Vitoria Airport
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Vitoria Airport (Template:Comma separated entries) is an airport near Vitoria-Gasteiz, in the Basque Country of Spain. It is locally known as Foronda Airport due to its proximity to the hamlet of Foronda.[1] The airport has one terminal with 3 gates, 7 check-in counters and 16 stands for medium and light aircraft, and a 3.5 km long CAT II/III runway.[2][3]
History
Foundation and early years
Before the current airport was built, Vitoria-Gasteiz was served by an Template:Ill. In 1970, due to the demographic growth of the city, the local chamber of commerce urged the Template:Ill to study the establishment of regular passenger flights. Due to the inadequacy of the existing infrastructure, preliminary studies for a new airport began in 1972. The 1976 project called for a Template:Convert runway, but eventually a Template:Convert runway was built.[4] The construction, which started in 1977, required the demolition of Template:Ill, a hamlet which would have been too close to the runway threshold. The airport opened on 16 February 1980.[5]
The provincial government, which had funded the construction, had envisioned the airport as the main gateway to the Basque Country. However, the initial offer of regular flights soon declined due to nearby Bilbao Airport being located closer to the main population centers.[5] DHL opened a logistics center at the airport in 1995.
Development since 2000
A new cargo terminal was inaugurated in 2006.[6]
In 2006 Ryanair began daily flights from London Stansted Airport,[7] a year later it started operating flights from Dublin Airport.[8] The airline left the airport in October 2007.[9] Air Nostrum terminated its two daily flights to Madrid in March 2011, leaving the airport without regular flights.[10] Helitt operated flights to Barcelona from October 2012 to January 2013,[11] but no other airline operated regular flights to Vitoria until 2017.[12] During this time, scheduled passenger flights were limited to charter operations during the summer season.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". During the summer of 2015, Air Nostrum offered flights to Palma de Mallorca, Mahón and Jerez.[1]Template:Importance inline
However, in 2016, Ryanair announced its return to Vitoria in March 2017 with year-round services to Bergamo and Tenerife.[12] In October 2017, twice-weekly flights to Cologne/Bonn and Seville were added,[13] with the aim of reaching 115,000 passengers per year.[14] Flights to Mallorca were added in April 2019,[15] at the same time Ryanair announced plans to expand their service to the airport by 40%, with the goal of reaching 160,000 passengers.[16] In October 2020, Ryanair decided to reinforce domestic routes by adding a twice-weekly connection to Alicante.[17] Ryanair's commercial contract was renovated in 2020, and a new route to Charleroi was added in April 2021.[18] Binter Canarias started operating flights to Gran Canaria and Tenerife in July 2020.[19] Binter's route to Tenerife was terminated in March 2022,[20] while the remaining one to Gran Canaria ended in October 2023.[21]
As of 2023, Vitoria was the fourth airport in Spain by cargo traffic.[22]
Airlines and destinations
Passenger
The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights at Vitoria Airport: Template:Airport-dest-list
Cargo
Statistics
In 2019, the airport served Template:Nts passengers (37% international, 63% domestic), operated Template:Nts flights and processed Template:Nts tons of cargo.[3] The airport served Template:Nts passengers in 2022 (the highest number since 1993) and processed Template:Nts tons of cargo, the highest number in the airport's history.[23][24] Template:Historical populations Template:Historical populations
Public transport
- A bus line operated by La Unión connects the airport with the city. The line operates only when regular flights arrive or depart.[25][26]
- Starting in 2025, a bus line will connect the airport with Vitoria-Gasteiz, Bilbao and Bilbao Airport.[27][28]
Accidents and incidents
- On 19 May 1995, a Convair CV-580 operated by Swiftair made a wheels-up landing during a training flight. All four occupants survived, but the aircraft was damaged beyond repair.[29]
Notes
References
External links
Template:Portalbar Template:Airports in Spain
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