Sultan Azlan Shah Airport

Sultan Azlan Shah Airport (IATA: IPH, ICAO: WMKI) is an airport that serves Ipoh, a city in the state of Perak, Malaysia. It is located 6 km away from the city centre. Sultan Azlan Shah Airport has been ranked as the seventh busiest airport in Malaysia.

Sultan Azlan Shah Airport

Lapangan Terbang Sultan Azlan Shah
Summary
Airport typePublic
OwnerGovernment of Malaysia
OperatorMalaysia Airports Holdings Berhad (MAHB)
ServesPerak, Malaysia
LocationIpoh, Perak, Malaysia
Time zoneMST (UTC+08:00)
Elevation AMSL130 ft / 40 m
Coordinates04°34′09″N 101°05′35″E
Maps

Perak State in Malaysia
IPH/WMKI
IPH/WMKI
IPH/WMKI (Peninsular Malaysia)
IPH/WMKI
IPH/WMKI (Malaysia)
IPH/WMKI
IPH/WMKI (Southeast Asia)
IPH/WMKI
IPH/WMKI (Asia)
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
04/22 2,000 6,562 Asphalt
Statistics (2018)
Passenger315,673 ( 15.1%)
Airfreight (tonnes)142 ( 35.1%)
Aircraft movements10,369 ( 5.0%)
Source: official web site[1]
AIP Malaysia[2]

History

Originating as a small airfield for Fokker aircraft, eventually being expanded so that jet operations could be accommodated. The then new airport terminal was made ready for the visit by Queen Elizabeth II to the Royal Town of Kuala Kangsar in 1989. The airport had then been used by many passengers (somewhat due to Malaysia Airlines serving the city and still being based in Subang).

Once the North-South Expressway opened, many people opted to use other methods rather than the often more expensive air travel; as a consequence of the lack of demand, Malaysia Airlines and later AirAsia withdrew their services. Following the introduction of electric trains having a direct link to Kuala Lumpur city centre, Malaysia Airports were forced to reconsider the financial viability of the site.[3]

In the hopes of renewing the airport for use by larger airlines, a new and 'modern' terminal building and an extended runway were constructed at a cost of RM45 million. The runway length of 2,000 metres was so that larger aircraft like the Boeing 737 and Airbus A320 family could land and take off. The key features of the new terminal were a larger and more spacious departure and arrival halls, full air-conditioning in the terminal, and increased passenger capacity.[4]

Unfortunately the new runway was left to be restricted to turboprop airliners only, due to a number of potholes.[5] Several months later, the issue was resolved,[6] only to then have a repeated issue.[7] Since then, the runway has been safe and used daily.

Malindo Air started a new service to Medan in 2018.

AirAsia resumed services from Johor Bahru to Ipoh in October 2018.

In December 2018, AirAsia launched services to Singapore from Ipoh.

Future

Upon the realisation by the Malaysian Government that the airport was unable to continue to expand (due to being surrounded by residential areas), there have been suggestions that sites further away from the city centre, in either Seri Iskandar or Batang Padang near Tapah. However, there have been no such actions in the subsequent years.

An alternative plan had been considered to utilise Ipoh as a feeder airport, as the airport was unable to compete with the larger and more established airports in Penang and Kuala Lumpur International Airport.

Several airlines have mentioned their desire to begin serving the airport, but only plans by Tigerair (now Scoot) have materialised.[8] Other airlines based in China and Indonesia have also expressed interest.[9]

In March 2017, the Perak state government announced that the airport's operators would be upgrading the terminal so that there would be more space for passengers.

Next year it is expected that the Perak state government will improve the airport and extend the runway from 2 km to 2.5 km

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

AirlinesDestinations
AirAsia Johor Bahru,[10][11][12][13] Singapore
Malindo Air Johor Bahru[14]
Scoot Singapore

Traffic and statistics

Annual passenger numbers and aircraft statistics
Year
Passengers
handled
Passenger
% change
Cargo
(tonnes)
Cargo
% change
Aircraft
movements
Aircraft
% change
2003115,2864981,57211.88
2004103,12310.673547.61,402 10.84
200574,45127.843740.51,145 18.31
200664,71113.135718.3954 16.72
200781498.81097.212 98.73
20085,376560.40100183 14252
200921,937308.00384 109.85
201048,508121.10844 119.84
201171,16946.701,536 82.07
201273,3543.134167.41,515 1.49
201374,3201.34031091.41,464 3.45
201498,768 32.9296 26.617,682 1107.888
2015222,606 125.4318 7.219,956 12.98
2016269,696 21.2178 44.114,137 29.28
2017274,146 1.7105 40.810,910 22.89
2018315,673 15.1142 35.110,369 5.0
Source: Malaysia Airports Holdings Berhad[15]
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References


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