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O. R. Tambo International Airport has two parallel runways adjacent to the airport's terminal buildings. There used to be a third runway, 09/27, but it was closed and became taxiway Juliet. Another decommissioned runway was 14/32 (which crossed runways 03L/21R and 03R/21L); it was converted into taxiway Echo.
O.R. Tambo International Airport 26°08′01″S 028°14′32″E / 26.13361°S 28.24222°E / -26.13361; 28.24222 ( OR Tambo International 5,558
The airport would initially be able to cope with 450 departing and 400 incoming passengers per hour. It is believed that there is a market for passenger service, mainly Pretoria residents that do not wish to commute to OR Tambo International Airport in Johannesburg; an estimated 25%-30% of passengers using O.R. Tambo are Pretoria residents.
At the O.R. Tambo International Airport, south-east of Kempton Park Central, the R21 meets the R24 freeway, which connects the airport with Johannesburg Central in the west. Via the R24 (named the Albertina Sisulu Freeway), the R21 is the only freeway apart from the Ben Schoeman Freeway (designated as the N1 ) that links Pretoria with ...
O. R. Tambo International Airport: Gautrain Airport Service ... Daegu International Airport: Express 1, Palgong 1, 401, 101-1 ... Clark International Airport via ...
Tambo: N61 (Roxas Boulevard) / N194 / Seaside Drive – Airport, Manila, Bay City: Northern terminus; continues north as N61 (Roxas Boulevard); future connection with Southern Access Link Expressway (SALEX) 8.3: 5.2: E6 – Airport, Skyway: Northbound exit and southbound entrance: 8.45: 5.25: Caltex service station (southbound only), demolished.
Lanseria International Airport (IATA: HLA, ICAO: FALA) is a privately owned international airport that is situated north of Randburg and Sandton to the northwest of Johannesburg, South Africa. The airport can handle aircraft up to the size of a Boeing 757-300 and the airport was created to ease traffic congestion at OR Tambo International Airport.
Airports Company of South Africa Limited (ACSA) is a majority (94.6%) state-owned South African airport management company. Founded in 1993, ACSA operates nine of South Africa's airports. [2]