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Sultan Thaha Syaifuddin Airport Bandar Udara Sultan Thaha Syaifuddin | |||||||||||
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Summary | |||||||||||
Airport type | Public | ||||||||||
Owner | Government of Indonesia | ||||||||||
Operator | PT Angkasa Pura II | ||||||||||
Serves | Jambi City | ||||||||||
Location | Jambi, Indonesia | ||||||||||
Time zone | WIB (UTC+07:00) | ||||||||||
Elevation AMSL | 82 ft / 25 m | ||||||||||
Coordinates | 01°38′17″S103°38′40″E / 1.63806°S 103.64444°E | ||||||||||
Website | www | ||||||||||
Maps | |||||||||||
Sumatra region in Indonesia | |||||||||||
Runways | |||||||||||
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Statistics (2018) | |||||||||||
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Sultan Thaha Syaifuddin Airport (Indonesian : Bandar Udara Sultan Thaha Syaifuddin) ( IATA : DJB, ICAO : WIJJ) (formerly WIPA), formerly known as Palmerah Airport, is in Jambi City in the Jambi province of Indonesia. It is located in the Paalmerah suburb of Jambi. The airport is named after Thaha Syaifuddin, the last Sultan of Jambi (1816–1904).
In colonial times, Jambi Airport was built by the Dutch and Japanese under the name of Paalmerah Airport. The name comes from the peg Paalmerah made of stone to determine the location of the airport boundary that is attached by the Dutch and then given a name in red paint.[ clarification needed ] In the 1950s after Indonesia proclaimed its independence, Jambi airport began to be publicly airport by the Departmental Agency of Civil Aviation.[ clarification needed ] At that time the dimensions of the runway were 900m x 25m with construction of gravel, and the largest aircraft in operation was the Douglas DC-3.
Departmental Agency of Civil Aviation in 1970 changed the nomenclature to the Directorate General of Civil Aviation and Airports Paalmerah became Technical Implementation of the Directorate General of Civil Aviation in Jambi Province. In 1976, the construction of the runway extension into 1650m x 30m. Dated 10 October 1978, Paalmerah Airport renamed Jambi Sultan Thaha Airport is derived from the name of one local hero Jambi. This year, carried out the installation of a Runway Visual Aid Light, VASI, CCR, and REILS.
In mid-1978, the nomenclature changed Airports Jambi Sultan Thaha Sultan Thaha Airport into Jambi.[ clarification needed ] 1991 saw the construction of a runway extension to 1800m x 30m. Approach in 1998, executed the installation of light and in 2000 again made a runway extension to 2000m x 30m. Along with technological development in 2005, carried VASI replacement and installation of PAPI.
On 1 January 2007, transfer of the Operational Management of Sultan Thaha Airport Jambi was previously managed by the Technical Implementation Unit of the Department of Transportation and is now managed by PT Angkasa Pura II, while the largest aircraft served the A320. Since managed by PT (Persero) Angkasa Pura II has been planned runway extension to 2220m x 30m and has been operated now.
The runway was expanded to 2,400 meters long and 45 meters wide, which was implemented in 2012 (it would later be expanded to 2,600 meters). This allows it to accommodate planes up to the equivalent Boeing 757 from the previous Boeing 737. An Instrument Landing System will also be added to enable incoming aircraft to make a perfect landing in bad weather. [3]
On 12 December 2011, the groundbreaking of expansion terminal phase-1 was done for a capacity of 1.5 million passengers per year. Today, passengers have reached 1 million, while the capacity of the terminal is only 300,000 passengers per year. The terminal will be expanded from 2,308 square meters to 13,015 square meters. [4] The new terminal was officially inaugurated on 27 December 2015. It is equipped with two jetbridge and can handle 1.8 million passengers per year. [5] The president of Indonesia inaugurated the second phase of expansion on 21 July 2016. The expansion includes 10 centimeter runway overlay and the terminal becomes 35,000 meter square. Nowadays the airport serves 23 takeoffs and 23 landings and predicted can serve 35 takeoff and 35 landing per day. [6]
The new terminals can accommodate up to 1.6 million passengers per year, more than 2 times than the old terminal which can only accommodate up to 700,000 passengers per year. The new terminal was built with modern concepts along with the latest facilities such as an air bridge, escalators, and elevators, and also features a commercial area for the service and comfort of the passengers or air visitors. Moreover, PT Angkasa Pura II also features local wisdom in the new terminal through the display of local crafts ornaments as part of the interior of the terminal building. As part of efforts to promote tourism in Jambi, PT Angkasa Pura II (Persero) placed replicas of temple sites located in Muara Jambi, which is one of the largest temple complexes in Southeast Asia. [7] The new terminal area of 35 thousand square meters and the parking area measures 26,500 square meters with a capacity of 436 cars and 415 motorcycles. The cost of construction of a passenger terminal and parking facilities of Sultan Thaha Airport by a contract value is approximately Rp 126 billion. While the costs for the construction of the apron to Rp 110 billion, the tower construction and operation of buildings Rp 16 billion, as well as the construction of basic facilities and other supporting facilities is Rp 67 billion. [8]
The Sultan Thaha Airport will be the first World's Zoo Airport in 2015, integrated with the Taman Rimba Zoo which is only 900 meters from the new terminal. The airport will be set with animal nuances. [9] Due to the access road to the airport takes a part of zoo land, the zoo will be 13 hectares only and according to Forestry Ministry Regulation, a zoo should be at least 15 hectares, and if less than the rule should be categorized as Taman Satwa (Animal Park). [10]
Rank | Destinations | Frequency (weekly) | Airline(s) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Jakarta–Soekarno–Hatta, Jakarta | 112 | Batik Air, Citilink, Garuda Indonesia, Lion Air, Sriwijaya Air |
2 | Batam, Riau Islands | 21 | Garuda Indonesia, Lion Air, Sriwijaya Air |
3 | Palembang, South Sumatra | 21 | Garuda Indonesia, Wings Air |
4 | Pekanbaru, Riau | 7 | Wings Air |
5 | Medan, North Sumatra | 7 | Wings Air |
6 | Bandar Lampung, Lampung | 7 | Wings Air |
7 | Padang, West Sumatra | 7 | Wings Air |
8 | Muara Bungo, Jambi | 7 | Wings Air |
9 | Dabo, Riau Islands | 3 | Susi Air |
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: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) Data current as of October 2006. Source: DAFIF.