King Hussein International Airport

Aqaba Airport (IATA: AQJ, ICAO: OJAQ), also known as King Hussein Int'l Airport (Arabic: مطارالملك الحسين الدولي), is an airport located in the vicinity of Industrial City (Aqaba International Industrial Estate – مدينة العقبة الصناعية الدولية), northern suburb of Aqaba in Jordan.

King Hussein International Airport

مطار الملك حسين الدولي

Maṭār al-Malik Ḥusayn al-Duwalī
Summary
Airport typePublic
OperatorAqaba Airports Company
ServesAqaba, Jordan
Focus city forRoyal Jordanian
Elevation AMSL173 ft / 53 m
Coordinates29°36′41.83″N 35°1′5.04″E / 29.6116194°N 35.0180667°E / 29.6116194; 35.0180667
Websitewww.aac.jo
Map
AQJ is located in Jordan
AQJ
AQJ
Location of airport in Jordan
Map
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
01/19 9,842 3,000 Asphalt
Statistics (2023)
Passengers309,000

Location

edit

The location of Aqaba is unusual, for within a 15 miles (24 km) radius there are three other countries, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Israel. The airport has a single runway equipped with a category 1 instrument landing system (ILS). Thanks to its normally excellent weather conditions, the airport is rarely closed, though strong southerly winds bring sandstorms across the Red Sea from Egypt.[citation needed] Just across the border in Israel and nominally serving Eilat a new airport called Ramon Airport opened in 2019 despite earlier proposals to jointly develop airport infrastructure in the region following the Israel Jordan Peace Treaty of 1994.[1][2]

Operations

edit

Annual passenger figures have risen from around 20,000 per year in the early days to over 90,000 in the year 2000.[citation needed] There are currently around 3,000 aircraft movements a year. A significant proportion of these are training flights, including those of the Royal Jordanian Air Force. The largest operator at Aqaba is Royal Jordanian. It operates about 10 flights a week to Amman, though extras are frequently scheduled, sometimes to coincide with passenger changeover on cruise ships. The airline operates Embraer E175 Regional Jets that undertake the journey in 45 minutes.[citation needed] The airline also undertakes about six charter flights to Europe, with European charter airlines adding a further dozen.[citation needed]

Facilities

edit
 
A Royal Jordanian aeroplane boards at the airport
 
map

The airport has a single 28,000 sq ft (2,600 m2) terminal building with just one departure gate and one baggage carousel, though the building is being extended. The facilities can cope when there is one aircraft to be handled, but on some occasions when there are three aircraft being turned around simultaneously things can become somewhat crowded.[citation needed] The capacity of the Terminal at present is 1.5 million passengers a year. The airport has 4 check-in desks, 2 gates, a cargo building and a cargo apron together with a parallel taxiway. The airport has one baggage claim belt, 200 short-term parking spaces, a post office, bank, cafeterias, VIP lounge, duty-free shop, and gift shops, and a clinic.

The airport includes also buildings for the Ayla Aviation Academy, the Aero Wings for Industry's assembly plant for light planes, the Jordan Private Jets Services (JPJets)'s private jet terminal, and the Al Baddad International Group's maintenance centre.[3] A new cargo terminal (6000 m2) and a new cargo apron (220 m × 600 m) opened in January 2005. There are also separate buildings for General Aviation and a Royal Pavilion – King Abdullah II owns a palace along the shoreline and regularly visits. The Royal Jordanian Air Academy are also regular visitors on land-away cross country training exercises.

Airlines and destinations

edit

The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights at Aqaba Airport:

AirlinesDestinations
Air Cairo Seasonal: Cairo
Edelweiss Air Seasonal: Zürich (resumes 30 March 2025)[4][5][6]
Royal Jordanian Amman–Queen Alia[7]
Turkish Airlines Istanbul
Wizz Air Abu Dhabi[8]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Israel, Jordan plan joint Aqaba airport". The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com. 21 June 2006. Retrieved 8 April 2023.
  2. ^ "Israel's New Airport is Angering Jordan, a Rare Friend in the Region". Haaretz.
  3. ^ "Home". khiaops.com. Archived from the original on 15 February 2008. Retrieved 8 April 2023.
  4. ^ "Flug Zürich (ZRH) – Akaba (AQJ), Jordanien | Edelweiss".
  5. ^ "Flüge von Zürich nach Akaba, Jordanien | Edelweiss".
  6. ^ "Lufthansa Group Carriers NW23 Intercontinental Network Adjustments – 29OCT23". Aeroroutes. Aeroroutes. Retrieved 30 October 2024.
  7. ^ "Royal Jordanian 2024 Embraer E190/195-E2 Network Overview – 24DEC23".
  8. ^ "Abu Dhabi's Wizz Air adds two new flight routes to Aqaba, Amman in Jordan". 9 February 2022.
edit

  Media related to King Hussein International Airport at Wikimedia Commons