The early years Prior to
World War II,
Zandery Airport was a
Pan American World Airways (PAA) stop. In 1928, PAA started mail flights from
Miami to
Paramaribo, the capital of the then Dutch colony
Suriname. PAA used
Sikorsky S-38 amphibians. Rich and famous Americans, mostly aviators, visited
Suriname. On 24 March 1934, female pilot Guggenheim and male pilot Russel Thaw had to make an emergency landing near the Nieuwe Haven, because they could not find Zanderij airfield. The
Lockheed airplane was so severely damaged that it was shipped back to the
United States. On 16 April 1934, female aviator
Laura Ingalls landed in a single engine airplane, the
Lockheed Air Express at Zanderij in the first solo flight around
South America in a landplane. The
KLM tri-motor
Fokker F.XVIII, named the
Snip (Snipe), made a trans-atlantic crossing from
Amsterdam via
Paramaribo to
Curaçao, carrying mail. The trip of 12,200 km (more than 4,000 over water) landed eight days after take-off from
Schiphol, on 22 December 1934, at
Hato Airport. The captain was J.J. Hongdong, co-pilot/navigator J.J. van Balkom, engineer L.D. Stolk, and wireless operator S. v.d. Molen. The route was from Amsterdam via Marseille, Alicante, Casablanca, Cabo Verde, Paramaribo and Caracas. The
Snip landed at Zanderij Field on 20 December 1934, after a first trans-Atlantic crossing of 3600 km, dubbed "the Christmas Mail-flight", directly from Porto
Praia. However, the flight did not inaugurate a regular KLM trans-Atlantic service. In January 1937
William Henry Vanderbilt III landed in a baby Clipper
Sikorsky S-38 at Zanderij with wife and friends
The Flying Hutchinsons. On 3 June 1937, aviation pioneer
Amelia Earhart landed at Zanderij with a
Lockheed Model 10 Electra at local time 2:38 P.M. The navigator was a retired
PAA aviator
Fred Noonan. This was on their second attempt of a "world flight" en route from
Miami to
Natal and then transatlantic to
Dakar,
Senegal. They stayed overnight at the Palace Hotel in Paramaribo and left Zanderij again on Friday 4 June 1937 for
Fortaleza,
Brazil. One month later they
disappeared over the central
Pacific Ocean near
Howland Island. On 16 March 1938, pilots
Whitney and Harmon made an emergency landing with their Beechcraft on an airstrip near the Eerste Rijweg. They could not find Zanderij Airfield. In 1938, the
KLM started a weekly service between
Paramaribo and
Willemstad (
Curaçao) with a twin engined
Lockheed L-14 Super Electra able to carry 12 passengers and named
MEEUW (PJ-AIM). Mail arrived much faster at Curaçao than with PAA, but the service was not a commercial success. On 11 May 1939,
The Flying Hutchinsons arrived at Zanderij in a twin engine
Lockheed Electra, on their "family round-the-world global nations flight", which was broadcast on a radio series sponsored by
Pepsi Cola. ===Expansion during
World War II by the US Armed Forces=== After the fall of the
Netherlands to
German forces in 1940, the United States obtained military basing rights to the airport from the Netherlands government-in-exile in
London.
Suriname was then the world's principal source of
bauxite (for
aluminium production) and needed protection. The first American armed forces arrived at the airport on 30 November 1941, and expanded the facilities to be a transport base for sending
Lend-Lease supplies to
England via air routes across the South
Atlantic Ocean. The runways were constructed by the US Corps of Engineers. They also built the road from
Onverwacht to Zanderij which was completed in 1942. With the United States' entry into the war in December 1941, the importance of Zandery Field increased drastically, becoming a major transport base on the South Atlantic route of
Air Transport Command ferrying supplies and personnel to
Freetown Airport,
Sierra Leone, and onwards to the European and African theaters of the war. In addition, antisubmarine patrols were flown from the airfield over the southern Caribbean and South Atlantic coastlines. Major
United States Army Air Force (USAAF) units assigned to the airfield were: •
35th Bombardment Squadron (
25th Bombardment Group) 1 November 1941 – 7 October 1943 (
B-25 Mitchell) : Detachment operated from:
Atkinson Field,
British Guiana, 1 November 1942 – 7 October 1943 : Detachment operated from:
Piarco Airport,
Trinidad, 27 August – 12 October 1943 •
99th Bombardment Squadron (
9th Bombardment Group), 3 December 1941 – 31 October 1942 (
B-18 Bolo) •
22nd Fighter Squadron (
36th Fighter Group), 16 September 1942 – 16 February 1943 (
P-39 Airacobras, later
P-47 Thunderbolts) •
23d Antisubmarine Squadron (Trinidad Detachment,
Antilles Air Command), 15 August – December 1943 (
A-29 Hudson) Just before the
Pearl Harbor attack, on 3 December, the 99th Squadron was ordered to distant Zandery Field,
Dutch Guiana (by way of
Piarco Field,
Trinidad, under an agreement with the Netherlands government-in-exile, by which the
United States occupied the colony to protect
bauxite mines. However, to the disappointment of the crews, the squadron had to leave its
B-17 behind. It was, however, reinforced with additional
B-18A Bolos, bringing squadron strength up to six aircraft. On 2 October 1942, a B-18A, piloted by Captain Howard Burhanna Jr. of the 99th Bomb Squadron, depth charged and sank the north of
Cayenne,
French Guiana. At Zandery, the unit shuttled from Zandery to Atkinson Field,
British Guiana, and, by January 1942, had eight
Curtiss P-40C Warhawks assigned. The P-40s were, in actuality, detached for airfield defense by the Trinidad Base Command, under which the 99th fell at the time. The intensive flying of the first two months of the war soon took its toll, however, and by the end of February 1942, the Squadron was forced to report that it had but three B-18As operational at Zandery and that " ... none of them are airworthy at this time." Apparently the unit was quickly reinforced, and by 1 March, strength was back up to six aircraft, and seven combat crews, all of whom had more than 12 months' experience. Operations from Zandery Field consisted of coastal, convoy and anti-submarine patrols until 31 October 1942, just prior to which time the 4th Antisubmarine Squadron was attached to the Squadron between 9 and 16 October. At this point, Antisubmarine Command took over the mission of the 99th and the men and the aircraft of the squadron were reassigned. In the middle of World War II, on 2 November 1943, Her Royal Highness
Princess Juliana visited Suriname from
Canada. She landed at Zanderij in a
KLM Lockheed Model 14 Super Electra PJ-AIM
Meeuw as the first ever member of the
Dutch royal family to visit Suriname. After the landing of the
Meeuw and escorting Dutch and US military planes, the Royal Princess was welcomed by
Governor Kielstra and inspected the
guard of honour. With the end of World War II, Zandery Airfield was reduced in scope to a skeleton staff. It was closed as a military facility on 30 April 1946, and on 22 October 1947, the Zandery Air Force Base was turned over to Dutch authorities which returned it to a civil airport. At that time, the value of the facility was estimated to be 400,000
Surinamese guilders (
Sƒ).
Highlights in the years after the second World War In March 1947, Alfredo de Los Rios landed with an
8-F Luscombe plane at
Zanderij. He had traveled from the aircraft factory in
Dallas,
Texas, in the United States. In June 1959, pilots and missionaries Robert Price and Eugene Friesen arrived at Zandery with a single engine plane during
Operation Grasshopper. They performed much medical treatment work in the interior and the
Sipaliwini Savanna. On 3 March 1960, American president
Dwight D. Eisenhower landed at Zanderij on board
Air Force One operated by the
U.S. Air Force with a
Boeing 707 jetliner. He was accompanied by
Secretary of State Christian Herter. They left Suriname the same day. On 14 April 1967, American president
Lyndon B. Johnson arrived during a rainstorm at Zanderij on board
Air Force One, a
Boeing 707 jet. Security was tight around Zanderij Airport. An agreement was signed by the Dutch government and the US to use Zanderij Airport for
Military Airlift Command (MAC) purposes. The USA paid US$22,000 for 400 landings per year. The crews stayed overnight at the Torarica Hotel. The
North American X-15 NASA rocket-powered aircraft was on exhibition at Zanderij Airport for an
airshow held from 8 to 13 November 1963. On 7 April 1972, the first-ever
Boeing 747 wide-body jetliner to land in South America, operated by
KLM Royal Dutch Airlines, landed at Zanderij Airport, Suriname. With one of the longest runways in the Caribbean region, it served the
Antonov An-225 Mriya – the world's largest cargo plane in 2010. The airport is officially named after the popular Surinamese politician and former
Prime Minister of Suriname,
Johan Adolf Pengel, but is locally still called
Zanderij. This is parallel to the small village and savannah where it is situated. The airport now has one runway of approximately 3.5 km This is achieved mainly on transatlantic flights between Paramaribo and
Amsterdam by
KLM,
TUI fly Netherlands and
Surinam Airways, and some regional flights to
Belém,
Georgetown,
Cayenne,
Panama City and
Miami by
Trans Guyana Airways with their
Beechcraft 1900D,
Copa Airlines,
Gol and Surinam Airways with their
Boeing 737's as well as flights to the Caribbean island destinations of
Aruba,
Curacao,
Havana,
Santiago de Cuba and
Port of Spain accommodated by
Caribbean Airlines, besides local companies
Fly All Ways and Surinam Airways. Cargo flights are performed by
Amerijet International and
Northern Air Cargo.
Future The state will invest an extra US$70 million in expanding and modernizing the J.A. Pengel Airport. US$28.5 million has been invested so far in the airport's modernization. For the time being, the arrival lounge, commercial center and parking lot have been handed over, while the runway has been repaved, the platform for planes has been renovated, the runway lights on the arrival side have been replaced and a backup system for electricity has been installed. This was all done prior to the 30 August 2013
UNASUR heads-of-state summit, hosted by Suriname. The project, which was prepared during the previous administration, is insufficient to actually turn the airport into an international hub. The departure and arrival lounges are currently apart from each other, but plans are to connect them in the future with airbridges. Lights were placed on the departure side of the runway, and the platform was expanded to accommodate more planes. The fire department barracks were moved to a more central location. Plans are to have the airbridges installed in the future, while the other matters were finished by 2017. The expansion of the airport will not only include the construction of a new terminal, but also the construction of a 2.7 km taxiway that will run parallel to the long 3.5 km runway. The total investment involves an amount of approximately US$205 million, and approval for the loan agreement was to be put forward to the National Assembly (DNA) of the Surinamese government by airport management mid-2019. The new airport terminal with a much more capacious arrival and departure hall is planned for the near future, the result of investment from China, as the current airport terminal cannot facilitate an increasing number of passengers while the Johan Adolf Pengel International Airport is making a continuous effort in route development management to attract more airlines. Suriname is looking into new markets through bilateral and open-skies agreements with different countries. ==Airlines and destinations==