Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Ohrid "St. Paul the Apostle" Airport

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Airport type
  
Civil

Website
  
ohd.airports.com.mk

Code
  
OHD

Phone
  
+389 46 252 820

Elevation AMSL
  
2,313 ft / 705 m

01/19
  
8,366

Elevation
  
705 m

Owner/operator
  
TAV Airports Holding

Ohrid

Serves
  
Ohrid, Republic of Macedonia

Location
  
Orovnik, Debarca Municipality

Address
  
P.FAH 134 6000, Ohrid 6000, Macedonia (FYROM)

Profiles

Ohrid Airport (IATA: OHD, ICAO: LWOH) (Macedonian: Аеродром Охрид, Aerodrom Ohrid), or Ohrid "St. Paul the Apostle" Airport (Macedonian: Аеродром „Св. Апостол Павле“ Охрид, Aerodrom "Sv. Apostol Pavle" Ohrid), is an international airport in Ohrid, Republic of Macedonia. The airport is located 9 km (6 mi) northwest from Ohrid. The main purpose of St. Paul the Apostle Airport is to serve as a second airport in Macedonia and alternative to Alexander the Great Airport at Skopje and cater to flights bringing in tourists destined for Ohrid.

Contents

History

The last runway reconstruction was performed in 2004, when a lighting system, a first category with simple approach lights, was installed. Other features enable takeoff, landing and maneuvering with different types of aircraft.

In 2008 the Macedonian government signed a contract with the Turkish company Tepe Akfen Ventures (TAV) for a twenty-year-long concession during which this company would manage Macedonia's two existing airports in Ohrid and Skopje. The planned works include the construction of a new airport terminal building in Skopje, extension of the runway, new administration building, and new access road with parking facilities increasing the capacity of Skopje Airport to four million passengers per year with plans to turn Skopje Airport into a major transit and cargo hub for the Balkans. Ohrid airport will have its terminal building and VIP sections modernized. The concession contract also includes the construction of a third airport intended for cargo transport near the eastern Macedonian town of Štip which eventually would be transformed into Macedonia’s main airport. The total amount of the foreseen investment is 200 million Euros with 30 to 40 million Euros total concession payments to the Macedonian Government over the 20-year concession period. Tepe Akfen Ventures Airport Holding is one of the world's fastest expanding airport operators currently managing the Turkish airports of Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir and Antalya along with Tbilisi in Georgia, and Monastir in Tunisia. TAV is also bidding to take over the management of Ruzyně International Airport and Riga International Airport.

Facilities

In this airport can be operational from small aircraft to medium-large aircraft. The apron can accommodate up to 9 aircraft and the terminal is equipped to handle up to 400 000 passengers annually. Among other concessions the terminal building encompasses an information desk, a restaurant, a duty-free shop, and a VIP lounge.

Statistics

The number of passengers at the airport is shown in the next table:

Ground transportation

There are currently no buses linking the airport with Ohrid city centre. The normal taxi fare for the 9-km ride is 8 euros or 500 denars

Incidents and accidents

  • On 20 November 1993 Avioimpex Flight 110, a Yak 42D crashed near the airport. The aircraft was on a flight from Geneva, Switzerland to Skopje, but had been diverted to Ohrid due to poor weather conditions. All eight crewmembers and 116 passengers died as a result of the accident. 115 died at the scene, the final victim died from injuries in hospital eleven days later.
  • References

    Ohrid "St. Paul the Apostle" Airport Wikipedia