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Encyclopedia > Luis Munoz Marin International Airport
Executive Air dba American Eagle ATR-72 and American Airlines aircraft at Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport in April 2001
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Executive Air dba American Eagle ATR-72 and American Airlines aircraft at Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport in April 2001

Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport in Carolina, Puerto Rico, is the island's main international gateway, and its main connection to the mainland United States. Intra-island flights fly between Carolina and various local points of interest, including Ponce and Vieques. Its IATA Airport Code is SJU. It is a common mistake to say that the location of the airport is in San Juan, the capital of the island.


Located in the area known as Isla Verde, the airport was, for many decades, known as Isla Verde International Airport, until 1985, when then Governor Rafael Hernández Colón decided to name it after Luis Muñoz Marín, Puerto Rico's first democratically elected governor.


Luis Muñoz Marín International has four terminals, designated A, B, C and D.


The airport served as a Caribbean hub for Pan Am, Trans-Caribbean, Eastern Airlines, and a short lived "focus city" for TWA. It was also the hub of Puerto Rico's international airline, Prinair, from the airline's start in 1966 to 1984, when Prinair went bankrupt. In 1986, American Airlines (along with American Eagle) established a hub in the airport to compete with Eastern Airlines.


In the past, the airport has been served by Mexicana, Lufthansa, Air France, British Airways, Viasa, Dominicana De Aviacion and many other important airlines.


Terminal A was inaugurated on May 20, 2004, with the inaugural flight being one from London by Virgin Atlantic. Delta Airlines established a hub in the terminal, with flights to be added to San Diego, California, Santo Domingo and Punta Cana, Dominican Republic as well as an already existing flight to New York being moved there and additional cities expected to be added in the future. Aerolineas Argentinas announced that they plan to use the new terminal as a hub for flights to central america and other points of the Caribbean, and Lan Chile and Lan Peru are expected to begin flying to the new termianl soon too. It is rumored that Aeromexico has plans to eventually use this terminal as well, and that Emirates wants to use the terminal too, which would make Emirates the first Arabian airline in Puerto Rican history to serve the island.


Various celebrities have been welcomed to Puerto Rico at this airport, including Menudo in 1981, after the group came back from touring Mexico; the boxer Félix Trinidad in 1999, after he defeated Oscar De La Hoya, and Pope John Paul II in 1984. Miss Universe 2003, Amelia Vega, held a press conference at the airport after her arrival on October of that year.


Disasters

On February 15, 1970, a Dominicana De Aviacion DC-9 that was flying to Luis Muñoz Marín crashed shortly after takeoff from Las Americas International Airport in Punta Caucedo, Dominican Republic, near Santo Domingo, killing everyone on board, including Puerto Rico's national women's volleyball team and Dominican Carlos Cruz, a former world boxing champion who was going to San Juan for a rematch with Carlos Ortiz. See: Dominicana DC-9 air disaster


On June 24, 1972, Prinair Flight 191, which took off from Luis Muñoz Marín Airport, crashed while attempting to land at Mercedita Airport in Ponce.


On December 31 of that same year, baseball star Roberto Clemente and his companions died when their DC-3 crashed soon after take-off from Luis Muñoz Marín during a relief flight bound for Nicaragua. Neither the bodies of the victims nor the plane's wreckage were ever found.


In 1983, a hijacked Alitalia DC-10 landed at this airport, under orders by the hijacker.


In 1985, an American Airlines DC-10 taking off from Muñoz Marín to JFK International Airport in New York overran the runway and nosedived into a nearby lake. Everybody avoided injury.


On May 9, 2004 an American Eagle Super ATR, flight 1450, crash-landed when of the tires popped. Twenty-six people were injured. No one died.


Airlines currently serving Luis Muñoz Marín International:

Copyright note

Photo copyrighted by, and courtesy of, Mr. Joe Pries and his website, auctiontransportation.com


  Results from FactBites:
 
San Juan Airport in Puerto Rico (740 words)
The Luis Munoz Marin International Airport (SJU) (current weather conditions) is about 9 miles from San Juan, reached by taxi, public bus or rental car.
The international travelers are generally coming to vacation, with the expectation of finding relaxation rather than the big hubbub, which, naturally is at its biggest at the height of the winter tourist season.
As with many airports, especially hubs, flight delays due to weather and mechanical problems impact the subsidiary flight schedules (as well as mistakes and miscommunications).
Luis Munoz Marin International Airport (279 words)
Luis Munoz Marin International Airport in San Juan, Puerto Rico is the island's main international gateway, and its main connection to the United States.
Located in the area known as Isla Verde[?], the airport was, for many decades, known as Isla Verde International Airport, until 1985, when then Governor Rafael Hernandez Colon decided to name it after Luis Munoz Marin, Puerto Rico's first democratically elected governor.
In 1970, a Dominicana De Aviacion DC-9 that was flying to Luis Munoz Marin crashed shortly after takeoff from Santo Domingo, killing everyone on board, including Puerto Rico's national women's volleyball team and Dominican Carlos Cruz, a world boxing champion who was going to San Juan to defend his crown versus Carlos Ortiz.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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