What is the best airport name you have come across

Steady

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I’ve been in South Africa the last week and I have been thinking how good, dare I say cool the Durban airport name is: “King Shaka International Airport” (pronounced Sharka) IMO it beats names like Sydney’s “[Sir Charles] Kingston Smith”, or Paris “Charles de Gaulle” no offence meant to the 2nd two gentlemen

It got me thinking that I don’t fly anywhere near as much and as far flung places as other AFFers, what is the best airport name others have come across?

[edited] SYD name
 
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Ouagadougou Thomas Sankara International Airport

Any name with Ouagadougou in it is a winner for me 🙂

BTW, when I went through there, they were renovating the terminal but that didn’t stop them having people inside. Stripped back to the concrete piers, electrical is hanging out everywhere, just dodge the piles of rubble as we went through the place.
 
Thought DUD for Dunedin was pretty good.

Just saw that Leh is IXL, Kushok Bakula Rimpochee Airport. It wasn’t that excelling when I was their in 1983 or there abouts…..
 
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Florence has one small airport, Amerigo Vespucci Airport. The second closest airport is the Pisa Airport, Galileo Galilei. Plus Leonardo DaVince fumicino, Marco Polo for Venice, Genova Christoforo Columbo.
 
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There's John Wayne (SNA) in Orange County and Hollywood Burbank (BUR) used to be called Bob Hope. Louisville (SDF) is Muhammed Ali.
 
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Tangential to this topic.

What are the names of Brisbane and Adelaide airports other then the city name? (BNE is not Eagle Farm).
 
Tangential to this topic.

What are the names of Brisbane and Adelaide airports other than the city name? (BNE is not Eagle Farm).

The new Brisbane airport doesn’t have a name other than Brisbane International.

The old airport was named Eagle Farm and considering some parts remain and were incorporated into the new airport (part of the old runway is now a taxiway), a lot of people still call it Eagle Farm.

I do think Eagle Farm was a great name for an airport.

Of course naming your airport just after the city has some problems - just ask SFO who has threatened to sue OAK if they go ahead renaming their airport “San Francisco Bay Oakland International“
 
I’ve been in South Africa the last week and I have been thinking how good, dare I say cool the Durban airport name is: “King Shaka International Airport” (pronounced Sharka) IMO it beats names like Sydney’s “Kingston Smith”, or Paris “Charles de Gaulle” no offence meant to the 2nd two gentlemen

It got me thinking that I don’t fly anywhere near as much and as far flung places as other AFFers, what is the best airport name others have come across?
LOL so bad we can't even get the name right... "Kingsford Smith", as in Sir Charles Kingsford Smith.

Doesn't matter - I don't even know if it is an official name, but nearly no one calls SYD that, especially in Australia.

Might change once Badgery's Creek opens up...
Tangential to this topic.

What are the names of Brisbane and Adelaide airports other then the city name? (BNE is not Eagle Farm).
They don't have one.

Australia... we just don't do airport names. The only examples that spring to mind are Ayres Rock Airport sometimes being called Connollan Airport, Gold Coast Airport sometimes being called Coolloongatta Airport, Sunshine Coast / Maroochydore and Ballina / Byron Bay.

This is in contrast to some countries, e.g. Philippines, where many airports are named after people and they are not afraid at all to name them fully as such in common speech. In fact, MNL or Ninoy Aquino International Airport is so commonplace that if you hopped into a taxi, you probably would be more conversant if you said, "I need to go to NAIA (pronounced 'nah-ee-ah')" rather than "Manila airport". Same goes in Vietnam (Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi) and Argentina (Buenos Aires).

Then again, MUC is named after Franz Josef Strauss, but it is very, very rarely addressed as such. But across the same country, you have the infamous, beleaguered Berlin "Willy Brandt" Brandenburg Airport.

Many airport "names" are really just required to differentiate them from other airports serving the same city or area, and are typically taken from the area name they are situated in, e.g. Tokyo Narita vs Tokyo Haneda, or Seoul Incheon vs Seoul Gimpo. Two big exceptions that come to mind are New York (Newark, La Guardia and John F Kennedy) and Bangkok (Don Meuang and Suvarnabhumi).
 
LOL so bad we can't even get the name right... "Kingsford Smith", as in Sir Charles Kingsford Smith.

Doesn't matter - I don't even know if it is an official name, but nearly no one calls SYD that, especially in Australia.
I actually thought it was Sir Kingsford Smith, I googled “SYD” and the first result was Kingsford Smith airport so went with that…… hopefully not too many were actually offended
 

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