Lombok International Airport

Last updated

Lombok International Airport

Bandar Udara Internasional Lombok
Lombok International Airport.jpg
Lombokairportlogo.png
Summary
Airport typePublic
Owner Government of Indonesia
Operator PT Angkasa Pura I
Serves Lombok
Location Central Lombok Regency, West Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia
Opened20 October 2011;12 years ago (2011-10-20)
Time zone WITA (UTC+08:00)
Elevation  AMSL 319 ft / 97 m
Coordinates 08°45′29″S116°16′35″E / 8.75806°S 116.27639°E / -8.75806; 116.27639
Website www.lombok-airport.co.id
Maps
LocationIndonesia.svg
Location in West Nusa Tenggara Province, Indonesia
Lombok Locator Topography.png
Airplane silhouette.svg
LOP /WADL
Location of the airport in Lombok
Indonesia location map.svg
Airplane silhouette.svg
LOP /WADL
LOP /WADL (Indonesia)
Southeast Asia location map.svg
Airplane silhouette.svg
LOP /WADL
LOP /WADL (Southeast Asia)
Asia laea location map.svg
Airplane silhouette.svg
LOP /WADL
LOP /WADL (Asia)
Runways
Direction LengthSurface
ftm
13/3110,8263,300 Asphalt
Statistics (2018)
Passengers4,139,371

Lombok International Airport( IATA : LOP, ICAO : WADL) [1] also known as Zainuddin Abdul Madjid International Airport, [2] is an international airport on the island of Lombok, a part of West Nusa Tenggara province in Indonesia. It is the island's only fully operational airport. [3] [2]

Contents

It replaced Selaparang Airport, [4] the island's previous sole operational airport, in Ampenan on the west coast of Lombok near the capital of Mataram.

The new facility was officially inaugurated by the president of Indonesia, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, on 20 October 2011. The airport can accommodate widebody high capacity Airbus A330 and Boeing 777 airliners, in addition to the smaller aircraft such as the Boeing 737 and the Airbus A320 family already serving Lombok. [5] The first aircraft that landed on the airport was a Garuda Indonesia Boeing 737-800NG, marking the commencement of operations on 1 October 2011. [6]

Naming

Bandara Internasional Lombok (BIL) had several operational names proposed. In January 2009 results of a public opinion poll conducted in Lombok indicated that Lombok International Airport (LIA) was chosen by 40.4% of respondents, Sasak International Airport (SIA) 20%, Rinjani International Airport (RIA) 46 16.7%, Mandalika the International Airport (MIA) 10.9%, Selaparang International Airport ( SIA) 8%, Pejanggik International Airport (PIA) 2.9%, and Arya Banjar Brittle International Airport (ABGIA) 1.1%. [7] [ better source needed ]

According to the airport's official website, the name is Lombok International Airport in English, and Bandar Udara Internasional Lombok in Indonesian. [1] It is referred to as Zainuddin Abdul Madjid International Airport in some sources. [2] [8] Muhammad Zainuddin Abdul Madjid was an ulema from Lombok which founded Nahdlatul Wathan, a prominent Islamic organization in the province.

The IATA code "LOP" only came into formal use in late November 2011. Before that the IATA code AMI, from Selaparang, was used by the airlines servicing the airport. Garuda and Batavia began to partially adopt the LOP code in their booking and ticketing systems at that time. Lion Air was using AMI at the end of November 2011; however, all flights were operating solely to and from Lombok International Airport.[ citation needed ]

Location

The airport site is at Tanak Awu, in Kabupaten Lombok Tengah (Regency of Central Lombok), Lombok, Indonesia, southwest of Mataram the provincial capital of Nusa Tenggara Barat and a few kilometers southwest of the small regional city of Praya.

The airport has a land area of about 551.8 hectares. [9] [10] Lombok International Airport has the second largest area after Soekarno–Hatta International Airport at the time of the opening of the airport. [11]

Airlines and destinations

When the Lombok International Airport became operational, all the flight schedules at Lombok's Selaparang Airport were moved to the new facility.

As Selaparang Airport never accommodated widebody aircraft, it is expected that further international and domestic services will soon supplement the existing routes providing higher passenger loads and freight volumes to those of the airport at Ampenan.

Citilink Airbus A320 parked at Lombok International Airport Citilink Lombok.jpg
Citilink Airbus A320 parked at Lombok International Airport
Wings Air ATR 72-500 parked at Lombok International Airport Wings Air di Lombok.jpg
Wings Air ATR 72–500 parked at Lombok International Airport
Entry and exit passport stamps at Lombok International Airport. Note that they bear the name of the old airport, Selaparang. Lombok International Airport Stamp 1.jpg
Entry and exit passport stamps at Lombok International Airport. Note that they bear the name of the old airport, Selaparang.

Passenger

AirlinesDestinations
AirAsia Kuala Lumpur–International
Batik Air Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta
Batik Air Malaysia Kuala Lumpur–International (begins 2 August 2024) [12]
Citilink Denpasar, Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta, Surabaya
Garuda Indonesia Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta
Indonesia AirAsia Kuala Lumpur–International
Lion Air Balikpapan, [13] Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta, Makassar, [14] Surabaya
Scoot Singapore [15]
Super Air Jet Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta, Kuala Lumpur–International (ends 28 July 2024), Surabaya, Yogyakarta–International [16]
Wings Air Bima, Denpasar, Sumbawa Besar

Public facilities and access

The airport is served by road links to the city of Mataram which is approximately 40 km to the northwest of the airport. It is approximately 55 km southeast of the established Senggigi tourism precinct of West Lombok. An integral component of the airport project was the building of a new link road to the city of Mataram to provide ready access to the city and tourism facilities on the west coast of the island. At the time of opening in late 2011 some sections of the new road remained incomplete. The developing area of Kuta and Selong Blanak lie 30 minutes to the south and provide some reasonably developed tourist facilities including hotels and restaurants.

The airport is not served by rail connections, and there are none available on the island.

The site is some distance from existing townships and external services; the nearest regional city is Praya, to the immediate north of the airport.

A tour desk, booking kiosks, and other facilities are available at the main terminal.

Car and bus parking

The airport has extensive paved parking areas at the main terminal and smaller facilities for the cargo terminal and administrative areas. Entrance is by a single controlled access point to the nearby highway.

Public bus services

Perum DAMRI provide a public airport shuttle service to Terminal Mandalika ('city bus terminal') on the eastern outskirts of Mataram and on to the west coast at Senggigi. The public bus service uses a dedicated fleet of modern air-conditioned buses and provides a scheduled service for set fees.

Taxi services

When the airport services were moved across from the previous facilities at Selaparang the Airport Taksi Koperasi moved operations to BIL. Upon the commencement of services from BIL they ceased to provide a set distance pre-paid docket system and adopted a metered ('argometer') method of charging for distance traveled. The airport taxi service is supplemented by metered taxis provided by the two established operators: Bluebird Taxi and Express Taxi.

Charter

Helicopter and fixed wing charter services are available by prior arrangement.

Development

The airport is undergoing a massive development project. After completion, the passenger capacity will be increased to 7.5 million, the runway will be expanded to 3,300 meters to allow wide bodied aircraft.

Phase I (2006–2009)

Phase II (2013–2015)

Phase III (2028)

Statistics

Airfield system [18] Phase 2Phase 3
Runway length2,750 m4,000 m
Runway width45 m45 m
Runway shoulders30 m30 m
Runway strips2,870 m x 300 m4,120 m x 300 m
Runway end safety area90 m x 90 m90 m x 90 m
Taxiway requirementsTwo apron exitsFull parallel
Taxiway width23 m23 m
Taxiway shoulder7.5 m10.5 m
RW-TW separation192 m192 m
Apron service road width10 m10 m
Support area service road width7 m7 m
Airfield inspection road width5 m5 m
Security fence height2 m2 m
Aircraft parking areasPhase 2Phase 3
Aircraft parking requirement1030
Aircraft apron area53,200 m300,000 sm
Air cargo apron28,000 sm
General aviation apron25,000 sm
Navigational aidsPhase 2Phase 3
Air traffic control tower23 m high23 m high
Precision landing systemR/W 13 ILSR/W 13 ILS
Runway lightingHigh intensityHigh intensity
Other NAVAIDsDME, DVOR NDBDME, DVOR NDB

Fire fighting and emergency services

The airport has no capability for the removal of disabled aircraft. [19]

Airport facilities and services

Information on flight procedures, communication procedures and airfield beacon and navigational aids were published by the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (Indonesia) in an AIRAC document published on 28 July 2011 with an effective date of 22 September 2011. [19]

Aircraft types

B747, B767, A350, A340, A330, B777, C130, A320, B737-900, CRJ1000, F100, F28, F50, IL-96, SSJ-100, MA60, ATR 72, CN235, [19] XL2.

Aircraft parking stands

Flight schools

The airport is the base of local flight training academy "LIFT" (Lombok Institute of Flight Technology) operating 3 Liberty XL2 training aircraft 6 days per week. [20]

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References

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  19. 1 2 3 4 "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 20 September 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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