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Francisco Bangoy International Airport

Coordinates:07°07′31″N125°38′45″E / 7.12528°N 125.64583°E /7.12528; 125.64583
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Airport serving Davao, Philippines

"DVO" redirects here. For other uses, seeDVO (disambiguation).
Francisco Bangoy International Airport
Tugpahanang Pangkalibutanon sa Francisco Bangoy
Paliparang Pandaigdig ng Francisco Bangoy
The airport in January 2018 as viewed from across the runway
Summary
Airport typePublic
Owner/OperatorDavao International Airport Authority
ServesMetro Davao
LocationBarangay Sasa, Buhangin,Davao City,Philippines
OpenedAugust 25, 1958; 67 years ago (1958-08-25)
Hub for
Operating base forCebu Pacific
Time zonePHT (UTC+08:00)
Elevation AMSL29 m / 96 ft
Coordinates07°07′31″N125°38′45″E / 7.12528°N 125.64583°E /7.12528; 125.64583
Maps
Map
DVO/RPMD is located in Mindanao mainland
DVO/RPMD
DVO/RPMD
Show map of Mindanao mainland
DVO/RPMD is located in Philippines
DVO/RPMD
DVO/RPMD
Show map of Philippines
Runways
DirectionLengthSurface
mft
05/233,0009,843Asphalt concrete
Statistics (2023)
Passengers3,844,895
Increase 38.82%
Aircraft movements24,993
Increase 30.30%
Cargo (in kg)45,194,773
Increase 25.19%
Source: CAAP[1]

Francisco Bangoy International Airport (IATA:DVO,ICAO:RPMD), also known asDavao International Airport, is the mainairport servingDavao City andDavao Region in thePhilippines. Serving as the main gateway toMindanao, it is the busiest airport on the island and thethird busiest in thePhilippines in 2022.

History

[edit]

Early history

[edit]

The site of the airport began operations in the 1940s asSasa Landing Field with a donation of land in barangay Sasa, located in Buhangin district of Davao City, by Don Francisco Bangoy, the then-current patriarch of an influential family that founded and settled in Davao alongside Don Jose Uyanguren. At the time it began operation, the airport merely consisted of a 1,200-meter (3,900 ft) unpaved grass runway andquonset huts serving as terminal buildings. At the time, and throughout much of the 1940s and the early 1950s, bothPhilippine Air Lines and thePhilippine Air Force provided air service to the city.[2]

As a civil aviation airport

[edit]
Old airport terminal

The Davao (Sasa) Airport was opened forcivil aviation on August 25, 1958.[3] It initially consisted of a new 1,500-meter (4,900 ft) long by 30-meter (98 ft) wide concrete runway and a 200-meter (660 ft) long by 60-meter (200 ft) wide apron. The grass airstrip was later converted as a taxiway forgeneral aviation.[4]

By 1959, the complex consisted of a smallcontrol tower and several low-rise buildings. On June 19, 1960,Republic Act No. 2762 was enacted which renamed the airport toFrancisco Bangoy Airport in honor of the late Don Francisco Bangoy.[5] Right of way and access to the terminal buildings and the airport were improved through further donation of land by Paciano Bangoy, Francisco's son, during the latter stages of Paciano's gubernatorial term. In 1970, the runway was extended and widened to 2,000 meters (6,600 ft) and 36 meters (118 ft), respectively, while the apron was widened to 100 meters (330 ft). Five years later, the runway was further extended and widened to 2,500 meters (8,200 ft) and to the current 45 meters (148 ft), respectively.[4]

Construction for a new terminal designed by Filipino architectLeandro Locsin began in 1976. It was designed to handle a million passengers annually and was completed in 1980. The project, in addition to runway expansions, was funded during the term of then-Congressman Manuel Garcia, whose congressional district covers the airport perimeter.[2]Airbus A300 operations byPhilippine Airlines started on September 1, 1989, marking the first widebody service to the city. The first scheduled international passenger service started on April 29, 1992, with the inauguration ofBouraq Airlines flights toManado,Indonesia.[4] After the launch of scheduled international flights to Davao, regular flights toKota Kinabalu,Malaysia[6] andSingapore were also commenced byMalaysia Airlines in 1996 andSilkAir in 1997, respectively.[7][8]

Expansion

[edit]

Rapid growth at the airport precipitated the construction of a15 million interim international terminal beside the airport's then-existing terminal,[2] and then eventually a new, larger terminal building that would consolidate the two existing terminals. In planning since 1992, construction began in 2000 and was subsequently inaugurated on December 2, 2003, with a capacity double that of the old airport terminal. The construction of the new ₱2.7 billion building was funded by both theAsian Development Bank (ADB) and theEuropean Investment Bank (EIB).[2] The modernization and upgrading of the airport facilities aim to make Davao as a hub for tourism and foreign investment in the region. Development was funded by aUS$40 million loan from the ADB, co-financed by the EIB for twenty-five millionECUs, and through budgetary allocations from the government. The total cost of the project amounted to US$128 million.

As part of the modernization of the airport, the runway was once again extended to the current 3,000 meters (9,800 ft) in 2001 to accommodate future international flights.[9]

Contemporary history

[edit]

On November 12, 2007,Cebu Pacific announced the airport as its thirdhub.[10] Likewise, Philippine Airlines announced the airport as its third hub on March 26, 2018.[11]

In June 2015, the Mindanao Development Authority announced its plans to turn the 1980–2003 airport terminal into a trade and cultural museum.[12]

Republic Act No. 11457, also known as theCharter of the Davao International Airport Authority, was approved on August 30, 2019, creating and establishing the Davao International Airport Authority, which will manage all airports in the Davao Region, including the Francisco Bangoy International Airport.[13]

Future developments

[edit]
A night shot of the Davao airport ramp during rush hour

The airport was slated for upgrading in 2016, but the project was shelved.[14] In 2017, an expansion project of the airport was announced.[15]Udenna Corporation submitted an unsolicited proposal in 2018 and received the original proponent status by the Department of Transportation in that year.[14] The initial expansion and upgrading project aimed to include the expansion of the existing passenger terminal building, landside and airside developments, construction of a parallel taxiway, and the introduction of new technologies.[14]

However, as of 2025, the Francisco Bangoy International Airport Project is now moving forward under a new public-private partnership (PPP) initiative led by the Davao International Airport Consortium.[16] The Davao International Airport Authority (DIAA) is currently evaluating a ₱12.9 billion proposal to upgrade, expand, operate, and maintain the airport under a Rehabilitate-Operate-Transfer (ROT) model.

The new expansion plan involves two key phases. Phase 1 includes the expansion and renovation of the passenger terminal building, upgrades to the existing cargo terminal, the construction of a fire station, the apron and parking lot expansion, the installation of a parallel taxiway, and the expansion of passenger access roads; while Phase 2 includes the further passenger terminal building expansion, the construction of a new cargo terminal, the additional apron and parking lot expansion, and the enhancement of ground support equipment (GSE) roads. As of January 27, 2025, the Davao International Airport Authority (DIAA) informed the proponent that it will proceed with the detailed evaluation of the proposal.[16] The PPP Center endorsed the project to the DIAA on January 16, 2025, after determining its completeness under Section 10 of the PPP Code.

Structure

[edit]

Terminal

[edit]
Front side of the terminal building

The current passenger terminal is a Malay architecture-inspired building which is four times larger than the old terminal. It is a two-level terminal building with an area of approximately 65,000 square meters (700,000 sq ft). It is fully computerized, more secure and has more commercial spaces for concessionaires at approximately 9,000 square meters (97,000 sq ft) of gross leasable area. It has four (4) jetbridges for passenger boarding. It has a Flight Information Display System andclosed-circuit television system complementing the terminal's security system. It is designed to handle approximately 4 million passengers annually. The added capacity is complemented by the latest navigational, security, and baggage handling equipment.[9]

The terminal has 14 domestic and 14 international check-in counters that can handle a steady flow of passenger traffic. The check-in counters are equipped with electronic weighing scales and conveyors and itsbaggage handling system is also computerized. It has two arrival areas, for domestic and international flights, with two baggage conveyors each. The cargo terminal building covers almost 5,580 square meters (60,100 sq ft) and can handle up to 84,600 tonnes (83,300 long tons; 93,300 short tons) of cargo annually.[9]

Runway

[edit]
Runway

The airport has a single 3,000-meter (9,800 ft) long by 45-meter (148 ft) wide runway that can handle basically all passenger wide-bodied aircraft, including theAirbus A380. Complementing the runway are two (2) turning pads at each end of it, which help aircraft make a backtrack. The installation of a newinstrument landing system (ILS) for both Runways 05 and 23 upgraded its compliance toInternational Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) operating category-Precision Approach Category 1. It can accommodate 8 to 10 aircraft landings per hour, depending on size and has the equivalent 9 gate holding areas for those aircraft. The airport has two dual access taxiways. Taxiways A3 and A4 are used to access the new ramp and terminal; taxiways B and C are used for access to the old airport ramp.[17]

TheAntonov An-124 is, by far, the largest aircraft to land at the airport. It is the fourth largest aircraft in the world, next to theBoeing 747-8.

Other structures

[edit]

Besides the main terminal building, there are also new support facilities like the administration building, airfield maintenance building, central plant building, hangar formilitary andtraining aircraft, and anARFF building. It has an 800-slot car parking area and four slots for shuttle buses. It has a 3-megawatt (4,000 hp) standbypower generator.

Airlines and destinations

[edit]

Passenger

[edit]
AirlinesDestinations
CebgoCagayan de Oro,[18]Iloilo (resumes March 29, 2026),[19]Siargao[18]
Cebu PacificBacolod,[18]Bangkok–Don Mueang,[18]Caticlan,[18]Cebu,[18]Clark,[18]Hong Kong,[18]Iloilo,[18]Manila,[18]Puerto Princesa,[18]Tacloban,[18]Tagbilaran,[18]Zamboanga[18]
PAL ExpressCebu,[20]Manila,[21]Tagbilaran[21]
Philippine AirlinesManila[21]
Philippines AirAsiaCebu[22]
Qatar AirwaysDoha[23]
ScootSingapore[24]
VietJet AirSeasonal charter:Da Nang[25]

Cargo

[edit]
AirlinesDestinations
JD AirlinesShenzhen[24]
MJets AirMacau[24]
Royal Air PhilippinesNanning[24]
Destination maps
Domestic destinations from Francisco Bangoy International Airport
  Passenger + cargo
  Passenger only
  Cargo only
  Future
  Seasonal/charter
International destinations from Francisco Bangoy International Airport
  Passenger + cargo
  Passenger only
  Cargo only
  Future
  Seasonal/charter

Statistics

[edit]

Data from theCivil Aviation Authority of the Philippines (CAAP).[26][27][28]

PassengersYear01,000,0002,000,0003,000,0004,000,0005,000,000200020052010201520202025PassengersAnnual passenger traffic
YearPassenger movementsAircraft movementsCargo movements (in kg)
DomesticInternationalTotal% changeDomesticInternationalTotal% changeDomesticInternationalTotal% change
2001937,75113,306951,057Steady12,73046813,198Steady39,406,6676,844,06746,250,734Steady
2002961,99014,441976,431Increase 2.6711,42246011,882Decrease 9.9744,380,4693,51944,383,988Decrease 4.04
2003742,43613,185755,621Decrease 22.618,9684809,448Decrease 20.4830,779,2231,65430,780,877Decrease 30.65
20041,128,65322,5731,151,226Increase 52.3511,36663412,000Increase 27.0141,972,43741,972,437Increase 36.36
20051,322,06424,9711,347,035Increase 17.0111,96871812,686Increase 5.7270,372,16770,372,167Increase 67.66
20061,307,63534,1791,341,814Decrease 0.3912,9201,03413,954Increase 10.0040,753,48740,753,487Decrease 42.09
20071,502,60052,6221,555,222Increase 15.9013,7781,12614,904Increase 6.8145,516,84315,45545,532,298Increase 11.73
20081,646,34746,5301,692,877Increase 8.8515,41478016,194Increase 8.6653,287,64214,93153,302,573Increase 17.0
20091,935,45432,4961,967,950Increase 16.259,3162839,599Decrease 40.7234,172,21084,42934,256,639Decrease 35.73
20102,207,68421,4932,229,177Increase 13.279,6922199,911Increase 3.2540,568,63163,19540,631,826Increase 18.61
20112,364,97225,1672,390,139Increase 7.2210,23823910,477Increase 5.7134,772,20651,77134,823,977Decrease 14.29
20122,923,32739,9162,963,243Increase 23.9825,46063426,094Increase 149.0642,118,39167,39242,185,783Increase 21.14
20132,773,69133,5382,807,229Decrease 5.2629,10453629,640Increase 13.5949,757,17771,84149,829,018Increase 18.12
20143,408,48743,9923,452,479Increase 22.9922,82269423,516Decrease 20.6653,714,15576,34753,790,502Increase 7.95
20154,099,13150,9744,150,105Increase 20.2126,05875826,816Increase 14.0359,737,24477,06259,814,306Increase 11.20
20163,462,11991,0823,553,201Decrease 14.3832,5711,18633,757Increase 25.8853,590,10168,40053,658,501Decrease 10.29
20174,140,75793,9104,234,667Increase 19.1836,0942,39938,493Increase 14.0357,594,657159,34257,753,999Increase 7.63
20184,288,408147,1494,435,557Increase 4.7442,7401,59544,335Increase 15.1878,824,575145,26278,969,837Increase 36.73
20194,303,903186,1834,490,086Increase 1.2342,2811,75944,040Decrease 0.6766,767,439181,76266,949,201Decrease 15.22
2020955,82433,265989,089Decrease 77.9716,32937016,699Decrease 62.0833,881,73544,38533,926,120Decrease 49.33
2021561,88912,015573,904Decrease 41.986,1771236,300Decrease 62.2730,089,418470,03530,559,453Decrease 9.92
20222,689,26180,2852,769,546Increase 382.5818,1371,04419,181Increase 204.4635,166,751934,14136,100,892Increase 18.13
20233,714,825130,0703,844,895Increase 38.8223,6751,31824,993Increase 30.3044,989,027205,74645,194,773Increase 25.19

An em dash (—) is used when data fromCAAP is not available.

Access and transportation

[edit]
TheDavao River Bridge, part of the Carlos P. Garcia National Highway

The airport is connected to the city via theCarlos P. Garcia National Highway. The four-laned La Verna-Mamay Bypass Road was constructed and finished in 2017 near the airport to decongest traffic going from Mamay road to the airport and beyond and vice versa, by avoiding the usually busy intersection of Mamay Road and the Carlos P. Garcia National Highway. To avoid widening a road, which would displace houses and creep onto the airport's site, the road splits into two for 600 meters then merges back. It has a length of 1.7 kilometers, and is able to accommodate 1,000 vehicles per day.[29]

The plannedDavao City Expressway will further connect the airport to the city via a diamond interchange. If it goes according to plan, the entire project will be completed in 2026.[30]

Accidents and incidents

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Aircraft, Passenger, and Cargo Movements"(PDF).Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on December 27, 2021. RetrievedFebruary 3, 2022.
  2. ^abcdAjero, Antonio M. (December 1, 2003)."Nonoy Garcia, Elias Lopez and other airport tales".SunStar.Sun.Star Davao. Archived fromthe original on December 21, 2003. RetrievedDecember 14, 2008.
  3. ^"Speech of President Garcia during the inaugural ceremonies of the opening of Davao Airport, held at 9:30 a.m., August 25, 1958".Official Gazette.
  4. ^abc"2.4.1 National Development Plan"(PDF). Japan International Cooperation Agency. March 1993.
  5. ^"Republic Act No. 2762".Senate Legislative Digital Resources. RetrievedNovember 6, 2022.
  6. ^"Malaysia Airlines March 30, 1997 Route Map".DepartedFlights. RetrievedJanuary 17, 2025.
  7. ^"MALAYSIA AIRLINES TIMETABLE 1996".Pinterest. RetrievedNovember 18, 2022.
  8. ^"SilkAir marks 20th year in Davao".Sunstar Davao. February 21, 2017. RetrievedNovember 18, 2022.
  9. ^abc"Upgraded Davao City International Airport Is Ready for More Passengers and Bigger Aircraft". Archived fromthe original on July 5, 2009.
  10. ^"Cebu Pacific to make Davao its 3rd hub" (Press release). Cebu Pacific. November 12, 2007. Archived fromthe original on November 17, 2007. RetrievedNovember 12, 2007.
  11. ^Cayon, Manuel (March 26, 2018)."Hong Kong, Bangkok eyed for next foreign route of PAL's Davao hub".BusinessMirror.
  12. ^Francisco, Carmelito Q. (June 16, 2015)."Old Davao airport set for conversion to trade hall".BusinessWorld. RetrievedNovember 17, 2022.
  13. ^"Duterte approves creation of Davao International Airport Authority".Philippine Daily Inquirer. September 10, 2019. RetrievedSeptember 14, 2019.
  14. ^abcMellejor, Lilian (April 4, 2019)."Udenna eyes Davao airport project".Philippine News Agency. RetrievedNovember 17, 2022.
  15. ^"With more people going to Davao, expansion of international airport gets a boost".Interaksyon. August 3, 2017. RetrievedNovember 16, 2022.
  16. ^ab"Francisco Bangoy International Airport Project | PPP Center".ppp.gov.ph. RetrievedFebruary 13, 2025.
  17. ^"Airports – Davao Int'l Airport". CAAP. Archived fromthe original on August 29, 2012. RetrievedSeptember 1, 2012.
  18. ^abcdefghijklmnRosales, Elijah Felice (November 4, 2024)."Cebu Pacific hikes Davao seats to 289K". The Philippine Star.
  19. ^"Cebgo to commence five Iloilo services from Mar-2026". Centre for Aviation. February 5, 2026.
  20. ^Cruz, Hazel Jane (September 26, 2025)."Local airline launches nonstop Cebu-Guam flights". GMA Network.
  21. ^abcCaseñas, Emma (November 11, 2021)."PAL to resume regular flights between Bohol, Davao". Bohol Chronicle.
  22. ^Marc Romyel, Difuntorum (August 31, 2025)."AirAsia Philippines Relaunches Flights Out of Cebu".Aviation Updates Philippines.
  23. ^Romero, Maria Bernadette (June 30, 2025)."New PAL-Qatar codeshare connects Doha". Daily Tribune.
  24. ^abcdColina, Antonio IV (January 9, 2026)."PH eyes revival of flights between Davao and Manado, Kuala Lumpur". MindaNews.
  25. ^Alama, Rudolph (January 12, 2026)."Booming Davao-Danang chartered flights seen as step toward regular direct service".Philippine Information Agency.
  26. ^Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines (July 23, 2018)."Yearly Passenger, Cargo and Aircraft Movements of all airports in the Philippines 1997-2017".Republic of the Philippines - Freedom of Information Portal. RetrievedAugust 13, 2018.
  27. ^"Statistics | Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines". Archived fromthe original on May 11, 2020.
  28. ^Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines."Aircraft, Passenger, and Cargo Movements". RetrievedSeptember 23, 2024.
  29. ^Alama, Rudolph Ian (June 29, 2018)."New bypass road opens in Davao City".Philippine Information Agency. RetrievedNovember 30, 2019.
  30. ^"Project description"(PDF). eia.emb.gov.ph. 2019. RetrievedMarch 23, 2020.
  31. ^"Air disaster timeline".BBC News. November 30, 2007. RetrievedJuly 16, 2012.
  32. ^"Accident description".Aviation Safety Network. May 19, 2000. RetrievedJuly 16, 2012.
  33. ^"Philippines airport bomb kills 18 – March 4, 2013".
  34. ^"Hercules goes down in Davao Gulf; 9 missing".Philippine Daily Inquirer. August 27, 2008. Archived fromthe original on October 24, 2008. RetrievedJuly 16, 2012.
  35. ^Ranter, Harro."ASN Aircraft accident Lockheed L-100-20 Hercules 4593 Barangay Bukana, San Pedro Extension, Davao City".aviation-safety.net. RetrievedMay 29, 2017.
  36. ^"US Navy ship to help locate crashed C-130".Philippine Daily Inquirer. Cebu Daily News. August 30, 2008. Archived fromthe original on November 22, 2008. RetrievedJuly 16, 2012.
  37. ^Manlupig, Karlos (June 2, 2013)."Cebu Pacific plane overshoots Davao airport runway".Rappler. RetrievedJune 3, 2013.

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