According the the Italian Wikipedia article, the airport has been open since the 1920s, and expanded its runway in April 2009 to handle jets like the B737 and A320. Current scheduled service is to Verona only.
According to the Italian Wikipedia article, Pontecagnano is a joint military-civilian airport with scheduled airline service to Milan Malpensa (MXP), Catania (CTA), Verona (VRN), Barcelona (BCN), Bucharest (BBU), and Munich (MUC). It also hosts a fair bit of bizjet traffic, as well as the long-established Aeroclub di Salerno, which includes a flying school:
Latest comments
re: English Destinations
🔗 Wed, 28 Apr 2010
— Anonymous Flyer at Salerno Costa d'Amalfi Airport, Italy Reply
Ryanair expressed an interst in flying from Salerno.
English Destinations
🔗 Sun, 20 Dec 2009
— Anonymous Flyer at Salerno Costa d'Amalfi Airport, Italy Reply
Have any low cost carriers expressed an interst in flying to England?
re: When does it open
🔗 Mon, 07 Sep 2009
— @david at Salerno Costa d'Amalfi Airport, Italy Reply
According the the Italian Wikipedia article, the airport has been open since the 1920s, and expanded its runway in April 2009 to handle jets like the B737 and A320. Current scheduled service is to Verona only.
re: When does it open
🔗 Mon, 07 Sep 2009
— @ptomblin at Salerno Costa d'Amalfi Airport, Italy Reply
Airports don't fly anywhere. They just sit there and let the planes come to them.
Pontecagnano Airpor
🔗 Mon, 07 Sep 2009
— Anonymous Flyer at Salerno Costa d'Amalfi Airport, Italy Reply
I am given to understand it opened in mid 2008 and closed soon after is this still the case?
When does it open
🔗 Mon, 07 Sep 2009
— Anonymous Flyer at Salerno Costa d'Amalfi Airport, Italy Reply
Is the airport open and where does it fly to?
Operations at Pontecagnano
🔗 Tue, 02 Sep 2008
— @david at Salerno Costa d'Amalfi Airport, Italy Reply
According to the Italian Wikipedia article, Pontecagnano is a joint military-civilian airport with scheduled airline service to Milan Malpensa (MXP), Catania (CTA), Verona (VRN), Barcelona (BCN), Bucharest (BBU), and Munich (MUC). It also hosts a fair bit of bizjet traffic, as well as the long-established Aeroclub di Salerno, which includes a flying school:
http://www.aeroclub.sa.it/