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PUERTO PRINCESA AIRPORT

Puerto Princesa airport in the middle of Palawan Island serves the provincial capitol of Puerto Princesa.
Puerto Princesa is the closest airport to the Balabac Islands and the closest airport to the Tubbataha
Reefs.

Puerto Princesa Airport is the main gateway to the Palawan mainland. Talks are afoot of converting the
airport to cater to international flights. From Manila, it is accessible by air via Philippine Airlines, Zest Air,
and Cebu Pacific. There are flights via Southeast Asian Airlines (SEAIR) from Manila via El Nido/Busuanga.
There are also seasonal flights direct from Boracay/Caticlan also via SEAIR. Cebu Pacific meanwhile offers
direct flights from Cebu.

http://www.mycam-asia.tv/philippines/how-to-fly-to.php?airport=pps

http://tourism-philippines.com/puerto-princesa/
Legazpi Airport

The Legazpi Airport is a major airport in the Bicol Region in the Philippines. It is located in
Legazpi City, Albay and it serves the locals and tourists in the City and its vicinity. Located
about 12 kilometers from Mayon Volcano, it has a single runway dimensions of 2280 x 36
meters, longer than those of the former airports of Bacolod (1958 x 30 meters) and Mandurriao
Airport in Iloilo (2100 x 43 meters).

The Airport in Legazpi is known in Filipino as Paliparan ng Legazpi and Bikol as


Palayogan nin Legazpi. It is operated by the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines and it
can handle medium-sized civilian jets and military aircraft.

The surface of the Legazpi City Airport is asphalt and the length of the runway in feet is 7480.
In aviation technical terms, the airports direction is 06/24.

http://www.markmaranga.com/legazpi-airport/
Daniel Z. Romualdez Airport

The Daniel Z. Romualdez Airport (airport codes: TAC and RPVA), popularly known as the
Tacloban Airport, was built on the Tacloban Peninsula, a really interesting headland to the
southeast of downtown Tacloban City in Leyte. The peninsula is practically coterminous with
Barangay 88 of the city, and it encloses the Cancabato Bay to the west.

Peninsulas like the Tacloban Peninsula are good places to build airport runways since they
provide less structural hazards for planes during take-offs and landings. Another runway build on
a similar piece of land is the one at Sangley Point Naval Base, built on the Cavite City peninsula.

http://www.vistapinas.com/article/daniel-z-romualdez-airport
Lumbia Airport

Lumbia Airport is a major domestic airport serving the area of Cagayan de Oro City. It is the
second busiest airport in Mindanao and is the only airport in the province of Misamis Oriental.

Airphil Express and Cebu Pacific operate services to Cebu, Davao and Manila and Philippine
Airlines also fly to Manila from here.

The Cagayan de Oro trunkline airport is serving Regions 10, 12, and 13. It is located in Lumbia,
some 10 kilometers from the city proper.

The largest aircraft that the runway can currently accommodate is B-737.

http://www.cagayan-de-oro.com/cagayan_de_oro_airport.htm

http://www.airportcentral.com/cagayan-de-oro-city-airport-lumbia-airport
Sibulan Airport

Because of the influence of Dumaguete in the Negros Oriental province, the Sibulan Airport is
widely recognized by locals as the Dumaguete Airport.

The Dumaguete Airport is situated in Barangay Boloc-Boloc, Municipality of Sibulan because


there are no more spaces available for a domestic airport in the University City. It is located
near the border of Sibulan and Dumaguete, about 3-4 kilometers from the city center.

The Dumaguete Airport is classified as a Class 1 principal (major domestic) airport by the Civil
Aviation Authority of the Philippines (CAAP), the body of the Department of Transportation and
Communications (DOTC) that is in charge for the operations of not only this airport but also of
all other airports in the Philippines except the major international airports.

http://www.markmaranga.com/dumaguete-airport-sibulan/

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