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Coordinates: 54°38′13″N 025°17′16″E / 54.63694°N 25.28778°E / 54.63694; 25.28778
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| [[Ryanair]] | [[Queen Alia International Airport|Amman–Queen Alia]] (ends 27 March 2020), [[Barcelona El Prat Airport|Barcelona]], [[Beauvais–Tillé Airport|Beauvais]], [[Orio al Serio International Airport|Bergamo]] (suspended until 8 April 2020),<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/verslas/4/1150289/ryanair-ir-wizz-air-atsaukia-visus-skrydzius-is-ir-i-italija|title=„Ryanair“ ir „Wizz Air“ atšaukia visus skrydžius iš ir į Italiją|publisher=[[Lithuanian National Radio and Television|LRT]]}}</ref> [[Berlin Schönefeld Airport|Berlin–Schönefeld]], [[Bremen Airport|Bremen]], [[Brussels South Charleroi Airport|Charleroi]], [[Dublin Airport|Dublin]], [[Frankfurt-Hahn Airport|Hahn]], [[Kharkiv International Airport|Kharkiv]], [[Boryspil International Airport|Kiev–Boryspil]], [[Liverpool John Lennon Airport|Liverpool]], [[Luton Airport|London–Luton]], [[London Southend Airport|London–Southend]], [[London Stansted Airport|London–Stansted]], [[Malta International Airport|Malta]], [[Gardermoen Airport|Oslo–Gardermoen]], [[Ciampino–G. B. Pastine International Airport|Rome–Ciampino]] (suspended until 8 April 2020),<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/verslas/4/1150289/ryanair-ir-wizz-air-atsaukia-visus-skrydzius-is-ir-i-italija|title=„Ryanair“ ir „Wizz Air“ atšaukia visus skrydžius iš ir į Italiją|publisher=[[Lithuanian National Radio and Television|LRT]]}}</ref> [[Ben Gurion Airport|Tel Aviv]], [[Treviso Airport|Treviso]] (suspended until 8 April 2020)<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/verslas/4/1150289/ryanair-ir-wizz-air-atsaukia-visus-skrydzius-is-ir-i-italija|title=„Ryanair“ ir „Wizz Air“ atšaukia visus skrydžius iš ir į Italiją|publisher=[[Lithuanian National Radio and Television|LRT]]}}</ref><br>'''Seasonal:''' [[Athens International Airport|Athens]], [[Corfu International Airport|Corfu]], [[Leeds Bradford Airport|Leeds/Bradford]], [[Adolfo Suárez Madrid–Barajas Airport|Madrid]] (ends 30 June 2020)
| [[Ryanair]] | [[Queen Alia International Airport|Amman–Queen Alia]] (ends 27 March 2020), [[Barcelona El Prat Airport|Barcelona]], [[Beauvais–Tillé Airport|Beauvais]], [[Orio al Serio International Airport|Bergamo]] (suspended until 8 April 2020),<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/verslas/4/1150289/ryanair-ir-wizz-air-atsaukia-visus-skrydzius-is-ir-i-italija|title=„Ryanair“ ir „Wizz Air“ atšaukia visus skrydžius iš ir į Italiją|publisher=[[Lithuanian National Radio and Television|LRT]]}}</ref> [[Berlin Schönefeld Airport|Berlin–Schönefeld]], [[Bremen Airport|Bremen]], [[Brussels South Charleroi Airport|Charleroi]], [[Dublin Airport|Dublin]], [[Frankfurt-Hahn Airport|Hahn]], [[Kharkiv International Airport|Kharkiv]], [[Boryspil International Airport|Kiev–Boryspil]], [[Liverpool John Lennon Airport|Liverpool]], [[Luton Airport|London–Luton]], [[London Southend Airport|London–Southend]], [[London Stansted Airport|London–Stansted]], [[Malta International Airport|Malta]], [[Gardermoen Airport|Oslo–Gardermoen]], [[Ciampino–G. B. Pastine International Airport|Rome–Ciampino]] (suspended until 8 April 2020),<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/verslas/4/1150289/ryanair-ir-wizz-air-atsaukia-visus-skrydzius-is-ir-i-italija|title=„Ryanair“ ir „Wizz Air“ atšaukia visus skrydžius iš ir į Italiją|publisher=[[Lithuanian National Radio and Television|LRT]]}}</ref> [[Ben Gurion Airport|Tel Aviv]], [[Treviso Airport|Treviso]] (suspended until 8 April 2020)<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/verslas/4/1150289/ryanair-ir-wizz-air-atsaukia-visus-skrydzius-is-ir-i-italija|title=„Ryanair“ ir „Wizz Air“ atšaukia visus skrydžius iš ir į Italiją|publisher=[[Lithuanian National Radio and Television|LRT]]}}</ref><br>'''Seasonal:''' [[Athens International Airport|Athens]], [[Corfu International Airport|Corfu]], [[Leeds Bradford Airport|Leeds/Bradford]], [[Adolfo Suárez Madrid–Barajas Airport|Madrid]] (ends 30 June 2020)
<!-- -->
<!-- -->
| [[Scandinavian Airlines]] | [[Copenhagen Airport|Copenhagen]], [[Stockholm–Arlanda Airport|Stockholm–Arlanda]]
| [[Scandinavian Airlines]] (all flights temporarily suspended)<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.sas.se/trafikinformation/meddelande/|publisher=[[Scandinavian Airlines]]}}</ref> | [[Copenhagen Airport|Copenhagen]], [[Stockholm–Arlanda Airport|Stockholm–Arlanda]]
<!-- -->
<!-- -->
| [[Smartwings Hungary]] (all flights suspended until 14 April 2020)<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/verslas/4/1151147/kelioniu-organizatoriai-atsaukia-visas-keliones-is-lietuvos|title=Kelionių organizatoriai atšaukia visas keliones iš Lietuvos|publisher=[[Lithuanian National Radio and Television|LRT]]}}</ref>| '''Seasonal charter:''' [[Corfu International Airport|Corfu]],<ref name="itaka.lt"/> [[Madeira Airport|Funchal]],<ref name="itaka.lt"/> [[Taba International Airport|Taba]]<ref name="itaka.lt">{{cite web|url=https://www.itaka.lt/musu-kryptys/|title=Our directions|website=itaka.lt}}</ref>
| [[Smartwings Hungary]] (all flights suspended until 14 April 2020)<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.lrt.lt/naujienos/verslas/4/1151147/kelioniu-organizatoriai-atsaukia-visas-keliones-is-lietuvos|title=Kelionių organizatoriai atšaukia visas keliones iš Lietuvos|publisher=[[Lithuanian National Radio and Television|LRT]]}}</ref>| '''Seasonal charter:''' [[Corfu International Airport|Corfu]],<ref name="itaka.lt"/> [[Madeira Airport|Funchal]],<ref name="itaka.lt"/> [[Taba International Airport|Taba]]<ref name="itaka.lt">{{cite web|url=https://www.itaka.lt/musu-kryptys/|title=Our directions|website=itaka.lt}}</ref>

Revision as of 08:00, 16 March 2020

Vilnius International Airport

Tarptautinis Vilniaus oro uostas
Summary
Airport typePublic
OwnerLithuanian government
OperatorSE "Lithuanian Airports"
ServesVilnius, Lithuania
Hub for
Focus city for
Elevation AMSL646 ft / 197 m
Coordinates54°38′13″N 025°17′16″E / 54.63694°N 25.28778°E / 54.63694; 25.28778
Websitehttps://www.vno.lt/en/
Map
VNO is located in Vilnius
VNO
VNO
Location within Vilnius
VNO is located in Lithuania
VNO
VNO
VNO (Lithuania)
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
01/19 2,515 8,250 Asphalt/Concrete
Statistics (2019)
Number of passengers5,004,921
Passenger change 18–19Increase1.7%
Aircraft movements47,440
Movements change 18–19Increase0.5%
Cargo (tonnes)13,974
Cargo change 18–19Increase9.4%
Source: Lithuanian Airports, 2020[1]

Vilnius Airport (IATA: VNO, ICAO: EYVI) (Lithuanian: Vilniaus oro uostas) is the international airport of Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania. It is located 5.9 km (3.7 mi) south[2] of the city. It is the largest of the four commercial airports in Lithuania by passenger traffic. With one runway and 5 million passengers a year.[1] Vilnius International Airport serves as a base for airBaltic, Ryanair, and Wizz Air. The airport is managed by state-owned enterprise Lithuanian Airports under the Ministry of Transport and Communications.[3]

History

Early years

The airport began operations on 17 August 1932 as Wilno–Porubanek, Porubanek was the name of the neighbouring village which today is part of the Kirtimai district of Vilnius. Before World War II it operated the then-domestic route between Wilno (Vilnius) and Warsaw as well as international route to Riga. Since 15 April 1939 it inaugurated a new route to Kovno (nowadays Kaunas). The airport was used as a military airfield during WWII. The airport resumed its activity as a civil airport as of 17 July 1944.[4]

Recent developments

Lithuanian Airlines (branded later as FlyLAL) was established as the Lithuanian flag carrier following independence in 1991 and inherited the Vilnius-based Aeroflot fleet of Tupolev Tu-134, Yakovlev Yak-40, Yak-42 and Antonov An-24, An-26 aircraft, but rapidly replaced these Soviet-era aircraft types with modern Boeing 737 and Boeing 757 jets and Saab 340, Saab 2000 turboprops. Operations were suspended effective 17 January 2009 as a result of growing financial difficulties. With the collapse of flyLAL, the airport lost its scheduled services to Amsterdam, Budapest, Istanbul, Madrid and Tbilisi. flyLAL used to operate to Dublin, Frankfurt, London, Milan and Paris in competition with Aer Lingus, airBaltic or Lufthansa.[citation needed]

AirBaltic, the national airline of Latvia and under Scandinavian Airlines part-ownership, opened up a second base at Vilnius in 2004 to complement its Riga operation and became the largest carrier at Vilnius, using Boeing 737 jets and Fokker 50 turboprops. At one point, airBaltic operated to 19 destinations from Vilnius but, in 2009, the network covered only three destinations served by two aircraft based at Vilnius.[citation needed]

Vilnius Airport is the main hub for Grand Cru Airlines and a base for Wizz Air. It used to be a main hub for Star1 Airlines until their end of operations in September 2010 and Aurela until Aurela had lost its flight license. It was the hub for Small Planet Airlines and Aviavilsa until both airlines folded. The airport was a secondary hub for airBaltic, Estonian Air and Skyways Express until they closed the bases in Vilnius.[citation needed]

On 30 June 2013 Air Lituanica also began its flights from the Vilnius Airport and established its base there serving several European cities. However, by 22 May 2015 the airline shut down all operations as well.[5]

The airport was closed for 35 days from 14 July 2017 to 17 August 2017 (inclusive) for runway reconstruction work, with all flights diverted to Kaunas Airport.[6][7]

Terminal

The Soviet-era terminal in 2013

The construction of an airport building was started in 1949 and completed in 1954.[4] It features a standard 1950s Soviet airport terminal design, originally intended for an airport with up to 20 aircraft movements per day. On the outside, it is decorated with sculptures of soldiers, workers and aviators, while inside walls and ceilings feature wreaths, bay leaves and stars, and until the early 1990s, the Soviet hammer and sickle, typical decor for Soviet public buildings of early post-war years.[citation needed]

A new departure terminal, connected with the old building, was built in 1993.[8] Since then, the old building has been used as the arrival terminal only.[4]

In November 2007, the new 1,000 m2 (11,000 sq ft) terminal building was opened for operations which improved the capacity and facilities of the airport and complies with the requirements of the Schengen agreement. [citation needed] The passenger throughput of the terminal increased, passenger service quality was improved and more stringent aviation security measures were implemented. The new area of the renovated passenger terminal now reaches 3,462 m2 (37,260 sq ft). It is equipped with 6 passenger boarding bridges, modern passenger check-in equipment, new travel value and duty-free shops were opened as well as business lounge and VIP Lounge.[9]

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights to and from Vilnius:[10]

AirlinesDestinations
Aeroflot Moscow–Sheremetyevo (suspended from 19 March until 30 March 2020)[11]
airBaltic (all flights suspended from 17 March until 14 April 2020)[12] [13] Amsterdam, Berlin–Tegel, Gothenburg (begins 29 March 2020),[14] Hamburg (begins 30 March 2020),[14] Munich, Paris–Charles de Gaulle, Riga, Tallinn, Zurich (begins 31 March 2020)[14]
Seasonal: Dubrovnik (begins 2 May 2020),[14] Rijeka (begins 7 May 2020)[14]
Austrian Airlines Vienna
Belavia Minsk
Blue Panorama Airlines (all flights suspended until 14 April 2020)[15] Seasonal charter: Marsa Alam,[16] Nosy Be,[16] Tenerife–South,[17] Tirana[16]
Brussels Airlines Brussels
Corendon Airlines (all flights suspended until 14 April 2020)[18] Seasonal charter: Antalya[16]
Corendon Airlines Europe (all flights suspended until 14 April 2020)[19] Seasonal charter: Hurghada[20]
Enter Air (all flights suspended until 14 April 2020)[21] Seasonal charter: Zakynthos[16]
Finnair Helsinki (suspended until 31 March 2020)[22]
Freebird Airlines (all flights suspended until 14 April 2020)[23] Seasonal charter: Antalya,[24] Bodrum,[24]
GetJet Airlines (all flights suspended until 14 April 2020)[25] [26][24] Charter: Hurghada,[24] Sharm El Sheikh[24]
Seasonal charter: Antalya,[24] Barcelona,[24] Batumi,[27] Bergamo,[26] Bodrum,[24] Burgas,[24] Catania,[26] Corfu,[26] Dalaman,[24] Djerba,[26] Dubai–Al Maktoum,[26] Enfidha,[26] Faro,[26] Funchal,[26] Gazipaşa,[26] Heraklion,[24] Izmir,[24] Kefalonia (begins 7 September 2020),[26] Málaga,[26] Palma de Mallorca,[24] Patras,[24] Pula (begins 8 June 2020),[26] Rhodes,[24] Split,[26] Tenerife–South,[26] Tirana,[26] Tivat,[26] Varna[24]
Holiday Europe (all flights suspended until 14 April 2020)[28] Seasonal charter: Hurghada,[29] Sharm El Sheikh[30]
Lauda Vienna
LOT Polish Airlines (all flights suspended until 25 March 2020)[31] London–City, Warsaw–Chopin
Lufthansa Frankfurt
Onur Air (all flights suspended until 14 April 2020)[32]Seasonal charter: Antalya
Norwegian Air Shuttle Oslo–Gardermoen, Stockholm–Arlanda
Ryanair Amman–Queen Alia (ends 27 March 2020), Barcelona, Beauvais, Bergamo (suspended until 8 April 2020),[33] Berlin–Schönefeld, Bremen, Charleroi, Dublin, Hahn, Kharkiv, Kiev–Boryspil, Liverpool, London–Luton, London–Southend, London–Stansted, Malta, Oslo–Gardermoen, Rome–Ciampino (suspended until 8 April 2020),[34] Tel Aviv, Treviso (suspended until 8 April 2020)[35]
Seasonal: Athens, Corfu, Leeds/Bradford, Madrid (ends 30 June 2020)
Scandinavian Airlines (all flights temporarily suspended)[36] Copenhagen, Stockholm–Arlanda
Smartwings Hungary (all flights suspended until 14 April 2020)[37] Seasonal charter: Corfu,[16] Funchal,[16] Taba[16]
Turkish Airlines Istanbul
Seasonal charter: Antalya (suspended until 14 April 2020)[38][24]
Ukraine International Airlines Kiev–Boryspil
Seasonal: Odessa
Wizz Air[39] Barcelona (suspended until 3 April 2020),[40] Beauvais (suspended until 3 April 2020),[41] Belfast–International (suspended from 17 March until 30 March 2020),[42] Billund (suspended from 17 March until 30 March 2020),[43] Doncaster/Sheffield (suspended from 17 March until 30 March 2020),[44] Dortmund (suspended until 3 April 2020),[45] Eindhoven (suspended from 17 March until 30 March 2020),[46] Kiev–Zhuliany (suspended from 17 March until 30 March 2020),[47] Kutaisi (suspended from 17 March until 30 March 2020),[48] Larnaca (suspended from 17 March until 30 March 2020),[49] London–Luton (suspended from 17 March until 30 March 2020),[50] London–Southend (suspended from 17 March until 30 March 2020),[51] Lviv (suspended from 17 March until 30 March 2020),[52] Milan–Malpensa (suspended until 3 April 2020),[53] Nice (suspended until 3 April 2020),[54] Reykjavík–Keflavík (ends 17 March 2020),[55] Saint Petersburg (begins 3 June 2020),[56] Sandefjord (suspended until 3 April 2020),[57] Tel Aviv (suspended until 30 March 2020),[58] Yerevan (suspended from 17 March until 30 March 2020),[59] Zaporizhia (begins 30 March 2020)[60]
Seasonal: Eilat (suspended from 17 March until 30 March 2020)[61]

Cargo

AirlinesDestinations
ASL Airlines Belgium Riga
DHL Aviation Leipzig/Halle, Riga
SprintAir Riga
Transaviabaltika Minsk
Turkish Cargo Prague, Istanbul–Atatürk

Statistics

Departures area
Control tower

Passenger traffic

Passengers at Vilnius Airport (millions) [62]

Data update: February 2020

Annual traffic

Annual Passenger Traffic[63]
Year Passengers % Change Change
2019 5,004,921 Increase 1.7% Increase 81,972
2018 4,922,949 Increase 30.9% Increase 1,161,112
2017 3,761,837 Decrease 1.4% Decrease 52,164
2016 3,814,001 Increase 14.3% Increase 477,917
2015 3,336,084 Increase 13.4% Increase 393,414
2014 2,942,670 Increase 10.6% Increase 280,801
2013 2,661,869 Increase 20.6% Increase 453,773
2012 2,208,096 Increase 28.9% Increase 495,629
2011 1,712,467 Increase 24.7% Increase 338,608
2010 1,373,859 Increase 5.0% Increase 65,227
2009 1,308,632 Decrease 36.1% Decrease 739,807
2008 2,048,439 Increase 19.3% Increase 331,217
2007 1,717,222 Increase 18.3% Increase 265,754
2006 1,451,468 Increase 13.2% Increase 169,596
2005 1,281,872 Increase 33.0% Increase 317,708
2004 964,164 Steady Steady

Busiest routes

Top 20 busiest routes from Vilnius in 2018[64]
Rank City Passengers Airlines
1 United Kingdom London 468,000 Ryanair, Wizz Air
2 Germany Frankfurt 276,000 Lufthansa, Ryanair
3 Norway Oslo 261,000 Ryanair, Norwegian Air Shuttle, Wizz Air
4 Poland Warsaw 253,000 LOT Polish Airlines, Wizz Air
5 Turkey Antalya 245,000 Small Planet Airlines, GetJet Airlines
6 Ukraine Kiev 229,000 Ukraine International, Wizz Air, Ryanair
7 Latvia Riga 199,000 airBaltic
8 Italy Milan 175,000 Wizz Air, Ryanair
9 Sweden Stockholm 167,000 Norwegian Air Shuttle, Scandinavian Airlines, Wizz Air
10 Russia Moscow 152,000 Aeroflot
11 France Paris 134,000 airBaltic, Ryanair, Wizz Air
12 Denmark Copenhagen 114,000 Scandinavian Airlines
13 Finland Helsinki 110,000 Finnair
14 Belgium Brussels 98,000 Brussels Airlines
15 Spain Barcelona 93,000 Wizz Air, Ryanair
16 Estonia Tallinn 91,000 Nordica, airBaltic
17 Germany Berlin 84,000 airBaltic
18 Turkey Istambul 83,000 Turkish Airlines
19 Italy Rome 82,000 Wizz Air, Ryanair
20 Egypt Hurghada 68,000 Small Planet Airlines, GetJet Airlines

Ground transportation

Vilnius airport railway station
The bus connecting the airport with Vilnius

Train

Direct train services between Vilnius Airport Railway Station (referred to as "Oro uostas" in the schedules) and the central station of Vilnius were started in October 2008. Distance from the Airport to the Central Railway Station is 4.3 kilometres (2.7 mi), the journey takes 7 minutes.

Bus

The direct intercity express services operate from the Airport to Klaipėda, Palanga, Minsk and Daugavpils. Also, the Latvian company Flybus.lv operates service from Vilnius airport to Riga (via Panevėžys and Bauska).[65]

Public transportation

City's buses operate from the airport. Also, the company Toks transports passengers from the bus station to Vilnius airport and back by microbuses.[65]

Aviation services

Passenger handling, aircraft handling, into-plane fueling and de-icing/anti-icing services are handled by BGS and Litcargus.[66]

Incidents and accidents

  • Scandinavian Airlines Flight 2748, operated with Dash-8-400 (LN-RDS) with 48 passengers and 4 crew members, took off from Copenhagen Airport on 12 September 2007. It was heading to Palanga, Lithuania, but was diverted to Vilnius Airport (better suited for an emergency landing) when landing gear problems were discovered before landing. Upon touchdown, the right landing gear collapsed. All passengers and crew were evacuated safely. The local officials at the Vilnius International Airport noted that this was the most serious incident in recent years. This accident, along with the Aalborg accident just days earlier, caused all SAS Dash 8 Q400 planes to be grounded until the beginning of October.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "VNO". www.ltou.lt. Retrieved 6 January 2020.
  2. ^ "EAD Basic". Ead.eurocontrol.int. Retrieved 24 May 2014.
  3. ^ "Institutions and Enterprises under the Regulation of the Ministry". sumin.lrv.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 8 June 2017.
  4. ^ a b c "Vilnius International Airport - Istorija". www.vilnius-airport.lt. Retrieved 4 February 2017.
  5. ^ "Air Lituanica ceases operations". ch-aviation. Retrieved 8 August 2015.
  6. ^ "Reconstruction of the runway of Vilnius Airport". Vilnius Airport.
  7. ^ "Vilnius Airport to be closed for a renovation until Aug. 17". The Seattle Times. 13 July 2017.
  8. ^ iVilnius.lt. "By plane | How to arrive | Learn | iVilnius - Vilnius city guide". iVilnius - Vilnius city guide. Retrieved 4 February 2017.
  9. ^ "Vilnius Airport will have a new passenger terminal". sumin.lrv.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 4 February 2017.
  10. ^ vilnius-airport.com - Schedule retrieved 27 September 2019
  11. ^ . eTurboNews https://www.eturbonews.com/567192/list-of-flights-operating-and-cancelled-on-aeroflot-during-covid-19/. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  12. ^ "„airBaltic" laikinai stabdo skrydžius iš Lietuvos, Latvijos ir Estijos". LRT.
  13. ^ airbaltic.com - Timetable retrieved 11 November 2018
  14. ^ a b c d e "airBaltic launches new direct routes from Tallinn and Vilnius". AirBaltic. Retrieved 10 December 2019.
  15. ^ "Kelionių organizatoriai atšaukia visas keliones iš Lietuvos". LRT.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h "Our directions". itaka.lt.
  17. ^ "Tenerife". TUI.lt.
  18. ^ "Kelionių organizatoriai atšaukia visas keliones iš Lietuvos". LRT.
  19. ^ "Kelionių organizatoriai atšaukia visas keliones iš Lietuvos". LRT.
  20. ^ "Flight information to Egypt". Kidytour.lt.
  21. ^ "Kelionių organizatoriai atšaukia visas keliones iš Lietuvos". LRT.
  22. ^ . Finnair https://www.finnair.com/lt-en/flight-information/travel-updates. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  23. ^ "Kelionių organizatoriai atšaukia visas keliones iš Lietuvos". LRT.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "Timetable". www.tez-tour.com.
  25. ^ "Kelionių organizatoriai atšaukia visas keliones iš Lietuvos". LRT.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "Novaturas Flights en". Novaturas flights.
  27. ^ Mammadova, Tamilla (3 September 2019). "First charter flight from Vilnius to Batumi, Georgia, completed". Trend.Az. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  28. ^ "Kelionių organizatoriai atšaukia visas keliones iš Lietuvos". LRT.
  29. ^ "Hurghada". TUI.lt.
  30. ^ "Sharm El Sheikh". TUI.lt.
  31. ^ "LOT Polish Airlines suspends all flights". onemileatatime.com.
  32. ^ "Kelionių organizatoriai atšaukia visas keliones iš Lietuvos". LRT.
  33. ^ "„Ryanair" ir „Wizz Air" atšaukia visus skrydžius iš ir į Italiją". LRT.
  34. ^ "„Ryanair" ir „Wizz Air" atšaukia visus skrydžius iš ir į Italiją". LRT.
  35. ^ "„Ryanair" ir „Wizz Air" atšaukia visus skrydžius iš ir į Italiją". LRT.
  36. ^ . Scandinavian Airlines https://www.sas.se/trafikinformation/meddelande/. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  37. ^ "Kelionių organizatoriai atšaukia visas keliones iš Lietuvos". LRT.
  38. ^ "Kelionių organizatoriai atšaukia visas keliones iš Lietuvos". LRT.
  39. ^ "Flights to Lithuania - Wizz Air". wizzair.com. Retrieved 24 November 2019.
  40. ^ "Lietuvos oro uostai dėl koronaviruso rizikos tikrins visus atvykstančius keleivius". LRT.
  41. ^ "Lietuvos oro uostai dėl koronaviruso rizikos tikrins visus atvykstančius keleivius". LRT.
  42. ^ "Wizz Air travel information". Wizz Air.
  43. ^ "Wizz Air travel information". Wizz Air.
  44. ^ "Wizz Air travel information". Wizz Air.
  45. ^ "Lietuvos oro uostai dėl koronaviruso rizikos tikrins visus atvykstančius keleivius". LRT.
  46. ^ "Wizz Air travel information". Wizz Air.
  47. ^ "Wizz Air travel information". Wizz Air.
  48. ^ "Wizz Air travel information". Wizz Air.
  49. ^ "Wizz Air travel information". Wizz Air.
  50. ^ "Wizz Air travel information". Wizz Air.
  51. ^ "Wizz Air travel information". Wizz Air.
  52. ^ "Wizz Air travel information". Wizz Air.
  53. ^ "„Ryanair" ir „Wizz Air" atšaukia visus skrydžius iš ir į Italiją". LRT.
  54. ^ "Lietuvos oro uostai dėl koronaviruso rizikos tikrins visus atvykstančius keleivius". LRT.
  55. ^ ""Wizz Air" nutraukia skrydžius iš Vilniaus į Atėnus ir Reikjaviką, retina į Londoną". LRT.
  56. ^ "Wizz Air announces further expansion from Saint Petersburg|". Wizzair.com. 20 February 2019. Retrieved 20 January 2020.
  57. ^ "„Wizz Air" laikinai stabdo skrydžius į Norvegiją". LRT.
  58. ^ "Wizz Air travel information". Wizz Air.
  59. ^ "Wizz Air travel information". Wizz Air.
  60. ^ "Wizz Air announces further expension in Ukraine with six new routes from Zaporizhzhya|". Wizzair.com. 22 October 2019. Retrieved 22 October 2019.
  61. ^ "Wizz Air travel information". Wizz Air.
  62. ^ "Vilnius airport statistics".
  63. ^ "VNO". www.ltou.lt. Retrieved 6 February 2020.
  64. ^ "Simonas Bartkus | Blog » Populiariausios kryptys 2018 m. – rekordiniais Vilniaus oro uosto metais". Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  65. ^ a b "Vilnius International Airport - Train / Bus". vno.lt. Retrieved 4 February 2017.
  66. ^ "European Ground Handling". Airline Ground Services. Retrieved 20 June 2019.

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