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International airports Abha 'Asir: OEAB AHB Abha International Airport: Al-Hofuf, Al-Ahsa: Eastern: OEAH HOF Al-Ahsa International Airport: Al-'Ula: Al Madinah: OEAO ULH AlUla International Airport [1] Buraidah: Al-Qassim: OEGS ELQ Prince Naif bin Abdulaziz International Airport: Dammam: Eastern: OEDF DMM King Fahd International Airport: Jeddah ...
King Khalid International Airport (Arabic: مطار الملك خالد الدولي, romanized: Maṭār al-Malik Khālid al-Duwaliyy; IATA: RUH, ICAO: OERK) is an international airport located about 35 kilometres (22 mi) north of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, [3] designed by the architectural firm HOK. [4]
This is a comparison of the IOC, FIFA, and ISO 3166-1 three-letter codes, combined into one table for easy reference. Highlighted rows indicate those entries in which the three-letter codes differ from column to column.
A baggage tag for a flight heading to Oral Ak Zhol Airport, whose IATA airport code is "URA". An IATA airport code, also known as an IATA location identifier, IATA station code, or simply a location identifier, is a three-letter geocode designating many airports and metropolitan areas around the world, defined by the International Air Transport Association (IATA). [1]
IATA time zone code is constructed of 2–4 characters (letters and digits) as follows: ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country code is always used as first and second characters of time zone code. If country is not divided into separate time zones – no more characters added. Just 2 characters used.
King Salman International Airport (IATA: none, ICAO: none) is an international airport in development, which would serve Riyadh, the capital of Saudi Arabia. [1] It would be built around the current King Khalid International Airport. [1] The airport is being designed by British architectural firm Foster + Partners. [2]
It defines three sets of country codes: ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 – two-letter country codes which are also used to create the ISO 3166-2 country subdivision codes and the Internet country code top-level domains. ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 – three-letter country codes which may allow a better visual association between the codes and the country names than ...
ISO 3166-1 alpha-2: two-letter code; ISO 3166-1 alpha-3: three-letter code; ISO 3166-1 numeric: three-digit code; The two-letter codes are used as the basis for other codes and applications, for example, for ISO 4217 currency codes; with deviations, for country code top-level domain names (ccTLDs) on the Internet: list of Internet TLDs.