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  2. Following the death of former Spanish Prime Minister, Adolfo Suárez, in 2014, the Spanish Ministry of Public Works and Transport announced [7] that the airport was to be renamed Aeropuerto Adolfo Suárez, Madrid–Barajas. The airport is the primary hub and maintenance base for Iberia and Air Europa.

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  3. In 1965, Barajas changed its name to Aeropuerto de Madrid - Barajas. Jumbo jets "land" in the 70s. In the 1970s, which began with the arrival of Jumbo jets, air traffic doubled to exceed one million passengers a year.

  4. Madrid Barajas MAD Airport was opened in 1933 though the first paved runway was only built in 1944. In 1965 the airport adopted the name it is known by today, Madrid-Barajas Airport, named after the small town near which it was located.

  5. Nov 3, 2021 · Published Nov 3, 2021. Officially called Adolfo Suárez MadridBarajas Airport (MAD) but more commonly known as Madrid Barajas Airport, this is the main airport serving the Spanish capital of Madrid. Size-wise, Madrid Airport is the second largest in Europe after France's Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport (CDG).

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    • Madrid Airport is named after a Spanish politician. Adolfo Suárez was born in Cebreros in the Province of Ávilaon September 25, 1932, to Hipólito Suárez Guerra and Herminia González Prados.
    • Madrid Airport (MAD) is the second-largest airport in Europe. Located 30 minutes from downtown Madrid in the suburb of Barajas, Adolfo Suárez Madrid–Barajas Airport (MAD), by geographical size, is the second-largest airport in Europe after Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport (CDG) in France.
    • Madrid-Barajas Terminal 4. Knowing they needed to look to the future and expand in the late 1990s, Spanish airport operator Aeropuertos Españoles y Navegación Aérea (AENA) announced a competition to design a new terminal.
    • Madrid Airport (MAD) has nine lounges. Once a luxury that was only available to passengers flying on the most expensive tickets or with elite credit card memberships, today, many airport lounges are open to the public for a fee.
  6. Today’s Barajas Airport, serving the new millennium, is light years away from the airport that was opened to air traffic on 22nd April, 1931. Its history can be summed up as follows. At the end of 1933. The Lineas Aereas Postales Españolas began commercial operations flying from Barajas to Barcelona.

  7. Madrid-Barajas Airport (code IATA: MAD, code ICAO: LEMD) is located on the northeast of Madrid, Barajas district, only 12 kilometers from Madrid city centre. The airport changed its name from Madrid-Barajas to Adolfo Suárez Madrid-Barajas in 2014.

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