Comandante Espora Airport Explained

Comandante Espora Airport
Nativename:Spanish; Castilian: Aeropuerto de Bahía Blanca - Comandante Espora
Iata:BHI
Icao:SAZB
Pushpin Map:Argentina Buenos Aires Province
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of airport in Buenos Aires Province
Pushpin Label:BHI
Pushpin Label Position:right
Type:Public / Military
Owner-Oper:Municipalidad de Bahía Blanca
City-Served:Bahía Blanca, Argentina
Elevation-F:246
Coordinates:-38.7247°N -62.1692°W
Website:AeropuertoBahiaBlanca.com
Metric-Rwy:y
R1-Number:06/24
R1-Length-M:2,030
R1-Surface:Asphalt
R2-Number:17R/35L
R2-Length-M:1498
R2-Surface:Asphalt
R3-Number:17L/35R
R3-Length-M:2616
R3-Surface:Asphalt
Stat-Year:2016
Stat1-Header:Passengers
Stat1-Data:306,523
Stat2-Header:Passenger change 15–16
Stat2-Data:0.4%
Stat3-Header:Aircraft movements
Stat3-Data:3,962
Stat4-Header:Movements change 15–16
Stat4-Data:33.2%
Footnotes:Source: DAFIF,[1] 2010 World Airport Traffic Report.[2]

Comandante Espora Airport, also known as Bahía Blanca Airport, is a domestic airport in Bahía Blanca, Argentina, which is served by Aerolíneas Argentinas and LADE.

Espora is also the main base of the Argentine Naval Aviation, and was given the identifier BACE by the Argentine Navy.

History

Comandante Espora Air Naval Base was built in the 1930s to replace the old Puerto Belgrano Air Naval Base, which could not support the newer aircraft that the Argentine Naval Aviation was adding. The new base was built in grounds close to the existing Bahía Blanca Airfield (Spanish: Aeródromo Civil de Bahía Blanca, also known as Villa Harding Green), located approximately 5 kilometers from Bahía Blanca and 25 kilometers from Puerto Belgrano Naval Base. The new airfield was opened on 16 June 1939.[3]

Between 1945 and 1964 it was the location of the Naval Aviation School, and in 1970 the Naval Aviation Command headquarters were located at Comandante Espora.[3]

From 1968 the airport was opened to civil and commercial traffic replacing the old civil airstrip at Villa Harding Green. The installations and runway were expanded and in 1972 were released to the commercial traffic linking the Argentine South. In September 1977, the runways were extended to allow aircraft of Boeing 767 size.[3]

References

  1. Web site: usurped. Airport information for SAZB. https://web.archive.org/web/20190305143444/http://worldaerodata.com/wad.cgi?airport=SAZB. 2019-03-05. World Aero Data. Data current as of October 2006. Source: DAFIF.
  2. http://www.aci.aero Airport Council International
  3. BASE AERONAVAL "COMANDANTE ESPORA" (BACE) - "Histarmar" website (accessed 2015-08-09)

External links