Mexico City International Airport
commercial airport that serves Mexico City, capital of Mexico From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Mexico City International Airport (Spanish: Aeropuerto Internacional de la Ciudad de México), known officially as Benito Juárez International Airport (Spanish: Aeropuerto Internacional Benito Juárez), (IATA: MEX, ICAO: MMMX) is the main airport of Mexico City, Mexico. It was named after the 19th century president Benito Juárez in 2006.
Remove ads
Airlines
The following airlines currently go to Mexico City International Airport: [4]
- Aeromar
- Aeroméxico
- Air Canada
- Air France
- Alitalia (starts June 16)
- All Nippon Airways (starts October 30)
- Avianca
- British Airways
- Copa Airlines
- Cubana de Aviacion
- Delta Air Lines
- Iberia
- Interjet
- JetBlue Airways
- KLM Royal Dutch Airlines
- LAN Airlines
- Lufthansa
- Magnicharters
- Southwest Airlines
- TAM Airlines
- United Airlines
- VivaAerobus
- Volaris
Remove ads
Past airlines
These airline used to go to Mexico City International Airport before:
- Aero California
- Aeroflot [5]
- Aeroperu
- Aerolíneas Argentinas
- Aviacsa [6]
- Aviateca
- Avolar [7]
- Braniff International Airways [8]
- Continental Airlines
- CP Air
- Japan Airlines [9]
- LACSA
- Lineas Aereas Azteca
- Mexicana de Aviacion [10]
- Northwest Airlines [11]
- Pan American World Airways [12]
- SARO [13]
- TACA Airlines
- TAESA [14]
- Texas International Airlines
- TWA [15]
- Varig Brazilian Airlines
- Western Airlines [16]
- World Airways
Remove ads
Gallery
- An Air France Boeing 707 at Mexico City in 1968
- TAESA was based at Mexico City International Airport in the 1990s.
- An Aeromexico Boeing 767 at Mexico City. Aeromexico is the largest airline at Mexico City.
- The tarmac at the airport.
- Inside the terminal at the airport
References
Other websites
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads