Nyíregyháza Airport

Nyíregyháza Airport (ICAO: LHNY) is a small civil airport serving Nyíregyháza,[1] a city in Szabolcs-Szatmár-Bereg county, Hungary.

Nyíregyháza Airport
Summary
Airport typePublic
ServesNyíregyháza, Hungary
Elevation AMSL338 ft / 103 m
Coordinates47°59′02″N 021°41′32″E
Websitetrenerkft.hu
Map
Ny
Location of airport in Hungary
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
18R/36L 1,000 3,281 Asphalt
18L/36R 1,000 3,281 Grass
Source: DAFIF[1][2]

Facilities

The airport resides at an elevation of 338 feet (103 m) above mean sea level. It has two runways: 18R/36L has an asphalt pavement measuring 1,000 by 20 metres (3,281 ft × 66 ft) and 18L/36R has a grass surface measuring 1,000 by 60 metres (3,281 ft × 197 ft).[1]

The airport is the home base of Tréner Ltd, a Hungarian pilot training organization which together with the University of Nyíregyháza (responsible for theoretical training) provides ATPL integrated courses and a professional airline pilot degree.

Airlines and destinations

Between 1948 and 1963, the airport served the then-frequent domestic flights operated by Maszovlet and its successor Malév.[3] Apart from a short-lived attempt in 1990, which tried to restart domestic flights within Hungary with a Nyíregyháza-Budaörs Airport route, there have been no scheduled flights to or from the airport since then.[4]

Statistics

Year Passengers[5] Change
2009
31 345
n/a
2010
29 591
−5.59%
2011
13 488
−54.42%
2012
17 137
+27.05%
2013
15 863
−7.43%
2014
7 840
−50.57%
2015
27 320
+248.47%
2016
34 313
+25.59%

Accidents

The second of two accidents of Maszovlet took place at this airport. On 2 October 1952, an Li-2 (HA-LIL) was flying the BudapestMiskolc–Nyíregyháza–Budapest route. Due to poor weather conditions, the landing in Miskolc succeeded only at the third attempt, yet the crew decided to continue the flight towards Nyíregyháza, where after several landing attempts the plane landed on slippery grass and crashed into a building. Three crew members, including the pilot and the co-pilot, died, two other crew members and the three passengers suffered severe injuries.[6]

References

  1. Airport information for LHNY from DAFIF (effective October 2006)
  2. Airport information for LHNY at Great Circle Mapper. Source: DAFIF (effective October 2006).
  3. "Repülni városról városra: egy szép álom vége". IHO. 2014-03-15. Retrieved 2019-02-23.
  4. "Ismét megindult a belföldi légiforgalom - 25 éve történt". inforstart.hu. 2015-05-21. Retrieved 2019-02-23.
  5. "Repülőterek forgalmi adatai (2004-2015)" (in Hungarian). KSH. Retrieved 2016-04-15.
  6. "Események, katasztrófák" (in Hungarian). Li-2.hu. Retrieved 2017-12-24.


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