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Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport (Spanish: Aeropuerto Internacional Luis Muñoz Marín) (IATA: SJU, ICAO: TJSJ, FAA LID: SJU), previously known as the Isla Verde International Airport (Spanish: Aeropuerto Internacional de Isla Verde), is the primary international airport of Puerto Rico serving the capital municipality of San Juan and its metropolitan area since 1955. [6]
Naval Air Station Isla Grande of San Juan, Puerto Rico in the mid-1940s. Originally constructed by the U.S. Navy as Naval Air Station Isla Grande prior to World War II in 1929, [6] the facility also served as Puerto Rico's main international airport until 1954, when Isla Verde International Airport (subsequently renamed Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport in 1985) was built.
Benjamín Rivera Noriega Airport: P-N 14,612 Ponce: PSE PSE TJPS Mercedita Airport: P-N 91,966 San Juan: SIG SIG TJIG Fernando Luis Ribas Dominicci Airport (Isla Grande Airport) P-N 14,106 San Juan / Carolina: SJU SJU TJSJ Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport: P-M 4,033,412 Vieques: VQS VQS TJVQ Antonio Rivera Rodríguez Airport: P-N 29,022
San Juan Airport may refer to: Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport, serving San Juan, Puerto Rico; Domingo Faustino Sarmiento Airport, serving San Juan, Argentina;
North Cay Airways also provided passenger air service from San Juan at some time during the airport's history. [24] In 1995, American Airlines was operating daily nonstop Boeing 757-200 jet service to New York JFK airport with Carnival Airlines also flying nonstop to JFK at this same with Boeing 727-200 jet service three days a week. [25]
In 1981, San Juan Airlines acquired Pearson Aircraft which was based in Port Angeles, Washington. [4] On 21 May 2014, Northwest Sky Ferry, which operated since 2007, merged into San Juan Airlines. [5] In May 2019, San Juan Airlines became the third airline to begin weekly passenger service at the Paine Field airport in Snohomish County, WA. [6]
[2] [3] By 1954, U.S. based Delta Air Lines (which was known as "Delta C&S" at the time following its acquisition and merger with Chicago and Southern Air Lines in May 1953) was serving the Dominican Republic on a daily basis via the then-named General Andrews Airport in Ciudad Trujillo with nonstop flights to San Juan, Puerto Rico and Port au ...
Domingo Faustino Sarmiento Airport (Spanish: Aeropuerto de San Juan – Domingo Faustino Sarmiento) (IATA: UAQ, ICAO: SANU) is an airport in San Juan Province, Argentina, serving the city of San Juan. It is named after Domingo Faustino Sarmiento, the seventh President of Argentina. Planning to build San Juan Airport started on 15 February 1958.