Alcides Fernández Airport Explained

Alcides Fernández Airport
Nativename:Acandí Airport
Iata:ACD
Icao:SKAD
Type:Public
Operator:Aerocivil
Location:Acandí, Colombia
Elevation-F:50
Coordinates:8.5°N -77.2744°W
Pushpin Map:Colombia
Pushpin Label:ACD
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of the airport in Colombia
Metric-Rwy:y
R1-Number:17/35
R1-Length-M:1189
R1-Surface:Asphalt
Footnotes:Source: GCM Google Maps[1]

Alcides Fernández Airport is a commercial airport on the Caribbean coast serving to town of Acandí in the Choco Department of Colombia. The airport is considered by residents of the town of Acandí to be an important link between that community and the rest of Colombia as well as neighboring Panama.

The airport was closed for some time during the early 2000s, as tourism to Acandí suffered a downturn. Acandí's mayor paid $30,000,000 Colombian pesos (approximately US$12,500) to enlarge the airport's runway and build better terminal facilities. The Colombian government paid a total of $1,500,000,000 Colombian pesos (approximately US$630,500) to aide in the renovation of the airport as part of Plan Colombia. In 2003, Colombian transportation minister Andres Uriel Gallego and Colombia's Civil Aeronautics minister Juan Carlos Velez re-opened the airport to public flights after renovation was completed.

Prior to its closing, the airport was served by Aerolínea de Antioquia and West Caribbean Airways both of which flew 19 seat passenger aircraft to the airport.

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Notes and References

  1. https://www.google.com/maps/@8.5001543,-77.2740587,2000m/data=!3m1!1e3 Google Maps - Acandi