
Ciudad Real International Airport, in Spain, reopened earlier this year after being abandoned since 2012. The airport first opened in 2008 but ceased operations after filing for bankruptcy in April 2012, when it became Spain's “ghost airport".
The abandoned airfield was used for long-term aircraft storage until the airport’s operator announced its reopening under new ownership and the return of passenger flights in 2026. The managing director of Ciudad Real International Airport, Rafael Gómez Arribas, explained that the airport will be operating only private flights, mainly from Europe and the United States.
The Spanish airport reportedly cost €1billion (£864million) to build and was originally designed to be Madrid's second-largest airport.
However, Ciudad Real Airport failed as a commercial hub mainly because of its remote location, 150 miles from the capital.
Interestingly, the airport has one of Europe’s longest runways, a massive 4,100-metre-long runway built to accommodate the world's largest commercial plane, the Airbus A380.
It was originally named Don Quixote Airport after the famous fictional character from the Spanish novel Don Quixote.
During the Covid pandemic, it served as a temporary parking hub for grounded aircraft from major European airlines.
After closing down in 2012, large yellow crosses had to be painted over the runway. These serve as a visual warning for pilots to indicate that the airport is closed and the runway is unfit for landing.
Express.co.uk has contacted Ciudad Real International Airport for comment