Toluca International Airport

Toluca International Airport, officially Licenciado Adolfo López Mateos International Airport (IATA: TLC, ICAO: MMTO) is an international airport in Toluca, State of Mexico, Mexico. It is part of the Mexico City Metropolitan Airport Group, and it is being improved and promoted to handle some traffic for the city of Toluca, but it also serves as a low-cost carrier airport for Mexico City, serving VivaAerobús, but in the past at different times also by Interjet, Volaris and Aeroméxico. The airport is named after President Adolfo López Mateos.

Licenciado Adolfo López Mateos International Airport

Aeropuerto Internacional Lic. Adolfo López Mateos
Summary
Airport typePublic
OperatorAdministradora Mexiquense del Aeropuerto Internacional de Toluca (AMAIT)
ServesToluca and Mexico City
Elevation AMSL2,580 m / 8,465 ft
Coordinates19°20′13″N 99°33′57″W
Map
TLC
Location of airport in Mexico
TLC
TLC (Mexico)
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
15/33 4,310 14,140 Asphalt
Statistics (2021)
Total passengers134,305
Ranking in Mexico44th 6
Source: Administradora Mexiquense del Aeropuerto Internacional de Toluca

It is considered as the main alternate airport for Mexico City International Airport since it is only 30 minutes or 40 km away from the Santa Fe financial district and has the longest runway of any airport in Mexico.

Overview

Construction of the airport began in 1970, as ordered by Jorge Jiménez Cantú, as a reliever airport for the Mexico City metropolitan area. It was inaugurated in 1984.

Toluca went from serving 145,000 passengers in 2002, to 3,200,000 in 2007 and 4,300,000 in 2008. It used to be a hub for Volaris, but the company announced on March 8, 2011 that its hub in Toluca would switch to Guadalajara. Interjet also moved the bulk of its operations to Mexico City. As a result, the passenger traffic got significantly reduced: from 1,161,064 passengers in 2013 to 134,305 in 2021.[1]

The airport was reduced from four terminals to two after all domestic operations were handled at the Domestic Terminal. Before 2007, Interjet and Volaris had each one independent terminal, plus Terminal 1 (now Domestic Terminal) and the International Terminal. Recent renovations have expanded both the terminals and apron, making the airport capable of handling an excess of 6 million passengers each year.

Among the airlines that used to frequent Toluca were Aeroméxico Connect, Click Mexicana, Republicair and TAESA Airlines.[2] The airport had service to the United States by Continental Express (later United Express) and Spirit Airlines. Service to Spain from Toluca was also offered by Air Madrid in the early 2000s.

Facade of the terminal at night
Check-in counters

Airlines and destinations

Cargo

AirlinesDestinations
FedEx Express Memphis
TUM AeroCarga Cancún, Ciudad Juárez, Guadalajara, Hermosillo, Mazatlán, Mérida, Monterrey, Nuevo Laredo, Oaxaca, Querétaro, Reynosa, Tijuana, Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Veracruz, Villahermosa

Statistics

Passengers

Toluca Airport Passengers. See source Wikidata query.

Top destinations

Busiest domestic routes at Toluca International Airport (2020)[3]
Rank City Passengers Ranking Airline
1  Nuevo León, Monterrey 23,358 Interjet, VivaAerobús
2  Quintana Roo, Cancún 14,190 Interjet, VivaAerobús
3  Jalisco, Guadalajara 8,408 1 Interjet, TAR
4  Guerrero, Acapulco 6,423 1 Interjet
5  Jalisco, Puerto Vallarta 4,333 2 Interjet, TAR
6  Guerrero, Ixtapa-Zihuatanejo 2,491 1 Interjet
7  Oaxaca, Huatulco 1,146 1 Interjet
8  Coahuila, Monclova 9
9  Querétaro, Querétaro 3

Transportation

A shuttle to Tecnológico station for the Toluca–Mexico City commuter rail will be provided when service commences in 2022.[4]

See also

References

  1. "Estadística Operacional de Aeropuertos / Statistics by Airport". Retrieved February 12, 2021.
  2. "Click Mexicana meets the first year of operations". T21 (in Spanish). July 2006. Retrieved March 8, 2021.
  3. "Traffic Statistics by Airline" (in Spanish). Secretaría de Comunicaciones y Transportes. January 2021. Retrieved February 12, 2021.
  4. "Recorrido de la Obra". Ciudad de Mexico. Retrieved March 7, 2017.

Media related to Lic. Adolfo López Mateos International Airport at Wikimedia Commons

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