Avianca Flight 011 was a Boeing 747-200BM Combi on an international scheduled passenger flight from Frankfurt to Bogotá via Paris, Madrid, and Caracas that crashed near Madrid on 27 November 1983. It took off from Charles de Gaulle Airport in Paris at 22:25 on 26 November 1983 for Madrid Barajas Airport; take-off was delayed waiting for additional passengers from a Lufthansa flight due to a cancellation of the Paris-Frankfurt-Paris segment by Avianca for operational reasons.

During the instrument landing system (ILS) approach to runway 33, the 747 crashed on a hill approximately southeast of the airport, killing 181 people, including 19 on-duty and four off-duty crew members. The 11 surviving passengers were seriously injured. The cause of the accident was judged to be pilot error, the captain having incorrectly determined the position of the plane. As of 2025, Avianca Flight 011 remains the second-deadliest aviation accident in Spanish territory (the deadliest being the Tenerife airport disaster), the deadliest accident in mainland Spain, the deadliest crash involving a single aircraft in Spain and the deadliest accident in the history of Avianca.

Background

thumb|left|The aircraft involved during its assembly in 1977

The aircraft involved was a Boeing 747-200BM Combi that first flew in 1977 and was delivered to Scandinavian Airlines System the same year. The aircraft was registered as LN-RNA and was named Magnus Viking. It was leased to Avianca in 1982 and re-registered as HK-2910X. The aircraft was nicknamed Olafo by the airline's employees. The aircraft was powered by four GE CF6 turbofan engines and was 6.3 years old at the time of the accident.

The captain was 58-year-old Tulio Hernández, who was one of Avianca's most experienced pilots, having been with the airline for 32 years. He had logged a total of 23,215 flight hours, including 2,432 hours on the Boeing 747.

The flight engineer was 57-year-old Juan Laverde, another one of Avianca's veteran pilots, who had been with the airline for 25 years and had 15,942 flight hours. He was the most experienced on the Boeing 747, having logged 3,676 hours on it.

Accident

It was night at the time of the accident. The meteorological conditions just before the crash consisted of a visibility of , and the wind was calm. Of the injured, nine were ejected from the airplane, a few of them still in their seats, and two claimed to have exited the aircraft by themselves. The aircraft was destroyed by the impact and ensuing fire.

Notable people killed

Victims include several notable people invited to the Colombian Government's First meeting on Hispanoamerican culture (). Other notable victims were named in the New York Times.

See also

  • Korean Air Flight 801
  • American Airlines Flight 965
  • Air Inter Flight 148
  • List of accidents and incidents involving commercial aircraft
  • Prinair Flight 277
  • Madrid runway disaster – another Spanish Aviation incident that occurred only 10 days later

Notes

References

  • Civil Aviation Accident and Incident Investigation Commission
  • Report from the Ministry of Infrastructures, Spain .
  • Transcript of the cockpit voice recorder (CVR)