Loakan Airport Paliparan ng Loakan Pagtayaban ti Loakan |
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IATA: BAG – ICAO: RPUB | |||
Summary | |||
Airport type | Public | ||
Operator | Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines | ||
Serves | Baguio City | ||
Location | Barangay Loakan Proper, Baguio City, Benguet | ||
Elevation AMSL | 1,296 m / 4,251 ft | ||
Coordinates | 16°22′30″N 120°37′10″E / 16.37500°N 120.61944°ECoordinates: 16°22′30″N 120°37′10″E / 16.37500°N 120.61944°E | ||
Map | |||
Location in the Philippines | |||
Runways | |||
Direction | Length | Surface | |
m | ft | ||
09/27 | 1,802 | 5,912 | Concrete |
Statistics (2008) | |||
Passengers | 9,805 | ||
Aircraft movements | 1,492 | ||
Metric tonnes of cargo | 55 | ||
Statistics from the Air Transportation Office.[1] |
Loakan Airport (Filipino: Paliparan ng Loakan, Ilokano: Pagtayaban ti Loakan) (IATA: BAG, ICAO: RPUB) is an airport serving the general area of Baguio City, located in the province of Benguet in the Philippines. The airport is classified as a Class 2 principal (minor domestic) airport by the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines (CAAP).
Contents
Airlines and destinations
![](https://web.archive.org/web/20130801073831im_/http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/d/de/AsianSpirit-Loakan-Baguio-2006.jpg/250px-AsianSpirit-Loakan-Baguio-2006.jpg)
Loakan Airport was formerly served by Philippine Airlines (PAL) beginning on March 15, 1941 with a single Beechcraft Model 18 NPC-54 on daily services between Manila (from Nielson Field) and Baguio. PAL suspended flights into Baguio in 1998 as part of a company downsizing. In the next year, commercial airline service into Baguio resumed with service from Asian Spirit Airlines, which later became Zest Airways. Commercial air service into Loakan Airport was again discontinued in 2012.
Incidents and accidents
- A Philippine Airlines DC-3 was lost on takeoff in 1952.[2]
- On the morning of June 27, 1987, Philippine Airlines Flight 206 a Hawker Siddeley HS 748, bound for Baguio, crashed into the slopes of Mt. Ugo while attempting to land in a monsoon, killing all 50 people on board. Then a Philippine Air Force Bell UH-1 Huey was lost during recovery operations of that crash.[3]
- A Philippine Air Force Cessna T-41 crashed right after takeoff on May 25, 2005. All four airmen died.[4]
- On April 7, 2009, a Bell 412 presidential helicopter owned by the Philippine Air Force carrying 8 key aides of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo crashed into the slopes of Mount Pulag in Tinoc, Ifugao while en route to Lagawe, the provincial capital of Ifugao. But they tried to return to Loakan Airport due to bad weather. All on board the ill-fated chopper died and Malacañang mourned for their deaths. At the time of the crash, the key aides checked the area for the visit of President Arroyo because she will inspect her mountain road project. Because of the disaster, she cancelled her trip. The U.S. officials dispatched CH-46 Sea Knights to find the downed chopper.[5][6]
See also
References
- ^ "Volume of Air Passengers and Air Cargo (Air Cargo in Metric Tons)". Air Transportation Office (Philippines), Civil Aviation Authority. Retrieved 21-Apr-2009.
- ^ "Baguio Airport". Retrieved 16-May-2009.
- ^ "Mt. Ugo Mountaineering". Retrieved 16-May-2009.
- ^ "Baguio plane crash kills future combat pilots". Nordis Weekly May 29, 2005. Retrieved 16-May-2009.
- ^ Missing govt chopper supposed to return due to bad weather
- ^ No survivors in chopper crash
External links
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