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Undid revision 470751936 by Snoozlepet (talk) we are already in 2012
year unnecessary - @snoozlepet: no consensus was reached in the discussion, so it remains that if the year can be induced, ie. if the route starts in less than one year and one day, then there is no need to include the year
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|[[Air Mauritius]] |Mauritius | 1B
|[[Air Mauritius]] |Mauritius | 1B
|[[Air Moldova]] |Chişinău | 1B
|[[Air Moldova]] |Chişinău | 1B
|[[Air One]]| Bari, Brindisi, Catania, Lamezia Terme, London-Gatwick [begins 25 March 2012], Munich [begins 25 March 2012], Naples, Palermo, Prague, Trapani, Warsaw [begins 1 June 2012] <br> '''Seasonal''': Alghero, Corfu, Herakliòn, Ibiza, Minorca, Olbia, Palma de Mallorca, Rhodes | 1A
|[[Air One]]| Bari, Brindisi, Catania, Lamezia Terme, London-Gatwick [begins 25 March], Munich [begins 25 March], Naples, Palermo, Prague, Trapani, Warsaw [begins 1 June] <br> '''Seasonal''': Alghero, Corfu, Herakliòn, Ibiza, Minorca, Olbia, Palma de Mallorca, Rhodes | 1A
|Air One|Tirana, Tunis | 1B
|Air One|Tirana, Tunis | 1B
|[[Air Seychelles]] |Mahé [ends 13 January] | 1B
|[[Air Seychelles]] |Mahé [ends 13 January] | 1B

Revision as of 14:43, 11 January 2012

Milan Malpensa Airport
"City of Milan"

Aeroporto di Milano-Malpensa
"Città di Milano"
File:LogoSea.png
Summary
Airport typePublic
OperatorSocietà Enti Aeroportuali (SEA) Aeroporti di Milano
ServesMilan
LocationSomma Lombardo, Italy
Elevation AMSL768 ft / 234 m
Websitewww.milanomalpensa1.eu
Map
MXP is located in Italy
MXP
MXP
Location within Italy
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
17L/35R 3,920 12,861 Asphalt
17R/35L 3,920 12,861 Asphalt
Statistics (2010)
Passengers18,947,808
Source: Italian AIP at EUROCONTROL[1]

Milano Malpensa Airport "City of Milan" (IATA: MXP, ICAO: LIMC), former "Aeroporto Città di Busto Arsizio" [2] is Milan's largest airport. It is located 39.97 km (24.83 mi) northwest[1] of central Milan, Italy. It is one of 3 airports in the Milan metropolitan area.

The airport is in the Province of Varese, within the communes of Cardano al Campo, Somma Lombardo, Casorate Sempione, Ferno, Lonate Pozzolo, Samarate, and Vizzola Ticino.[citation needed] The airport is connected to Milan by the Milano-Varese highway as well as by the "Malpensa Express" train starting from the Milan Cadorna railway station (LeNord regional railways) and taking about 40 minutes. It is also connected to Linate Airport by a scheduled bus service and by Milan's local transportation. The Milan airport system has a third international airport, Orio al Serio Airport, which serves low-cost traffic.[citation needed]

Malpensa was the 21st busiest airport in Europe in terms of passengers, handling 18,947,808 passengers in 2010.[3] As of early 2008, Malpensa remains the top Italian airport in terms of international traffic, together with Rome Leonardo da Vinci-Fiumicino Airport in terms of total passengers. As far as hub transit passengers are concerned it is also the second airport in Italy after Rome, according to ASSAEROPORTI traffic data. It is also the leading air freight gateway to Italy. Malpensa serves a population of over 15 million inhabitants.

EasyJet has a dedicated Terminal (T2) and Malpensa is the company's biggest base outside the UK.

In 2008 Lufthansa announced plans to create its first Hub outside Germany, and its fourth European hub, at Milan Malpensa airport.[4] In October 2008, Lufthansa set up its Italian division, Lufthansa Italia. Operations commenced on 2 February 2009, and ceased on October 30, 2011 as Lufthansa abandoned plans to create a hub at Malpensa airport.

Malpensa has two terminals and a third runway has been announced, with completion set for 2012.[5] There is also a dedicated cargo terminal called "CargoCity", which currently handles over 410,000 tons of yearly traffic.

Ground handling

Ground handling services have been slowly deregulated and have seen SEA (the airport authority) create SEA Handling and the arrival of private handler ATA Handling. ATA Handling provides all services apart from bus transport to/from aircraft (originally subcontracted to SEA Handling, now subcontracted to Air Pullman) and disabled assistance. Up to 2001 all ground handling services were provided by SEA and TWA. In the first few years of deregulation some airlines put their own staff for customer assistance but Air One and British Airways realised that it was too expensive and so dismissed them. United Airlines stopped flying to Malpensa. To date the only airline with its own check-in staff remains KLM. Passenger handling is provided by SEA Handling, ATA Handling, Aviapartner, Globeground Italia and ICTS Italia. Ramp services are provided by SEA Handling, ATA and recently Aviapartner. SEA Handling provides 80% of ramp services mostly thanks to its major customer Alitalia.

In May 2006, Italy's Civil Aviation Authority took off the limitation of two ramp handlers. Aviapartner and ARE Group announced that they would create a new company called Aviapartner (owned 51% by Aviapartner and 49% ARE Group) to serve Milan Malpensa and Rome Fiumicino. There are fears that luggage mishandling will go up.

Aviapartner has started operating serving Iberia flights and signing more contracts as time has gone on. However, SEA Handling maintains a dominant position and is reorganising itself to be more competitive by going from a monopolistic mentality to free market one.

Security services

Airport security services were transferred in 2000 from the Polizia di Stato (State Police) to SEA which created an internal division called SEA Airport Security. Up to 2002, SEA was assisted by IVRI in providing security services but the contract was not renewed. SEA Airport Security is supervised by Polizia di Stato (Italian State Police), Guardia di Finanza (Italian Military Customs Police) and Ente Nazionale Aviazione Civile (Italy's Civil Aviation Authority). Carabinieri supervise ramp entrance. Furthermore some airlines rely on private security companies (such as ICTS Italia, SEA Airport Security, Gruppo Sicurezza etc.) to provide ID check and airplane guarding.

Terminals, airlines and destinations

Malpensa has two terminals:

Terminal 1
  • will be divided into three sections:
    • 1A, which handles domestic and intra-Schengen flights
    • 1B, which handles non-Schengen and all intercontinental flights
    • 1C, which is currently under construction
  • Volareweb.com, when it existed, had its head office in the Area Tecnica Sud, in Terminal 1 and in Ferno[6]
Terminal 2
  • is used by Low Cost Carriers (currently only EasyJet). Previously Terminal 2 was also used for charter services. Charter flights are now operated from Terminal 1.
Terminal 1, as seen from outside
The new Check-In area available in Terminal 1
Lufthansa's first A380 making a special visit, with the main terminal in the background
AirlinesDestinationsTerminal
Aegean Airlines Athens, Heraklion, Mykonos, Santorini 1A
Aer Lingus Dublin 1B
Aeroflot Moscow-Sheremetyevo 1B
Air AlgérieAlgiers 1B
Air Berlin Berlin-Tegel, Düsseldorf, Stuttgart 1A
Air China Beijing-Capital, Shanghai-Pudong 1B
Air Europa Madrid 1A
Air France operated by RégionalLyon, Marseille, Nantes, Toulouse 1A
Air Italy Fortaleza, Havana, La Romana, Natal, Nosy Be
Charter: Dubai
1B
Air Mauritius Mauritius 1B
Air Moldova Chişinău 1B
Air One Bari, Brindisi, Catania, Lamezia Terme, London-Gatwick [begins 25 March], Munich [begins 25 March], Naples, Palermo, Prague, Trapani, Warsaw [begins 1 June]
Seasonal: Alghero, Corfu, Herakliòn, Ibiza, Minorca, Olbia, Palma de Mallorca, Rhodes
1A
Air OneTirana, Tunis 1B
Air Seychelles Mahé [ends 13 January] 1B
Alitalia Rome-Fiumicino 1A
Alitalia Miami, Moscow-Sheremetyevo, New York-JFK, Tokyo-Narita 1B
Alitalia operated by Air Alps Salerno 1A
Alitalia operated by Air One Cairo 1B
American Airlines New York-JFK 1B
Armavia Yerevan [begins 29 March] 1B
Atlasjet Antalya 1B
Austrian Airlines Vienna 1A
Azerbaijan AirlinesBaku 1B
Belavia Minsk 1B
Belle Air Tirana 1B
Biman Bangladesh AirlinesDhaka 1B
Blu-expressSeasonal: Lampedusa 1A
Blue Air Antalya 1A
Blue Panorama Airlines Heraklion, Lampedusa, Lourdes, Rhodes, Santorini 1A
Blue Panorama Airlines Antigua[7], Aruba, Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi, Cancún, Cayo Largo del Sur, Cartagena, Curaçao, Havana, Holguin, La Romana, Mahé [begins 14 February], Phuket, Santa Clara 1B
British Airways London-Heathrow 1B
Brussels Airlines Brussels 1A
Bulgaria Air Sofia 1B
Cathay Pacific Hong Kong 1B
Cyprus Airways Larnaca 1B
Czech Airlines Prague 1A
Delta Air Lines Atlanta, New York-JFK 1B
EasyJet Agadir, Amsterdam, Athens, Barcelona, Bari, Berlin-Schönefeld, Bordeaux, Brindisi, Bristol, Brussels, Cagliari, Casablanca, Catania, Copenhagen, Corfu, Edinburgh, Ibiza, Lamezia Terme, London-Gatwick, London-Luton, Lisbon, Lyon, Madrid, Málaga, Marrakech, Mykonos, Naples, Olbia, Palermo, Palma de Mallorca, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Porto, Prague, Rome-Fiumicino, Split, Thessaloniki, Toulouse
Seasonal: Dubrovnik, Heraklion, Kos, Malta, Rhodes, Santorini, Zante
2
EgyptAir Cairo 1B
El Al Tel Aviv 1B
ElbaFly Seasonal: Elba 1A
Emirates Dubai 1B
Ethiopian Airlines Addis Ababa1 1B
Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi 1B
Europe Airpost Lourdes 1A
Europe AirpostTangier 1B
Finnair Helsinki 1A
Flybe Birmingham, Manchester 1B
Germanwings Cologne/Bonn, Hanover, Stuttgart 1A
Gulf Air Bahrain 1B
Iberia Madrid 1A
Icelandair Seasonal: Reykjavík-Keflavík 1A
Iran Air Tehran-Imam Khomeini1 1B
Jat Airways Belgrade 1B
Jet Airways Delhi 1B
Jet4you Casablanca 1B
KLM Amsterdam [ends 25 March] 1A
Korean Air Seoul-Incheon1 1B
LOT Polish Airlines Warsaw 1A
LufthansaDüsseldorf, Frankfurt, Munich 1A
Lufthansa Regional operated by Air Dolomiti Munich 1A
Lufthansa Regional operated by Contact Air Stuttgart 1A
Lufthansa Regional operated by Eurowings Hamburg
Seasonal: Düsseldorf
1A
Lufthansa Regional operated by Lufthansa CityLine Munich 1A
Luxair Luxembourg 1A
Malév Hungarian Airlines Budapest 1A
Meridiana Fly Antalya, Bodrum, Cagliari, Fuerteventura, Olbia, Tenerife-South, Tortolì
Seasonal: Mykonos, Rhodes, Santorini
1A
Meridiana FlyChişinău, Dakar, Malé, Marsa Alam, Mauritius, Mombasa, Sharm el-Sheikh, Tel Aviv, Zanzibar 1B
Middle East Airlines Beirut 1B
Monarch Birmingham [begins 25 March], London-Gatwick [begins 25 March], Manchester [begins 25 March] 1B
Niki Vienna 1A
Norwegian Air Shuttle Copenhagen [begins 29 June 2012], Oslo 1A
Oman Air Muscat 1B
Pakistan International Airlines Islamabad1, Lahore1 1B
Qatar Airways Doha 1B
Rossiya Saint Petersburg 1B
Royal Air Maroc Casablanca 1B
Royal Jordanian Amman-Queen Alia 1B
Saudi Arabian Airlines Jeddah, Riyadh 1B
Scandinavian Airlines Copenhagen, Stockholm-Arlanda
Seasonal: Oslo
1A
Sky Airlines Antalya 1B
Skybridge AirOps Perugia 1A
Skybridge AirOps Sharm el-Sheikh 1B
Singapore Airlines Singapore 1B
SriLankan Airlines Colombo [ends 23 March][8] 1B
SunExpress Istanbul-Sabiha Gokcen, İzmir 1B
Sun d'Or
operated by El Al
Seasonal: Tel Aviv 1B
Swiss International Air Lines Zürich 1A
TACV Sal (Cape Verde) 1B
TAM Airlines São Paulo-Guarulhos 1B
TAP PortugalLisbon, Porto 1A
TAP Portugal operated by Portugália Porto 1A
Thai Airways International Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi 1B
Transavia.com Rotterdam 1A
Tunisair Djerba, Enfidha, Monastir, Tabarka, Tozeur, Tunis 1B
Turkish Airlines Antalya, Istanbul-Atatürk 1B
Twin Jet Marseille 1A
United Airlines Newark 1B
Ukraine International Airlines Kiev-Boryspil 1B
Uzbekistan Airways Tashkent 1B
VuelingBarcelona
Seasonal: Ibiza, Palma de Mallorca
1A
Wind JetCatania 1A

Notes
  • ^1 These flights have an intermediate stop before arriving at their listed destinations, but the airline does not have local traffic rights on the leg.

Charter

AirlinesDestinationsTerminal
AlbaStarIbiza, Minorca, Palma de Mallorca 1A
Alitalia[9]Saint Maarten
Seasonal: La Romana, Malé, Mombasa, Santo Domingo, Zanzibar
1B
AMC Airlines El Alamein, Marsa Alam, Sharm el-Sheikh 1B
Blu-express Antalya, Barcelona, Bodrum, Hurghada, Istanbul-Sabiha Gökçen, Palma de Mallorca, Sharm el-Sheikh 1B
CityLine Hungary Budapest 1B
Iberworld Minorca 1A
Israir Airlines Tel Aviv 1B
Mistral Air Pantelleria 1A
Mistral Air Hurghada, Latakia, Tel Aviv 1B
Neos Amsterdam, Arrecife, Brindisi, Chania, Copenhagen, Fuerteventura, Funchal, Heraklion, Ibiza, Karpathos, Kos, Lamezia Terme, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Lisbon, Lourdes, Madrid, Minorca, Mykonos, Palma de Mallorca, Porto Santo, Rhodes, Santorini, Seville, Skiathos, Tenerife-South 1A
Neos Agadir, Aleppo, Amman-Queen Alia, Amman-Marka, Antalya, Antigua, Aqaba, Banjul, Boa Vista, Cairo, Cancún, Cap Skirring, Djerba, Dubai, Havana, Holguín, Hurghada, La Romana, Larnaca, Luxor, Mahé, Malé, Marsa Alam, Mérida, Mersa Matruh, Mombasa, Montego Bay, Nosy Be, Pointe-à-Pitre, Punta Cana, Ras al-Khaimah, Recife, Sal, Salvador da Bahia, Samaná, Sharm el-Sheikh, Tel Aviv, Zanzibar 1B
Nouvelair Djerba, Monastir, Tabarka 1B
Onur Air Seasonal: Antalya, Istanbul-Atatürk 1B
SmartLynx Airlines Lourdes, Málaga, Tenerife-South 1A

Cargo airlines

AirlinesDestinations
Air China Cargo Beijing-Capital, Chengdu, Novosibirsk, Shanghai-Pudong, Vienna
AirBridgeCargo Airlines Amsterdam, Frankfurt, Maastricht, Moscow-Domodedovo, Moscow-Sheremetyevo
Asiana Cargo London-Stansted, Seoul-Incheon, Vienna
Atlas Air Lima, Santa Maria
CargoluxCampinas-Viracopos, Los Angeles, Luxembourg, Maastricht, New York-JFK
Cargolux ItaliaAlmaty, Baku, Dubai, Hong Kong, Johannesburg, Luxembourg, Osaka-Kansai, Taipei-Taoyuan
Cathay Pacific Delhi, Dubai, Frankfurt, Hong Kong, London-Heathrow, Manchester, New York-JFK, Paris-CDG
China Airlines Dubai, Manchester, Taipei-Taoyuan
China Cargo Airlines Amsterdam, Shanghai-Pudong, Urumqi
China Southern Airlines Amsterdam, Guangzhou
Cygnus Air Madrid
DHL Aviation London-Heathrow, London-Luton, London-Stansted
EgyptAir CargoCairo
Emirates SkyCargo Amsterdam, Dubai, Nairobi
Etihad Crystal Cargo Abu Dhabi, Tripoli
European Air Transport London-Heathrow
FedEx Express Ancona, Lisbon, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Pisa, Venice-Marco Polo
Great Wall Airlines Amsterdam, Chennai, Shanghai-Pudong
Korean Air Cargo Navoiy, Seoul-Incheon, Shanghai-Pudong, Vienna
MASkargo Kuala Lumpur
Mistral Air Lourdes
Nippon Cargo Airlines Amsterdam, Nagoya-Centrair, Tokyo-Narita
Polet Airlines Khartoum
Qatar Airways Doha
Royal Air Maroc Cargo Casablanca [begins 30 June], El Aaiún [begins 30 June]
Saudi Arabian Airlines Brussels, Jeddah, Riyadh
Silk Way Airlines Baku [10]
Southern Air Atlanta, Chicago-O'Hare, New York-JFK
TAROM Cargo Bucharest-Henri Coandă
Turkish Airlines Istanbul-Atatürk, Pristina
World Airways Baltimore, Chicago-O'Hare, Mexico City, New York-JFK

Traffic and statistics

Busiest Domestic Routes from Malpensa (2010)[11]
Rank City Passengers
1 Italy Naples, Italy 703.031
2 Italy Rome, Italy 683.081
3 Italy Catania, Italy 544.328
4 Italy Palermo, Italy 468.362
5 Italy Bari, Italy 372.863
6 Italy Lamezia Terme, Italy 256.948
7 Italy Olbia, Italy 192.862
8 Italy Brindisi, Italy 156.335
9 Italy Cagliari, Italy 112.416
Busiest International Routes from Malpensa within European Union (2010)[11]
Rank City Passengers
1 France Paris-CDG, France 922.702
2 Spain Madrid, Spain 624.290
3 Spain Barcelona, Spain 564.628
4 Netherlands Amsterdam, Netherlands 558.481
5 United Kingdom London-Heathrow, United Kingdom 491.844
6 United Kingdom London-Gatwick, United Kingdom 335.273
7 Portugal Lisbon, Portugal 321.320
8 Germany Munich, Germany 316.544
9 Germany Frankfurt am Main, Germany 305.890
10 Austria Vienna, Austria 295.861
11 Denmark Copenhagen, Denmark 281.285
12 Greece Athens, Greece 275.273
Busiest International Routes from Malpensa outside the European Union (2010)
Rank City Passengers
1 United Arab Emirates Dubai, United Arab Emirates 405.502
2 United States New York-Kennedy, United States 321.837
3 Turkey Istanbul-Atatürk, Turkey 315.435
4 Morocco Casablanca, Morocco 255.732
5 Egypt Cairo, Egypt 243.660
6 Switzerland Zürich, Switzerland 243.426
7 Russia Moscow-Sheremetyevo, Russia 240.948
8 Egypt Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt 225.767
9 Israel Tel Aviv, Israel 205.771
10 Brazil São Paulo-Guarulhos, Brazil 190.132
11 Turkey Antalya, Turkey 188.912
12 Egypt Marsa Alam, Egypt 170.113

Transport links

Rail

Malpensa Express at Milano-Cadorna Railway Station
Connection between the rail station and the airport
Malpensa Airport Diagram
  • A second Express service to Milan Central Station will begin with the winter rail schedule change (13 December 2010). There will be a train every 30 minutes calling at Milan Porta Garibaldi station; journey time will be 41 minutes. During rush hours, services will also call at Milano Bovisa station and Saronno Centrale; for these services journey time will be 47 minutes.[13]
  • Two daily High Speed (Alta Velocità) services link Milan Malpensa's railway station, to Florence (calling at Milano Centrale, Bologna Centrale and Firenze Santa Maria Novella) and Naples (calling at Milano Centrale, Bologna Centrale, Firenze Santa Maria Novella, Roma Termini, Napoli Centrale).[14]
  • Suburban Line S10 (Milano Rogoredo-Milano Bovisa) has been running to Malpensa since June 2010.[15] Trains call at: Ferno, Busto Arsizio, Castellanza, Rescaldina, Saronno Centrale, Milano Bovisa, Milano Lancetti, Milano Porta Garibaldi M2 (Green), Milano Repubblica M3 (Yellow), Milano Porta Venezia M1 (Red), Milano Dateo and Milano Porta Vittoria.
  • There is also a shuttle connection between Malpensa Airport railway station and Busto Arsizio FS.[16] From here there are connections with Milan's railway stations of Milano Centrale and Milano Porta Garibaldi.
  • The Malpensa – Varese – Mendrisio (CH) – Lugano (CH) line is being built and will be finished by 2012. There are future plans also to connect Gallarate Station (FS) and Milan's Centrale Station (FS) allowing for easy connections onto high-speed international lines.

Bus

Malpensa Shuttle and Malpensa Bus Express connect the airport to Milan Central Station (Trenitalia's National Railway hub) and the metro. Stops at the Milan Fair are provided on request. Travel time is about an hour (longer during heavy traffic).

A free shuttle bus links Terminal 1 & 2 every 20 minutes 24 hours a day, within the airport. Travel time to go from one terminal to the other is about 15 minutes.

Malpensa is also connected by bus to Linate Airport and to various cities in northern Italy with Lufthansa Airport Bus(like Turin, Novara, Como, Varese, Bergamo and Brescia) and Switzerland.

Since February 2010, Lufthansa Airport Bus, in partnership with Autostrade SpA, connects Milan Central Station, with Terminal 1 & 2, with stops in Fieramilanocity and Milan Fair – Rho/Pero on request, every 20 minutes. Furthermore this new service links the Airport with the nearby Lombard provinces of Varese, Como, Bergamo and Brescia, those of Alessandria, Novara and Turin in Piedmont, Genoa in Liguria and also Bellinzona, Chiasso and Lugano in Switzerland ). For these destinations passengers can also enjoy an additional limousine transfer service with high-end car or minibus (max. 8 people) bookable until 24 hours.[17]

Taxi

Taxis are available at the Arrivals of Terminal 1 & 2.

Automobile connections

Malpensa Airport is connected by a four-lane highway to the A8 motorway (connecting Switzerland to Milan) and by a four-lane highway to the A4 motorway linking Milan to Turin and to the Strada Statale 11.

References

  1. ^ a b "EAD Basic". Ead.eurocontrol.int. Retrieved 2010-11-07.
  2. ^ "Aeroportilombardi | Breve storia di Malpensa". Mxpairport.it. Retrieved 2010-11-07.
  3. ^ http://www.assaeroporti.it/defy.asp
  4. ^ Third Runway for Malpensa, Aviation Week & Space Technology, 171, 1 (6 July 2009), p. 15
  5. ^ AW & ST
  6. ^ "Volare Group SpA." Businessweek. Retrieved on February 8, 2011. "The company is based in Ferno, Italy." and "Aeroporto Malpensa 2000 – S.P. 52 Terminal 1 – Area Tecnica Sud Ferno, VA 21010"
  7. ^ http://www.ttgitalia.com/pagine/Blue-Panorama-riconferma-il-volo-Malpensa-Antigua,Dettaglio001,IT,275364,Home-news.aspx
  8. ^ SriLankan to cut London flights to daily, to increase flights to China and cancels Milan flights
  9. ^ http://corporate.alitalia.it/it/Images/pr_07_07_2011_tcm6-39821.pdf
  10. ^ http://i245.photobucket.com/albums/gg70/hal1950/silky01y.jpg
  11. ^ a b "Dati Traffico 2010 Enac" (PDF). Retrieved 2010-11-07.
  12. ^ "Collegamento Milano Malpensa – MALPENSA EXPRESS". Malpensaexpress.it. Retrieved 2010-11-07.
  13. ^ "Malpensa – Da dicembre parte il treno Malpensa-Milano Centrale | Lombardia | Varese News". .varesenews.it. 2010-07-31. Retrieved 2010-11-07.
  14. ^ "Ferrovie dello Stato – Homepage". Trenitalia.com. Retrieved 2010-11-07.
  15. ^ "Castellanza – Malpensa express più veloci e nuovi suburbani, così cambia l'orario | Lombardia | Varese News". .varesenews.it. 2010-01-30. Retrieved 2010-11-07.
  16. ^ iPhone. "Busto Arsizio/Castellanza – Grandi opere ferroviarie, treni nel tunnel di Castellanza da dicembre | Busto Arsizio | Varese News". .varesenews.it. Retrieved 2010-11-07.
  17. ^ "Italiano". Autostradale.it. 2010-05-31. Retrieved 2010-11-07.

External links