Surabaya, ID 🇮🇩 Closed Airport
ICAO
ID-0338
IATA
-
Elevation
9 ft
Region
ID-JI
Local Time
Loading...
Loading...GPS Code: Not available
Local Code: Not available
Location: -7.217473° N, 112.712343° E
Continent: Asia
Type: Closed Airport
Help fellow travelers by sharing your experience at Tanjung Perak Airport. Tips are reviewed before publishing.
See what travelers are saying about Tanjung Perak Airport from online reviews
AI-generated summary based on publicly available traveler reviews
Researching traveler experiences online...
No community tips yet for Tanjung Perak Airport.
Be the first to share a helpful tip for fellow travelers!
Loading weather data...
| Designation | Length | Width | Surface | Status |
|---|
| Type | Description | Frequency |
|---|
Not Applicable. There are no official records of a formal airport with the name 'Tanjung Perak Airport' or ICAO code 'ID-0338' ever operating. The designation appears to be erroneous.
Not Applicable. The site was never an airport. The provided coordinates correspond to the Port of Tanjung Perak, which has been a major seaport for over a century. The location was developed for maritime trade, not aviation.
The site is the active and fully operational Port of Tanjung Perak. It is one of Indonesia's busiest and most important seaports, handling massive volumes of container, passenger, and inter-island cargo traffic. The area consists of container terminals, docks, passenger ferry terminals, and extensive industrial and logistics infrastructure.
The specified location has immense historical significance, but as a seaport, not an airport. The Port of Tanjung Perak has been the primary maritime gateway to eastern Indonesia since the Dutch colonial era. While Surabaya has a rich aviation history, it is centered on other locations, such as the Morokrembangan Naval Air Station (a former seaplane base) and the current Juanda International Airport (SUB/WARR), which replaced the older Perak Airfield that was located further inland.
None. The concept of 'reopening' is not valid as the facility was never an airport. The site is critical national infrastructure as a seaport, and there are no plans, prospects, or feasibility for converting this vital maritime hub into an airport.