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Campo de Mayo Airport

Airports in Buenos Aires ProvinceArgentine airport stubs

Campo de Mayo Airport (ICAO: SADO) is a military airport located near San Miguel, Buenos Aires, Argentina. The airport is within a 36 square kilometres (14 sq mi) military reservation surrounded by urban areas in the northwest suburbs of Buenos Aires. Approach and departure will be over densely populated areas. Runway length includes 65 metres (213 ft) paved overruns on both ends. The El Palomar VOR-DME (Ident: PAL) is located 5.5 nautical miles (10 km) south-southeast of the airport. The El Palomar non-directional beacon (Ident: L) is located 4.0 nautical miles (7 km) to the southeast. The Mariano Mareno VOR-DME (Ident: ENO) is located 6.1 nautical miles (11 km) west-southwest of Campo de Mayo.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Campo de Mayo Airport (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Campo de Mayo Airport
General Julio Argentino Roca,

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Wikipedia: Campo de Mayo AirportContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -34.534722222222 ° E -58.672222222222 °
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Address

Aeródromo de Campo de Mayo

General Julio Argentino Roca
1659
Buenos Aires, Argentina
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San Miguel, Buenos Aires
San Miguel, Buenos Aires

San Miguel is a city in the northwest region of Greater Buenos Aires, 30 km from the City of Buenos Aires. San Miguel is the county seat of San Miguel Partido, and has been a part of Greater Buenos Aires since the early 2000s. The number of inhabitants was 157,532 according to the 2001 census. Part of a vast estancia estate owned by General Ángel Pacheco, San Miguel was founded as San José del Pilar by a French Argentine agronomist, Adolfo Sourdeaux, on May 18, 1864. Part of Pilar Partido initially, the town was renamed San Miguel after the former district was subdivided shortly afterward. A Buenos Aires-Pacific Railway line was built along the town in 1870, and its first schools were opened at that time as part of President Domingo Sarmiento's program for education in Argentina. The town was designated as county seat for the newly created General Sarmiento Partido in 1889, and was in turn made the county seat for San Miguel Partido when the former was subdivided in 1994. San Miguel's transition from a rural community to that of a suburban bedroom community with high-rise buildings has caused it to lose its village character and strained its infrastructure. The largely service-oriented economy is complemented by industries such as the IPH steel cable facility.Cable television provider TeleRed broadcasts from San Miguel, covering audiences in most of the Greater Buenos Aires. Its programming includes a local Catholic channel, Señal Santa Marìa, which offers family-friendly content plus religious programmes, mostly from EWTN. San Miguel is home to a number of educational institutions, including the National University of General Sarmiento and the parochial Colegio Máximo de San José, from which Jorge Bergoglio (the future Pope Francis) obtained a degree in philosophy.San Miguel has numerous bus lines running through the center and is served with several stations by the San Martin and Urquiza commuter railroad lines, which provide easy access to Buenos Aires.