Aviation Specials – May 2018

(Frankie) #1
Toncontín gained a fearsome reputation due to high terrain, a hill at the end of its runway
and winds that buff et its thresholds. Action has been taken to alleviate some of the
problems, but it is still a tight squeeze for jets, as Bernardo Andrade explains.

T


egucigalpa, the capital of
Honduras, sits atop an active
seismic zone formed by the Central
American Volcanic Arc (CAVA). The
Cocos and Caribbean tectonic plates lay
off the coast to the west, and the intense
pressure produced by geological shifts
has shaped the peaks in the region’s
landscape for eons. More recently, the
country has been subject to political
turmoil, hurricanes and severe fl oods,
but these are not the only problems to
have aff ected the air operations. The
terrain makes the approach to Runway
02 rather challenging, and several
accidents have occurred over the
decades (see panel). This led the History
Channel’s Most

80 // Extreme Airports

TEGUCIGALPA


Extreme Airports television programme
to rank Toncontín International the
second most dangerous airport in the
world, a mantle that authorities have
recently tried their best to cast-off.

Small beginnings
The fi rst aircraft to arrive in the
locale, a Bristol, landed in 1921 on the
Comayagüela plain a mere two miles
(3km) from the city centre. In those
early days the area was just grass,
but a rudimentary airfi eld was soon
established without any delineated
runways, providing the freedom for
aircraft to take off and land into the
prevailing winds. Two years later the
local government acquired two Lincoln
Standard biplanes for passenger and

mail services and these aircraft were
based on the fi eld. As the popularity and
reliability of air travel increased, even
American aviator Charles Lindbergh
landed on the airstrip in his famous
aircraft Spirit of Saint Louis during 1928,
a year after he’d made the fi rst solo
crossing of the Atlantic from New York
to Paris.
Meanwhile, the mountainous terrain
surrounding the Comayagüela plain had
become a defensive asset during the
1924 Honduran Civil War. This led the
then President Tiburcio Carías Andino to
realise that aviation could not only provide
a means of transportation but play a role
in warfare. So, in 1931 the Honduran Air
Force was established on the airfi eld
(the armed forces continue to maintain
a signifi cant presence on the eastern

TAMING TO NCONTIN


80-85_Tegucigalpa_TC.indd 80 11/05/2018 11:20

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