Ilopango International Airport

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ilopango International Airport
IATA: -- - ICAO: MSSS
Summary
Airport type Military and Charter
Operator CEPA
Serves San Salvador
Elevation AMSL 2008 ft (612 m)
Coordinates 13°41′41.90″N, 89°6′56.05″W
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
15/33 7,345 2,239 Asphalt
Satellite view of Ilopango Int'l Airport
Satellite view of Ilopango Int'l Airport

Ilopango International Airport (IATA:--, ICAO: MSSS) is an airport located on the eastern part of the city of San Salvador, El Salvador, once serving the city as its international airport until it was replaced by the larger and more modern Comalapa International Airport, located about 50 km south of the city. Currently, Ilopango is used for military and charter aviation only. It also holds the annual Ilopango Air Show.

During the civil war it was a perfect target for bombs from the guerrillas, the rebel group that also destroyed El Puente de Oro (The Golden Bridge), a hanging bridge over the Lempa River.

Contents

[edit] Rehabilitation

Ilopango has the problem that many airports in Central America have: it borders on the city and has houses near it so its runway can't be expanded. Its hangars will be relocated and modernized to serve as a modern commercial airport. It will be mainly used by the tourist complex project PORTOPANGO at Lake Ilopango and for domestic flights between other airports that will be built in El Salvador.

[edit] History

Ilopango was once the largest and busiest airport in Central America until the civil war disrupted its operations. It ended its international flight service in the late 1970s, with the building of the bigger and more modern Comalapa International. Currently, there is a plan that involves the modernization and enlargement of the airport to accommodate modern aircraft. In 2001, the administration of the airport passed from the military to the Comisión Ejecutiva Portuaria Autónoma (CEPA), which is in charge of planning the modernization project. [1]

During the 1980s, hangars four and five of the Ilopango air base were used as a stopover in the transfer of military supplies heading South to the Contras and drugs moving North into the U.S. Declassified interviews taken during Independent Counsel Lawrence Walsh's investigation into Iran-Contra date the Contra's use of the airport to 1983 when CIA pilot Marcos Aguado approached Salvadoran Air Force commander Juan Rafael Bustillo to secure hangar space for the operation.

[edit] Facts

Iberia Airlines held the commonly known "La Ruta de los Tres Santos" (Three Saints Route) which was San Juan - San Salvador - San Jose.

[edit] Some airlines that served Ilopango in the past

  • Aviateca (Guatemala)
  • Lacsa (San José (CR))
  • TACA [Now part of Grupo TACA] (San Pedro Sula, Tegucigalpa, Guatemala, Los Angeles, New York, Miami)
  • Copa Airlines (Panama City, San Andres Island)
  • Iberia (Madrid, Miami, San José (CR), San Juan)
  • Pan Am (New York, Houston-Intercontinental, Los Angeles, Guatemala)
  • Sahsa (Tegucigalpa)
Languages