Juan Gualberto Gómez Airport
Varadero International Airport Juan Gualberto Gomez Airport | |||||||||||
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Summary | |||||||||||
Airport type | Public | ||||||||||
Operator | ECASA S.A. | ||||||||||
Serves | Varadero and Matanzas | ||||||||||
Location | 5 km from Carbonera | ||||||||||
Elevation AMSL | 64 m / 210 ft | ||||||||||
Coordinates | 23°02′04″N 81°26′07″W / 23.03444°N 81.43528°W | ||||||||||
Map | |||||||||||
Runways | |||||||||||
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Statistics (2018) | |||||||||||
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Source: Aerodrome chart[1] |
Juan Gualberto Gómez Airport (IATA: VRA, ICAO: MUVR), formerly known as Varadero Airport (Spanish: Aeropuerto de Varadero), is an international airport serving Varadero, Cuba, and the province of Matanzas. The airport is located 5 km from the village of Carbonera, closer to the city of Matanzas than to Varadero. The closest airport to Varadero is Kawama Airport. In 2009, the airport handled 1.28 million passengers,[2] making it the second busiest airport in Cuba after José Martí International Airport in Havana.
History
[edit]Juan Gualberto Gomez Airport was built in 1989 and inaugurated by Fidel Castro,[3] thus replacing the old Varadero airport located in Santa Marta, currently known as Kawama Airport. The airport was named after a journalist, fighter for the Cuban Independence and black rights activist in Cuba Juan Gualberto Gómez (1854–1933).[4]
In April 2020, Cuba stopped all scheduled flights. In October 2020, it was announced that the airport would be reopening for flights with tourists being restricted to a "bubble", but before that began, the province moved to the "new normality" and the airport reopened for regular commercial flights, with flights from Mexico and the UK.[5]
In 2024, TUI terminated all flights to Varadero, which it had served from both Amsterdam and Brussels, due to a sharp decline in passenger figures to Cuba.[6] Condor followed by announcing to terminate their route to Frankfurt in 2025, leaving the airport without year-round services to Europe.[7]
Facilities
[edit]The terminal building has shops for tourists (including rum, cigars, T-shirts, books, carvings, pharmaceuticals) both before customs check point, at a large departures lounge with cafeterias on the upper level and a smaller air conditioned VIP lounge the lower level.[8] Immigration checkpoint consists of wooden booths for push doors opened by immigration officers after travelers have been processed.[9] Customs check point consists of three x-ray machines. Two flights of stairs and an escalator take travelers to the departure lounge. Tour operators offices are located near the domestic terminal area. The ground handling equipment is imported mainly from North America. There are four jet bridges (serving parking areas 2 to 5), but air stairs are used for the remaining aircraft parking space #1 on the apron by the terminal.[10]
Airlines and destinations
[edit]The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights at Juan Gualberto Gómez Airport:
Airlines | Destinations |
---|---|
Aeroflot | Seasonal: Moscow–Sheremetyevo[11] |
Air Canada Rouge[citation needed] | Montréal–Trudeau, Toronto–Pearson |
Air Transat[citation needed] | Montréal–Trudeau, Toronto–Pearson Seasonal: Halifax, Moncton, Ottawa, Québec City |
American Airlines[citation needed] | Miami |
Condor | Frankfurt (ends 29 April 2025)[12] |
Iberojet | Seasonal: Lisbon[13] |
Neos | Seasonal: Milan–Malpensa[14] |
OWG | Montréal–Trudeau,[15] Toronto–Pearson[15] |
Sunwing[citation needed] | Montreal–Trudeau, Québec City, Toronto–Pearson Seasonal: Bagotville, Calgary, Deer Lake, Edmonton, Halifax, Hamilton (ON), Kitchener/Waterloo, London (ON), Moncton, Ottawa, Regina, St. John's, Saskatoon, Thunder Bay, Vancouver, Windsor, Winnipeg |
WestJet[citation needed] | Calgary, Toronto–Pearson |
World2fly | Seasonal: Lisbon[13] |
Accidents and incidents
[edit]- 29 December 1992 - Aerocaribbean Antonov 26 was hijacked en route to Varadero Airport from Havana. The aircraft landed in Miami.[16]
- 6 March 2005 - Air Transat Flight 961, an Airbus A310 returned safely to airport following detachment of rudder after takeoff.[17]
References
[edit]- ^ Aerodrome chart Archived 2011-06-26 at the Wayback Machine issued 10 May 2007
- ^ "www.radioangulo.cu - Servicios Archivo Aeropuerto de Varadero entre los mejores del país (Spanish only)". [permanent dead link ]
- ^ "DISCURSO PRONUNCIADO POR FIDEL CASTRO RUZ, PRESIDENTE DE LA REPÚBLICA CUBA, EN LA INAUGURACION DEL AEROPUERTO INTERNACIONAL DE VARADERO "JUAN GUALBERTO GOMEZ", EL 25 DE SEPTIEMBRE DE 1989, "AÑO 31 DE LA REVOLUCION"". www.cuba.cu.
- ^ "Varadero Airport VRA".
- ^ "Cuba's Varadero destination reopened with British tourists". 26 October 2020.
- ^ cibercuba.com - Tremendous drop in tourism in Cuba: TUI airline will no longer fly to Varadero due to lack of passengers 19 March 2024
- ^ aerotelegraph.com - "Condor to terminate all Cuba flights by summer" (German) 6 December 2024
- ^ "Varadero Airport VRA".
- ^ "Immigration / Customs | Cuba".
- ^ "Varadero Airport VRA".
- ^ "Aeroflot Adds Varadero Service From July 2023". Aeroroutes. Retrieved 26 May 2023.
- ^ aerotelegraph.com - "Condor to terminate all Cuba flights by summer" (German) 6 December 2024
- ^ a b cibercuba.com - World2Fly and Iberojet resume flights to Varadero from Portugal 2 June 2024
- ^ periodico26.cu - Neos to Fly Between Cuba’s Varadero and Italy 16 December 2022
- ^ a b Lemus Domínguez, Yenli (2 July 2022). "Llegó primer vuelo de Off We Go al Aeropuerto de Varadero en 2022" [The first flight Off We Go flight arrived at Varadero Airport in 2022] (in Spanish). Retrieved 17 August 2022.
- ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Antonov 26 CU-T110 Miami International Airport, FL (MIA)". aviation-safety.net.
- ^ "Aviation Investigation Report A05F0047, Loss of Rudder in Flight, Air Transat Airbus A310-308 C-GPAT, Miami, Florida, 90 nm S, 06 March 2005" (PDF). Transportation Safety Board of Canada (TSB). 22 November 2007. A05F0047. Retrieved 26 August 2008.
External links
[edit]Media related to Juan Gualberto Gómez Airport at Wikimedia Commons