Cape Town International Airport: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
no edit summary
m (Cape Town Airport (CPT/FACT) moved to Cape Town International Airport (CPT/FACT): add International to airport name)
No edit summary
Line 2: Line 2:
{{categorynoregion|Africa|South Africa}}
{{categorynoregion|Africa|South Africa}}


{{infobox|fullname=Cape Town Intl. Airport|location=Cape Town, South Africa|iata=CPT|icao=FACT|aptype=Commercial|website=http://www.acsa.co.za/|mapurl=|mapsource=|atctower=118.100|atcground=121.900|atcclearance=|atcapproach=119.700|atcdeparture=|atcatis=127.00|atcunicom=}}
{{infobox|fullname=Cape Town International Airport|location=Cape Town, South Africa|iata=CPT|icao=FACT|aptype=Commercial|website=http://www.acsa.co.za/home.asp?pid=1156|mapurl=|mapsource=|atctower=118.100|atcground=121.900|atcclearance=|atcapproach=119.700|atcdeparture=|atcatis=127.00|atcunicom=}}


Cape Town International is South Africa's second-largest airport, and a prime tourism gateway serving millions of visitors descending on the Mother City each year.  
Cape Town International is South Africa's second-largest airport, and a prime tourism gateway serving millions of visitors descending on the Mother City each year.  
Traffic through the airport reflects this: over 60 000 aircraft ferrying 5-million passengers in 2003, and an expected 6.5-million in 2004. By 2015, 14-million passengers are expected to land in Cape Town.  
Traffic through the airport reflects this: over 60,000 aircraft ferrying 5-million passengers in 2003, and an expected 6.5-million in 2004. By 2015, 14-million passengers are expected to land in Cape Town.  
Cape Town International won the 2005 Skytrax Best Airport in Africa award, and was named leading airport in Africa at the World Travel Awards from 2001 through 2004 (coming second to Johannesburg International in 2005).  
Cape Town International won the 2005 Skytrax Best Airport in Africa award, and was named leading airport in Africa at the World Travel Awards from 2001 through 2004 (coming second to Johannesburg International in 2005).  


Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.

Navigation menu