San Vicente Airport (IATA: SWL, ICAO: RPSV) is an airport in San Vicente, Palawan, Philippines. The airport was opened for general aviation flights on 22 June 2017, and opened for commercial flights by the end of 2017.[2] The airport was built to boost tourism in the town and as an alternative to much smaller El Nido Airport.
Travel to this part of northwest Palawan usually takes three hours by land from the provincial capital, Puerto Princesa,[3] located 186 kilometers away.[2] With the airport in operation, travel between Puerto Princesa and San Vicente has been reduced to less than 30 minutes.[4]
Airport construction began in 2009.[2] A ₱ 62.7-million airport development project was initiated in 2012; this project was to include the construction of a passenger terminal, a fire station building and an elevated 2,500-gallon water tank; and runway extension with slope protection and hill obstruction removal.[6] and was supposed to be completed by March 2014 but delayed by an issue with a nearby private property owner. By February 2017, the airport is already accommodating chartered and private flights.[7]
The removal of a hill obstructing the west end of the runway was completed by March 2017[citation needed] using funds from the Department of Tourism's Tourism Infrastructure and Enterprise Zone Authority amounting to ₱ 236 million.[7] The completion of San Vicente Airport was followed by potential investors looking to develop the designated "San Vicente Tourism Economic Zone". The local government at that time already had plans to develop its 14.7 kilometers (9.1 mi) white beach along Imuruan Bay as the "next Boracay".[7]
The airport features a passenger terminal, a fire station building and an elevated 2,500-US-gallon (9,500 L) water tank facility.[6] Its concrete runway measures 1,803 meters (5,915 ft) long and 45 meters (148 ft) wide.[2] The terminal can accommodate 100 people.[5]
^Aeronautical Information and Communications Division (December 2017). "Monthly NOTAM Summary, 12/17"(PDF). Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines. Retrieved 7 December 2017.