,679 |
| 2012 | 9,892,067 | 100,393 | 20,601 |
| 2013 | 9,770,253 | 95,483 | 18,781 |
| 2014 | 10,315,732 | 102,211 | 19,821 |
| 2015 | 10,627,182 | 100,417 | 18,800 |
| 2016 | 12,093,645 | 111,996 | 18,588 |
| 2017 | 13,092,117 | 118,554 | 18,045 |
| 2018 | 13,573,304 | 131,027 | 19,174 |
| 2019 | 13,261,228 | 126,451 | 19,739 |
| 2020 | 5,134,252 | 67,280 | 13,926 |
| 2021 | 6,899,523 | 83,983 | 15,853 |
| 2022 | 12,417,699 | 119,530 | 15,830 |
| Source: Aena Statistics[3] | |||
Busiest routes
edit| Rank | Destination | Passengers | Change 2022 / 23 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Düsseldorf | 354,653 | |
| 2 | Amsterdam | 347,277 | |
| 3 | Manchester | 311,392 | |
| 4 | Frankfurt | 300,620 | |
| 5 | Oslo | 296,887 | |
| 6 | London-Gatwick | 283,531 | |
| 7 | London-Stansted | 235,524 | |
| 8 | Stockholm-Arlanda | 225,175 | |
| 9 | Copenhagen | 225,032 | |
| 10 | Dublin | 189,914 | |
| 11 | Birmingham | 179,309 | |
| 12 | Bristol | 171,246 | |
| 13 | Helsinki | 164,262 | |
| 14 | Hamburg | 154,240 | |
| 15 | Munich | 148,202 | |
| 16 | Zurich | 140,754 | |
| 17 | Brussels | 135,714 | |
| 18 | Berlin | 132,289 | |
| 19 | Cologne/Bonn | 123,114 | |
| 20 | Newcastle | 122,252 | |
| Source: Estadísticas de tráfico aereo[91] | |||
| Rank | Destination | Passengers | Change 2022 / 23 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Laayoune | 47,375 | |
| 2 | Marrakech | 44,745 | |
| 3 | Nouakchott | 37,801 | |
| 4 | Dakar-Diass | 20,433 | |
| 5 | Sal | 13,689 | |
| 6 | Casablanca | 10,593 | |
| 7 | Dakhla | 7,292 | |
| 8 | Nouadhibou | 6,963 | |
| 9 | Boa Vista | 6,909 | |
| 10 | Guelmim | 4,995 | |
| Source: Estadísticas de tráfico aereo[91] | |||
| Rank | Destination | Passengers | Change 2022 / 23 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Madrid | 1,606,855 | |
| 2 | Tenerife-North | 901,701 | |
| 3 | Lanzarote | 811,069 | |
| 4 | Fuerteventura | 659,647 | |
| 5 | Barcelona | 508,117 | |
| 6 | Seville | 278,699 | |
| 7 | Málaga | 242,673 | |
| 8 | La Palma | 229,694 | |
| 9 | Tenerife-South | 221,266 | |
| 10 | Santiago de Compostela | 165,691 | |
| 11 | Bilbao | 133,086 | |
| 12 | Valencia | 100,997 | |
| 13 | Asturias | 94,078 | |
| 14 | Palma de Mallorca | 78,719 | |
| 15 | El Hierro | 64,983 | |
| 16 | La Gomera | 55,572 | |
| 17 | Granada | 53,898 | |
| 18 | Vigo | 44,788 | |
| 19 | Alicante | 41,241 | |
| 20 | Pamplona | 33,490 | |
| Source: Estadísticas de tráfico aereo[91] | |||
Ground transportation
editPlans have existed for several years to construct a rail link connecting the airport to Las Palmas and Maspalomas. As of 2018, the Tren de Gran Canaria scheme was estimated to be underfunded by €1,500 million.[92]
Military use
edit
There is an airbase of the Spanish Air and Space Force to the east of the runways. Beyond several hangars opposite to the passenger terminal, the Gando Air Base (Base Aérea de Gando) contains ten shelters situated on the southern end of the eastern runway. They harbor the Ala 46 with F/A-18 Hornets, CASA 212 and the Eurocopter AS 532 of SAR.[93] Ala 46 or 46 Wing, composed of 462 and 802 fighter squadron, defends the Spanish airspace around the Canary Islands. It is one of the biggest and most important air bases of the Spanish Air and Space Force and is unique for the wide variety of aircraft which it operates.[citation needed]
Military activity was most intense during the mid-1970s, at the time of the crisis of decolonisation of Western Sahara and its occupation by Morocco. Military crises in Western Africa, like the 2013 Mali intervention by France, made Gando Air Base the main air platform for operations in Western Africa area by NATO. In 2006 Spain proposed Gando Air Base as headquarters for the newly created US Africa Command (AFRICOM), but the AFRICOM HQ was ultimately based in Stuttgart (Germany).[citation needed]
The Canary Islands Air Command (Mando Aéreo de Canarias – MACAN) is based in the city of Las Palmas. Canary Islands Air Command is the only territorial general Air Command Air Force in Spain; its mission is the maintenance, preparation and command of air units located in the Canary archipelago.[94][95] Any Spanish military airplane that lands in the Canary Islands is immediately put at the disposal of the Canary Islands Air Command, who can retain it and use it as long as necessary for missions within the islands. This happens sometimes with heavy military transport, antisubmarine warfare and early warning airplanes; the islands do not have these on a permanent basis. Once the plane is released by the Canary Islands Air Command, it can leave the Canary Islands and reverts to the Air Force Commands of mainland Spain.[citation needed]
The deployment base of Gando Air Base is the Lanzarote Military Airfield (Aeródromo Militar de Lanzarote). Lanzarote Military Airfield has permanently its own Air Force troops platoons and the radar for the air defence (the EVA 22, which covers the Eastern Canary Islands and the maritime area up to the Sahara), but it has no permanently based military planes, using the ones from Gando.[citation needed]
Other facilities
editCanaryfly has its head office in Hangar L.[96] Binter Canarias also has its head office on the airport grounds.[97]
MPAIAC bombing and Tenerife disaster
editAt 1:15 PM on 27 March 1977, a bomb planted by the Movement for the Independence and Autonomy of the Canaries Archipelago (MPAIAC) exploded in a florist's shop on the terminal concourse. Fifteen minutes of warning was given to the airport authorities,[98] who started to evacuate the building; the inside of the terminal was damaged and eight people were injured, one seriously.[99]
References
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Between 1944 and 1946 the passenger terminal was built. The airline company offices located in the facilities at the Lanzarote Air Station were then transferred there, thus separating civil and military activities. A Decree passed in July 1946 declared the airport open to all types of domestic and international traffic, classifying it as a customs airport.
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b) Envío por correo postal a la siguiente dirección: CANARYFLY, Aeropuerto de Gran Canaria, Hangar L, C.P. 35230, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria.
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BINTER CANARIAS S.A., hereinafter BINTER CANARIAS, with registered offices at the Airport of Gran Canaria, Telde,[...]
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External links
edit
Media related to Gran Canaria Airport at Wikimedia Commons