Minami-Daito Airport

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Minamidaito Airport (南大東空港, Minamidaitō Kūkō, (IATA: MMD, ICAO: ROMD)) is an airport in Minamidaitō, Shimajiri District, Okinawa Prefecture, Japan.

Minami-Daito Airport

南大東空港

Minamidaitō Kūkō
Summary
Airport typePublic
OperatorOkinawa Prefecture
LocationMinami Daito, Okinawa, Japan
Elevation AMSL159 ft / 48 m
Coordinates25°50′48″N 131°15′49″E / 25.84667°N 131.26361°E / 25.84667; 131.26361
Map
ROMD is located in Japan
ROMD
ROMD
ROMD (Japan)
Map
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
02/20 1,500 4,921 Asphalt concrete
Statistics (2015)
Passengers42,444
Cargo (metric tonnes)224
Aircraft movement1,584

The prefecture operates the airport, which is classified as a third class airport.

Only a round flight from Naha, to Minami-Daito and Kitadaitō, back to Naha is operated every day. The route differs on the day of the week. Flight from Kitadaito to Minamidaitō is the shortest flight in Japan, costs JPY¥7,600, and is only 12 km (7.5 mi) long, takes 3 minutes in the air. This flight will end on 31 July 2024.[2]

History

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The original Minamidaito Airport began as an air base for the Imperial Japanese Navy in 1934. The first civilian operations began in March 1961. The runway was repaired in June 1963 and expanded to 1,200 meters in December 1968 in order to accommodate NAMC YS-11 aircraft. However, with the reversion of the island to Japanese control in 1972, it was found that the approach way was not in conformance with Japanese Aviation Law, so the runway needed to be treated as shorter than its actual length. A new 800 meter runway was completed in August 1974.

The airport was relocated to its present location and upgraded to accommodate larger flights in July 1997 with the present 1500 meter runway.

Airlines and destinations

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AirlinesDestinations
Ryukyu Air Commuter Kitadaito (ends 31 July 2024),[2] Naha

References

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  1. ^ "Minami Daito Airport" (PDF). Japanese Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 October 2016. Retrieved 7 January 2017.
  2. ^ a b "JAL Group Discontinues Shortest Domestic Japan Route in 3Q24". Aeroroutes. Retrieved 31 January 2024.
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