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Tocumen International Airport

Tocumen International Airport (Spanish: Aeropuerto Internacional de Tocumen) (IATA: PTY, ICAO: MPTO) is the primary international airport serving Panama City, the capital of Panama. The airport serves as the homebase for Copa Airlines and is a regional hub to and from The Caribbean, South, North and Central America and additionally features routes to some European and Asian cities.

Tocumen International Airport

Aeropuerto Internacional de Tocumen
Summary
Airport typePublic
OperatorTocumen S.A.
ServesPanama City, Panama
LocationTocumen
Opened1 June 1947; 75 years ago (1947-06-01)
Hub for
Elevation AMSL135 ft / 41 m
Coordinates9°04′17″N 79°23′01″W / 9.07139°N 79.38361°W / 9.07139; -79.38361Coordinates: 9°04′17″N 79°23′01″W / 9.07139°N 79.38361°W / 9.07139; -79.38361
Websitetocumenpanama.aero
Map
PTY
Location in Panama
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
03R/21L 3,050 10,007 Concrete
03L/21R 2,682 8,799 Asphalt
Statistics (2020)
Passengers4,526,663
Movements49,808
Source: WAD[1] STV[2] GCM[3]

History

During World War II, Panamanian airports were leased exclusively by the U.S. Armed Forces. The nearest airport to Tocumen was the Paitilla Point Airfield. Several airports were built to protect the Panama Canal from foreign aggression. The 37th Pursuit Group at Albrook Field replaced the P-40 Warhawks of the 28th Pursuit Squadron at the Paitilla Point airbase from 9 December 1941 though 26 March 1942 in the immediate aftermath of the Pearl Harbor attack.

Tocumen International Airport was inaugurated on June 1, 1947, by President Enrique Adolfo Jiménez, and airport operations began before the construction works were completed. The administrative building/passenger terminal was inaugurated seven years later, during the administration of Colonel José Antonio Remón Cantera. The old airport building, which currently is being used as a cargo terminal, was built on an area of 720 ha (1,800 acres) and was 126 ft (38 m) above sea level. As time passed, and due to Panama's role as a country of transit, that terminal became too small to attend to the growing demand for air operations. These circumstances compelled the aeronautical authorities at the time to consider expanding the airport. Work on the new buildings began in 1971.

In order to build the structure that currently houses the current passenger terminal, a lot of soil had to be moved and the bed of the Tocumen river had to be diverted from its original site. The current passenger terminal was inaugurated on August 15, 1978, and operations began on September 5 of the same year. The Tocumen International Airport is one of the few airports in the region that has two landing runways able to serve the largest commercial aircraft operating today. The name of the airport was changed in 1981 by the military government to Omar Torrijos International Airport, in honor of the Panamanian leader who died on July 31, 1981, at the age of 52 in a plane crash in Cerro Marta, Coclesito in very bad conditions. After nine years, the original name was reestablished after the fall of the dictatorship of Panama by the U.S. invasion of 1989, when the airport was seized by 82nd Airborne Division paratroopers.[4] The original runway (03L/21R) is mainly used for cargo and private flights, but also as a supplement to the primary runway during peak traffic periods. The main runway (03R/21L) is 3,050 m × 45 m (10,007 ft × 148 ft) and is used primarily for commercial flights, the 03R direction is ILS Cat. I enabled. Until May 31, 2003, Tocumen International Airport was managed by the Civil Aeronautics Directorate (which is known today as the Civil Aeronautics Authority). On June 1 of that year, an innovative terminal management platform was created through Law No. 23 of January 29, 2003, which set out a regulatory framework for the management of airports and landing strips in Panama. This law allowed the creation of Aeropuerto Internacional de Tocumen, S.A., also referred to as Tocumen, S.A., which currently manages the terminal. This law is one of a number of laws that restructured the aeronautical sector in Panama to further its improvement and modernization.[5]

In August 2015, it was announced that Emirates would operate flights to Tocumen International Airport from Dubai starting February 2016, at which point it would have become the world's longest non-stop flight.[6] In January 2016, the route was delayed due to a lack of economical opportunities for the flight. It has not yet been announced when the flight will begin regularly scheduled operations.[7] It was planned to make the route between Tocumen International Airport and Dubai the longest flight in the world, until Emirates started flying between Dubai and Auckland.

Expansion

First phase

 
Main airport entrance

In 2006, Tocumen S.A. started a major expansion and renovation program. The main passenger terminal was expanded 20,830 m2 (224,200 sq ft) at a cost of approximately US$21 million. New boarding gates were built to allow more flights to and from Panama, and to facilitate the growth of commercial and internal circulation areas.

Tocumen airport administration acquired 22 new boarding bridges and replaced the oldest 14. This included the addition of 6 remote positions, hence allowing Tocumen Airport to have a total of 28 boarding gates. The new installations were opened in 2006. The airport also has a VIP lounge, Copa Club, operated by the partnership between United Airlines and Copa Airlines that caters to Copa's partner airlines and Star Alliance members. It also had an Admirals Club for American Airlines, which closed on June 30, 2012.[8] The Lounge Panama,[9] a VIP airport lounge operated by Global Lounge Network[10] started operations at Tocumen on January 9, 2019.

The next step of the modernization project was the purchasing of new equipment to provide service and support to the common areas of the airport. New equipment included: modern boarding gates and elevators, luggage conveyor belts, flight information system, and revamping the air conditioning system.

The renovation of the old Tocumen international airport (originally built in 1947) to be used solely as a cargo terminal, was the last step of the modernization project of Tocumen international airport. It included the redesign of the central building, the construction of new buildings for cargo companies among other improvements.[11]

Second phase

The second expansion phase of Tocumen International airport is the Northern Terminal. At a cost of US$60 million, a completely new terminal with 12 additional terminal gates was built. With these 12 new gates plus the existing 22 gates and the six remote aircraft docks, there is a total of 40 gates. The new facilities included the platforms, taxiways and a new road which connect both the cargo terminal and the airport's administration building. The Muelle Norte is linked to the main passenger terminal and have 10 moving walkways for passengers and 1,400 m2 (15,000 sq ft) commercial areas. The luggage sorting system was expanded to accommodate increased demand. The tender for the design of the second phase was given to Ecuador-based Planman Cia Ltda. Colombia-based Aerotocumen won the tender of the construction of the North Terminal.

Third phase

The South Terminal started a bidding process during the first half of 2012 and the contract was acquired by the Brazilian company Odebrecht. Tocumen S.A. made an investment of US$780 million, which included 20 additional gates. It included the construction of a new terminal, hundreds of parking spots, Tocumen river diversion, and four new direct-access lanes to the airport. The new terminal was officially inaugurated on April 29, 2019 and started operations on June 22, 2022.[12]

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

AirlinesDestinations
Air Canada Rouge Toronto–Pearson
Air Europa Madrid
Air France Paris–Charles de Gaulle
American Airlines Miami
Avianca Bogotá
Avianca Costa Rica San José de Costa Rica–Juan Santamaría
Conviasa Caracas, Managua
Copa Airlines Armenia (Colombia), Aruba, Asunción, Atlanta, Baltimore (begins June 28, 2023),[13] Barbados, Barcelona (VE), Barranquilla, Belize City, Belo Horizonte–Confins, Bogotá, Boston, Brasilia, Bucaramanga, Buenos Aires–Ezeiza, Cali, Cancún, Caracas, Cartagena, Chicago–O'Hare, Chiclayo, Córdoba (AR), Cúcuta, Curaçao, David, Denver, Fort Lauderdale, Georgetown–Cheddi Jagan, Guadalajara, Guatemala City, Guayaquil, Havana, Kingston–Norman Manley, Las Vegas, Lima, Los Angeles, Managua, Manaus, Manta (begins June 27, 2023),[14] Maracaibo, Medellín–JMC, Mendoza, Mexico City, Mexico City/AIFA, Miami, Montego Bay, Monterrey, Montevideo, Montréal–Trudeau, Nassau, New York–JFK, Orlando, Paramaribo, Pereira, Port-au-Prince, Porto Alegre, Port of Spain, Punta Cana, Quito, Rio de Janeiro–Galeão, Rosario, San Andrés Island, San Francisco, San José de Costa Rica–Juan Santamaría, San Juan, San Pedro Sula, San Salvador, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz de la Sierra–Viru Viru, Santa Marta, Santiago de Chile, Santo Domingo–Las Américas, São Paulo–Guarulhos, Sint Maarten, Tampa, Tegucigalpa/Comayagua, Toronto–Pearson, Valencia (VE), Washington–Dulles
Delta Air Lines Atlanta
Estelar Airlines Caracas
Eurowings Discover Frankfurt
Iberia Madrid
KLM Amsterdam
LASER Airlines Caracas
Turkish Airlines Istanbul
Turpial Airlines Valencia (VE)
United Airlines Houston–Intercontinental, Newark
Venezolana Barquisimeto, Caracas, Maracaibo
Wingo Bogotá, Cali, Cartagena, Medellín–JMC, San José de Costa Rica–Juan Santamaría

Cargo

AirlinesDestinations
21 Air Miami
ABX Air Miami
Aerosucre Bogotá, Santo Domingo–Las Américas
AeroUnion Mexico City
Amerijet International Managua, Miami
Avianca Cargo Bogotá, Miami
DHL Aero Expreso Aruba, Barbados, Bogotá, Caracas, Curaçao, Guatemala City, Lima, Mexico City, Miami, Port of Spain, Quito, San José de Costa Rica–Juan Santamaría, San Juan, San Pedro Sula, Santiago de Chile
FedEx Express Memphis, San José de Costa Rica–Juan Santamaría
LATAM Cargo Brasil Miami
LATAM Cargo Colombia Bogotá, Managua, Miami[15]
Líneas Aéreas Suramericanas Bogotá
Mas Air Mexico City, Miami, Guadalajara
Qatar Airways Cargo Dallas/Fort Worth, Doha, Liège, Maastricht/Aachen, Quito
Transcarga Caracas, Las Piedras, Valencia (VE)
UPS Airlines Louisville, Managua, Miami
Vensecar Internacional Aruba, Caracas

Statistics

 
Copa Airlines planes. Tocumen International Airport, Panamá City.
 
Check-in hall
 
Departure gates area in Terminal 2
 
View of Tocumen Intl Airport from the tarmac

Annual traffic

Annual passenger traffic at PTY airport. See Wikidata query.
Annual traffic
Year Passengers Passengers using ICAO methodology (2015) % Change % Change using ICAO methodology values (2015) Cargo % Change Movements % Change
2003 2,145,489 11.5% 85,508 - 43,980 -
2004[16] 2,398,443 11.8% 96,215 12.5% 45,703 3.9%
2005 2,756,948 15% 103,132 19.6% 47,873 4.6%
2006[17] 3,215,423 16.6% 82,186 -20.3% 53,853 12.7%
2007[18] 3,805,312 18.3% 82,463 0.3% 61,400 14.0%
2008[19] 4,549,170 19.5% 86,588.8 4.8% 73,621 19.9%
2009[20] 4,748,621 6,531,927 4.4% 83,513 -3.8% 80,330 9.1%
2010[21] 5,042,410 7,005,031 6.2% 7.2% 98,565 18.0% 84,113 4.7%
2011[22] 5,844,561 8,271,459 15.9% 18.1% 110,946 12.6% 93,710 11.4%
2012[23] 6,962,608 10,174,870 19.1% 23.0% 116,332 4.9% 110,206 17.6%
2013[24] 7,784,328 11,586,681 11.8% 13.9% 110,186 -5.3% 121,356 10.1%
2014[25] 8,536,342 12,782,167 9.7% 10.3% 110,789 0.5% 135,406 11.5%
2015[26] 8,913,501 13,434,673 4.4% 5.1% 96,902 -12.5% 141,642 4.6%
2016[27] 14,741,937 9.7% 110,364 13.9% 145,245 2.54%
2017[28] 15,616,065 5.9% 113,228 2.59% 145,914 0.46%
2018[29] 16,242,679 4.01% 168,108 48.47% 148,556 1.81%
2019[30] 16,582,601 2.09% 164,700 -2.03% 149,808 1%
2020[31] 4,526,663 -72.70% 145,929 -11.40% 50,976 - 65.97%
2021[32] 9,163,998 102.44% 202,743 38.93% 88,823 74.24%

Busiest routes

Busiest international routes out of Tocumen International Airport (2017)[33]
Rank City Passengers Airlines
1   San José de Costa Rica 863,035 Avianca Costa Rica, Copa, Copa Colombia
2   Bogotá, Colombia 792,170 Avianca, Avianca Ecuador, Copa, Copa Colombia
3   Miami, Florida 745,262 American, Copa
4   Cancun, Mexico 597,704 Copa, Delta
5   Havana, Cuba 581,741 Copa
6   São Paulo, Brazil 542,675 Copa
7   Mexico City, Mexico 524,404 Copa, Aeroméxico
8   Santiago de Chile, Chile 505,180 Copa
9   Lima, Peru 490,435 Copa
10   Caracas, Venezuela 446,641 Avior Airlines, Conviasa, Copa, LASER Airlines, SBA, Venezolana
11   Orlando, Florida 397,325 Copa
12   Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic 394,947 Copa
13   Medellín, Colombia 394,695 Copa, Copa Colombia
14   Guayaquil, Ecuador 390,516 Copa, Copa Airlines Colombia
15   Punta Cana, Dominican Republic 373,965 Copa, Copa Airlines Colombia
16   Quito, Ecuador 359,564 Avianca Ecuador, Copa, Copa Airlines Colombia
17   New York, New York 332,532 Copa
18   Los Angeles, California 327,821 Copa
19   Guatemala City, Guatemala 272,911 Copa, Copa Colombia
20   Buenos Aires, Argentina 269,915 Copa

See also

References

  1. ^ . World Aero Data. Archived from the original on 2019-03-05.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) Data current as of October 2006. Source: DAFIF.
  2. ^ Airport information for Tocumen International Airport at Transport Search website.
  3. ^ Airport information for Tocumen International Airport at Great Circle Mapper.
  4. ^ Henriksen, Thomas H. (2022-01-31). America's Wars: Interventions, Regime Change, and Insurgencies after the Cold War (1 ed.). Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9781009053242.002. ISBN 978-1-009-05324-2. S2CID 113329937.
  5. ^ "History of Tocumen Airport". Tocumen Airport Panama. 2010-08-01. Retrieved 2010-08-01.
  6. ^ Thompson, Chuck (2015-08-14). "World's longest nonstop flight announced". CNN. Retrieved 2015-08-14.
  7. ^ "Flights to Panama City". Emirates. 2016-01-12. Retrieved 2016-01-12.
  8. ^ "Admirals Club Lounge | Airline Clubs And Lounges | American Airlines". American Airlines. 2015-04-25. Retrieved 2015-04-25.
  9. ^ "PTY4-The-Lounge-Panama-by-Global-Lounge-Network". Prioritypass.com. Retrieved 23 January 2019.
  10. ^ "Global Lounge Network". Globalloungenetwork.com. Retrieved 23 January 2019.
  11. ^ "Expansion Plan of Tocumen Airport". Tocumen Airport Panama. 2010-08-01. Retrieved 2010-08-01.
  12. ^ "Panama City's Tocumen International airport consolidates its place as one of Latin America's major hubs as new Terminal 2 opens its gates to traffic". Blue Swan Daily. 2019-05-15. Retrieved 2019-05-15.
  13. ^ "Copa Airlines adds BWI to North American route schedule". The Daily Record. Baltimore, Maryland, USA. January 26, 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  14. ^ https://www.nlarenas.com/2023/01/copa-airlines-anuncia-vuelos-panama-manta/
  15. ^ "Actionable Trading Ideas, Real Time News, Financial Insight".
  16. ^ Tocumen Airport Report 2004 Website 2009-02-27 at the Wayback Machine
  17. ^ Tocumen Airport Report 2006 Website 2007-06-14 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ Tocumen Airport Report 2007 Website 2008-09-10 at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ Tocumen Airport Report 2008 Website 2011-05-31 at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ Tocumen Airport Report 2009 Website 2011-06-08 at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ Tocumen Airport Report 2010 Website 2012-05-11 at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-05-11. Retrieved 2012-03-01.
  23. ^ Tocumen Airport Report 2012 Website 2014-01-07 at the Wayback Machine
  24. ^ Tocumen Airport Report 2013 Website 2014-07-01 at the Wayback Machine
  25. ^ "INICIO". Tocumenpanama.aero. Retrieved 23 January 2019.
  26. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-11-05. Retrieved 2016-11-05.
  27. ^ http://www.tocumenpanama.aero/transparencia/data_12-06-2017_081422/10.3/pdf/reporte_estadistico_2016.pdf[permanent dead link]
  28. ^ "Annual Report 2017" (PDF). Tocumenpanama.aero. Retrieved 23 January 2019.
  29. ^ "Estadísticas Aeropuerto Internacional de Tocumen Enero a Diciembre 2018" (PDF). Tocumenpanama.aero.
  30. ^ "16.5 million passengers drove Tocumen International Airport in 2019". Tocumenpanama.aero.
  31. ^ "Estadísticas Aeropuerto Internacional de Tocumen Enero a Diciembre 2020" (PDF). Tocumenpanama.aero.
  32. ^ "Estadísticas Aeropuerto Internacional de Tocumen Enero a Diciembre 2021" (PDF). Tocumenpanama.aero.
  33. ^ "Annual Report 2017" (PDF). Tocumenpanama.aero. Retrieved 23 January 2019.

  This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency.

External links

  Media related to Tocumen International Airport at Wikimedia Commons

  • Official website
  • Our Airports - Tocumen International Airport
  • Accident history for PTY at Aviation Safety Network
  • La Prensa de Panama Report 2015 Website

tocumen, international, airport, airport, tucuman, argentina, teniente, general, benjamín, matienzo, international, airport, airport, panama, city, florida, northwest, florida, beaches, international, airport, spanish, aeropuerto, internacional, tocumen, iata,. For the airport in Tucuman Argentina see Teniente General Benjamin Matienzo International Airport For the airport in Panama City Florida see Northwest Florida Beaches International Airport Tocumen International Airport Spanish Aeropuerto Internacional de Tocumen IATA PTY ICAO MPTO is the primary international airport serving Panama City the capital of Panama The airport serves as the homebase for Copa Airlines and is a regional hub to and from The Caribbean South North and Central America and additionally features routes to some European and Asian cities Tocumen International AirportAeropuerto Internacional de TocumenIATA PTYICAO MPTOFAA LID PTYSummaryAirport typePublicOperatorTocumen S A ServesPanama City PanamaLocationTocumenOpened1 June 1947 75 years ago 1947 06 01 Hub forCopa Airlines Copa Airlines Colombia DHL Aero ExpresoElevation AMSL135 ft 41 mCoordinates9 04 17 N 79 23 01 W 9 07139 N 79 38361 W 9 07139 79 38361 Coordinates 9 04 17 N 79 23 01 W 9 07139 N 79 38361 W 9 07139 79 38361Websitetocumenpanama aeroMapPTYLocation in PanamaRunwaysDirection Length Surfacem ft03R 21L 3 050 10 007 Concrete03L 21R 2 682 8 799 AsphaltStatistics 2020 Passengers4 526 663Movements49 808Source WAD 1 STV 2 GCM 3 Contents 1 History 2 Expansion 2 1 First phase 2 2 Second phase 2 3 Third phase 3 Airlines and destinations 3 1 Passenger 3 2 Cargo 4 Statistics 4 1 Annual traffic 4 2 Busiest routes 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message During World War II Panamanian airports were leased exclusively by the U S Armed Forces The nearest airport to Tocumen was the Paitilla Point Airfield Several airports were built to protect the Panama Canal from foreign aggression The 37th Pursuit Group at Albrook Field replaced the P 40 Warhawks of the 28th Pursuit Squadron at the Paitilla Point airbase from 9 December 1941 though 26 March 1942 in the immediate aftermath of the Pearl Harbor attack Tocumen International Airport was inaugurated on June 1 1947 by President Enrique Adolfo Jimenez and airport operations began before the construction works were completed The administrative building passenger terminal was inaugurated seven years later during the administration of Colonel Jose Antonio Remon Cantera The old airport building which currently is being used as a cargo terminal was built on an area of 720 ha 1 800 acres and was 126 ft 38 m above sea level As time passed and due to Panama s role as a country of transit that terminal became too small to attend to the growing demand for air operations These circumstances compelled the aeronautical authorities at the time to consider expanding the airport Work on the new buildings began in 1971 In order to build the structure that currently houses the current passenger terminal a lot of soil had to be moved and the bed of the Tocumen river had to be diverted from its original site The current passenger terminal was inaugurated on August 15 1978 and operations began on September 5 of the same year The Tocumen International Airport is one of the few airports in the region that has two landing runways able to serve the largest commercial aircraft operating today The name of the airport was changed in 1981 by the military government to Omar Torrijos International Airport in honor of the Panamanian leader who died on July 31 1981 at the age of 52 in a plane crash in Cerro Marta Coclesito in very bad conditions After nine years the original name was reestablished after the fall of the dictatorship of Panama by the U S invasion of 1989 when the airport was seized by 82nd Airborne Division paratroopers 4 The original runway 03L 21R is mainly used for cargo and private flights but also as a supplement to the primary runway during peak traffic periods The main runway 03R 21L is 3 050 m 45 m 10 007 ft 148 ft and is used primarily for commercial flights the 03R direction is ILS Cat I enabled Until May 31 2003 Tocumen International Airport was managed by the Civil Aeronautics Directorate which is known today as the Civil Aeronautics Authority On June 1 of that year an innovative terminal management platform was created through Law No 23 of January 29 2003 which set out a regulatory framework for the management of airports and landing strips in Panama This law allowed the creation of Aeropuerto Internacional de Tocumen S A also referred to as Tocumen S A which currently manages the terminal This law is one of a number of laws that restructured the aeronautical sector in Panama to further its improvement and modernization 5 In August 2015 it was announced that Emirates would operate flights to Tocumen International Airport from Dubai starting February 2016 at which point it would have become the world s longest non stop flight 6 In January 2016 the route was delayed due to a lack of economical opportunities for the flight It has not yet been announced when the flight will begin regularly scheduled operations 7 It was planned to make the route between Tocumen International Airport and Dubai the longest flight in the world until Emirates started flying between Dubai and Auckland Expansion EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message First phase Edit Main airport entrance In 2006 Tocumen S A started a major expansion and renovation program The main passenger terminal was expanded 20 830 m2 224 200 sq ft at a cost of approximately US 21 million New boarding gates were built to allow more flights to and from Panama and to facilitate the growth of commercial and internal circulation areas Tocumen airport administration acquired 22 new boarding bridges and replaced the oldest 14 This included the addition of 6 remote positions hence allowing Tocumen Airport to have a total of 28 boarding gates The new installations were opened in 2006 The airport also has a VIP lounge Copa Club operated by the partnership between United Airlines and Copa Airlines that caters to Copa s partner airlines and Star Alliance members It also had an Admirals Club for American Airlines which closed on June 30 2012 8 The Lounge Panama 9 a VIP airport lounge operated by Global Lounge Network 10 started operations at Tocumen on January 9 2019 The next step of the modernization project was the purchasing of new equipment to provide service and support to the common areas of the airport New equipment included modern boarding gates and elevators luggage conveyor belts flight information system and revamping the air conditioning system The renovation of the old Tocumen international airport originally built in 1947 to be used solely as a cargo terminal was the last step of the modernization project of Tocumen international airport It included the redesign of the central building the construction of new buildings for cargo companies among other improvements 11 Second phase Edit The second expansion phase of Tocumen International airport is the Northern Terminal At a cost of US 60 million a completely new terminal with 12 additional terminal gates was built With these 12 new gates plus the existing 22 gates and the six remote aircraft docks there is a total of 40 gates The new facilities included the platforms taxiways and a new road which connect both the cargo terminal and the airport s administration building The Muelle Norte is linked to the main passenger terminal and have 10 moving walkways for passengers and 1 400 m2 15 000 sq ft commercial areas The luggage sorting system was expanded to accommodate increased demand The tender for the design of the second phase was given to Ecuador based Planman Cia Ltda Colombia based Aerotocumen won the tender of the construction of the North Terminal Third phase Edit The South Terminal started a bidding process during the first half of 2012 and the contract was acquired by the Brazilian company Odebrecht Tocumen S A made an investment of US 780 million which included 20 additional gates It included the construction of a new terminal hundreds of parking spots Tocumen river diversion and four new direct access lanes to the airport The new terminal was officially inaugurated on April 29 2019 and started operations on June 22 2022 12 Airlines and destinations EditPassenger Edit AirlinesDestinationsAir Canada RougeToronto PearsonAir EuropaMadridAir FranceParis Charles de GaulleAmerican AirlinesMiamiAviancaBogotaAvianca Costa RicaSan Jose de Costa Rica Juan SantamariaConviasaCaracas ManaguaCopa AirlinesArmenia Colombia Aruba Asuncion Atlanta Baltimore begins June 28 2023 13 Barbados Barcelona VE Barranquilla Belize City Belo Horizonte Confins Bogota Boston Brasilia Bucaramanga Buenos Aires Ezeiza Cali Cancun Caracas Cartagena Chicago O Hare Chiclayo Cordoba AR Cucuta Curacao David Denver Fort Lauderdale Georgetown Cheddi Jagan Guadalajara Guatemala City Guayaquil Havana Kingston Norman Manley Las Vegas Lima Los Angeles Managua Manaus Manta begins June 27 2023 14 Maracaibo Medellin JMC Mendoza Mexico City Mexico City AIFA Miami Montego Bay Monterrey Montevideo Montreal Trudeau Nassau New York JFK Orlando Paramaribo Pereira Port au Prince Porto Alegre Port of Spain Punta Cana Quito Rio de Janeiro Galeao Rosario San Andres Island San Francisco San Jose de Costa Rica Juan Santamaria San Juan San Pedro Sula San Salvador Santa Clara Santa Cruz de la Sierra Viru Viru Santa Marta Santiago de Chile Santo Domingo Las Americas Sao Paulo Guarulhos Sint Maarten Tampa Tegucigalpa Comayagua Toronto Pearson Valencia VE Washington DullesDelta Air LinesAtlantaEstelar AirlinesCaracasEurowings DiscoverFrankfurtIberiaMadridKLMAmsterdamLASER AirlinesCaracasTurkish AirlinesIstanbulTurpial AirlinesValencia VE United AirlinesHouston Intercontinental NewarkVenezolanaBarquisimeto Caracas MaracaiboWingoBogota Cali Cartagena Medellin JMC San Jose de Costa Rica Juan SantamariaCargo Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message AirlinesDestinations21 AirMiamiABX AirMiamiAerosucreBogota Santo Domingo Las AmericasAeroUnionMexico CityAmerijet InternationalManagua MiamiAvianca CargoBogota MiamiDHL Aero ExpresoAruba Barbados Bogota Caracas Curacao Guatemala City Lima Mexico City Miami Port of Spain Quito San Jose de Costa Rica Juan Santamaria San Juan San Pedro Sula Santiago de ChileFedEx ExpressMemphis San Jose de Costa Rica Juan SantamariaLATAM Cargo BrasilMiamiLATAM Cargo ColombiaBogota Managua Miami 15 Lineas Aereas SuramericanasBogotaMas AirMexico City Miami GuadalajaraQatar Airways CargoDallas Fort Worth Doha Liege Maastricht Aachen QuitoTranscargaCaracas Las Piedras Valencia VE UPS AirlinesLouisville Managua MiamiVensecar InternacionalAruba CaracasStatistics Edit Copa Airlines planes Tocumen International Airport Panama City Check in hall Departure gates area in Terminal 2 View of Tocumen Intl Airport from the tarmac Annual traffic Edit Annual passenger traffic at PTY airport See Wikidata query Annual traffic Year Passengers Passengers using ICAO methodology 2015 Change Change using ICAO methodology values 2015 Cargo Change Movements Change2003 2 145 489 11 5 85 508 43 980 2004 16 2 398 443 11 8 96 215 12 5 45 703 3 9 2005 2 756 948 15 103 132 19 6 47 873 4 6 2006 17 3 215 423 16 6 82 186 20 3 53 853 12 7 2007 18 3 805 312 18 3 82 463 0 3 61 400 14 0 2008 19 4 549 170 19 5 86 588 8 4 8 73 621 19 9 2009 20 4 748 621 6 531 927 4 4 83 513 3 8 80 330 9 1 2010 21 5 042 410 7 005 031 6 2 7 2 98 565 18 0 84 113 4 7 2011 22 5 844 561 8 271 459 15 9 18 1 110 946 12 6 93 710 11 4 2012 23 6 962 608 10 174 870 19 1 23 0 116 332 4 9 110 206 17 6 2013 24 7 784 328 11 586 681 11 8 13 9 110 186 5 3 121 356 10 1 2014 25 8 536 342 12 782 167 9 7 10 3 110 789 0 5 135 406 11 5 2015 26 8 913 501 13 434 673 4 4 5 1 96 902 12 5 141 642 4 6 2016 27 14 741 937 9 7 110 364 13 9 145 245 2 54 2017 28 15 616 065 5 9 113 228 2 59 145 914 0 46 2018 29 16 242 679 4 01 168 108 48 47 148 556 1 81 2019 30 16 582 601 2 09 164 700 2 03 149 808 1 2020 31 4 526 663 72 70 145 929 11 40 50 976 65 97 2021 32 9 163 998 102 44 202 743 38 93 88 823 74 24 Busiest routes Edit Busiest international routes out of Tocumen International Airport 2017 33 Rank City Passengers Airlines1 San Jose de Costa Rica 863 035 Avianca Costa Rica Copa Copa Colombia2 Bogota Colombia 792 170 Avianca Avianca Ecuador Copa Copa Colombia3 Miami Florida 745 262 American Copa4 Cancun Mexico 597 704 Copa Delta5 Havana Cuba 581 741 Copa6 Sao Paulo Brazil 542 675 Copa7 Mexico City Mexico 524 404 Copa Aeromexico8 Santiago de Chile Chile 505 180 Copa9 Lima Peru 490 435 Copa10 Caracas Venezuela 446 641 Avior Airlines Conviasa Copa LASER Airlines SBA Venezolana11 Orlando Florida 397 325 Copa12 Santo Domingo Dominican Republic 394 947 Copa13 Medellin Colombia 394 695 Copa Copa Colombia14 Guayaquil Ecuador 390 516 Copa Copa Airlines Colombia15 Punta Cana Dominican Republic 373 965 Copa Copa Airlines Colombia16 Quito Ecuador 359 564 Avianca Ecuador Copa Copa Airlines Colombia17 New York New York 332 532 Copa18 Los Angeles California 327 821 Copa19 Guatemala City Guatemala 272 911 Copa Copa Colombia20 Buenos Aires Argentina 269 915 CopaSee also EditTransport in Panama List of airports in PanamaReferences Edit Airport information for MPTO World Aero Data Archived from the original on 2019 03 05 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Data current as of October 2006 Source DAFIF Airport information for Tocumen International Airport at Transport Search website Airport information for Tocumen International Airport at Great Circle Mapper Henriksen Thomas H 2022 01 31 America s Wars Interventions Regime Change and Insurgencies after the Cold War 1 ed Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 9781009053242 002 ISBN 978 1 009 05324 2 S2CID 113329937 History of Tocumen Airport Tocumen Airport Panama 2010 08 01 Retrieved 2010 08 01 Thompson Chuck 2015 08 14 World s longest nonstop flight announced CNN Retrieved 2015 08 14 Flights to Panama City Emirates 2016 01 12 Retrieved 2016 01 12 Admirals Club Lounge Airline Clubs And Lounges American Airlines American Airlines 2015 04 25 Retrieved 2015 04 25 PTY4 The Lounge Panama by Global Lounge Network Prioritypass com Retrieved 23 January 2019 Global Lounge Network Globalloungenetwork com Retrieved 23 January 2019 Expansion Plan of Tocumen Airport Tocumen Airport Panama 2010 08 01 Retrieved 2010 08 01 Panama City s Tocumen International airport consolidates its place as one of Latin America s major hubs as new Terminal 2 opens its gates to traffic Blue Swan Daily 2019 05 15 Retrieved 2019 05 15 Copa Airlines adds BWI to North American route schedule The Daily Record Baltimore Maryland USA January 26 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link https www nlarenas com 2023 01 copa airlines anuncia vuelos panama manta Actionable Trading Ideas Real Time News Financial Insight Tocumen Airport Report 2004 Website Archived 2009 02 27 at the Wayback Machine Tocumen Airport Report 2006 Website Archived 2007 06 14 at the Wayback Machine Tocumen Airport Report 2007 Website Archived 2008 09 10 at the Wayback Machine Tocumen Airport Report 2008 Website Archived 2011 05 31 at the Wayback Machine Tocumen Airport Report 2009 Website Archived 2011 06 08 at the Wayback Machine Tocumen Airport Report 2010 Website Archived 2012 05 11 at the Wayback Machine Tocumen Airport Report 2011 Website PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2012 05 11 Retrieved 2012 03 01 Tocumen Airport Report 2012 Website Archived 2014 01 07 at the Wayback Machine Tocumen Airport Report 2013 Website Archived 2014 07 01 at the Wayback Machine INICIO Tocumenpanama aero Retrieved 23 January 2019 Memoria Anual 2015 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2016 11 05 Retrieved 2016 11 05 http www tocumenpanama aero transparencia data 12 06 2017 081422 10 3 pdf reporte estadistico 2016 pdf permanent dead link Annual Report 2017 PDF Tocumenpanama aero Retrieved 23 January 2019 Estadisticas Aeropuerto Internacional de Tocumen Enero a Diciembre 2018 PDF Tocumenpanama aero 16 5 million passengers drove Tocumen International Airport in 2019 Tocumenpanama aero Estadisticas Aeropuerto Internacional de Tocumen Enero a Diciembre 2020 PDF Tocumenpanama aero Estadisticas Aeropuerto Internacional de Tocumen Enero a Diciembre 2021 PDF Tocumenpanama aero Annual Report 2017 PDF Tocumenpanama aero Retrieved 23 January 2019 This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency External links Edit Media related to Tocumen International Airport at Wikimedia Commons Official website Our Airports Tocumen International Airport Accident history for PTY at Aviation Safety Network La Prensa de Panama Report 2015 WebsitePortals Panama Aviation World War II Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tocumen International Airport amp oldid 1136013739, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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