Teniente General Benjamín Matienzo International Airport

Teniente General Benjamín Matienzo International Airport
Aeropuerto Internacional Teniente General Benjamín Matienzo
IATA: TUCICAO: SANT
Summary
Airport type Public
Operator Government and Aeropuertos Argentina 2000
Serves Tucumán Province, Argentina
Location Ruta A016 Km9. (T4117) CEVIL POZO
Elevation AMSL 1,495 ft / 456 m
Coordinates 26°50′27″S 065°06′17″W / 26.84083°S 65.10472°W / -26.84083; -65.10472Coordinates: 26°50′27″S 065°06′17″W / 26.84083°S 65.10472°W / -26.84083; -65.10472
Map
TUC

Location of airport in Argentina

Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
02/20 2,900 9,515 Concrete
Statistics (2014)
Total passengers 523,121
Source: DAFIF[1][2]

Teniente General Benjamín Matienzo International Airport (IATA: TUC, ICAO: SANT) is the international airport that serves Tucumán Province in the north of Argentina. It was built in 1981, and its terminal was inaugurated on 12 October 1986. The airport provides four departure gates, two arrival gates, immigration and passenger services, plus a large cargo terminal, the second biggest in the country.

Overview

This airport replaced the old one, located on the Ninth of July Park, because of its bad location (600 metres (1,969 ft) from the Plaza Independencia). The old airport had just one short runway 17/35 of (1600m/5000 ft) and it was closed in 1987. Now the Bus Main Station uses parts of the appron of the airport, while the Music School from the Universidad Nacional de Tucumán uses its passenger terminal.

The Departing Sector was rebuilt in 2005, with international flights facilities and a jet-bridge. It can handle big aircraft such as the Boeing 747, Boeing 767, Airbus A330 or Boeing 777.

It has 135,000 m² of runways, 21,250 m² of taxiways, a 6,985 m² terminal, two hangars of 1,840 m², and parking places for 278 cars. It has a small cargo terminal of 50 m². Cargo flights are important as Tucumán is the second most important Airport in Argentina in order of Tons of Cargo (after Buenos Aires-Ezeiza). Most of cargo flights are scheduled between September and November, taking fresh fruits to Europe and United States. A Freight Terminal was constructed in 2013.

In 1988, it handled 710,000 passengers. In 1998, 568,000. And in 2008, just 287,000 passengers. Traffic is anyway growing: 193,000 passengers in 2007; 287,000 in 2008; 365,000 in 2009; 411,000 in 2010; 404,000 in 2011; 445.000 in 2012; 500.906 in 2013; and 523.191 in 2014

On 9 April 2013, the runway heading changed from 01/19 to 02/20 due to magnetic variation.

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

AirlinesDestinations
Aerolíneas Argentinas Buenos Aires-Aeroparque, Córdoba
Seasonal: Mar del Plata [3]
Austral Líneas Aéreas Buenos Aires-Aeroparque, Córdoba
LATAM Argentina Buenos Aires-Aeroparque

Cargo

AirlinesDestinations
Atlas Air Miami, FL
Centurion Air Cargo Austin, TX
LAN Cargo Lima, Los Angeles, Miami

Statistics

Traffic by calendar year. Official ORSNA Statistics
Passengers Change from previous year Aircraft operations Change from previous year Cargo
(metric tons)
Change from previous year
2011 404,040 Decrease 1.71% 6,007 Decrease 2.21% 4,937 Increase 58,95%
2012 444,893 Increase 10.11% 5,655 Decrease 5.86% 5,167 Increase 4.59%
2013 500,906 Increase 12.59% 6,099 Increase 7.85% 3,427 Decrease 33.64%
2014 523,191 Increase 4.45% 5,538 Decrease 9.20% 5,950 Increase 73.62%
Source: ORSNA

Ground transportation

Tucumán International Airport has direct public transport links to San Miguel de Tucumán served by Bus nº 121 to the Bus Terminal Station, through AV. Avellaneda. Route A016 (continuation from Av. Sarmiento) provides access to the City Center. Taxis and rental cars are available as well, as is the case in most airports.

References

  1. Airport information for SANT at World Aero Data. Data current as of October 2006.Source: DAFIF.
  2. Airport information for TUC at Great Circle Mapper. Source: DAFIF (effective October 2006).
  3. http://airlineroute.net/2015/12/18/ar-cormdq-jan16/
  1. http://airlineroute.net/2015/12/18/ar-cormdq-jan16/
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.