Vienna Airport (IATA: VIE, ICAO: LOWW) is an international airport serving Vienna, the capital of Austria. It is located in Schwechat, 18 km (11 mi) southeast of central Vienna and 57 kilometres (35 mi) west of Bratislava, the capital of Slovakia. Its name in the Austrian Aeronautical Information Publication is Wien-Schwechat Airport.[2] It is the country's largest airport and serves as the hub for Austrian Airlines as well as a base for low-cost carriers Ryanair and Wizz Air. It is capable of handling wide-body aircraft up to the Airbus A380. The airport features a dense network of European destinations as well as long-haul flights to Asia, North America and Africa.
Vienna Airport Flughafen Wien-Schwechat | |||||||||||||||
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Summary | |||||||||||||||
Airport type | Public | ||||||||||||||
Owner/Operator | Flughafen Wien AG | ||||||||||||||
Serves | |||||||||||||||
Location | Schwechat, Austria | ||||||||||||||
Opened | 1938 | ||||||||||||||
Hub for | Austrian Airlines | ||||||||||||||
Focus city for | Korean Air Cargo | ||||||||||||||
Operating base for | |||||||||||||||
Elevation AMSL | 183 m / 600 ft | ||||||||||||||
Coordinates | 48°06′39″N 016°34′15″E / 48.11083°N 16.57083°E | ||||||||||||||
Website | www | ||||||||||||||
Maps | |||||||||||||||
Airport map | |||||||||||||||
Runways | |||||||||||||||
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Statistics (2023) | |||||||||||||||
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Source: Statistics[1] |
History
editEarly years
editOriginally built as a military airport in 1938 and used during World War II as the Heinkel firm's southern military aircraft design and production complex, or Heinkel-Süd facility, it was taken over by the British in 1945 and became RAF Schwechat under the occupation of the country. In 1954, the Betriebsgesellschaft was founded, and the airport replaced Wien-Aspern Airport as Vienna's (and Austria's) principal aerodrome. There was just one runway, which in 1959 was expanded to measure 3,000 m (9,843 ft). The erection of the new airport building began in 1959.[citation needed]
In 1972, another runway was built. In 1982, the airport was connected to the national motorway network (Ostautobahn). In 1986, the enlarged arrivals hall was opened, and in 1988 Pier East with 8 jet bridges was opened.[citation needed]
On 27 December 1985, the El Al ticket counter was attacked by Abu Nidal, a Palestinian terrorist organization that simultaneously conducted a terrorist attack at Fiumicino Airport in Rome.[3]
Flughafen Wien AG , one of the few publicly traded airport operators in Europe, was privatised in 1992. The state of Lower Austria and the City of Vienna each hold 20% of the shares, the private employee participation foundation holds 10%, with the remaining 50% held privately.[4] The shares are part of the Austrian Traded Index.[citation needed]
In 1992, the new Terminal 1 was opened and a year later the shopping area around the plaza in the transit area of the B, C and D gates was opened. In 1996, Pier West with 12 jetbridges became operational.[citation needed]
Development since the 2000s
editIn 2006, the 109 m (358 ft) tall control tower started operating. It allows a free overview of the entire airport area and offers a night laser show, which aims to welcome the passengers even from the aircraft. From 2004 to 2007, an Office Park had been erected offering 69,000 m2 (740,000 sq ft) of rentable space. A VIP and general aviation terminal, including a separated apron, opened in 2006.[citation needed]
To accommodate future growth, in 1998 Vienna Airport published a master plan that outlined expansion projects until 2015. These projects included a new office park, railway station, cargo center, general aviation center, air traffic control tower, terminal, and runway. Additionally, the plan called for streamlined security control.[5] The centerpiece of the enlargement was the new terminal, dubbed Skylink during its construction. In 2002, the airport's management estimated that building the new terminal will cost €401.79 million.[6] However, costs skyrocketed and in 2009 stood at an estimated €929.5 million.[6] The Austrian Court of Audit then recommended that the airport implement several cost-savings measures, which in the Court's estimate brought down final costs to €849.15 million, still more than double the original plans.[6]
On 5 June 2012, the new Austrian Star Alliance Terminal (Terminal 3, named Skylink during its construction) was opened, which enables the airport to handle up to 30 million passengers per year.[7] Construction started in 2004 and was suspended due to projected cost increases in 2009, but resumed in 2010. The maximum planned costs totaled less than €770 million.[8] Following concerns over the mismanagement of the Skylink project, chief executive Herbert Kaufman agreed to resign at the end of December 2010.[9] The new building with its North Pier has 17 jetbridges and makes the airport capable of handling more aircraft, although the new terminal is not able to handle Airbus A380 aircraft. However, the older Concourse D will see an upgrade to accommodate the A380.[10]
Terminals
editThe airport has four terminal buildings named Terminal 1, 2 and 3 which are directly built against each other as well as the additional Terminal 1A located opposite Terminal 1. Terminals 1, 2 and 3 connect to the five concourses. The central arrivals hall for all terminal areas is located in Terminal 3.[11]
Terminals
edit- Terminal 1 underwent refurbishment in January 2013 and is now mainly used by some Oneworld and SkyTeam airlines along with Turkish Airlines, Ryanair and Wizz Air.[citation needed]
- Terminal 1A, located in a standalone building opposite Terminal 1. It hosted check-in facilities for a number of low-cost carriers and leisure airlines including Condor, SunExpress and Vueling and has been reopened in March 2023 after being closed for nearly three years in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.[12]
- Terminal 2 was refurbished between 2016 and 2022[10] and now features new security screening areas and a revamped baggage reclaim.[13]
- Terminal 3, also referred to as the Austrian Star Alliance Terminal, with its adjoining Concourses F and G is the airport's newest facility. It is used by Austrian Airlines, most Star Alliance members, and a number of other carriers including Emirates, El Al, Korean Air, Royal Jordanian and Qatar Airways. A planned expansion has been postponed indefinitely.[13]
Concourses
edit- Concourse B is in the basement of Concourse C and features Gates B31–B42 (boarding by buses) for Schengen destinations.[11] Since 2021 it was temporarily used to handle non-Schengen bus arrivals. In 2022 it has been refurbished to assume that role permanently.[citation needed]
- Concourse C (pier west) for Schengen destinations; features Gates C21-24) (boarding via buses), C31–C42 (jetbridges) C71–C75 (boarding via buses)[11]
- Concourse D (pier east; formerly Concourse A) for non-Schengen destinations with shared passport control at the entrance of Pier East; features Gates D21–D29 (boarding via jetbridges), D31–D37 (boarding via buses), D61–D70 (buses).[11] Concourse D has been closed and partially refurbished during the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Concourse F (Level 1 of pier north) is used for Schengen destinations and consists of Gates F01-F37 (jetbridges and buses)[11]
- Concourse G (Level 3 and basement of pier north) for non-Schengen destinations; shared passport control at the entrance of Level 3; features Gates G01-G37 (jetbridges and bus gates) and G61-67 (boarding via buses).[11]
Expansion projects
editTerminal 3 expansion
editIn addition to the aforementioned refurbishments of existing passenger facilities, a completely new building is under construction as of early 2024, which is supposed to connect the existing pier east and pier north. The so-called T3 Southern Enlargement will be offering 70,000 m2 (750,000 sq ft) of leisure area and new additional bus gates. The opening had originally been planned for 2023, however, the project had been delayed in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. In January 2023 it was announced that the construction of the new building was then set to start in mid-2023.[13] Construction for the new terminal annex subsequently started in February 2024 with a completion date expected for 2027.[14]
Third runway
editVienna Airport originally projected that it would need a third runway by 2012, or 2016 at the latest, in the event of cooperation with nearby Bratislava Airport.[5] The third runway is planned to be parallel to and south of the existing runway 11/29. It will be designated 11R/29L, with the existing runway being renamed 11L/29R. The new runway is planned to be 3680 m long and 60 m wide, and equipped with a category III instrument landing system in one direction (29L).[15]
Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic the airport projected that a third runway will be necessary by 2025,[16] however, environmental organizations and some local communities oppose construction.[17] These groups have attacked the decision of Lower Austria (the state in which the airport is located) to move ahead with the first phase of construction. A verdict from the administrative court that has taken up the lawsuit was expected later in 2015.[18] As of September 2016, there were ongoing public protests while no legal decision had been made.[19] On 28 March 2018, the Austrian Federal Administrative Court ruled in favour of a third runway.[20][21]
Airlines and destinations
editPassenger
editThe following airlines offer regular scheduled and charter flights at Vienna Airport:
Cargo
editStatistics
editTraffic figures
editGraphs are unavailable due to technical issues. There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki.org. |
Passengers | Change from previous year | Aircraft operations | Change from previous year | Cargo (including road feeder service, metric tons) |
Change from previous year | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2005 | 15,859,050 | 7.26% | 252,988 | 3.42% | 180,066 | 13.77% |
2006 | 16,855,725 | 6.28% | 260,846 | 3.11% | 201,870 | 12.11% |
2007 | 18,768,468 | 11.35% | 280,912 | 7.69% | 205,024 | 1.56% |
2008 | 19,747,289 | 5.22% | 292,740 | 4.21% | 201,364 | 1.79% |
2009 | 18,114,103 | 8.27% | 261,758 | 10.58% | 198,407 | 1.47% |
2010 | 19,691,206 | 8.71% | 265,150 | 1.30% | 231,824 | 16.84% |
2011 | 21,106,292 | 7.19% | 266,865 | 0.65% | 291,313 | 25.66% |
2012 | 22,195,794 | 5.02% | 264,542 | 0.87% | 265,467 | 8.89% |
2013 | 21,999,926 | 0.75% | 250,224 | 5.41% | 268,155 | 1.03% |
2014 | 22,483,158 | 2.20% | 249,989 | 0.09% | 290,116 | 8.19% |
2015 | 22,775,054 | 1.30% | 226,811 | 1.70% | 272,575 | 1.80% |
2016 | 23,352,016 | 2.50% | 226,395 | 0.20% | 282,726 | 3.70% |
2017 | 24,392,805 | 4.50% | 224,568 | 0.80% | 287,692 | 1.90% |
2018 | 27,037,292 | 10.80% | 241,004 | 7.30% | 295,427 | 2.60% |
2019 | 31,662,189 | 17.10% | 266,802 | 10.70% | 283,806 | 3.90% |
2020 | 7,812,938 | 75.32% | 95,880 | 64.06% | 217,888 | 23.23% |
2021 | 10,405,815 | 33.19% | 111,567 | 16.36% | 208,010 | 4.53% |
2022 | 23,682,133 | 127.59% | 188,412 | 68.88% | 208,713 | 0.34% |
2023 | 29,533,186 | 24.70% | 221,095 | 17.3% | 245,009 | 17.39% |
Sources: (Years 2005,[125] 2006,[126] 2007,[127] 2009,[128] 2011,[129] 2012,[130] 2013,[131] and 2014[132], 2015,[133] 2016,[134] 2017,[135] 2018,[136] 2019,[137] 2020,[138] 2021,[139] 2022[140] and 2023[141] |
Busiest routes
editRank | Destination | Passengers |
---|---|---|
1 | Frankfurt | 1,109,585 |
2 | Berlin–Tegel | 966,659 |
3 | Paris–Charles de Gaulle | 944,404 |
4 | Amsterdam | 943,705 |
5 | Zürich | 940,410 |
6 | London–Heathrow | 833,930 |
7 | Düsseldorf | 771,175 |
8 | Hamburg | 720,332 |
9 | Barcelona | 640,052 |
10 | Bucharest | 634,044 |
Rank | Airport | Passengers | Operating airlines |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Tel Aviv | 596,989 | Austrian Airlines, El Al, Wizz Air, Lauda, Malta Air |
2 | Dubai–International | 415,169 | Emirates |
3 | Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi | 340,639 | Austrian Airlines, EVA Air, Thai Airways International |
4 | Taipei–Taoyuan | 301,982 | China Airlines, EVA Air |
5 | Istanbul–Sabiha Gökçen | 299,778 | Pegasus Airlines, AnadoluJet |
6 | Antalya | 273,000 | Austrian Airlines, SunExpress, Lauda, Corendon Airlines |
7 | Doha | 228,502 | Qatar Airways |
8 | Chicago–O'Hare | 163,006 | Austrian Airlines |
9 | Toronto–Pearson | 152,583 | Air Canada |
10 | Cairo | 147,210 | Austrian Airlines, Egyptair |
Ground transportation
editTrain
editThe Vienna S-Bahn line S7 provides a local service to the city centre taking approx. 25 minutes.[143] The more expensive City Airport Train connects the airport directly to Wien Mitte railway station, close to the city centre, in 16 minutes.[144]
Additionally, the underground railway station has been expanded to accommodate long-distance trains. Since December 2014, the first trains passing Vienna's new main station, ICE services from Germany, terminate at the airport. Since December 2015, ÖBB Railjet services operate to the airport as well. Long-distance train rides between the airport and the main station take approx. 15 minutes.
Car
editThe airport lies directly adjacent to motorway A4 which leads from central Vienna to Budapest. It has its own exit named Flughafen Wien-Schwechat. Bratislava can be reached via motorway A6 which splits from the A4 in the east. Taxis and car rental facilities are available at the airport. There are also several taxi companies that operate at the airport.
Bus
editBuses operate from the airport to various places in Vienna and to other cities including Bratislava, Budapest and Brno.[145]
Accidents and incidents
edit- In 1955, a Convair CV-340 crashed on approach to the airport, killing 7 of the 29 passengers and crew on board. This is the last fatal aviation accident to occur at Wien-Schwechat Airport.[146]
- On 27 December 1985, 1985 Rome and Vienna airport attacks[147]
- On 12 July 2000, Hapag-Lloyd Flight 3378 crashed short of the runway at the airport on the final approach of its diverted flight due to fuel exhaustion. There were no fatalities, but the aircraft was damaged beyond repair.[148]
See also
editReferences
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- ^ Allett, Tom (18 June 2012). Cook, Caroline (ed.). "Vienna's Skylink Open for Business". Airports International. Key Publishing. Archived from the original on 8 July 2013. Retrieved 19 December 2023.
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- ^ Gubisch, Michael (16 December 2010). "Vienna Airport chief to resign". FlightGlobal. London. Archived from the original on 3 November 2012. Retrieved 19 December 2023.
- ^ a b "Flughafen Wien: Neues Terminal, neue Strecken" [Vienna Airport: New terminal, new routes] (in German). 30 March 2016. Archived from the original on 4 June 2016. Retrieved 19 December 2023.
- ^ a b c d e f "Flughafenplan" [Airport Map] (PDF). Vienna Airport. Retrieved 29 October 2022.
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- ^ a b c Dichler, Martin (5 June 2021). "Bald kann der Flughafen Wien seine neue Gepäckhalle eröffnen" [Vienna Airport will soon be able to open its new baggage reclaim hall]. aeroTelegraph (in German). Archived from the original on 9 April 2023. Retrieved 19 December 2023.
- ^ presse.wien.gv.at (German) 14 February 2024
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- ^ Airport Council International's 2006 World Airport Traffic Report
- ^ Airport Council International's 2007 World Airport Traffic Report
- ^ Airport Council International Archived 2016-08-11 at the Wayback Machine's 2009 World Airport Traffic Report
- ^ "Trafic Mondial World Traffic 2011" (PDF). Airport Council International. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2015. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
- ^ "Trafic Mondial World Traffic 2012" (PDF). Airport Council International. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2015. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
- ^ "Trafic Mondial World Traffic 2013" (PDF). Airport Council International. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2015. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
- ^ "安全注册" (PDF). haminfo-terminal.com. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
- ^ "Flughafen Wien 2015: Neuer Passagierrekord von 22,8 Mio. (plus 1,3 %) – Optimistischer Ausblick für 2016" (in German). Vienna Airport. 19 January 2016. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
- ^ "Flughafen Wien 2016: Drei Passagierrekorde in einem Jahr – Stärkster Tag, stärkster Monat und erstmals mehr als 23 Mio. Passagiere im Gesamtjahr" (in German). Vienna Airport. 17 January 2017. Retrieved 19 December 2023.
- ^ "Rekordjahr 2017: Flughafen-Wien-Gruppe mit 30,9 Mio. ( 6,9%) Passagieren erstmals über 30 Mio.-Grenze" (in German). Vienna Airport. 16 January 2018. Retrieved 19 December 2023.
- ^ "Flughafen Wien legt stark zu: 2018 passagierstärkstes Jahr in der Geschichte der Flughafen-Wien-Gruppe mit 34,4 Mio. ( 11,3%) Passagieren, erstmals 27 Mio.-Marke am Standort Wien geknackt". Vienna Airport. 22 January 2019.
- ^ "Starkes Passagierwachstum: Flughafen-Wien-Gruppe mit 39,5 Mio. Passagieren ( 15,0%) in 2019, 31,7 Mio. Passagiere ( 17,1%) am Flughafen Wien". Vienna Airport. 21 January 2020. Retrieved 19 December 2023.
- ^ "Excelsheet: Traffic Results Overview" (XLSX). Retrieved 11 March 2021.
- ^ "Kommerzielle Zivilluftfahrt 2021: Passagieraufkommen um 20,3% gestiegen, aber noch immer deutlich unter Vorkrisenniveau" [Commercial civil aviation 2021: Passenger traffic up 20.3%, but still well below pre-crisis levels.] (PDF). Statistics Austria (in German). Bundesanstalt Statistik Österreich. 24 February 2022. Retrieved 1 February 2023.
- ^ "Number of air passengers rose by 137.4 % in 2022" (PDF). Statistics Austria. Bundesanstalt Statistik Österreich. 24 February 2023. Retrieved 7 April 2023.
- ^ "Viennaairport - Press Releases & News". www.viennaairport.com. 18 January 2024. Retrieved 18 January 2024.
- ^ a b "Air passenger transport between the main airports of Austria and their main partner airports (routes data)". Eurostat. Archived from the original on 13 April 2021. Retrieved 19 December 2023.
- ^ "Bahnverbindungen". Vienna Airport. Retrieved 2 June 2015.
- ^ "City Airport Train/ CAT". Vienna Airport. Retrieved 2 June 2015.
- ^ "Vienna Airport". Slovak Lines. Retrieved 8 February 2020.
- ^ "ASN Aircraft accident Convair CV-340-58". Aviation Safety Network. 10 October 1955. Retrieved 5 October 2023.
- ^ "Twin Attacks at the Airports of Vienna and Rome (Dec. 27, 1985)". Israeli Security Agency. Archived from the original on 2 July 2018. Retrieved 19 December 2023.
- ^ "ASN Aircraft accident Airbus A310-304". Aviation Safety Network. 12 July 2000. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
External links
edit Media related to Vienna International Airport at Wikimedia Commons
Vienna International Airport travel guide from Wikivoyage