Rosh Pina Airport Explained

Rosh Pina Airport
Iata:RPN
Icao:LLIB
Type:Public
Operator:Israel Airports Authority
Location:Rosh Pinna, Mahanayim
Elevation-F:922
Pushpin Map:Israel northeast#Israel
Pushpin Label:RPN
Pushpin Mapsize:280
R1-Number:05/23
R1-Length-F:3,190
R1-Length-M:972
R1-Surface:Asphalt
R2-Number:15/33
R2-Length-F:3,655
R2-Length-M:1,114
R2-Surface:Asphalt

Rosh Pina Airport (Hebrew: שְׂדֵה הַתְּעוּפָה רֹאשׁ פִּינָּה, Arabic: مطار روش بينا), sometimes called Mahanayim Airport due to its proximity to Mahanayim, is an Israeli airport located in Rosh Pinna, near the Safed-Hatzor-Rosh Pina Industrial Park.[1] The airport is located 16 km from Safed, 29 km from Tiberias and 30 km from Kiryat Shmona.

History

The airport was built in 1943 during the British Mandate for Palestine and became RAF Station Machanaim. Using 400 mules and Indian soldiers, Major Ronald John Jarvis Horton laid the foundations. With his mules and wooden chariots, he then trekked overland to India and Burma where he fought the Japanese at Kohima. Mahanayim served the British army against Vichy France in Syria. After the British evacuation in 1948, the airport was transferred to Israel for use by the IAF. In the 1950s, Arkia Israel Airlines began service to the airport, working from a hut which served as a passenger terminal and air traffic control tower. By 1968, a new terminal building had been constructed and three years later, in 1971, a fire station and control tower were erected. Following increased activity, the passenger terminal was further expanded in 1994. In 2008 the airport was closed temporarily for the testing of an Elbit Systems unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV).[2]

Airlines and destinations

Since the closure of Tel Aviv-Sde Dov, which was the only destination served from Rosh Pina by Ayit Aviation and Tourism[3] there are currently no more scheduled flights at the airport.

Statistics

Since the beginning of the century the airport saw decreasing number of passengers. The drop off in passenger volume has been attributed to major upgrades undertaken on the road infrastructure to the northern periphery of Israel since the early 2000s, leading to a viable alternative to air service to the region. (For example, Egged bus №845, which as of July 2019 travels from Rosh Pina to Tel Aviv in about an hour and 45 minutes.) Most flights from Rosh Pina were to Sde Dov Airport in Tel Aviv. However, Sde Dov closed in mid-2019, making travel by air from Tel Aviv to Rosh Pina even less convenient.

Year Total Domestic Passengers Total Domestic Operations
1999168,915 21,647
2000123,595 18,137
2001127,123 19,593
2002108,016 17,926
200380,277 15,706
200454,764 14,995
200545,306 13,149
200616,110 11,592
200716,790 11,017
200819,766 9,703
200919,050 7,614
201023,067 10,275
201115,782 9,273
201215,224 9,491
Source: Israel Airports Authority

Accidents

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.galil-home.co.il/en/content/rosh-pina Rosh Pina
  2. http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/rosh-pina-airport-shut-for-drone-trials-1.255534 Rosh Pina Airport shut for drone trials
  3. http://www.ayit.co.il Ayit Airways, Air Service from Sde Dove to Rosh Pina