Hotels, Resorts, Villas
Hotels, Resorts, Villas
Hotels, Resorts, Villas
Hotels, Resorts, Villas


Leonardo Da Vinci International Airport edit
extracted from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia (using Wikipedia Reflection Script)


 

Leonardo da Vinci-Fiumicino Airport - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Leonardo da Vinci-Fiumicino Airport

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Leonardo da Vinci-Fiumicino Airport
Aeroporto Leonardo da Vinci di Fiumicino
Roma/Fiumicino Airport
Rome Airport Logo.png
Rom Fiumicino 04.jpg
IATA: FCOICAO: LIRF
Summary
Airport type Public
Operator Aeroporti di Roma SpA
Serves Rome, Vatican City
Location Fiumicino
Hub for
Elevation AMSL 13 ft / 4 m
Coordinates 41°48′01″N 012°14′20″E / 41.80028°N 12.23889°E / 41.80028; 12.23889Coordinates: 41°48′01″N 012°14′20″E / 41.80028°N 12.23889°E / 41.80028; 12.23889
Website www.adr.it
Map
FCO is located in Italy
FCO
Location in Italy
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
07/25 3,307 10,850 Asphalt
16R/34L 3,902 12,802 Asphalt
16L/34R 3,902 12,802 Asphalt
16C/34C 3,602 11,818 Asphalt
Statistics (2011)
Total passengers 37.693.46
Aircraft movement 329,269
Source: Italian Aeronautical Information Publication1
Eurocontrol2
Passport stamp

Leonardo da Vinci-Fiumicino Airport (Italian: Aeroporto Leonardo da Vinci di Fiumicino) (IATA: FCOICAO: LIRF), also commonly known as Fiumicino Airport, is Italy's largest airport with 37.7 million passengers served in 2011,3 located in Fiumicino, 18.9 nautical miles (35.0 km; 21.7 mi) west southwest of Rome's historic city centre.1

The airport serves as a hub for Alitalia and based on total passenger numbers it was the sixth busiest airport in Europe, and the world's 25th busiest airport in 2011.

The airport is named after Italian polymath Leonardo da Vinci, who first designed a proto helicopter and a flying machine with wings.

Contents

History

The airport was officially opened on January 15, 1961, with two runways, replacing the small Rome Ciampino Airport which remains in service for domestic and charter operations. During the decade Alitalia invested heavily in the new airport, building hangars and maintenance centers; in the same period a third runway was added (16L/34R). Despite being officially opened in 1961, Leonardo da Vinci-Fiumicino Airport had actually been in use since August 20, 1960. This was in order to help relieve air traffic that was congesting Rome Ciampino Airport during the 1960 Olympics.4

Four runways presently operate at Leonardo da Vinci airport: 16L/34R and 16R/34L (separated by a distance of 4,000 m (13,000 ft)), 16C/34C (close to 16L/34R), mostly used as a taxiway or as a backup of 16L/34R, and 07/25, used only westwards for takeoffs due to dominant winds.

Since 2005 the airport operates a category III B instrument landing system (ILS). Further improvement work was implemented in 2007 to enable the airport to handle 30 takeoffs/landings per hour, up from 10, in the event of thick fog.

The terminal areas were upgraded during the 1990s5:

  • 1991: Opening of the domestic pier with 12 loading bridges (Pier A);
  • 1995: Opening of the international pier with 10 loading bridges (Pier B);
  • 1999: Opening of the west satellite with 11 loading bridges (satellite C) and sky-bridge train connecting it with the main terminal;
  • 2000: Opening of the new domestic terminal (terminal A). Reorganization of terminal buildings, then consisting of: terminal A (and pier A), terminal AA, terminal B (and pier B), terminal C (and west satellite);
  • 2004: Opening of new cargo terminal called Cargo City;
  • 2008: Opening of terminal 5 for check-in of American carrier flights and El-Al (passengers are then bussed to the Main terminal building); serves 950,000 passengers per year. Extended work to build new pier C.
  • 2009: Renaming of terminals - A has been renamed T1, AA has become T2, B and C became T3 and T5 has remained as T5.
  • 2010: Launch of the new single Baggage Handling System (BHS) for more efficient luggage delivery.

The next commitments will be the following:

  • completion of environment-friendly cogeneration system allowing the airport to self-produce energy;
  • the new pier C (dedicated to international flights) with 16 additional loading bridges, to be completed by 2011-2012 to enable handling the expected growth from present-day 38 million passengers per year to 55 million by 2018.
  • Masterplan Fiumicino Nord: to 2044, AdR, will build four new terminals and two new runways. In 2044 Fiumicino's passengers will be 100 million/year.

Terminals, airlines and destinations

A terminal map of Fiumicino Airport
Airlines Destinations Terminal
Aegean Airlines Athens, Rhodes
Seasonal: Corfu [begins 17 July 2012], Mykonos [resumes 10 July 2012] , Santorini [resumes 11 July 2012]
3
Aer Lingus Dublin
Seasonal: Cork
3
Aeroflot Moscow-Sheremetyevo 3
Aeroflot
operted by Rossiya
St Petersburg 3
Aerolíneas Argentinas Buenos Aires-Ezeiza 3
Afriqiyah Airways Tripoli 3
Air Algérie Algiers 3
Air Alps Bolzano 1
Air Berlin Berlin-Tegel, Düsseldorf, Hamburg, Nuremberg 3
Air Canada Seasonal: Montréal-Trudeau, Toronto-Pearson 3
Air China Beijing-Capital 3
Air Corsica Seasonal: Ajaccio, Figari 3
Air Dolomiti Seasonal: Nimes [begins 2 July 2012] 1
Air Europa Madrid 3
Air France Marseille, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Toulouse 1
Air Italy Turin 1
Air Italy Fortaleza, Havana, Mombasa, Natal, Nossi Be, Santiago de Cuba, Zanzibar 3
Air Malta Malta 3
Air Moldova Chişinău 3
Air Transat Seasonal: Montréal-Trudeau, Toronto-Pearson 3
Air Vallée Parma 1
AirBaltic Riga 3
Alitalia Alghero, Amsterdam, Ancona, Athens, Barcelona, Bari, Bologna, Budapest, Brindisi, Brussels, Cagliari, Catania, Crotone, Florence, Frankfurt, Geneva, Genoa, Lamezia Terme, Madrid, Málaga, Malta, Milan-Linate, Milan-Malpensa, Munich, Naples, Nice, Palermo, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Pisa, Reggio Calabria, Thessaloniki, Toulouse, Turin, Valencia, Venice-Marco Polo, Verona, Vienna, Warsaw-Chopin
Seasonal: Ibiza, Lampedusa, Olbia, Palma de Mallorca, Pantelleria, Rhodes, Trapani
1
Alitalia Accra, Algiers, Amman-Queen Alia, Beijing-Capital, Beirut, Belgrade, Benghazi [begins 3 June 2012], Boston, Bucharest-Henri Coandă, Buenos Aires-Ezeiza, Caracas, Cairo, Casablanca, Damascus [resumes 27 October 2012], Istanbul-Atatürk, Kiev-Boryspil, Lagos, London-Heathrow, Miami, Moscow-Sheremetyevo, New York-JFK, Newark, Osaka-Kansai, Rio de Janeiro-Galeão, Riyadh [begins 18 September 2012], St Petersburg, São Paulo-Guarulhos, Sofia, Tbilisi [begins 2 July 2012]6, Tehran-Imam Khomeini, Tel Aviv-Ben Gurion, Tirana, Tokyo-Narita, Toronto-Pearson, Tripoli, Tunis
Seasonal: Chicago-O'Hare, Los Angeles
3
American Airlines Seasonal: Chicago-O'Hare, New York-JFK 5*
Arkia Israel Airlines Tel Aviv-Ben Gurion 5*
Armavia Seasonal: Yerevan 3
Atlasjet Istanbul-Atatürk 3
Azerbaijan Airlines Baku 3
Austrian Airlines Vienna 3
Belavia Minsk 3
Belle Air Tirana, Skopje 3
Biman Bangladesh Airlines Dhaka 3
Blue Air Bacău, Bucharest-Henri Coandă 2
Blue Panorama Airlines Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi, Cancún, Cayo Largo, Dalaman, Havana, Hurghada, Kos, La Romana, Luxor, Mahé, Marsa Alam, Mersa Matruh, Montego Bay, Mykonos, Phuket, Roatan, Santiago de Cuba, Santorini, Sharm el-Sheikh, Zanzibar 3
Blue Panorama Airlines
operated by Blu-express
Brindisi, Catania, Chania, Genoa, Granada, Istanbul-Sabiha Gökçen, Lampedusa, Mykonos, Nice, Palermo, Pantelleria, Santorini, Turin
Seasonal: Antalya [resumes 14 June 2012], Corfu [begins 19 July 2012], Karpathos [begins 19 July 2012], Kos [resumes 19 July 2012], Menorca [resumes 19 July 2012], Palma de Mallorca [resumes 19 July 2012], Preveza [begins 19 July 2012], Rhodes [resumes 19 July 2012], Samos [begins 19 July 2012], Skiathos [begins 19 July 2012]
3
Bmibaby Birmingham 3
Brit Air Lyon 1
British Airways London-Gatwick, London-Heathrow 3
Brussels Airlines Brussels 3
Bulgaria Air Sofia 3
Carpatair Chişinău [begins 5 June 2012], Craiova, Timişoara
Seasonal: Iaşi
3
Cathay Pacific Hong Kong 3
China Airlines Delhi, Taipei-Taoyuan 3
China Eastern Airlines Shanghai-Pudong 3
Croatia Airlines Dubrovnik, Split, Zagreb 3
Cyprus Airways Larnaca 3
Czech Airlines Prague 3
Darwin Airline Geneva, Lugano, Rimini 3
Delta Air Lines Atlanta
Seasonal: Detroit, New York-JFK
5*
EasyJet Amsterdam, Athens, Berlin-Brandenburg [begins 3 June], Berlin-Schönefeld [ends 2 June], Bilbao [ends 27 October], Bristol, Dubrovnik, Düsseldorf [ends 26 October], Geneva, Heraklion, Ibiza, Lisbon, London-Gatwick, Lyon, Madrid, Milan-Malpensa, Mykonos, Nice, Palermo, Palma de Mallorca, Paris-Orly, Split, Toulouse, Venice-Marco Polo 2
EasyJet Switzerland Basel/Mulhouse, Geneva 2
EgyptAir Cairo 3
El Al Tel Aviv-Ben Gurion 5*
Emirates Dubai 3
Eritrean Airlines Asmara 3
Ethiopian Airlines Addis Ababa, Stockholm-Arlanda [ends 15 June 2012] 3
Europe Airpost Ostend, Tangier 3
Finnair Helsinki 3
Germanwings Cologne/Bonn, Hanover, Stuttgart 3
Gulf Air Bahrain 3
Iberia Madrid 3
Israir Airlines Tel Aviv-Ben Gurion 5
Jat Airways Belgrade 3
Jet2.com Glasgow-International, Leeds/Bradford, Manchester, Newcastle 3
Kenya Airways Nairobi-Jomo Kenyatta 3
KLM Amsterdam 1
Korean Air Seoul-Incheon 3
Kuwait Airways Kuwait, Paris-Charles de Gaulle 3
LOT Polish Airlines Warsaw-Chopin 3
Lufthansa Berlin-Brandenburg [begins 3 June], Düsseldorf, Frankfurt, Munich 3
Lufthansa Regional
operated by Air Dolomiti
Munich 3
Luxair Luxembourg 3
Meridiana Fly Cagliari, Olbia, Verona 1
Meridiana Fly Malé, Mauritius, Sharm el-Sheikh, Tel Aviv-Ben Gurion, Yerevan
Seasonal: Fuerteventura, Mykonos, Santorini, Tenerife-South
3
Middle East Airlines Beirut 3
Mistral Air Lourdes Cargo
Monarch Birmingham, London-Luton 3
Montenegro Airlines Podgorica 3
Neos Boa Vista, Cancún, Mahé, Malé, Mombasa, Tel Aviv-Ben Gurion, Zanzibar 3
Niki Vienna 3
Norwegian Air Shuttle Copenhagen, Gothenburg-Landvetter, Helsinki, Oslo-Gardermoen, Stockholm-Arlanda 3
OLT Express Bydgoszcz [begins 29 October 2012], Gdańsk [beings 30 October 2012], Łódź [begins 29 October 2012], Rzeszów [begins 30 October 2012], Warsaw-Chopin [begins 29 October 2012]] TBD
Onur Air Antalya 3
Qatar Airways Doha 3
Pegasus Airlines Istanbul-Sabiha Gökçen 3
Régional Bordeaux, Strasbourg [begins 2 July 2012] 1
Royal Air Maroc Casablanca 3
Royal Jordanian Amman-Queen Alia 3
Saudi Arabian Airlines Jeddah, Riyadh 3
Scandinavian Airlines Copenhagen, Oslo-Gardermoen
Seasonal: Stockholm-Arlanda
3
Singapore Airlines Singapore 3
Sky Work Airlines Bern 3
Smart Wings Prague 3
SriLankan Airlines Colombo 3
Sun d'Or
operated by El Al
Tel Aviv-Ben Gurion 5*
Sunwing Airlines Seasonal: Toronto-Pearson 5*
Swiss International Air Lines Basel/Mulhouse, Zürich 3
TACV Sal 3
TAP Portugal Lisbon 3
TAP
operated by Portugália
Porto 3
TAROM Bucharest-Henri Coandă 3
Thai Airways International Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi 3
Transaero Moscow-Vnukovo [begins 27 June], St Petersburg [begins 28 June]
Charter: Moscow-Domodedovo
3
Transavia.com Rotterdam 3
Tunisair Monastir, Tunis 3
Turkish Airlines Istanbul-Atatürk 3
Ukraine International Airlines Kiev-Boryspil 3
United Airlines Washington-Dulles
Seasonal: Newark
5*
Ural Airlines Yekaterinburg 3
US Airways Philadelphia
Seasonal: Charlotte
5*
Uzbekistan Airways Tashkent 3
Vueling Airlines Barcelona, Ibiza, Málaga, Minorca, Nantes, Palma de Mallorca, Paris-Orly, Valencia 3
Wind Jet Catania, Palermo 2
Wind Jet Seasonal Charter: Tel Aviv-Ben Gurion 5*
Wizz Air Belgrade, Brno, Budapest, Cluj-Napoca, Gdansk, Poznan, Prague, Sofia, Târgu Mureş, Timisoara, Vilnius, Warsaw-Chopin [ends 17 July 2012], Warsaw-Modlin [begins 18 July 2012] 2
  • All international (non-Schengen) flights arrive at Terminal 3, through gates G and H. Terminal 5 is an isolated, departure-only facility for all US-flagged carriers and a few others7.

Traffic and statistics

Busiest Domestic Routes from Fiumicino (2011)8
Rank City Passengers Airline
1 Sicily Catania, Sicily 913.805 Alitalia, Blu-express, Wind Jet
2 Lombardy Milan-Linate, Lombardy 772.918 Alitalia
3 Sicily Palermo, Sicily 755.773 Alitalia, Blu-express, easyJet, Wind Jet
4 Piedmont Turin, Piedmont 471.455 Air Italy, Alitalia, Blu-express
5 Veneto Venice-Marco Polo, Veneto 399.460 Alitalia, easyJet
6 Sardinia Cagliari, Sardinia 373.834 Alitalia, Meridiana Fly
7 Lombardy Milan-Malpensa, Lombardy 340.530 Alitalia, easyJet
8 Calabria Lemezia Terme, Calabria 300.004 Alitalia, Blu-express
9 Apulia Bari, Apulia 287.135 Alitalia
10 Liguria Genoa, Liguria 267.004 Alitalia, Blu-express
Busiest European Routes from Fiumicino (2011)9
Rank City Passengers Airline
1 Spain Madrid, Spain 1.280.221 Air Europa, Alitalia, easyJet, Iberia
2 France Paris-CDG, France 1.217.305 Air France, Alitalia
3 United Kingdom London-Heathrow, United Kingdom 1.050.229 Alitalia, British Airways
4 Netherlands Amsterdam, Netherlands 914.622 Alitalia, KLM, easyJet
5 Spain Barcelona, Spain 747.582 Alitalia, Vueling
6 Germany Frankfurt am Main, Germany 718.768 Alitalia, Lufthansa
7 Belgium Brussels, Belgium 513.077 Alitalia, Brussels Airlines
8 Germany Munich, Germany 512.143 Alitalia, Lufthansa
9 Greece Athens, Greece 482.403 Aegean Airlines, Alitalia, easyJet
10 United Kingdom London-Gatwick, United Kingdom 477.455 British Airways, easyJet
11 Austria Vienna, Austria 452.417 Alitalia, Austrian Airlines, Niki
12 Portugal Lisbon, Portugal 412.108 easyJet, TAP Portugal
13 Turkey Istanbul-Atatürk, Turkey 368.745 Alitalia, Turkish Airlines
14 Russia Moscow-Sheremetyevo, Russia 346.218 Aeroflot, Alitalia
15 France Paris-Orly, France 342.351 easyJet, Vueling
16 Switzerland Geneva, Switzerland 328.956 Alitalia, Baboo, easyJet
17 Czech Republic Prague, Czech Republic 313.745 CSA Czech Airlines, Smart Wings, Wizz Air
18 Switzerland Zurich, Switzerland 309.304 Swiss International Air Lines
19 Denmark Copenhagen, Denmark 296.937 Cimber Sterling, Norwegian Air Shuttle, Scandinavian Airlines
20 France Nice, France 287.650 Alitalia, Blu-express, easyJet
Busiest Intercontinental Routes from Fiumicino (2011)
Rank City Passengers Airline
1 United States New York-John F. Kennedy, United States 550.575 Alitalia, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines
2 Israel Tel Aviv, Israel 521.328 Alitalia Arkia Israel Airlines, El Al, Israir Airlines, Meridiana Fly, Neos, Sun d'Or
3 United Arab Emirates Dubai, United Arab Emirates 419.127 Emirates
4 Canada Toronto, Canada 291.826 Alitalia, Air Canada, Air Transat, Sunwing Airlines
5 Argentina Buenos Aires-Ezeiza, Argentina 277.769 Aerolíneas Argentinas, Alitalia
5 United States Newark, United States 227.880 Alitalia, United Airlines
6 Egypt Cairo, Egypt 217.638 Alitalia, Egyptair
7 Tunisia Tunis, Tunisia 213.406 Alitalia, Tunisair
8 Brazil São Paulo-Guarulhos, Brazil 203.682 Alitalia
9 Morocco Casablanca, Morocco 191.506 Alitalia, Royal Air Maroc
10 Japan Tokyo-Narita, Japan 185.624 Alitalia
11 China Beijing, China 180.694 Air China, Alitalia
12 United States Chicago, United Airlines 178.406 Alitalia, American Airlines
13 Qatar Doha, Qatar 177.801 Qatar Airways
14 United States Philadelphia, United States 174.120 US Airways
15 Hong Kong Hong Kong, Hong Kong 173.952 Cathay Pacific
16 United States Atlanta, United States 160.355 Delta Air Lines
17 Turkey Istanbul-Sabiha Gökçen, Turkey 143.586 Blu-express, Pegasus Airlines
18 United States Washington D.C., United States 136.189 United Airlines
19 United States Miami, United States 133.901 Alitalia
20 United States Boston, United States 132.457 Alitalia

Other facilities

All Nippon Airways has its Rome Sales Office in the Room 447 in the Office Tower (Torre Uffici), on the airport property.1011 Cathay Pacific has its Rome Office in Torre Uffici 2.12

Ground handling

Ground handling services have been provided by Aeroporti di Roma up to 1999 when it created Aeroporti di Roma Handling (to serve all airlines apart from Alitalia, which continued being handled by Aeroporti di Roma itself). Alitalia provided passenger assistance even before 1999. In 2001 Alitalia created Alitalia Airport and started providing self-handling and third party handling. Air One created EAS and started providing third-party services too. Aeroporti di Roma Handling remains the biggest handler in terms of airlines handled but Alitalia Airport is the biggest handler in terms of airplanes handled as Alitalia aircraft account for 50% of the ones in Fiumicino. There are some private handlers that provide passenger assistance alone: ARE Group, Globeground Italia and ICTS Italia.

On 2 May 2006 Meridiana's passenger handling staff transferred to Alitalia Airport and the ramp transferred to Alitalia Airport in February 2007 (from Aeroporti di Roma Handling).

The ground handling deregulation has brought confusion on who does what and has decreased service levels especially on transferring baggage.

In May 2006 Italy's Civil Aviation Authority announced that it took off the limitation of 3 ramp handlers in Rome Leonardo da Vinci airport. ARE Group and Aviapartner announced that they would create a company called Aviapartner (51% Aviapartner; 49% ARE Group) to serve Milan Malpensa and Rome Leonardo da Vinci. There are fears that luggage mishandling will go up.

In November 2006 Aeroporti di Roma Handling was sold to Flightcare (itself owned by Spanish company FCC), an Aviance member.

Security services

Security Services transferred from the Polizia di Stato to Aeroporti di Roma in 2000. Aeroporti di Roma created Airport Security (100%-owned) to provide these services as well as security services to airlines (in competition with other security companies such as IVRI). Airport Security is supervised by Polizia di Stato (Italian State Police), Guardia di Finanza (Italian Customs Police), Ente Nazionale Aviazione Civile (Italy's Civil Aviation Authority) and Aeroporti di Roma.

Ground transportation

Leonardo da Vinci is about 35 km (22 mi) by car from Rome's historic city centre. The airport is served by the six-lane motorway A91 Roma-Fiumicino and numerous buses and taxis.

Fiumicino Aeroporto railway station is served by the Leonardo Express train operated by Trenitalia, available at the airport terminal. It takes 30 minutes to get to Termini Station in a non-stop trip that is provided twice an hour. Alternatively, local trains leave once every 15 minutes, stopping at all stations. Passengers may have to change at Trastevere, Ostiense (Metro Piramide) or Tuscolana.13 The railway was scheduled to open in December 1989, with nonstop and several stop services available.14

Accidents and incidents

From the 1960s until the 1980s, the airport experienced significant aircraft hijackings as well as being the scene of two major terrorist attacks and the port of origin for an aircraft bombing in flight—some engendered by the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

  • On 23 November 1964, TWA Flight 800 (1964) an engine caught fire on a Boeing 707 during take off. 50 out of the 73 passengers and crew on board were killed.
  • On 5 March 1967, Varig flight 837, a Douglas DC-8-33 registration PP-PEA flying from Leonardo da Vinci-Fiumicino Airport to Rio de Janeiro-Galeão via Monrovia, caught fire after a mistaken approach to Monrovia, missing the threshold of the runway by 6,023 ft. Of the 90 passengers and crew aboard, 51 died.

References

  1. ^ a b ENAV S.p.A.
  2. ^ A6856/07 NOTAMN from the European Organisation for the Safety of Air Navigation
  3. ^ Italian Airport Statistics
  4. ^ http://www.lifeinitaly.com/travel/da-vinci-airport.asp
  5. ^ Expansion projects at Fiumicino
  6. ^ "Alitalia to Start Service to Tbilisi". http://www.finchannel.com/Main_News/Travel_Biz/99507_Alitalia_to_Start_Service_to_Tbilisi/. 
  7. ^ "Where to Meet at FCO?". http://www.roninrome.com/transportation/where-to-meet-at-fco. Retrieved 1 July 2011. 
  8. ^ "Stampa di foto a pagina intera" (PDF). 2012-03-28. http://www.enac.gov.it/repository/ContentManagement/information/P2098846464/Dati_di_traffico_2011.pdf. Retrieved 2012-03-29. 
  9. ^ "Stampa di foto a pagina intera" (PDF). 2012-03-28. http://www.enac.gov.it/repository/ContentManagement/information/P2098846464/Dati_di_traffico_2011.pdf. Retrieved 2012-03-29. 
  10. ^ "ANA City Offices/Ticketing Offices Europe." All Nippon Airways. Retrieved on 13 August 2011. "Rome Sales Office Room Nr 447 Torre Uffici Aeroporto Di Fiumicino, 00050 Fiumicino Roma"
  11. ^ "Contact ANA." ANA United Kingdom. Retrieved on 30 August 2011. "Room 447 Office Tower Fiumicino Airport 00050 Fiumicino (Rome) ITALY"
  12. ^ "Italy." Cathay Pacific. Retrieved on August 31, 2011. "Rome Address Torre Uffici 2 Via Generale Felice Santini snc Aeroporto Leonardo da Vinci 00054 Fiumicino (RM)"
  13. ^ http://www.adr.it/portal/portal/adr/Fiumicino/Servizi/Come_raggiungerci/Arrivo_in_treno_FCO
  14. ^ Flight International. 23 May 1987. 5.

External links



Copyright Wikipedia.com.