Amman Civil Airport


Amman Civil Airport , commonly known as Marka International Airport , is located in Marka district, Greater Amman Municipality, Jordan, some northeast of Amman's city centre.
Amman Civil Airport served as Amman's main airport from 1950 until 1983, when Queen Alia International Airport replaced it. Scheduled commercial passenger flights are set to resume in 2026, and it serves as Amman's main airport for general aviation. It also is an aviation education and training hub and hosts air freight operations. It serves as the home base for Arab Wings and Jordan International Air Cargo, and the Jordan Airports Company is headquartered at the airport.

History

The airport was founded in 1950 by the British as a joint military-civilian airport. It served as Jordan's main civilian airport until Queen Alia International Airport opened in 1983. In its military capacity, it served as base for the Royal Air Force.
It first hosted RAF units in 1920.
RAF squadron based here included:
In 2009, Jordan Airports Company officially assumed managerial and operational responsibility for Amman Civil Airport. In coordination with specialised international consultants, the company prepared a comprehensive master plan for Amman Civil Airport, which includes several capital projects, and began the implementation of the first phase of the master plan to develop the facilities at the airport. As of 2012, several infrastructure and air side projects to modernise the airport had begun.

Airlines and destinations

Accidents and incidents

  • On 30 June 1973, Aeroflot Flight 512, a Tupolev Tu-134A, registration CCCP-65668, overran the runway on takeoff from the airport, traveled down the slope of a ravine, struck trees and a one-story concrete building beyond the runway threshold, and broke into three parts, killing two crew members and seven people in the building. The other five crew members and all 78 passengers survived. Investigators determined that the crash occurred because the captain mistakenly believed that one engine had failed and the airliner's speed was dropping — in fact, both engines were working properly — and decided to abort the takeoff at a speed of.