Curaçao International Airport
Airport in Willemstad, Curaçao From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Airport in Willemstad, Curaçao From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Curaçao International Airport (IATA: CUR, ICAO: TNCC), (Papiamento: Aeropuerto Internashonal Hato, Dutch: Hato Internationale Luchthaven) also known as Hato International Airport (formerly Dr. Albert Plesman International Airport), is the only airport for the Dutch Caribbean island of Curaçao, in the southern Caribbean Sea.
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Curaçao International Airport Hato International Airport Aeropuerto Internashonal Hato Hato Internationale Luchthaven | |||||||||||
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Summary | |||||||||||
Airport type | Public | ||||||||||
Owner | Curaçao Airport Holding | ||||||||||
Operator | Curaçao Airport Partners | ||||||||||
Serves | Curaçao | ||||||||||
Location | Willemstad, Curaçao | ||||||||||
Hub for | |||||||||||
Elevation AMSL | 29 ft / 9 m | ||||||||||
Coordinates | 12°11′20″N 068°57′35″W | ||||||||||
Website | curacao-airport.com | ||||||||||
Map | |||||||||||
Runways | |||||||||||
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Statistics (2021) | |||||||||||
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Source: Curaçao Airport[1] |
The airport is located on the north coast of Curaçao, 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) from the capital Willemstad. The airport connects Curaçao island to Europe, the Americas, and the Caribbean. It has the third longest commercial runway in the Caribbean region, accommodating up to a Boeing 747.
The airport serves as a main base for Divi Divi Air and EZAir. It formerly served as a main base for ALM, KLM, DCA, DAE, Insel Air, and JetAir Caribbean.
The airport was initially called Hato Airport, namesake to the nearby town of Hato. On Tuesday, 5 January 1954, the airport was renamed Dr. Albert Plesman airport. Plesman, director of the Royal Dutch Airlines for the Netherlands and Colonies, had died a few days earlier. Often it was spoken of Aeropuerto Plesman or Plesman Airport, unofficially also the name Hato remained in use till this day. Nowadays, the official name is Curaçao International Airport. It will be unnecessary to set out in detail, of which it is of paramount importance, that the Dutch aviation industry gets a firm footing in the vicinity of the Caribbean sea, where air traffic is now becoming more and more a factor of economic significance.' - Albert Plesman
With the above argument, in March 1934, Albert Plesman, director of KLM, hoped to receive financial support from the Comité Vliegtocht Nederland-Indië. It was a new plan to head to the West. In the 1920s, it started to interest itself in the Caribbean region. Curaçao was developing itself in a beneficial way due to the presence of the oil refinery, and a growing number of people were starting to choose the region with the purpose of vacationing. Aviation companies were paying close attention to these developments and were researching if it was possible to create a connection between the United States, Curaçao and South America. The West Indische Gouvernement constructed a runway at the Hato plantation in Curaçao,
On 22 December 1934, the Snip plane arrived in Curaçao after an 8th day during a trip with the route Amsterdam-Marseille-Alicante-Casablanca-Porto Praia-Paramaribo-La Guaria-Curaçao.
Hato was one of the most important and busiest airports in the Caribbean during the Second World War. The airport was used by the United States Army Air Forces Sixth Air Force for patrols against submarines. Flying units using the airfield were:
During the 1960s, the 'Bestuurscollege' commissioned Netherlands Airport Consultants B.V. (NACO) to design a Master plan for the airport. This assignment was in connection with the expected arrival of the Boeing 747. The runway was extended and the first KLM 'Jumbo' arrived on 6 November 1971, with the Boeing 747-200 ‘Mississippi’.
Curaçao International Airport N.V. (Curinta) was founded in 1977 and operated the Airport until 2013. Its predecessor was the 'Luchthavenbedrijf' (airport company), which was a department of the Government of Curaçao. After 2013, a public-private-partnership was founded. The Curaçao Airport Holding (CAH) is owned by the government and CAH owns the airport and 450 hectares (1100 acres) of land around it. The CAH acts as supervisor of the Curaçao Airport Partners (CAP) who has a 30-year concession to operate and develop the airport. The CAP is a consortium of Zürich Airport (Switzerland), Janssen de Jong[2] (the Netherlands) and CCR (Brazil).[3][4]
In the 2010s, renovations and expansions were started, so the airport could host more passengers. The runway and taxiway were renovated, a Plaza was opened with catering and retail, and the old terminal was demolished.[5] A new departure hall took its place. It is fully airconditioned with a system using cold seawater.[6] The airport receives about 3,300 private jets and airplanes yearly. A dedicated terminal or Jet Centre was opened to both efficiently handle VIPS and artists at large events, and be ready for even more private passengers in the future.[7]
Curaçao Airport Partners (CAP) started off the expansion and visible enhancement of Curaçao International Airport as part of the airport expansion project:
The terminal expansion project is a crucial component of the Airport Expansion Project. The SPANTENBIER of the expanded eastern part of the terminal marks yet another important milestone in the Airport Expansion Project. Important partner in this development is governmental company Curaçao Airport Holding, which is also investing significantly in the realization of the Terminal Expansion Project.
Following this milestone, we will continue with the development of the terminal, which when inaugurated, will have doubled the departure waiting area. In addition to a more spacious area for arriving, departing and transit passengers, Curaçao International Airport will gain an additional bridge that will be able to accommodate, process and offer services to large wide-body aircraft. In addition, a second Mirador will be placed on the expanded part of the terminal, ideal for enjoying plane spotting with family and friends or for photography.
CAP realizes the impact the airport developments have on Curaçao's economy, and as the airport operator is committed to jointly offer an enhanced and improved facility and service, positioning Curaçao as a more competitive airport in the Caribbean region.
The start date of the complete construction work for the terminal expansion project (terminal and continuation with the expansion of the middle part of the airport) was the second quarter of 2016. The end date of the complete construction work (including new immigration departures area) was December 2018.
The start date of the terminal expansion/bridge construction work was June 2016. The end date was set for January 2018.
When the terminal area is operational, CAP and CAH will offer more space (double the capacity) in the waiting area with facilities that enhance the comfort and experience of the traveler as well as more shopping and food and beverage facilities.
CAP will also offer a 6th bridge for major wide body airplanes. Here after CAP will continue with the expansion which includes separate routes for arriving or transit passengers and a new spacious area for departing area immigration among others.
The aim is to be able to process 2.5 million travelers.
Curaçao Airport Partners (private company) invested 25 million dollars in the terminal expansion. CAH also invested an additional 10 million dollars in the terminal expansion project.
Airlines | Destinations |
---|---|
AerCaribe | Bogotá |
Aerosucre | Bogotá |
Amerijet International | Miami |
DHL Aviation (DHL Aero Expreso) | Panama City–Tocumen, Port of Spain |
DHL Aviation (Vensecar Internacional) | Aruba, Caracas, Panama City–Tocumen |
Fedex Express (Mountain Air Cargo) | Aguadilla, Aruba, Bonaire |
Uniworld Air Cargo | Caracas, Panama City–Tocumen |
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki.org. |
Year | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Passengers handled[17] | 1,707,889 | 1,465,061 | 830,145 | 548,000 | 1,450,410 |
Rank | Country | Passengers | % Total | % Change | Airlines |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Netherlands | 177.042 | 41,0% | 11,0% | KLM, TUI fly Netherlands |
2 | United States | 73.259 | 17,0% | 20,0% | American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, JetBlue, United Airlines |
3 | Colombia | 23.593 | 5,5% | 38,0% | Avianca, Copa Airlines |
4 | Canada | 21.169 | 4,9% | 11,0% | Air Canada, Sunwing Airlines, WestJet |
5 | Germany | 18.536 | 4,3% | 10,0% | Condor |
6 | Venezuela | 16.081 | 3,7% | 44,0% | Albatros Airlines, Avior Airlines, LASER Airlines |
7 | Aruba | 14.060 | 3,3% | 13,0% | Aruba Airlines, Divi Divi Air, EZAir |
8 | Brazil | 13.229 | 3,1% | 23,0% | Avianca, Wingo |
9 | Suriname | 8.458 | 2,0% | 9,0% | Fly All Ways, Surinam Airways |
10 | Belgium | 7.400 | 1,7% | 12,0% | TUI fly Belgium |
Rank | Airline | Passenger share | Destinations |
---|---|---|---|
1 | KLM | 29% | Amsterdam |
2 | TUI fly Netherlands | 19% | Amsterdam |
3 | American Airlines | 13% | Charlotte, Miami |
4 | Divi Divi Air | 8% | Kralendijk, Oranjestad |
5 | EZAir | 6% | Barranquilla, Kralendijk, Medellín, Oranjestad |
6 | Avianca | 5% | Bogotá |
7 | Jetair Caribbean | 5% | Kingston, Medellín, Philipsburg, Port-au-Prince, Santo Domingo |
8 | Copa Airlines | 4% | Panama City |
9 | JetBlue | 3% | New York |
10 | Wingo | 2% | Bogotá |
Located at the west side of Hato Airport there are hangars for the two Bombardier Dash 8 Maritime Patrol Aircraft and two AgustaWestland AW139 helicopters of the Dutch Caribbean Coast Guard. This was, until 2007, a naval airbase of the Royal Netherlands Navy which operated the base for 55 years. With a wide variety of aircraft in the past years Fireflies, Avengers, Trackers, Neptunes, Fokker F-27's, P-3C Orions, Fokker F-60's and several helicopters. After the political decision to sell all Orions the airbase was not needed anymore.
The west end of the airport is a USAF Forward Operating Base (FOB). The base hosts AWACS and transport aircraft. Until 1999 the USAF operated a small fleet of F-16 fighters from the FOB.
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