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Lihue Airport (IATA: LIH, ICAO: PHLI, FAA LID: LIH) is a state-owned public-use airport located in the Līhuʻe CDP on the southeast coast of the island of Kauaʻi in Kauai County, Hawaiʻi, United States, two nautical miles east of the center of the CDP. [1] [3] The airport does not serve as a hub for any airline carrier.
Route 570 is a one-mile (1.6 km) road that stretches from Route 56 in Lihue to Lihue Airport on the island of Kauai.Before the construction of Route 51 in the 1980s, the road provided primary access to Lihue Airport with the north and eastern shores of the Kauai.
Toggle Examples using location map templates subsection. 4.1 Location map, using default map (image) ... Module: Location map/data/United States Kauai. 5 languages.
Molokai Airport (Hoolehua Airport) P-N 79,336 Lanai City, Lanai LNY: LNY PHNY Lanai Airport: P-N 42,061 Lihue, Kauai LIH: LIH PHLI Lihue Airport: P-S 1,644,590 IDAHO: Boise: BOI: BOI KBOI Boise Airport (Boise Air Terminal) (Gowen Field) P-M 1,943,181 Hailey / Sun Valley: SUN: SUN KSUN Friedman Memorial Airport: P-N 93,280 Idaho Falls: IDA: IDA KIDA
It connects with Hawaii Route 51 to Lihue Airport. Following the intersection the road briefly passes through some rural patches with the occasional resort before crossing the Wailua River. At the Wailua River, there is a two-lane southbound bridge and a two-lane northbound bridge. A bridge expansion was completed in 2011.
The Pacific Missile Range Facility, Barking Sands (IATA: BKH, ICAO: PHBK, FAA LID: BKH) is a U.S. naval facility and airport located five nautical miles (9 km) northwest of the central business district of Kekaha, in Kauai County, Hawaii, United States. [1] PMRF is the world's largest instrumented, multi-dimensional testing and training missile ...
Island Air (officially Hawaii Island Air) was a commuter airline based in Honolulu, Hawaii. [1] It operated scheduled inter-island passenger services in Hawaii. Its main base was the Daniel K. Inouye International Airport [2] on Oahu.
The airport has had several names over its lifetime. At the time of its opening in 1970, it was named the Ke-āhole Airport, after its geographical location, Keāhole Point, itself named after the ʻāhole fish found in the area. [6] [7] In 1993, the airport was renamed Keāhole-Kona International Airport, after the nearby resort town of Kona. [8]