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León Airport

León Airport
Aeropuerto de León
AeropuertoLEN.JPG
Summary
Airport type Public
Operator Aena
Serves León, Spain
Elevation AMSL 3,005 ft / 916 m
Coordinates 42°35′20″N 5°39′20″W / 42.58889°N 5.65556°W / 42.58889; -5.65556
Website aena-aeropuertos.es
Map
LEN is located in Spain
LEN
LEN
Location of airport in Spain
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
05/23 3,000 9,843 Asphalt
06/24 1,100 3,609 Natural ground compact
Statistics (2013)
Passengers 30,890
Passenger change 12-13 Decrease39.5%
Aircraft Movements 1,962
Movements change 12-13 Decrease25.4%
Passengers 30,890
Passenger change 12-13 Decrease39.5%
Aircraft Movements 1,962
Movements change 12-13 Decrease25.4%

León Airport, Spanish: Aeropuerto de León or Aeropuertu de Llión in Leonese language (IATA: LENICAO: LELN), is a minor domestic airport located 6 kilometres (4 mi) from León, Spain.

In March 1920, a ministerial provision on territorial distribution and organisation of military forces and services designated Leon as a location for one of the air stations established under the provision. In 1924, works were authorised to adapt the air station so that Leon airport could be used for stopovers by aircraft on the routes that linked Madrid and Asturias. In 1929 the military aerodrome was provisionally authorised to provide commercial air navigation services.

The aerodrome was located one kilometre north of the village of Virgen del Camino and seven kilometres south of the city of Leon, an area of hard flat land dedicated to pasture, and its navigation aids comprised a marking in the middle of the airfield and a windsock. It had four hangars to house and repair aircraft, as well as fuel, oil, water and telephone services. At that time the station was the headquarters of Number One Squadron's 21st Inspection Unit, within the Northwest Regional Fleet.

During the Spanish Civil War, the Leon aerodrome was the headquarters of numerous airborne units and at the end of the conflict it was listed as class A. At that time it had radio and telephone facilities, a radiogoniometer and night lighting.

In the 1940s an aviation school was installed in the facilities, where the first pilots graduated at the General Aviation School. When this was closed it was replaced by the Apprentices School and later by the Airforce Specialists School.

In 1964 Leon Airport was opened to commercial traffic. It now had an airfield with facilities for landing in two directions. The aeronautical limitations were published in 1967 and remained unmodified until 1988. In 1990, the local and regional governments decided to sponsor an airport infrastructure project that would encourage aeronautical activity in the province. For this purpose, Leon's Provincial Council requested authorisation from the Spanish Ministry of Defence to install civil facilities on the land of the military air station, with permission being granted in 1991.


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