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|[[Nouvelair]]| '''Seasonal charter''': [[Djerba–Zarzis International Airport|Djerba]], [[Monastir Habib Bourguiba International Airport|Monastir]], [[Tunis–Carthage International Airport|Tunis]]
|[[Nouvelair]]| '''Seasonal charter''': [[Djerba–Zarzis International Airport|Djerba]], [[Monastir Habib Bourguiba International Airport|Monastir]], [[Tunis–Carthage International Airport|Tunis]]
|[[Olympic Air]]| [[Athens International Airport|Athens]]
|[[Olympic Air]]| [[Athens International Airport|Athens]]
|[[Orbest Orizonia Airlines]]|'''Charter''': [[Tenerife South Airport|Tenerife]] (begins 12 June 2013)
|[[Pegasus Airlines]]| [[Sabiha Gökçen International Airport|Istanbul-Sabiha Gökçen]] <br> '''Seasonal charter''': [[Antalya International Airport|Antalya]]
|[[Pegasus Airlines]]| [[Sabiha Gökçen International Airport|Istanbul-Sabiha Gökçen]] <br> '''Seasonal charter''': [[Antalya International Airport|Antalya]]
|[[Qatar Airways]]| [[Doha International Airport|Doha]], [[Sofia Airport|Sofia]]
|[[Qatar Airways]]| [[Doha International Airport|Doha]], [[Sofia Airport|Sofia]]

Revision as of 07:53, 3 June 2013

Bucharest Henri Coandǎ International Airport

Aeroportul Internaţional Henri Coandă

Otopeni Airport
Summary
Airport typePublic/Military
OperatorThe National Company "Bucharest Airports" S.A.
ServesBucharest
LocationOtopeni, Romania
Hub for
Elevation AMSL314 ft / 96 m
Websitewww.bucharestairports.ro
Map
OTP is located in Romania
OTP
OTP
Location within Romania
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
08R/26L 3,500 11,484 Asphalt
08L/26R 3,500 11,484 Asphalt
Helipads
Number Length Surface
m ft
H1 3.5 11 Concrete
Statistics (2012)
Passengers7,101,712
Aircraft movements98,600
Source: Romanian AIP at EUROCONTROL[1]

Henri Coandă International Airport (Romanian: Aeroportul Internaţional Henri Coandă) (IATA: OTP, ICAO: LROP) is Romania's busiest international airport, located 16.5 km (10.3 mi) northwest[1] of the city of Bucharest, within Otopeni city limits. One of two airports serving the Romanian capital, the other being Băneasa, it is named after Romanian flight pioneer Henri Coandă, builder of Coandă-1910 aircraft and discoverer of the Coanda effect of fluidics. Until May 2004, the official name was Bucharest Otopeni International Airport (Romanian: Aeroportul Internaţional Bucureşti Otopeni), which remains the name by which it is generally known. The military section of the airport is currently used by the 90th Airlift Flotilla of the Romanian Air Force.

Henri Coandă International Airport serves as headquarters for TAROM, the country's national airline, and Țiriac Air.[2][3] It also serves as a base of operations for charter or low-cost airlines, Air Bucharest, Blue Air and Wizz Air. The airport is managed by The National Company Bucharest Airports S.A. (Compania Naţională Aeroporturi Bucureşti S.A.).[4]

History

Arrivals Hall

During World War II, the airport in Otopeni was used as an airbase by the German air force. Up to 1965, it was restricted for military use, and was one of the major bases of the Romanian Air Force, with a runway of 1,200 metres (3,900 ft). Before 1965, Băneasa Airport was the only airport that Bucharest used for commercial flights. However, with the growth of air traffic, a new commercial airport was constructed in the settlement of Otopeni, where the military air base used to be. The existing runway was modernised, extended up to 3,500 metres (11,500 ft), making it one of the longest in Europe at that time (1965). Also, a new passenger terminal (designed by Cezar Lăzărescu) was constructed in 1970 for domestic and international flights.

In the late 1960s, when President Nixon of the United States visited Romania, a new VIP lounge was created, and on 13 April 1970, the passenger terminal was updated to have a capacity of 1,200,000 passengers per year. The airport slowly became more and more used by airlines, with a growing number of passengers, and in 1986, it entered a new phase of development. A second 3500-metre runway was constructed, as well as related taxiways. The airport lighting system was improved and the capacity was increased to 35–40 airport movements per hour.

In 1992, Otopeni Airport became a regular member of Airports Council International (ACI). In the same year a long-term, multi-stage upgrade plan was devised, anticipating a sharp increase in traffic as traveling restrictions to and from Romania were lifted. The first stage of the plan (Phase I), taking place between 1994 and 1998, involved the construction a new departures terminal and of a new airside concourse with 5 jetways and 9 gates (referred to as 'the Finger') as well as the extension of various airport ramps and of their associated taxiways.[5]

The second phase (labeled Phase II/IIe) of the plan led to the construction of a terminal dedicated to domestic flights and of a multi-story car park (2003), the complete overhaul of the control tower (between 2005–2007) as well as the transformation of the old terminal building in a dedicated arrivals hall (in 2000). During the same phase, two new high-speed taxiways (Oscar and Victor) were constructed. Phase II was completed in 2007.[5]

The third stage of the plan (Phase III), started in 2009, involves the extension of the airside concourse ('the Finger') with 15 new gates (of which 9 jetways), as well as the expansion of Departure Hall (8 new gates) and Arrivals Hall. The airside concourse, designed by Studio Capelli Architettura & Associati, was inaugurated on 29 March 2011,[5][6] followed, in November 2012, by the extension of the Departure Hall.[7]

The airport has ILS CAT III B status on runways 08R and 08L.

OTP north runway

Current and future development

The airport is currently undertaking Phase III of its development program, a €150 million investment, which consist of the expansion of Departure Hall, Arrivals Hall and the concourse. At the end of this phase, the terminal will have a processing capacity of 4,500 passengers per hour,[8] and the airport's capacity is expected to raise to a total of 6 mil. passengers annually on both domestic and international routes.[9]

Beyond Phase III, a new terminal building (Henri Coandă 2), located at the Eastern end of the current location is envisaged. Henri Coandă 2 will be of a modular design, consisting of 4 separate buildings, each capable of individually handling 5 million passengers annually. Each module will be built as traffic demands will dictate. Thus, by 2023, Terminal 2 alone should be able to handle the 20 million passengers per year indicated by estimates. The terminal will be connected to the future A3 motorway, to the railway system and to the Bucharest Metro system as Bucharest Metro Line M6.[10]

Terminals

The airport's facilities consist of a single terminal with two main buildings (occasionally considered to be separate terminals). These two buildings are the Departures Hall (formerly known as International Departures Hall) and the Arrivals Hall (formerly known as International Arrivals/Domestic Hall).[11] A walkway with several shops connects the buildings. The airside concourse (the so-called finger terminal) is organized in two separate (Schengen/non-Schengen) passengers transit flows.[12]

The airport has a total of 32 gates (of which 14 equipped with jetways).[7]

Airlines

Aerial view of Bucharest Otopeni terminals.
Bucharest Otopeni Airport is TAROM's main base.
Bucharest Otopeni Airport new extended finger terminal.
Air France at Bucharest Otopeni Airport
Wizz Air at Bucharest Otopeni Departures terminal
Lufthansa at Bucharest Otopeni Airport

Passenger

AirlinesDestinations
Aegean AirlinesSeasonal charter: Corfu (resumes 10 June 2013), Heraklion, Kos (resumes 4 June 2013), Rhodes (resumes 4 June 2013), Zakynthos (begins 3 June 2013)
Aeroflot Moscow-Sheremetyevo
Air Berlin Berlin-Tegel
Air Bucharest Seasonal charter: Antalya (resumes 6 June 2013), Barcelona, Bodrum , Corfu (resumes 9 June 2013), Dubai, Heraklion , Hurghada, Kos (begins 9 June 2013), Palma de Mallorca (resumes 5 June 2013), Rhodes (resumes 9 June 2013), Rovaniemi, Sharm El Sheikh, Split (begins 11 June 2013)
Air Europa Charter: Tenerife-South
Air France Paris-Charles de Gaulle
Air MaltaCharter: Malta (begins 6 June 2013)
Air Moldova Chişinău
Alitalia Milan-Linate, Rome-Fiumicino
Austrian Airlines
operated by Tyrolean Airways
Vienna
Blue Air Barcelona, Bologna, Brussels, Catania, Dublin, Larnaca, London-Luton, Madrid, Málaga, Milan-Bergamo, Naples, Nice, Paris-Beauvais, Rome-Fiumicino, Stuttgart, Valencia, Venice
Seasonal: Lisbon (resumes 15 June 2013)
British Airways London-Heathrow
Czech Airlines Prague
El Al Tel Aviv-Ben Gurion
flydubai Dubai
KLM Amsterdam
LOT Polish Airlines Warsaw-Chopin
Lufthansa Berlin-Tegel, Munich
Seasonal: Frankfurt
Lufthansa Regional
operated by Eurowings
Düsseldorf
Lufthansa Regional
operated by Lufthansa CityLine
Munich
Seasonal: Frankfurt
Nouvelair Seasonal charter: Djerba, Monastir, Tunis
Olympic Air Athens
Pegasus Airlines Istanbul-Sabiha Gökçen
Seasonal charter: Antalya
Qatar Airways Doha, Sofia
Scandinavian Airlines Copenhagen
Sky Airlines Seasonal charter: Antalya
Swiss International Air Lines
operated by Helvetic Airways
Zurich
TAP Portugal Lisbon
TAROM Amman-Queen Alia, Amsterdam, Athens, Baia Mare, Barcelona, Beirut, Belgrade, Brussels, Budapest, Cairo, Chişinău, Cluj-Napoca, Dubai, Dublin, Frankfurt, Iași, Istanbul-Atatürk, Larnaca, London-Heathrow, Madrid, Munich, Oradea, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Rome-Fiumicino, Satu Mare, Sibiu, Sofia, Strasbourg, Suceava, Târgu Mureş, Tel Aviv-Ben Gurion, Thessaloniki, Timişoara, Vienna
Seasonal: Dubrovnik (resumes 16 June 2013), Nice (resumes 30 May 2013), Palma de Mallorca (resumes 19 June 2013)
Seasonal charter: Antalya , Bodrum, Corfu (resumes 12 June 2013), Heraklion, Hurghada, Kos (resumes 21 June 2013), Mykonos [resumes 21 June 2013], Perveza (begins 8 June 2013) Rhodes, Santorini (resumes 16 June 2013), Sharm el-Sheikh, Skiathos (resumes 1 June 2013), Tenerife-South (resumes 12 June 2013)
Tunisair Seasonal charter: Tunis
Turkish Airlines Istanbul-Atatürk
Vueling Barcelona
Seasonal: Bilbao (begins 20 June 2013), Madrid (begins 19 June 2013)
Wizz Air Alghero , Barcelona, Bari, Beauvais, Bergamo, Bologna, Catania, Charleroi, Cuneo, Dortmund, Dubai-World Central (begins 29 October 2013),[13] Eindhoven, Geneva, Girona (begins 4 June 2013), Larnaca , London-Luton, Madrid, Milan-Malpensa, Naples, Perugia (begins 5 June 2013), Pisa, Rome-Ciampino, Sandefjord , Tel Aviv-Ben Gurion (begins 15 June 2013), Treviso, Valencia, Verona, Zaragoza
Seasonal: Alicante , Palma de Mallorca

Cargo

AirlinesDestinations
DHL Aviation Bergamo, Budapest, Chişinău, Treviso
TNT Airways Liège, Munich, Sofia
UPS Airlines
operated by Farnair Switzerland
Cologne/Bonn, Katowice


Services

Shopping area located inside the Departures Hall

Services for passengers

The International Departure area hosts a variety of shops, cafes, lounges, Internet cafes and many more. There is also a chapel at the first level of the International Departures Hall. The facilities inside the airport are easily accessible for the persons with disabilities. Airlines distribute Romanian- and English-language newspapers at the departure gates.

Ancillary services

A business lounge.

The main handling agent in the airport is Globeground, the second being Menzies. The catering services are provided by Alpha Rocas [3].

Traffic and statistics

In 2012, Henri Coandă International received 7,101,712 passengers,[14] an increase of 40% compared to 2011. This was largely due to the transfer of operations from Aurel Vlaicu International Airport after its closure as a commercial airport in March. Together, both of Bucharest's airports handled 7,547,465 passengers in 2012.[15]

OTP traffic
Year Passengers (total)[16] Passengers (domestic flights) Aircraft movements[16] Cargo
2005 2,972,799
-
49,593 16,887 tonnes
2006 3,497,938
-
55,056 18,089 tonnes
2007 4,937,683 410,916 67,372 17,423 tonnes
2008 5,063,555 497,208 69,916
-
2009 4,480,765 496,391 69,692
-
2010 4,802,510
-
71,481
-
2011 5,049,443
-
-
-
2012 7,101,712
-
-
-
Busiest routes at Henri Coandă Airport
City Airport(s) Weekly Departures
(January 2013)
Airlines
Vienna Vienna Airport
54
Austrian Airlines, TAROM
Rome Fiumicino Airport, Ciampino Airport
45
Alitalia, Blue Air, TAROM. Wizz Air
Paris Beauvais Airport, Charles de Gaulle Airport
44
Air France, Blue Air, TAROM, Wizz Air
London Heathrow Airport, Luton Airport
42
Blue Air, British Airways, TAROM, Wizz Air
Munich Munich Airport
40
Lufthansa, Lufthansa Cityline, TAROM
Istanbul Atatürk Airport, Sabiha Gökçen Airport
39
Pegasus Airlines, TAROM, Turkish Airlines
Frankfurt Frankfurt Airport
32
Lufthansa, TAROM
Cluj-Napoca Cluj-Napoca Airport
31
TAROM
Iași Iași Airport
31
TAROM
Timișoara Traian Vuia Airport
26
TAROM

Ground transportation

RATB Route 783 diagram (connections to Bucharest Metro lines shown)

Train

A direct train service to the main railway station, Gara de Nord, runs from the Airport railway station, about 900 m from the airport. Shuttle buses connect this train station with the departures and arrivals halls and the tickets are valid both for the train and for the transfer bus.

The next phase of the airport's expansion aims to locate the train station in the airport itself.

Bus

Henri Coandă Airport is connected to the public transport company RATB system. The 780 route provides express bus service to Gara de Nord railway station in Bucharest and the 783 route provides express bus service to the city center 24 hours a day.

Taxi

As of May 2013, taxis serving Henri Coandă Airport can be ordered using a touch screen system located in the arrivals terminal, allowing the taxi drivers to enter the pick-up area. This measure was taken after many complaints from passengers who were being ripped off when using illegal, high-price taxis.[17]

Car Hire

Companies such as Avis, Hertz, Europcar and Sixt are located between international departures hall(upper floor) and arrivals hall.

Car

The airport is 16.5 km (10.3 mi) north of central Bucharest, to which it is connected by route DN1. The A3 motorway will connect the airport and the city, when finished.

Underground

Construction of the M6 line will start in 2014, connecting Henri Coanda Intl. to Gara de Nord train station.

  • Season 14 of The Amazing Race was filmed here during the first portion of the third leg. All of the nine teams present arrived at the airport on three separate flights before they completed the rest of the leg.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b EAD Basic
  2. ^ "TAROM S.A. – Identification Data
  3. ^ About Țiriac Air
  4. ^ "Contact." Henri Coandă International Airport. Retrieved on 1 December 2011. "The National Company "Bucharest Airports" S.A. Calea Bucurestilor nr. 224 E Otopeni, Ilfov County Postal code 075150 Romania" – Address in Romanian: "Compania Nationala "Aeroporturi Bucuresti" S.A. Calea Bucurestilor nr. 224 E Otopeni, judetul Ilfov Cod postal 075150 Romania"
  5. ^ a b c [1] Template:Ro icon Romanian Ministry of Transportation – Descriptive Note – Otopeni Airport Development Strategy
  6. ^ "The Bucharest Airport at a10.eu
  7. ^ a b New Departing Hall extension opened Template:Ro icon
  8. ^ Bucharest Henri Coandă Airport – Development&Modernization – Phase III
  9. ^ Extensions to the Coandă Airport Template:Ro icon
  10. ^ [2] Template:Ro icon The Romanian Ministry of Transportation
  11. ^ Bucharest Otopeni Airport, the last frontier Template:Ro icon
  12. ^ A new terminal Template:Ro icon
  13. ^ New route to DWC
  14. ^ Topul aeroporturilor din Romania Template:Ro icon
  15. ^ http://www.aeronews.ro/comercial/1677-aeroporturile-bucureti-trafic-in-2012
  16. ^ a b ORDIN 169/1.801. Planul national de actiune privind reducerea emisiilor de gaze cu efect de seră în domeniul aviatiei civile Template:Ro icon
  17. ^ "Touch screen installed for cab ordering at Otopeni airport in Bucharest". Romania Insider. Retrieved 2 May 2013.