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Doha International Airport (IATA: DIA, ICAO: OTBD) (Arabic: مطار الدوحة الدولي) is an airport in Doha, Qatar. It was Qatar's commercial international airport until Hamad International Airport opened on 27 May 2014. While all scheduled commercial traffic ceased, the airport site and existing runway is still used by Qatar Emiri Air Force, Qatar Amiri Flight, Rizon Jet, Gulf Helicopters and Qatar Aeronautical College. It also acts as a state/diplomatic airport catering to both Qatar Amiri Flight (which is based at the airport) and state visit flights. The airport welcomed commercial flights again on 15 September 2022 for selected airlines to handle increased traffic for the 2022 FIFA World Cup taking place in the country in November.

Doha International Airport

مطار الدوحة الدولي

Maṭār al-Dawḥah al-Duwalī
Summary
Airport typePublic / Military / private
OperatorQatar Civil Aviation Authority
ServesDoha, Qatar
LocationDoha, Qatar
Elevation AMSL35 ft / 11 m
Coordinates25°15′40″N 051°33′54″E
Map
DIA/OTBD
Location of airport in Doha , Qatar
DIA/OTBD
DIA/OTBD (Qatar)
DIA/OTBD
DIA/OTBD (Middle East)
DIA/OTBD
DIA/OTBD (West and Central Asia)
DIA/OTBD
DIA/OTBD (Asia)
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
15/33 4,572 14,993 Asphalt
Statistics (2016)
Passengers37,300,000
Sources: Civil Aviation Affairs[1]
Statistics from Doha Airport,[2] Worldaerodata.com[3]

History


Doha International Airport opened in 1959 replacing Dukhan Airport, which was built in the 1930s and located 80 kilometres (50 mi) west of Doha.

The airport suffered from overutilization, even though it had been expanded numerous times. Before the opening of the new airport, the capacity stood at 12 million passengers per year.[4] Its 4,570-metre (14,993 ft) runway was one of the longest at a civil airport. It was the main base of Qatar Airways. In the past, the airport was mostly used by Qatari holiday makers and foreign workers coming for the oil and gas sector. As Qatar Airways expanded rapidly, the airport grew and attracted more people such as holiday makers and transit travelers. In 2010, it was the world's 27th busiest airport by cargo traffic. The control tower and ancillary buildings were designed by Curtis W. Fentress, FAIA, RIBA of Fentress Architects.

All scheduled commercial air traffic serving this airport moved to the new Hamad International Airport on 27 May 2014.[5] The new airport is located 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) east of the former facility. It covers 2,200 hectares (5,400 acres) of land and was able to handle 29 million passengers per year on opening day.[6] The old airport was [originally] planned to be demolished, but will be refurbished and reopened for the 2022 FIFA World Cup.[7]


Terminals



Departure and Transfer Terminal


This was the main terminal at Doha and handled all economy class Qatar Airways flights, as well as all other airlines using the airport. This terminal was expanded several times in order to cope with the increasing number of passengers using the airport each year. The terminal had 44 satellite gates, as well as seating areas and a large duty-free area. There were 3 lounges in this terminal, including the Oryx Lounge, which was used by all foreign airlines' premium passengers, the Qatar Airways Gold Lounge, which was used by Qatar Airways Gold Privilege Club members, and the Qatar Airways Silver Lounge, used by Qatar Airways silver privilege club card holders. This terminal had been expanded as the old Arrivals Terminal was integrated into the departures terminal, while a new arrival terminal was opened. All departing and transferring passengers used this facility, as passengers arriving into Doha used the new Arrivals Terminal. The Departure and Transfer Terminal opened an additional 12 boarding positions located between the terminal and the Premium Terminal gates, as well as a revamped Oryx lounge to cater for the increase in passenger numbers.[8] [when?] The passenger facilities featured 60 check-in counters, 42 parking bays for aircraft and 15 baggage claim belts.


Terminal A

Terminal A of the Departure and Transfer Terminal was the check-in area used by the airport's biggest user, Qatar Airways, as well as Cathay Pacific, which operated a codeshare with Qatar Airways to Hong Kong under a strategic partnership agreement.[9]


Terminal B

In June 2011, Terminal B, built on the location of the former arrivals terminal at Doha International Airport, was dedicated to more than 30 foreign airlines operating services from Doha. The terminal included an enlarged check-in area with 35 counters and a new baggage handling system, as well as food outlets. All foreign airlines were moved to Terminal B.

All terminals have been renovated recently and will be operational by the end 2021 or early to mid-2022 for the FIFA football World Cup that will be held in Qatar.


Arrivals Terminal


On 19 December 2010, a new Arrival Terminal was opened in the western apron, in the site of the former Asian Games (which Doha hosted in 2006) temporary terminal. The terminal had a capacity of 2,770 passengers per hour. The 32,000-square-metre (340,000 sq ft) Arrivals Terminal replaced the arrivals hall of what became the Departure and Transfer Terminal. The Arrivals Terminal had 22 immigration counters, eight e-gates, eight baggage carousels, 36 concierge desks for hotel transfers, car rental and other services, as well as 746 parking spaces. The former arrivals hall was merged with the departing hall, adding extra valuable space and capacity to the airport. These changes were part of the multimillion-dollar expansion of Doha Airport to cope with the increasing traffic of Qatar Airways and other airlines before the new Hamad International Airport opened in 2014.[10]


Qatar Airways Premium Terminal


The Qatar Airways Premium Terminal was opened in 2006 and handled all Qatar Airways first and business class passengers. There are 6 gates in this terminal.


Airlines and destinations


Ramp overview
Ramp overview
Airside area
Airside area
Gate area
Gate area

The airport shut down for commercial traffic on 27 May 2014 when all airlines relocated to its successor, Hamad International Airport.[5] The last commercial flight departing from Doha International Airport was a Lufthansa plane returning to its home of Frankfurt at 00:30 on 28 May 2014.

From the 14th of September 2022, the airport will start being used for passenger traffic for the 2022 FIFA World Cup. At least 13 airlines, including Etihad Airways, Flydubai, Pegasus Airlines, Jazeera Airways, and SalamAir will move their regular scheduled flights to the airport until the end of 2022, while designated Match Day Shuttle flights will use the newer Hamad International Airport. Temporary routes that will operate to the airport until the end of 2022 has been listed below. [11] [12]

AirlinesDestinations
Air ArabiaSharjah
Air Cairo Sohag
Badr AirlinesKhartoum
Ethiopian Airlines Addis Ababa
Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi
flydubaiDubai–International
Himalaya AirlinesKathmandu
Jazeera AirwaysKuwait City
Nepal AirlinesKathmandu
Pakistan International AirlinesIslamabad, Lahore, Peshawar
Pegasus AirlinesIstanbul–Sabiha Gokcen
Salam AirMuscat
Tarco AviationKhartoum

Statistics


Since 1998, the number of passengers and total cargo load increased significantly.

Statistics for Doha International Airport
YearTotal passengersTotal Cargo (tons)Total Cargo (1000s lbs)Aircraft movements
1998 2,100,00086,854  
1999 2,300,00062,591  
2002 4,406,30490,879200,35177,402
2003[13] 5,245,364118,406261,03742,130
2004[13] 7,079,540160,088352,93051,830
2005[13] 9,377,003207,988458,53059,671
2006[13] 11,954,030262,061577,739103,724
2007[14] 9,459,812252,935557,62665,373
2008[14] 12,272,505414,872914,63690,713
2009[2] 13,113,224528,9061,166,038101,941
2010[2] 15,724,027707,8311,560,498118,751
2011 18,108,521795,5581,753,905136,768
2012 21,163,597
2013 23,266,187

Accidents and incidents



See also



References


  1. "eAIP Bahrain FIR 07 MAR 2013 Archived 16 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine." Civil Aviation Affairs. 7 March 2013
  2. Doha International Airport – 2009/2010 Statistics
  3. Worldaerodata.com Retrieved 2 August 2014
  4. A-Z Group Ltd. "A-Z World Airports Online – Qatar airports – Doha International Airport (DOH/OTBD)". Azworldairports.com. Retrieved 2 November 2010.
  5. Scott, Victoria (27 May 2014). "Qatar shifts operations completely to new Hamad International Airport". Doha News. Retrieved 28 May 2014.
  6. "Qatar Information Guide". Retrieved 14 February 2012.
  7. "Ex-Doha Airport to be Brought Out of Retirement for 2022 Football World Cup - Simple Flying". Archived from the original on 5 November 2019. Retrieved 31 October 2019.
  8. Mandapam, Bince -. "Doha International Airport unveils brand new Terminal B for international carriers – Qatar News Doha". www.onlineqatar.com. Retrieved 4 December 2017.[dead link]
  9. "Doha – Qatar Airport Information – Cathay Pacific Hong Kong". Cathaypacific.com.
  10. "AQ01_22102009_C.indd" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 July 2011. Retrieved 2 November 2010.
  11. Pearson, James (8 September 2022). "Which Airlines Will Use The Reopened Doha International Airport?". Simple Flying. Retrieved 11 September 2022.
  12. "THIRTEEN AIRLINES WILL COMMENCE OPERATIONS AT DOHA INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT (DIA)". Hamad International Airport. Retrieved 12 November 2022.
  13. A-Z Group Ltd. "A-Z World Airports Online – Country Index – Qatar airports – Doha International Airport (DOH/OTBD)". Azworldairports.com.
  14. "Doha International Airport – 2007/2008 Statistics" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 October 2011. Retrieved 6 September 2011.
  15. "BBC News | MIDDLE EAST | Saudi hijack passengers freed".


Media related to Doha International Airport at Wikimedia Commons


На других языках


[de] Flughafen Doha

Der Flughafen Doha (Doha International Airport) war der internationale Verkehrsflughafen in Doha, der Hauptstadt Katars.
- [en] Doha International Airport

[es] Aeropuerto Internacional de Doha

El Aeropuerto Internacional de Doha (IATA: DOH, OACI: OTBD) (en árabe مطار الدوحة الدولى) fue un aeropuerto comercial de Catar. El aeropuerto fue el aeropuerto internacional comercial de Catar, hasta que el 27 de mayo de 2014 abrió el nuevo Aeropuerto Internacional Hamad, a escasos 2 km, debido al aumento del tráfico aéreo comercial. El aeropuerto de Doha tiene una pista, mientras que el nuevo Aeropuerto Internacional Hamad tiene dos pistas

[fr] Ancien aéroport international de Doha

L'aéroport international de Doha (arabe : مطار الدوحة الدولى) (code IATA : DIA • code OACI : OTBD) est un ancien aéroport commercial du Qatar.

[it] Aeroporto Internazionale di Doha

L'Aeroporto Internazionale di Doha (IATA: DIA, ICAO: OTBD) (in arabo: مطار الدوحة الدولى‎) è un aeroporto attualmente in disuso per i voli di linea della città di Doha, capitale del Qatar.

[ru] Доха (аэропорт)

Международный аэропорт До́ха (араб. مطار الدوحة الدولي‎, англ. Doha International Airport), (ИАТА: DIA, ИКАО: OTBD) — бывший гражданский и коммерческий аэропорт. Он находился в столице Катара — Дохе. И был заменён в 2014 году современным Международным аэропортом Хамад. До закрытия аэропорт (наряду с семью другими) имеел рейтинг «три звезды» по версии британской исследовательской компании Skytrax[2].



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