Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Dodoma Airport (IATA: DOD, ICAO: HTDO) is an airport serving the Tanzanian capital of Dodoma located in the Dodoma Region. [2] It has a runway that's 2,450 metres (8,038 feet) long, at an elevation of 1,109 metres (3,638 feet).
District roads are under the responsibility of the President’s Office Regional Administration and Local Government (PORALG) through Tanzania Rural and Urban Roads Agency (TARURA). [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Before 1980, Tanzania shared the same highway numbering system as Kenya , following the dissolution of the East African Community, the country renamed ...
Regulation of airports and aviation in the Philippines lies with the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines (CAAP). The CAAP's classification system, introduced in 2008, rationalizes the previous Air Transportation Office (ATO) system of airport classification, pursuant to the Philippine Transport Strategic Study and the 1992 Civil Aviation Master Plan. [1]
The planned airport would be located in Msalato Ward, approximately 14 kilometres (9 mi), by road, north of the central business district of the city of Dodoma. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The airport would occupy 45 square kilometres (17 sq mi) of real estate.
Cotabato (Awang) Airport. The landside operations of the following airports is managed by the Bangsamoro Airport Authority. [4] [5] Landside includes an airport's passenger terminal building, administrative building, vehicular parking area, and other non-restricted areas. This excludes "airside" operations which covers facilities and areas ...
Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA / n ɑː. ˈ iː. j ə / NA-ee-YAH; Filipino: Paliparang Pandaigdig ng Ninoy Aquino; IATA: MNL, ICAO: RPLL), also known as Manila International Airport (MIA), is the main international airport serving Metro Manila in the Philippines.
Daniel Z. Romualdez Airport (IATA: TAC, ICAO: RPVA), also known as Tacloban City Airport, is an airport serving the general area of Tacloban, a highly urbanized city in the Leyte island of the Philippines. It is the main gateway from Manila and Cebu to Eastern Visayas.
Plans for an international airport in Legazpi started in 1996. [5] In 1997, a study commissioned by the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) indicated the need for expansion at four airports in the Philippines: namely Legazpi Airport, Bacolod City Domestic Airport, Mandurriao Airport in Iloilo City and Daniel Z. Romualdez Airport in Tacloban.