Nicosia International Airport
0 sources
Nicosia International Airport
Summary
Nicosia International Airport is an international airport[1]. It draws 150 Wikipedia views per month (international_airport category, ranking #386 of 1,156).[2]
Key Facts
- Nicosia International Airport is located in Nicosia[3].
- Nicosia International Airport is in the country of Cyprus[4].
- Nicosia International Airport is in the country of Northern Cyprus[5].
- Nicosia International Airport's instance of is recorded as international airport[6].
- Nicosia International Airport is owned by United Nations Peacekeeping Force in Cyprus[7].
- Nicosia is named after Nicosia International Airport[8].
- Nicosia International Airport's IATA airport code is recorded as NIC[9].
- Nicosia International Airport's ICAO airport code is recorded as LCNC[10].
- Nicosia International Airport's Commons category is recorded as Nicosia International Airport[11].
- Nicosia International Airport's runway is recorded as 14/32[12].
- Nicosia International Airport's runway is recorded as 09/27[13].
- Nicosia International Airport was dissolved in 1977[14].
- Nicosia International Airport's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 35.15, 'lon': 33.277222222222}[15].
- Nicosia International Airport's place served by transport hub is recorded as Nicosia[16].
- Nicosia International Airport's different from is recorded as Ercan International Airport[17].
- Nicosia International Airport sits at an elevation of {'unit': 'Q11573', 'amount': '+220'}[18].
- Nicosia International Airport's aerodrome reference point is recorded as {'lat': 35.15, 'lon': 33.27722222222222}[19].
- Nicosia International Airport's language used is recorded as English[20].
- Nicosia International Airport's language used is recorded as Greek[21].
- Nicosia International Airport's state of use is recorded as decommissioned[22].
Why It Matters
Nicosia International Airport draws 150 Wikipedia views per month (international_airport category, ranking #386 of 1,156).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 24 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23] It is known by 17 alternative names across languages and contexts.[24]