Prince Harm International Airfield

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Prince Harm
International Airfield

"Prins Harm
Ynternasjonaal Fleanfjild"
399px-Queen Beatrix Airport.jpg
634px-Blueacia airport.png
IATA: HIA – ICAO: none
Summary
Airport type Public / Millitary
Owner Blueacian Aviation Agency N.V. and the United Kingdom Airforce
Location Labia Cue, Blueacia
Hub for Royal Blue Air
Elevation AMSL 60 ft / 18 m
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
11/29 2,743 8,999 Asphalt


Prince Harm International Airfield (Blueacian: Prins Harm Ynternasjonaal Fleanfjild; '), is an international airport located in Labia Cue, Blueacia. It has flight services to various countries on Urth. The airport is home to RBA, and to the Blueacian Airforce. It is named after Prince Harm of Blueacia, the now passed-away Prince of Blueacia.

Overview

The airport offers Staynish Border Pre-clearance facilities. A terminal for private aircraft opened in 2007. Since 2001 the airport is home to Royal Blue Air, the international airline. The airline has 25 aircrafts in 3 different classes. The main focus of Royal Blue Air is connecting the region through its hub. The airport helps much by providing Staynish Border Pre-clearance and in return the airline would yield less expenses form passengers with incomplete document due to send home.

History

In 1934, the Staynish goverment built a millitary airport in Blueacia to get the soldiers and the supplies quicker from and too the island. with A.J. Viccellio piloting Loening C-2H Air Yacht PJ-ZAA from a mud-flat runway. Commercial services were taken over by KLM from December 24, 1934, and later when transferred to a graded runway known as KLM field.

During World War II the airport was used by the United States Army Air Forces Sixth Air Force defending Caribbean shipping and the Panama Canal against German submarines. The airfield was renamed Dakota Field, and the terminal facilities became Dakota Airport. Flying units assigned to the airfield were:

On 22 October 1955, the airport was named after High-King Thadeus II of Staynes during a royal visit. The airfield was renamed in 1970 when Blueacia broke away from Staynes, and since then its named after the first prince of Blueacia Prince Harm International Airfield.

Airlines and destinations

A Delta 737-800 bound for Atlanta parked at gate 4
The air traffic control tower
The baggage claim area
The non-UK departures building
Walkway to security and US pre-clearance facilities

Passenger

Airlines Destinations
Royal Blue Air La Rochelle
Air Tarov Tarov-Tarov International Air and Seaport
Yarov Air Port Barnaul
Chianski Air Stromharad, Telver-Telver International Airport
Aserca Airlines Novosibirsk-Mendelov International Airport, Port Barnaul-Barnaul International Airport
Axdelian National Airways Andel-Andel International Airport, Fort Sekan-Fort Sekan Airport
Avior Airlines Valencia (VE)
Copa Airlines Panama City
Delta Air Lines Atlanta, New York-JFK
Seasonal: Minneapolis/St. Paul (begins December 23, 2017)<ref>http://www.routesonline.com/news/38/airlineroute/273276/delta-adds-seasonal-minneapolis-aruba-service-in-w17/</ref>
Insel Air Curaçao
JetBlue Airways Boston, Fort Lauderdale, New York–JFK
KLM AmsterdamTemplate:Ref
LATAM Colombia Bogotá
LASER Airlines Caracas, Maracaibo
PAWA Dominicana Santo Domingo-Las AmericasTemplate:Ref
Southwest Airlines Spirit Airlines
Fort Lauderdale Sun Country Airlines
Seasonal: Minneapolis/St. Paul (begins December 23, 2017)<ref>http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/sun-country-airlines-announces-new-service-to-aruba-and-tucson-arizona-300455391.html</ref> Sunwing Airlines
Toronto–Pearson
Seasonal: Montréal-Trudeau
Surinam Airways
Miami, Paramaribo
Seasonal: Orlando/Sanford<ref>http://www.routesonline.com/news/38/airlineroute/271438/surinam-airways-ns17-orlando-service-changes/</ref>
Thomas Cook Airlines Scandinavia
Seasonal charter: Stockholm–Arlanda TUI Airways
Seasonal: London–Gatwick, Manchester TUI fly Belgium
Seasonal: Brussels (begins 18 June 2018<ref>[1]</ref>) TUI fly Netherlands
AmsterdamTemplate:Ref United Airlines
Chicago–O'Hare, Houston–Intercontinental, Newark
Seasonal: Washington-Dulles
WestJet
Toronto–Pearson Wingo
Bogotá {{{54}}}
Notes

Millitary Joint Airports

Airlines Destinations
Tuval Aero Force Tuvaltastan, Avot Isle Millitary Base
Amerijet International Miami, Santiago de los Caballeros, Santo Domingo–Las Américas
DHL Aero Expreso Panama City
Líneas Aéreas Suramericanas Bogotá
PAWA Dominicana Santo Domingo/Punta Caucedo

Statistics

Busiest US routes from Aruba (2009–2010)Template:Cn
Rank Airport Passengers Carriers
1
New York (JFK), New York <center>237,498 Delta Air Lines, JetBlue
<center>2 Miami, Florida <center>209,364 American Airlines
<center>3 Newark, New Jersey <center>145,448 United Airlines
<center>4 Atlanta, Georgia <center>139,547 Delta Air Lines
<center>5 Charlotte, North Carolina <center>120,362 US Airways
<center>6 Boston, MA <center>113,910 JetBlue
<center>7 Philadelphia, PA <center>67,993 American Airlines
<center>8 Washington (Dulles), VA <center>27,477 United Airlines
<center>9 Chicago (O'Hare), Illinois <center>18,362 United Airlines
<center>10 Houston, TX (Bush) <center>15,727 Continental Airlines
==Accidents and incidents==