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Santa Maria Airport (Azores)

Santa Maria Airport (IATA: SMA, ICAO: LPAZ) is an international airport located 5 km (3.1 mi) west northwest of the urbanized area of Vila do Porto on the island of Santa Maria, in the Portuguese autonomous region of the Azores. A principal hub in transatlantic travel until the end of the 20th century, it was constructed at the start of the Second World War to protect convoys by American troops who were ceded authority until its end. From this period on, the airfield took on a commercial role, reinforced by inter-island travel and connections to Europe, resulting in its obtaining the communication duties for the North Atlantic sector of the airspace corridor.

Santa Maria Airport

Aeroporto de Santa Maria
A view of the terminal and tower from the tarmac of Santa Maria Airport
Summary
Airport typePublic
OwnerANA Aeroportos de Portugal
OperatorVinci SA
ServesVila do Porto
LocationSanta Maria Island (Azores), Portugal
Opened26 July 1945 (1945-07-26)
Focus city forSATA Air Açores
Built1945
In use2
Time zoneAzores (−01:00)
 • Summer (DST)Azores (01:00)
Elevation AMSL94 m / 308 ft
Coordinates36°58′26″N 25°10′16″W / 36.97389°N 25.17111°W / 36.97389; -25.17111
Websiteaeroportosantamaria.pt
Map
LPAZ
Location of the airport on the island of Santa Maria
LPAZ
LPAZ (Santa Maria, Azores)
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
18/36 10,000 3,048
Statistics (2011)
Passengers93,436
Aircraft Operations3,176
Metric tonnes of cargo2697.6
Source: Portuguese AIP[1]

History edit

 
Aerial view of the airport, shortly after construction 1946

In the context of the Second World War, in July 1941, a Portuguese mission under the command of engineer Colonel Hermínio José de Sousa Serrano, and which included Colonel Frederico Lopes da Silva and Major Fernando Tártaro, visited Santa Maria to study a possible location for an airfield, opting for the plateau known as Pico de Maria Dias. Two years later, technicians from Pan American World Airways arrived on the island, arriving on board the NT Lima in December 1943,[2] and confirmed that the location was optimal for establishing a military airfield to complement the field at Lajes.[3][4] The airfield would, therefore, assist in the protection of the maritime convoys that crossed the Atlantic to support the port of Murmansk in the Soviet Union, which were being sunk by German U-boats.[2]

The project that was planned, and which was sent for approval to António de Oliveira Salazar, included provisions for an inter-island and a trans-oceanic airport, with the first costing 1.685 million US dollars, and the second 5.125 million US dollars.[4] The final plan, sent to the Portuguese government by Pan American, and contracting the construction was an estimated 3.130 million US dollars, and included:[5]

  • Construction of two piers at the port;
  • Expansion of the wharf and ramp;
  • Improvements to the roads, bends and bridges;
  • Construction of a roadway to the aerodrome;
  • Construction of three runways: 2 2,000 by 50 metres (6,560 ft × 160 ft) and 1 1,400 by 50 metres (4,590 ft × 160 ft), with an area of 270,000 square metres (2,900,000 sq ft);
  • A platform/tarmac for parking aircraft that was 150 by 150 metres (490 ft × 490 ft);
  • A control tower and station building; and
  • A water supply and sewage network.

Military airfield edit

 
A World War II Quonset hut used to lodge members of the military
 
Another Quonset hut that remains in the district of Aeroporto, literally Airport

While the final project was being prepared, the Portuguese Department of Defense authorized immediate execution of the first work,[3] that included a runway to service planes transferred from Lajes Airfield, carrying with them the technicians and equipment. Along with a team of little more than 40 workers, Lieutenant Engineer Correia de Sousa concluded the runway construction.[6] On 8 August 1944, at about 2:15 p.m., the first plane landed on the runway, a Douglas C-47 Skytrain (Dakota C-47) operated by the US Air Force, transporting materials and bread from Terceira.[6] It departed an hour later.[6]

The Americans later extended the taxiways by another 200 metres (660 ft), and on 15 November 1944 a new 1,350 by 50 metres (4,430 ft × 160 ft) service runway was concluded (and which operated until 14 May 1945.[6] The first runway was situated in the locality of Ginjal, it was a dirt runway covered with reinforced steel gridwork.[2]

Finally, on 28 November 1944, an accord was signed between the US and Portuguese governments, that envisioned its use as a waypoint for planes travelling to the Pacific theatre of operations, or those that needed to be diverted due to weather conditions.[3][6] This was followed on 14 December 1944 by a similar accord between Pan American Airways and the Portuguese government, resulting in the installation of new radio equipment. Work on the passenger terminal and support buildings had already progressed, along with runways 2 and 3 and the parking area. At this time there were 3000 workers onsite: 2000 American, 600 Micaleanse and 400 Marienses, a number that continued to grow over time (eventually reaching 3000 Americans and 1000 Azoreans).[6] Meanwhile, the port was expanded to receive battalions with the equipment necessary to improve the infrastructures and to construct a network to pipe aviation fuel to the plateau. These included: airport infrastructures; roadways; water supply and sewage; residences; and social spaces (such as hotel, gymnasium, church, a cinema/theatre to hold 1000 people, and a hospital in the area of Santana, to evacuate the injured in the European theatre).[citation needed]

On 11 July 1945, the first Portuguese-registered aircraft landed in Santa Maria, an Avro Anson Mk I from Terceira's Air Base No.4 (Lajes Airfield), followed by a C-54 "Skymaster" on 24 July from São Miguel, that included various Portuguese and American authorities visiting the installations to officially inaugurate the aerodrome on 26 July 1945.[7] The aerodrome was operated by American forces until the end of the conflict, and accounted for 500 airplanes that transited the site.[citation needed]

Civil aviation edit

 
A KLM Constellation at Santa Maria Airport, during the era when the island was a stopover during transatlantic travel
 
The main terminal buildings seen from the neighbourhood of Aeroporto

The accords between the Portuguese, Great Britain and the United States permitted those forces to use the facilities in Lajes and Santa Maria until 2 June 1946.[2] At that time the American forces base was transferred to Lajes and both airports began to be administered from Portugal. By Decree-law 35/736 (5 July 1946 the airport at Santa Maria began to be administered by the Secretariado da Aeronáutica Civil (Civil Aeronautics Secretariate), later substituted by the Direcção Geral de Aeronáutica Civil (Directorate-General for Civil Aeronautics).[7] After improvements to the runway, the airplane parking area and installations in the terminal, the airport was inspected by Lieutenant-Colonel Humberto Delgado (then-Director-General of the DGEC), for it to be certified for operational traffic.[7] The first airplane to arrive following inspection was a Pan American Boeing 377 Stratocruiser, flying the New York-Leopoldville route, stopping at the Santa Maria waypoint on 29 October 1946.[8] Other records refer to a Pan American Lockheed Constellation stopping on the same day.[2]

Following the airport's certification for passenger service, Santa Maria was selected to operate as the air traffic control centre for North Atlantic region, under the responsibility of Portugal by the Provisional International Civil Aviation Organization (PICAO), in the first semester of 1946. During this period, due to an absence of coaxial cable link between Europe and the United States, Santa Maria became an important international centre for communications.[9] Communications were limited to teletype and radio. With the 1965 installation of coaxial cable between the United States and England, all communications between the two continents began to intersect at Santa Maria.[2] The airport was classified an ETOPS alternate, having suitable facilities to accommodate transatlantic flights needing to make an emergency landing.

The Santa Maria International Airport was re-inaugurated officially on 28 November 1946. The existing infrastructures were expanded in the meantime, with residential areas administrated and developed by architect Francisco Keil do Amaral, who tried to maintain the existing characteristics.[citation needed]

On 13 January 1947, Lieutenant Henrique Owen Pinto de Barros da Costa Pessoa was named first director of the airport.[7]

The forerunner of SATA Air Açores (Sociedade Açoriana de Transportes Aéreos) initiated services to São Miguel on 5 August 1957, and to Terceira on 9 June 1947, using a Beechcraft D18S (CS-TAA) christened "Açor".[citation needed]

From 1940 to 1970, the airport was an important link in trans-Atlantic travel and the focus of the island economy and employment. First, during the construction the airport and support structures, attracting workers from São Miguel and the archipelago, then as a hub of aviation activities, supporting air traffic in the North Atlantic. Transportes Aéreos Portugueses (TAP) (the national flag carrier began layover flights to the airport on 7 December 1962, eventually inaugurating trans-Atlantic service between Santa Maria-New York (26 April 1969) and Santa Maria-Montreal (8 May 1971). Santa Maria was the unique gateway for passengers entering or exiting the Azores; it served as a destination, stopover and intercontinental waypoints for European, North American, Central American and South American airlines, in addition to Caribbean airways, including:

Commencing in the late 1970s, Air France's supersonic Concordes were routed via Santa Maria as a technical stop for refueling on weekly scheduled SST flights between Paris and Caracas.[11]

Along with the airports in Lisbon, Porto, Faro, Flores, Horta, Ponta Delgada and Beja, the airport's concessions to provide support to civil aviation was conceded to ANA Aeroportos de Portugal on 18 December 1998, under provisions of decree 404/98.[12] With this concession, ANA was also provided to the planning, development and construction of future infrastructures.[12]

District edit

 
A FIAT G91 on display in the neighbourhood of Aeroporto

The airport at Santa Maria was part of a larger complex of buildings and infrastructures constructed in the 20th century.[13] Apart from the airport terminals and ground control facilities, the area later known as Aeroporto locally, included a residential barrio, the services and equipment to support local residences, roadways and many of first signals, public transport stops and electrical transformer stations.[13] The development of this district was important in the development of the island, with many of the installations left by American troops after the Second World War (the early terminal, control tower, building of Clube Asas do Atlântico, gymnasium, cinemas and warehouses) and many of the semi-cylindrical troop-quarters retained after the withdraw of forces.[13] Its North American influence and original purpose marks its differences to local construction; the urban design and buildings, just like many of the projected constructions by architect Keil do Amaral (the airport, residence of airport director, groups of residences and signalling) make the district distinct from the other areas of the island.[13] The newer neighborhoods and recent buildings, are of an inferior architectural quality, and correspond to the blocks closer to the airport.[13]

Airlines and destinations edit

The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights at Santa Maria Airport:[14]

Statistics edit

Annual passenger traffic at SMA airport. See Wikidata query.

Accidents and incidents edit

 
Independent Air Boeing 707 involved in a fatal incident in the hills of Pico Alto
  • Air France Flight 009, a Lockheed Constellation flying from Paris to New York, struck the Redondo Mountain on the approach to its intermediate stop at Santa Maria on 28 October 1949. All 11 crew members and 37 passengers on board were killed, including French boxing champion Marcel Cerdan and French classical violinist Ginette Neveu. Probable causes included poor reporting by the crew and failure to carry out approach procedures.
  • A chartered Boeing 707-300 (N7231T), Independent Air Flight 1851 from Bergamo, Italy, in 1989 crashed on approach to Santa Maria Airport, when it struck the Pico Alto mountain. The aircraft was destroyed with the loss of all passengers (137) and crew (7). The accident was the result of bad communication and failure to follow standard procedures by crew and air traffic control.[16]
  • An Avianca Airlines Boeing 787 traveling from Madrid to Bogota had to make an emergency landing at SMA on 23 June 2018 when an electrical system in the airplane triggered an alarm.[17]
  • An Avianca Airlines Boeing 787 traveling from Madrid to Bogota made an emergency landing at SMA on 30 November 2023 due to yet-unspecified technical problems. [18]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Santa Maria LPAZ", Aeronautical Information Publication (PDF) (in Portuguese and English), Lisbon, Portugal: AIP, 2016
  2. ^ a b c d e f Comissão de Luta pela Defesa dos Interesses da Ilha de Santa Maria (1981), p.3
  3. ^ a b c SRHOPTC (1994), p.9
  4. ^ a b Ferreira (1997), p.236
  5. ^ Ferreira (1997), p.236–237
  6. ^ a b c d e f Ferreira (1997), p.237
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i Ferreira (1997), p.238
  8. ^ F. Valdez (19 October 2010), p.23–24
  9. ^ SRHOPTC (1994), p.11
  10. ^ "Viasa Summer time table(Effective 1 July 1961) – South America to Europe". Airline Timetable Images. Retrieved 21 November 2011.
  11. ^ http://www.timetableimages.com, Summer 1977 Air France system timetable
  12. ^ a b (PDF), Lisbon, Portugal: ANA Aeroportos de Portugal, SA, 2011, p. 1115, archived from the original (PDF) on 2 January 2014, retrieved 2 January 2014
  13. ^ a b c d e (in Portuguese), SREC/DRAC, 22 November 1994, archived from the original on 29 October 2013
  14. ^ "Home". 4 July 2016.
  15. ^ a b "Mobility and transport" (PDF). 22 June 2023.
  16. ^ N7231T at the Aviation Safety Network
  17. ^ "Avión de Avianca aterrizó en las islas Azores - Europa - Internacional - ELTIEMPO.COM". 24 June 2018.
  18. ^ "Esto le pasó a vuelo de Avianca que venía de Madrid a Bogotá y tuvo que ser desviado de emergencia". 30 November 2023.

Sources edit

  • Oliveira, João Eduardo Franco de (1996), Aeroporto de Santa Maria. 1946–1996 (in Portuguese), Aeroportos e Navegação Aérea, ANA
  • Ferreira, Adriano (1997), Era uma vez... Santa Maria (in Portuguese), Vila do Porto (Azores), Portugal: Câmara Municipal de Vila do Porto
  • SRHOPTC, ed. (1994), Santa Maria International Airport (in Portuguese), Ponta Delgada (Azores), Portugal: Secretaria Regional de Habitação, Obras Públicas, Transporte e Comunicações
  • Comissão de Luta pela Defesa dos Interesses da Ilha de Santa Maria, ed. (1 July 1981), Aeroporto de Santa Maria - Que Futuro? (in Portuguese)
  • Herz, Norman (2006), Operação Alacrity: os Açores e a Guerra no Atlântico (in Portuguese), Vila do Porto (Azores), Portugal: Município de Vila do Porto, ISBN 978-989-95262-0-4
  • Oliveira, João Eduardo Franco de, Aeroporto de Santa Maria: 1946-1996 (in Portuguese), Aeroportos e Navegação Aérea, ANA
  • Rodrigues, Tito António Magalhães (7 August 1986), "Aeroporto de Santa Maria - Uma História por contar", O Baluarte de Santa Maria, Ano XIII (in Portuguese) (Série II ed.), pp. 1/8

External links edit

  •   Media related to Santa Maria Airport (Azores) at Wikimedia Commons
  • Accident history for SMA at Aviation Safety Network

santa, maria, airport, azores, other, airports, named, santa, maria, santa, maria, airport, disambiguation, santa, maria, airport, iata, icao, lpaz, international, airport, located, west, northwest, urbanized, area, vila, porto, island, santa, maria, portugues. For other airports named Santa Maria see Santa Maria Airport disambiguation Santa Maria Airport IATA SMA ICAO LPAZ is an international airport located 5 km 3 1 mi west northwest of the urbanized area of Vila do Porto on the island of Santa Maria in the Portuguese autonomous region of the Azores A principal hub in transatlantic travel until the end of the 20th century it was constructed at the start of the Second World War to protect convoys by American troops who were ceded authority until its end From this period on the airfield took on a commercial role reinforced by inter island travel and connections to Europe resulting in its obtaining the communication duties for the North Atlantic sector of the airspace corridor Santa Maria AirportAeroporto de Santa MariaA view of the terminal and tower from the tarmac of Santa Maria AirportIATA SMAICAO LPAZSummaryAirport typePublicOwnerANA Aeroportos de PortugalOperatorVinci SAServesVila do PortoLocationSanta Maria Island Azores PortugalOpened26 July 1945 1945 07 26 Focus city forSATA Air AcoresBuilt1945In use2Time zoneAzores 01 00 Summer DST Azores 01 00 Elevation AMSL94 m 308 ftCoordinates36 58 26 N 25 10 16 W 36 97389 N 25 17111 W 36 97389 25 17111Websiteaeroportosantamaria wbr ptMapLPAZLocation of the airport on the island of Santa MariaShow map of AzoresLPAZLPAZ Santa Maria Azores Show map of Santa Maria AzoresRunwaysDirection Length Surface ft m 18 36 10 000 3 048Statistics 2011 Passengers93 436Aircraft Operations3 176Metric tonnes of cargo2697 6Source Portuguese AIP 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 Military airfield 1 2 Civil aviation 2 District 3 Airlines and destinations 4 Statistics 5 Accidents and incidents 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 Sources 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp Aerial view of the airport shortly after construction 1946 In the context of the Second World War in July 1941 a Portuguese mission under the command of engineer Colonel Herminio Jose de Sousa Serrano and which included Colonel Frederico Lopes da Silva and Major Fernando Tartaro visited Santa Maria to study a possible location for an airfield opting for the plateau known as Pico de Maria Dias Two years later technicians from Pan American World Airways arrived on the island arriving on board the NT Lima in December 1943 2 and confirmed that the location was optimal for establishing a military airfield to complement the field at Lajes 3 4 The airfield would therefore assist in the protection of the maritime convoys that crossed the Atlantic to support the port of Murmansk in the Soviet Union which were being sunk by German U boats 2 The project that was planned and which was sent for approval to Antonio de Oliveira Salazar included provisions for an inter island and a trans oceanic airport with the first costing 1 685 million US dollars and the second 5 125 million US dollars 4 The final plan sent to the Portuguese government by Pan American and contracting the construction was an estimated 3 130 million US dollars and included 5 Construction of two piers at the port Expansion of the wharf and ramp Improvements to the roads bends and bridges Construction of a roadway to the aerodrome Construction of three runways 2 2 000 by 50 metres 6 560 ft 160 ft and 1 1 400 by 50 metres 4 590 ft 160 ft with an area of 270 000 square metres 2 900 000 sq ft A platform tarmac for parking aircraft that was 150 by 150 metres 490 ft 490 ft A control tower and station building and A water supply and sewage network Military airfield edit nbsp A World War II Quonset hut used to lodge members of the military nbsp Another Quonset hut that remains in the district of Aeroporto literally Airport While the final project was being prepared the Portuguese Department of Defense authorized immediate execution of the first work 3 that included a runway to service planes transferred from Lajes Airfield carrying with them the technicians and equipment Along with a team of little more than 40 workers Lieutenant Engineer Correia de Sousa concluded the runway construction 6 On 8 August 1944 at about 2 15 p m the first plane landed on the runway a Douglas C 47 Skytrain Dakota C 47 operated by the US Air Force transporting materials and bread from Terceira 6 It departed an hour later 6 The Americans later extended the taxiways by another 200 metres 660 ft and on 15 November 1944 a new 1 350 by 50 metres 4 430 ft 160 ft service runway was concluded and which operated until 14 May 1945 6 The first runway was situated in the locality of Ginjal it was a dirt runway covered with reinforced steel gridwork 2 Finally on 28 November 1944 an accord was signed between the US and Portuguese governments that envisioned its use as a waypoint for planes travelling to the Pacific theatre of operations or those that needed to be diverted due to weather conditions 3 6 This was followed on 14 December 1944 by a similar accord between Pan American Airways and the Portuguese government resulting in the installation of new radio equipment Work on the passenger terminal and support buildings had already progressed along with runways 2 and 3 and the parking area At this time there were 3000 workers onsite 2000 American 600 Micaleanse and 400 Marienses a number that continued to grow over time eventually reaching 3000 Americans and 1000 Azoreans 6 Meanwhile the port was expanded to receive battalions with the equipment necessary to improve the infrastructures and to construct a network to pipe aviation fuel to the plateau These included airport infrastructures roadways water supply and sewage residences and social spaces such as hotel gymnasium church a cinema theatre to hold 1000 people and a hospital in the area of Santana to evacuate the injured in the European theatre citation needed On 11 July 1945 the first Portuguese registered aircraft landed in Santa Maria an Avro Anson Mk I from Terceira s Air Base No 4 Lajes Airfield followed by a C 54 Skymaster on 24 July from Sao Miguel that included various Portuguese and American authorities visiting the installations to officially inaugurate the aerodrome on 26 July 1945 7 The aerodrome was operated by American forces until the end of the conflict and accounted for 500 airplanes that transited the site citation needed Civil aviation edit nbsp A KLM Constellation at Santa Maria Airport during the era when the island was a stopover during transatlantic travel nbsp The main terminal buildings seen from the neighbourhood of Aeroporto The accords between the Portuguese Great Britain and the United States permitted those forces to use the facilities in Lajes and Santa Maria until 2 June 1946 2 At that time the American forces base was transferred to Lajes and both airports began to be administered from Portugal By Decree law 35 736 5 July 1946 the airport at Santa Maria began to be administered by the Secretariado da Aeronautica Civil Civil Aeronautics Secretariate later substituted by the Direccao Geral de Aeronautica Civil Directorate General for Civil Aeronautics 7 After improvements to the runway the airplane parking area and installations in the terminal the airport was inspected by Lieutenant Colonel Humberto Delgado then Director General of the DGEC for it to be certified for operational traffic 7 The first airplane to arrive following inspection was a Pan American Boeing 377 Stratocruiser flying the New York Leopoldville route stopping at the Santa Maria waypoint on 29 October 1946 8 Other records refer to a Pan American Lockheed Constellation stopping on the same day 2 Following the airport s certification for passenger service Santa Maria was selected to operate as the air traffic control centre for North Atlantic region under the responsibility of Portugal by the Provisional International Civil Aviation Organization PICAO in the first semester of 1946 During this period due to an absence of coaxial cable link between Europe and the United States Santa Maria became an important international centre for communications 9 Communications were limited to teletype and radio With the 1965 installation of coaxial cable between the United States and England all communications between the two continents began to intersect at Santa Maria 2 The airport was classified an ETOPS alternate having suitable facilities to accommodate transatlantic flights needing to make an emergency landing The Santa Maria International Airport was re inaugurated officially on 28 November 1946 The existing infrastructures were expanded in the meantime with residential areas administrated and developed by architect Francisco Keil do Amaral who tried to maintain the existing characteristics citation needed On 13 January 1947 Lieutenant Henrique Owen Pinto de Barros da Costa Pessoa was named first director of the airport 7 The forerunner of SATA Air Acores Sociedade Acoriana de Transportes Aereos initiated services to Sao Miguel on 5 August 1957 and to Terceira on 9 June 1947 using a Beechcraft D18S CS TAA christened Acor citation needed From 1940 to 1970 the airport was an important link in trans Atlantic travel and the focus of the island economy and employment First during the construction the airport and support structures attracting workers from Sao Miguel and the archipelago then as a hub of aviation activities supporting air traffic in the North Atlantic Transportes Aereos Portugueses TAP the national flag carrier began layover flights to the airport on 7 December 1962 eventually inaugurating trans Atlantic service between Santa Maria New York 26 April 1969 and Santa Maria Montreal 8 May 1971 Santa Maria was the unique gateway for passengers entering or exiting the Azores it served as a destination stopover and intercontinental waypoints for European North American Central American and South American airlines in addition to Caribbean airways including Aeroflot which began to use Santa Maria as waypoint to Cuba during the 1960s 7 Aeromexico Air France began to use Santa Maria as a stopover in 1948 7 Avianca British Airways Canadian Pacific Air Lines Iberia LTU International Lufthansa KLM first to establish a connection to New York through Santa Maria on 21 May 1946 7 Pan American World Airways began stopovers to Santa Maria in 1947 7 Panair do Brasil Suriname Airways Swissair began to stopover in Santa Maria in 1954 7 Trans World Airlines Viasa stopovers between Caribbean destinations and Europe starting in 1960 10 Commencing in the late 1970s Air France s supersonic Concordes were routed via Santa Maria as a technical stop for refueling on weekly scheduled SST flights between Paris and Caracas 11 Along with the airports in Lisbon Porto Faro Flores Horta Ponta Delgada and Beja the airport s concessions to provide support to civil aviation was conceded to ANA Aeroportos de Portugal on 18 December 1998 under provisions of decree 404 98 12 With this concession ANA was also provided to the planning development and construction of future infrastructures 12 District edit nbsp A FIAT G91 on display in the neighbourhood of Aeroporto The airport at Santa Maria was part of a larger complex of buildings and infrastructures constructed in the 20th century 13 Apart from the airport terminals and ground control facilities the area later known as Aeroporto locally included a residential barrio the services and equipment to support local residences roadways and many of first signals public transport stops and electrical transformer stations 13 The development of this district was important in the development of the island with many of the installations left by American troops after the Second World War the early terminal control tower building of Clube Asas do Atlantico gymnasium cinemas and warehouses and many of the semi cylindrical troop quarters retained after the withdraw of forces 13 Its North American influence and original purpose marks its differences to local construction the urban design and buildings just like many of the projected constructions by architect Keil do Amaral the airport residence of airport director groups of residences and signalling make the district distinct from the other areas of the island 13 The newer neighborhoods and recent buildings are of an inferior architectural quality and correspond to the blocks closer to the airport 13 Airlines and destinations editThe following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights at Santa Maria Airport 14 AirlinesDestinationsAzores AirlinesLisbon 15 SATA Air AcoresPonta Delgada 15 Statistics editGraphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Annual passenger traffic at SMA airport See Wikidata query Accidents and incidents edit nbsp Independent Air Boeing 707 involved in a fatal incident in the hills of Pico Alto Air France Flight 009 a Lockheed Constellation flying from Paris to New York struck the Redondo Mountain on the approach to its intermediate stop at Santa Maria on 28 October 1949 All 11 crew members and 37 passengers on board were killed including French boxing champion Marcel Cerdan and French classical violinist Ginette Neveu Probable causes included poor reporting by the crew and failure to carry out approach procedures A chartered Boeing 707 300 N7231T Independent Air Flight 1851 from Bergamo Italy in 1989 crashed on approach to Santa Maria Airport when it struck the Pico Alto mountain The aircraft was destroyed with the loss of all passengers 137 and crew 7 The accident was the result of bad communication and failure to follow standard procedures by crew and air traffic control 16 An Avianca Airlines Boeing 787 traveling from Madrid to Bogota had to make an emergency landing at SMA on 23 June 2018 when an electrical system in the airplane triggered an alarm 17 An Avianca Airlines Boeing 787 traveling from Madrid to Bogota made an emergency landing at SMA on 30 November 2023 due to yet unspecified technical problems 18 See also editAviation in the AzoresReferences editNotes edit Santa Maria LPAZ Aeronautical Information Publication PDF in Portuguese and English Lisbon Portugal AIP 2016 a b c d e f Comissao de Luta pela Defesa dos Interesses da Ilha de Santa Maria 1981 p 3 a b c SRHOPTC 1994 p 9 a b Ferreira 1997 p 236 Ferreira 1997 p 236 237 a b c d e f Ferreira 1997 p 237 a b c d e f g h i Ferreira 1997 p 238 F Valdez 19 October 2010 p 23 24 SRHOPTC 1994 p 11 Viasa Summer time table Effective 1 July 1961 South America to Europe Airline Timetable Images Retrieved 21 November 2011 http www timetableimages com Summer 1977 Air France system timetable a b ANA Aeroportos Relatorio de Gestao e Contas 2011 PDF Lisbon Portugal ANA Aeroportos de Portugal SA 2011 p 1115 archived from the original PDF on 2 January 2014 retrieved 2 January 2014 a b c d e Aeroporto de Santa Maria in Portuguese SREC DRAC 22 November 1994 archived from the original on 29 October 2013 Home 4 July 2016 a b Mobility and transport PDF 22 June 2023 N7231T at the Aviation Safety Network Avion de Avianca aterrizo en las islas Azores Europa Internacional ELTIEMPO COM 24 June 2018 Esto le paso a vuelo de Avianca que venia de Madrid a Bogota y tuvo que ser desviado de emergencia 30 November 2023 Sources edit Oliveira Joao Eduardo Franco de 1996 Aeroporto de Santa Maria 1946 1996 in Portuguese Aeroportos e Navegacao Aerea ANA Ferreira Adriano 1997 Era uma vez Santa Maria in Portuguese Vila do Porto Azores Portugal Camara Municipal de Vila do Porto SRHOPTC ed 1994 Santa Maria International Airport in Portuguese Ponta Delgada Azores Portugal Secretaria Regional de Habitacao Obras Publicas Transporte e Comunicacoes Comissao de Luta pela Defesa dos Interesses da Ilha de Santa Maria ed 1 July 1981 Aeroporto de Santa Maria Que Futuro in Portuguese Herz Norman 2006 Operacao Alacrity os Acores e a Guerra no Atlantico in Portuguese Vila do Porto Azores Portugal Municipio de Vila do Porto ISBN 978 989 95262 0 4 Oliveira Joao Eduardo Franco de Aeroporto de Santa Maria 1946 1996 in Portuguese Aeroportos e Navegacao Aerea ANA Rodrigues Tito Antonio Magalhaes 7 August 1986 Aeroporto de Santa Maria Uma Historia por contar O Baluarte de Santa Maria Ano XIII in Portuguese Serie II ed pp 1 8External links edit nbsp Media related to Santa Maria Airport Azores at Wikimedia Commons Accident history for SMA at Aviation Safety Network Portals nbsp Portugal nbsp Aviation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Santa Maria Airport Azores amp oldid 1206686754, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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