About Antiguo Aeropuerto

## Antiguo Aeropuerto, Punto Fijo (Falcón, Venezuela): What It Is, Where It Sits, and How It Came To Be At-a-glance: - Type: Urban sector (“sector/urbanización”) - City: Punto Fijo, Paraguaná Peninsula, Falcón State, Venezuela - Approx. coordinates: 11.7203164, -70.1918991 - Why the name? Built over the grounds of Punto Fijo’s former Las Piedras airfield; not the current commercial airport. --- ### What “Antiguo Aeropuerto” actually refers to Despite the aviation-sounding name, Antiguo Aeropuerto is a residential/urban sector of Punto Fijo, not an operating airport. The name traces to the former Las Piedras airfield that once occupied this part of the city; the neighborhood later grew on those lands. Municipal/encyclopedic listings recognize “Barrio/Urbanización Antiguo Aeropuerto” among Punto Fijo’s sectors, and local documentation explicitly notes the name derives from building over the earlier airfield site. You may still see the sector referenced in local news posts or community updates because it’s a well-known neighborhood identifier in Punto Fijo. The usage is current and common in social and municipal contexts. --- ### Key geography & orientation - City context: Antiguo Aeropuerto lies within Punto Fijo, the largest city on the Paraguaná Peninsula. The peninsula itself is connected to mainland Falcón by an isthmus and road links toward Coro and Médanos de Coro National Park. - Neighborhood status: Reference lists of Punto Fijo’s sectors show “Sector Antiguo Aeropuerto” (subdivided into multiple sub-sectors), plus an entry for “Barrio Antiguo Aeropuerto”—reinforcing that this is an inhabited urban area rather than an aviation facility. --- ### A concise history: from airstrip to urban sector - Early origins: Community accounts describe the area’s roots as an early airfield in the 1940s—sometimes called “Campo Espinoso”—used in Punto Fijo’s formative decades as oil activity drew workers and infrastructure to Paraguaná. These sources frame it as the first aviation field for the city. (Note: these are local historical recollections rather than formal city archives.) - Name inheritance: Later neighborhood growth reclaimed those lands, and the moniker “Antiguo Aeropuerto”—literally, “Old Airport”—stuck. A community development document states plainly that the urbanization was built where the “Aeropuerto Las Piedras” used to be, which is why the sector carries the name. Important distinction today: The current commercial airport serving Punto Fijo is Josefa Camejo International (IATA: LSP) in Las Piedras/Los Taques Municipality, several kilometers away. It is an operational airport with a 2,800-meter runway (09/27). Do not confuse it with the Antiguo Aeropuerto neighborhood. --- ### Practical traveler notes #### 1) Navigation & naming clarity When asking for directions, specify “Sector Antiguo Aeropuerto (Punto Fijo)” to avoid drivers or apps assuming you want the Josefa Camejo (LSP) airport in Las Piedras. The sector name is widely used in local wayfinding and social updates. #### 2) What you’ll actually find Expect a lived-in urban district rather than a heritage museum or preserved runway. Official lists and community documents identify it as a populated sector; there isn’t a formal attraction tied to aviation remains within the neighborhood itself documented in authoritative sources. If your interest is strictly aviation, aim for LSP (Josefa Camejo) or aviation history research; Antiguo Aeropuerto is effectively city fabric today. #### 3) Wider area context Punto Fijo sits on a peninsula known for oil-industry history and desert-coastal scenery. Travelers often pair time in the city with a road trip toward Coro and the Médanos de Coro dunes via the modern highway across the isthmus. This is region-level context, but it helps plan routing around Paraguaná. --- ### Getting there (and getting around) - By air: Fly into Josefa Camejo International (LSP)—the operational airport for Punto Fijo and Paraguaná. From there, road transport (taxi or private driver) brings you into the city and to Antiguo Aeropuerto. (Facilities and scheduled routes have varied over time; verify current flights and services before travel.) - By road: The city is connected with Coro via a highway spanning the isthmus, offering dune views—useful if you’re combining Paraguaná with mainland Falcón. --- ### Nearby points of interest (regional) While Antiguo Aeropuerto itself is a neighborhood, travelers often anchor in Punto Fijo to explore: - Médanos de Coro National Park (dunes): Striking sand-dune fields near Coro, reached via the isthmus highway mentioned above. (Plan as a separate excursion from Punto Fijo.) - Josefa Camejo International Airport (LSP): Aviation spotters sometimes note the airport’s regional role and runway specs; keep in mind this is the current airport, not the old airfield implied by the neighborhood name. --- ### Data notes & accuracy flags - Neighborhood vs. airport: “Antiguo Aeropuerto” is not an active airport. It’s a sector name rooted in the site’s historic airfield usage. This distinction is clear in sector lists and in community documentation. - Historic claims: The 1940s airfield/Campo Espinoso references come from community and social posts rather than formal municipal archives. Treat them as local oral history; specifics (dates, exact facilities) may warrant on-the-ground archival verification. - Operational airport today: For flights, planning, and ground transfers, rely on data for Josefa Camejo (LSP). Route maps and schedules in Venezuela can change frequently; verify current operations with carriers or airport sources before booking. - Local conditions: Social clips periodically reference the “sector Antiguo Aeropuerto” in the context of weather or street conditions. These are time-bound snapshots; do not assume permanence. Confirm locally if conditions affect your visit. --- ### Responsible travel & inclusivity Punto Fijo is a working city with diverse communities. If your route takes you through Antiguo Aeropuerto, respect residential privacy, ask before photographing people or private property, and support small businesses when possible. This is not a set-piece attraction; it’s a neighborhood whose name preserves a layer of city memory. --- ### Bottom line - Go for: City context and orientation inside Punto Fijo; understanding where the “old airport” name comes from. - Don’t expect: A formal museum or preserved runway on site. - Do verify: Current flight operations at LSP and any city conditions that could affect transit. --- ### Sources & further reading - Sector listings identifying Antiguo Aeropuerto as a Punto Fijo neighborhood/urbanization (with sub-sectors). - Community documentation noting the urbanization was built on the former “Aeropuerto Las Piedras” grounds. - Regional context and highway connection toward Coro and Médanos de Coro. - Current operational airport for the region: Josefa Camejo International (LSP)—location, runway, and role. Note: Only verifiable, cited facts are included above. Anecdotal or community-sourced historical details are labeled as such.

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Updated April 15, 2024

## Antiguo Aeropuerto, Punto Fijo (Falcón, Venezuela): What It Is, Where It Sits, and How It Came To Be

At-a-glance:
– Type: Urban sector (“sector/urbanización”)
– City: Punto Fijo, Paraguaná Peninsula, Falcón State, Venezuela
– Approx. coordinates: 11.7203164, -70.1918991
– Why the name? Built over the grounds of Punto Fijo’s former Las Piedras airfield; not the current commercial airport.

### What “Antiguo Aeropuerto” actually refers to

Despite the aviation-sounding name, Antiguo Aeropuerto is a residential/urban sector of Punto Fijo, not an operating airport. The name traces to the former Las Piedras airfield that once occupied this part of the city; the neighborhood later grew on those lands. Municipal/encyclopedic listings recognize “Barrio/Urbanización Antiguo Aeropuerto” among Punto Fijo’s sectors, and local documentation explicitly notes the name derives from building over the earlier airfield site.

You may still see the sector referenced in local news posts or community updates because it’s a well-known neighborhood identifier in Punto Fijo. The usage is current and common in social and municipal contexts.

### Key geography & orientation

– City context: Antiguo Aeropuerto lies within Punto Fijo, the largest city on the Paraguaná Peninsula. The peninsula itself is connected to mainland Falcón by an isthmus and road links toward Coro and Médanos de Coro National Park.
– Neighborhood status: Reference lists of Punto Fijo’s sectors show “Sector Antiguo Aeropuerto” (subdivided into multiple sub-sectors), plus an entry for “Barrio Antiguo Aeropuerto”—reinforcing that this is an inhabited urban area rather than an aviation facility.

### A concise history: from airstrip to urban sector

– Early origins: Community accounts describe the area’s roots as an early airfield in the 1940s—sometimes called “Campo Espinoso”—used in Punto Fijo’s formative decades as oil activity drew workers and infrastructure to Paraguaná. These sources frame it as the first aviation field for the city. (Note: these are local historical recollections rather than formal city archives.)
– Name inheritance: Later neighborhood growth reclaimed those lands, and the moniker “Antiguo Aeropuerto”—literally, “Old Airport”—stuck. A community development document states plainly that the urbanization was built where the “Aeropuerto Las Piedras” used to be, which is why the sector carries the name.

Important distinction today: The current commercial airport serving Punto Fijo is Josefa Camejo International (IATA: LSP) in Las Piedras/Los Taques Municipality, several kilometers away. It is an operational airport with a 2,800-meter runway (09/27). Do not confuse it with the Antiguo Aeropuerto neighborhood.

### Practical traveler notes

#### 1) Navigation & naming clarity
When asking for directions, specify “Sector Antiguo Aeropuerto (Punto Fijo)” to avoid drivers or apps assuming you want the Josefa Camejo (LSP) airport in Las Piedras. The sector name is widely used in local wayfinding and social updates.

#### 2) What you’ll actually find
Expect a lived-in urban district rather than a heritage museum or preserved runway. Official lists and community documents identify it as a populated sector; there isn’t a formal attraction tied to aviation remains within the neighborhood itself documented in authoritative sources. If your interest is strictly aviation, aim for LSP (Josefa Camejo) or aviation history research; Antiguo Aeropuerto is effectively city fabric today.

#### 3) Wider area context
Punto Fijo sits on a peninsula known for oil-industry history and desert-coastal scenery. Travelers often pair time in the city with a road trip toward Coro and the Médanos de Coro dunes via the modern highway across the isthmus. This is region-level context, but it helps plan routing around Paraguaná.

### Getting there (and getting around)

– By air: Fly into Josefa Camejo International (LSP)—the operational airport for Punto Fijo and Paraguaná. From there, road transport (taxi or private driver) brings you into the city and to Antiguo Aeropuerto. (Facilities and scheduled routes have varied over time; verify current flights and services before travel.)
– By road: The city is connected with Coro via a highway spanning the isthmus, offering dune views—useful if you’re combining Paraguaná with mainland Falcón.

### Nearby points of interest (regional)

While Antiguo Aeropuerto itself is a neighborhood, travelers often anchor in Punto Fijo to explore:

– Médanos de Coro National Park (dunes): Striking sand-dune fields near Coro, reached via the isthmus highway mentioned above. (Plan as a separate excursion from Punto Fijo.)
– Josefa Camejo International Airport (LSP): Aviation spotters sometimes note the airport’s regional role and runway specs; keep in mind this is the current airport, not the old airfield implied by the neighborhood name.

### Data notes & accuracy flags

– Neighborhood vs. airport: “Antiguo Aeropuerto” is not an active airport. It’s a sector name rooted in the site’s historic airfield usage. This distinction is clear in sector lists and in community documentation.
– Historic claims: The 1940s airfield/Campo Espinoso references come from community and social posts rather than formal municipal archives. Treat them as local oral history; specifics (dates, exact facilities) may warrant on-the-ground archival verification.
– Operational airport today: For flights, planning, and ground transfers, rely on data for Josefa Camejo (LSP). Route maps and schedules in Venezuela can change frequently; verify current operations with carriers or airport sources before booking.
– Local conditions: Social clips periodically reference the “sector Antiguo Aeropuerto” in the context of weather or street conditions. These are time-bound snapshots; do not assume permanence. Confirm locally if conditions affect your visit.

### Responsible travel & inclusivity

Punto Fijo is a working city with diverse communities. If your route takes you through Antiguo Aeropuerto, respect residential privacy, ask before photographing people or private property, and support small businesses when possible. This is not a set-piece attraction; it’s a neighborhood whose name preserves a layer of city memory.

### Bottom line

– Go for: City context and orientation inside Punto Fijo; understanding where the “old airport” name comes from.
– Don’t expect: A formal museum or preserved runway on site.
– Do verify: Current flight operations at LSP and any city conditions that could affect transit.

### Sources & further reading
– Sector listings identifying Antiguo Aeropuerto as a Punto Fijo neighborhood/urbanization (with sub-sectors).
– Community documentation noting the urbanization was built on the former “Aeropuerto Las Piedras” grounds.
– Regional context and highway connection toward Coro and Médanos de Coro.
– Current operational airport for the region: Josefa Camejo International (LSP)—location, runway, and role.

Note: Only verifiable, cited facts are included above. Anecdotal or community-sourced historical details are labeled as such.

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