
A
huge airport in central Spain that cost one billion euros ($1.5
billion) to build but has not received a commercial flight since 2011
has gone up for auction for just 100 million euros.
With a runway long enough to land an Airbus 380, the world’s largest
airliner, and a capacity to handle 10 million passengers per year, the
airport at Ciudad Real, some 200km south of Madrid, has become a symbol
of Spain’s real estate bubble.
Spain’s first private international airport operated its first flight
in December 2008 but passenger traffic never took off and CR
Aeropuertos, the operator of the terminal, went into bankruptcy in June
2012 with debts of around 300 million euros.
It went up for auction on Monday for a starting price of 100 million
euros to meet creditor demands and the bidding will close on December
27, a spokesman for a commercial court in Ciudad Real which is
overseeing its sale said.
Ciudad Real, a city of around 75,000 residents located halfway
between Madrid and Cordoba, attracts few visitors and the airport was
designed to serve both the Spanish capital and the Andalusian coast
which are both less than an hour away by high-speed rail. The airport,
which reportedly cost around one billion euros to build, had its final
commercial flight, from low-cost airline Vueling, at the end of 2011.
It remained open for another six months to receive a handful of
private arrivals and in 2012 Oscar-winning Spanish director Pedro
Almodovar used it for a week to film part of his latest film I’m So
Excited! about a doomed passenger plane.
Ciudad Real Airport with 4200-metre-long runway, Europe’s longest
Since then the airport’s 4200-metre-long runway, Europe’s longest,
has had to be continually painted with yellow crosses so pilots flying
over the airport will know they cannot land there, according to Spanish
media reports.
Spain, which is gingerly emerging from a double-dip recession sparked
by the implosion in 2008 of a decade-long property bubble that fuelled
overspending on massive infrastructure projects, has the most
international commercial airports of any country in Europe.
Several of the country’s 47 public airports do not have any regular
commercial flights and 15 move less than 100,000 passengers per year, or
less than one flight per day.
Another private airport at Castellon on the Mediterranean coast has fared even worse than the one at Ciudad Real.
It opened in March 2011 but has not handled a single flight. [AAP]
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