Prague Ruzyně Airport
| Prague Ruzyně International Airport Mezinárodní letiště Praha-Ruzyně |
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|---|---|---|---|
| IATA: PRG – ICAO: LKPR | |||
| Summary | |||
| Airport type | Public | ||
| Operator | Letiště Praha | ||
| Serves | Prague | ||
| Location | Ruzyně district of Prague | ||
| Hub for | |||
| Elevation AMSL | 1,247 ft / 380 m | ||
| Coordinates | 50°06′03″N 014°15′36″E / 50.10083°N 14.26°ECoordinates: 50°06′03″N 014°15′36″E / 50.10083°N 14.26°E | ||
| Website | |||
| Map | |||
| Location within Czech Republic | |||
| Runways | |||
| Direction | Length | Surface | |
| m | ft | ||
| 06/24 | 3,715 | 12,191 | Concrete |
| 12/30 | 3,250 | 10,665 | Concrete |
| 2,120 | 6,955 | Asphaltic concrete | |
| Helipads | |||
| Number | Length | Surface | |
| m | ft | ||
| H2 | 11.2 | 37 | Asphalt |
| H3 | 11.2 | 37 | Asphalt |
| H4 | 11.2 | 37 | Asphalt |
| Statistics (2009, 2010) | |||
| Passengers (2010) | 11,643,366 | ||
| Passenger growth 08–09 | −7.8% | ||
| Cargo (2009) | 47,870,804 kg | ||
| Source: Czech AIP at EUROCONTROL1 | |||
Prague Ruzyně International Airport (Czech: Letiště Praha-Ruzyně, Czech pronunciation: [ˈpraɦa ˈrʊzɪɲɛ], (IATA: PRG, ICAO: LKPR), serves Prague, Czech Republic. Located 10 kilometres (6 mi) west1 of the city centre, the airport is a hub for Czech Airlines. It was opened on 5 April 1937. Prague-Ruzyně is the biggest airport in the Czech Republic, and with 11.6 million passengers in 2009, the busiest one within the new EU member states.
Contents |
Ruzyně today
Most flights depart Ruzyně Airport from the North Terminals (Terminal 1 and 2). The South Terminals (Terminal 3 and 4) handle a few irregular flights, as well as VIP flights, special flights and small aircraft.
The airport contains two runways in service: 06/24 (till April 1993 07/25) and 12/30 (till May 2012 13/31). Former runway 04/22 is permanently closed for take-offs and landings and is used for taxiing and parking only. The most used runway is 24 due to the prevailing western winds. Runway 30 is also used often. Runway 06 is used rarely, while runway 12 is used only exceptionally.
Public transport to and from Prague city centre involves taking the bus number 119 to Dejvická metro station, and transferring on to the green metro line (Line A) or tram there, bus number 100 to Zličín metro station (yellow Line B), or number 179 to Nové Butovice station. A typical trip takes about 40 minutes. After midnight when the metro is closed, night bus number 510 runs from the airport, offering 4 transfer points to centre-bound trams en-route.
Since 14 December 2008, the bus line AE (Airport Express) also provides nonstop service between Terminals 1 and 2, and the Prague Main railway station every day from 05:00 to 22:00 H, leaving every half hour.
History
Czechoslovakia belonged, and Czech Republic belongs, to the leading European pioneers of the civil aviation,citation needed and became over time a part of the most state-of-the-art continental transportation system. The Prague–Ruzyně Airport began operation on 5 April 1937, but Czechoslovak civil aviation history started at the military airport in Prague–Kbely in 1919. The Prague Aviation Museum is now found at Kbely Airport.
Due to insufficient capacity of the Kbely airport in the middle of the 1930s, the Government decided to develop a new State Civil Airport in Ruzyně. One of the major awards the Prague Ruzyně Airport received include Diploma and Gold Medal granted in 1937 at the occasion of the International Art and Technical Exhibition in Paris (Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne also known as Paris 1937 World's Fair) for the technical conception of the central airport, primarily the architecture of check-in building (nowadays known as Terminal 4) designed by architect Ing. A. Beneš.
Other awards were granted for modernization during individual airport development phases. All these facts have been increasing the interest of carriers in using Prague airport. In one of the most dramatic moments in its history, the airport was seized by Soviet paratroopers on the night of August 20–21, 1968, who then facilitated the landing of Soviet troops and transports for the invasion of Czechoslovakia.
The airport has excellent location both with respect to short distance from the centre of Prague and within the European area. Moreover, the Ruzyně fields provide opportunities for further expansion of the airport according to the increasing capacity demand. The airport serves as a hub of the trans-European airport network.
The political and economic changes affected the seventy years of existence of the Prague-Ruzyně Airport. Some new air transportation companies and institutions were founded and some ceased operation since then. Ten entities were responsible for airport administration over time, including the new construction and development. Until the 1990s, there were two or three decade gaps before the major modernization of the Prague-Ruzyně Airport began in order to match the current capacity requirements. Since then, the Airport began modernisation on an ongoing basis and is gradually one of the top European airports.citation needed
The airport was used in the James Bond film, Casino Royale. The airport, along with Virgin Atlantic Airbus A340-600, depicts a scene that actually takes place in the film at Miami International Airport.
An online petition organized by one of the best-known Slovak film director, Fero Fenič, calling on the government and the Parliament to rename Prague Ruzyně Airport to Václav Havel International Airport attracted - just in a week after December 20, 2011 - a support of over 65,000 signatories both within and outside of the Czech Republic.2 A rendition of the airport with the proposed Václav Havel's name in a form of his signature along with his typical heart symbol after it is included in a blog's article in support of renaming of the airport.3 This name change is set to officially take place on October 5, 2012 on what would be Havel's 76th birthday anniversary. However, the name of the airport for IATA and ICAO will remain the same.
Further development
As the capacity of the airport has been reaching its limit for the last couple of years (as of 2005), further development of the airport is being considered. Besides regular repairs of the existing runways, Prague Airport (Czech: Letiště Praha s.p.) began the preparations for building a new runway, parallel to the 06/24 runway. The construction with estimated costs of CZK 5–7 billion was scheduled to begin in 2007, and the new runway marked 06R/24L (also called the BIS runway) is to be put into service in 2010. However, because of plenty of legal problems and protests of people who live close to the airport premises, the construction has not yet begun. Despite these problems, the project has support from the government, and is expected to be completed by the end of 2014. animation of the new runway and more info.
It will be over 3,500 metres (11,483 ft) long. Located about 1,500 metres (4,921 ft) south-east of the present main runway, the 24L runway will be equipped with a category III ILS, allowing landing and taking off under bad weather conditions.
Prague Airport states that besides increasing the airport capacity, the new runway system will greatly reduce the noise level in some densely inhabited areas of Prague. This should be achieved by reorganising the air traffic space around the airport, and shifting the traffic corridors after putting the two parallel runways into service. The vision of heavy traffic raised many protests from the suburban communities directly surrounding the airport. On 6 November 2004, local referenda were held in two Prague suburbs – Nebušice and Přední Kopanina – giving official support to the local authorities for active opposition against the construction of the parallel runway.
The construction of a railway connection between the airport and Prague city centre is also in the planning stage. According to the most recent plans, the construction should begin in 2011, and the operations should commence in 2014. The track will be served by express trains with special fares, connecting non-stop the airport with the city centre, and local trains fully integrated into Prague integrated transit system.4
Operations
The company operating the airport is Prague Airport (Letiště Praha, a. s.), a joint-stock company that has one shareholder, the Ministry of Finance has its sole shareholder. The company was founded in February 2008, as part of a privatization process involving the Airport Prague (Správa Letiště Praha, s.p.) state enterprise. This action was in accordance with the Czech Republic Government Memorandum Nr. 888, which had been passed on 9 July 2008. On 1 December 2008, Prague Airport took all rights and duties formerly held by Správa Letiště Praha, s.p., and Prague Airports took all business authorisations, certificates, employees, and licenses from the fomrer company.5
The head office of Prague Airport is in Prague 6.6 The former state-owned enterprise had its head office on the airport property.78
Terminals
Ruzyně Airport has two main passenger terminals, two general aviation terminals, as well as a cargo facility.
-
- Terminal 1: is used for flights outside the Schengen area; it was opened in 1997
- Terminal 2: is used for flights within the Schengen area; it was opened on 17 January 2006
- Terminal 3: is used for private and charter flights; it was opened in 1997
- Terminal 4: is used exclusively for VIP flights and state visits; it is the oldest part of the airport which was opened on 5 April 1937
- Cargo Terminal 1: operated by Menzies Aviation Czech; for freight flights only
- Cargo Terminal 2: operated by Skyport; for freight flights only
Airlines and destinations
| Airlines | Destinations | Terminal |
|---|---|---|
| Aegean Airlines | Athens [begins 24 May 2012] | 2 |
| Aer Lingus | Dublin | 1 |
| Aeroflot | Moscow-Sheremetyevo | 1 |
| Aeroflot operted by Rossiya |
St. Petersburg | 1 |
| Aerosvit | Kiev-Boryspil | 1 |
| Air France | Marseille, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Toulouse | 2 |
| Air France operated by Brit Air |
Lyon | 2 |
| Air Malta | Seasonal: Malta | 2 |
| Air One | Milan-Malpensa, Pisa, Venice-Marco Polo | 2 |
| Air Via | Seasonal: Burgas [begins 1 June 2012], Varna [begins 5 June 2012] | 1 |
| Austrian Airlines | Vienna | 2 |
| Azerbaijan Airlines | Baku | 1 |
| Belavia | Minsk-National | 1 |
| Bmibaby | Birmingham | 1 |
| British Airways | London-Heathrow | 1 |
| Brussels Airlines | Brussels | 2 |
| Brussels Airlines operated by Flybe |
Brussels | 2 |
| Bulgaria Air | Sofia Seasonal: Burgas [begins 17 June 2012] |
1
|
| Czech Airlines | Abu Dhabi, Almaty, Baku, Donetsk, Kiev-Boryspil, Lviv, Minsk-National, Moscow-Sheremetyevo, Nizhniy Novgorod, Odessa, Rostov-on-Don, Samara, Sofia [ends 27 May 2012], St. Petersburg, Tashkent, Tbilisi, Tel Aviv-Ben Gurion, Ufa, Yekaterinburg, Yerevan, Zagreb | 1 |
| Czech Airlines | Amsterdam, Barcelona, Berlin-Tegel [ends 2 June 2012], Brussels, Bucharest-Henri Coandă, Budapest, Cologne/Bonn, Copenhagen, Düsseldorf, Frankfurt, Geneva, Hamburg, Košice, Madrid, Milan-Malpensa, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Poprad-Tatry, Riga, Rome-Fiumicino, Stockholm-Arlanda, Tallinn, Venice-Marco Polo, Vilnius, Warsaw, Žilina | 2 |
| Central Connect Airlines | Berlin-Brandenburg [begins 3 June 2012], Hannover, Krakow, Ljubljana, Ostrava, Stuttgart | 2 |
| Delta Air Lines | New York-JFK | 1 |
| EasyJet | Bristol, London-Gatwick, London-Stansted | 1 |
| EasyJet | Amsterdam, Lyon, Milan-Malpensa, Paris-Charles de Gaulle | 2 |
| El Al | Tel Aviv-Ben Gurion | 1 |
| Emirates | Dubai | 1 |
| Enter Air | Seasonal: Bilbao, Catania, Funchal, Larnaca, Madrid, Malaga, Palma de Mallorca | 2 |
| Finnair | Helsinki | 2 |
| Freebird Airlines | Seasonal: Antalya | 1 |
| Germanwings | Cologne/Bonn | 2 |
| Iberia | Madrid | 2 |
| Iceland Express operated by Holidays Czech Airlines |
Seasonal: Reykjavík-Keflavík [begins 20 June 2012] | 2 |
| Jet2 | Edinburgh, Leeds/Bradford, Manchester, Newcastle | 2 |
| KLM operated by KLM Cityhopper |
Amsterdam | 2 |
| Korean Air | Seoul-Incheon | 1 |
| LOT Polish Airlines | Warsaw | 2 |
| Lufthansa | Frankfurt | 2 |
| Lufthansa Regional operated by Lufthansa CityLine |
Düsseldorf, Munich | 2 |
| Norwegian Air Shuttle | Copenhagen, Oslo-Gardermoen, Stockholm-Arlanda | 2 |
| Nouvelair | Seasonal: Enfidha, Tabarka | 1 |
| Onur Air | Seasonal: Antalya | 1 |
| Orbest | Seasonal: Madrid | 2 |
| S7 Airlines | Novosibirsk | 1 |
| Scandinavian Airlines | Oslo-Gardermoen [begins 30 August 2012], Stockholm-Arlanda | 2 |
| Sky Airlines | Seasonal: Antalya | 1 |
| Skyways | Gothenburg-Landvetter | 2 |
| Small Planet Airlines | Seasonal: Heraklion | 2 |
| Smart Wings | Dubai, Tel Aviv-Ben Gurion Seasonal: Antalya, Burgas, Larnaca, Split |
1 |
| Smart Wings | Las Palmas, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Rome-Fiumicino, Tenerife-South Seasonal: Alghero, Barcelona, Bilbao, Cagliari, Catania, Chania, Girona, Heraklion, Ibiza, Kalamata, Kefalonia, Kerkyra/Corfu, Kos, Lamezia Terme, Malaga, Naples, Nice, Olbia, Palma de Mallorca, Patras, Preveza, Rhodes, Skiathos, Thessaloniki, Valencia, Zakynthos |
2 |
| Swiss International Air Lines | Basel/Mulhouse, Geneva, Zürich | 2 |
| Tailwind Airlines | Seasonal: Antalya | 1 |
| TAP Portugal | Lisbon Seasonal: Budapest |
2 |
| Tatarstan Airlines | Kazan, Perm | 1 |
| Transavia.com | Rotterdam | 2 |
| Tunis Air | Seasonal: Tunis | 1 |
| Turkish Airlines | Istanbul-Atatürk | 1 |
| Ural Airlines | Nizhniy Novgorod, Yekaterinburg | 1 |
| Volotea | Nantes [begins 3 June 2012] | 2 |
| Vueling | Barcelona | 2 |
| Wind Jet | Rimini | 2 |
| Wizz Air | London-Luton Seasonal: Burgas |
1 |
| Wizz Air | Bari, Barcelona, Eindhoven, Madrid, Milan-Orio al Serio, Naples, Rome-Fiumicino, Treviso-Sant'Angelo | 2 |
| Yakutia Airlines | Krasnodar | 1 |
Cargo airlines
| Airlines | Destinations |
|---|---|
| Air Contractors | Paris-Charles de Gaulle |
| China Airlines Cargo | Abu Dhabi, Amsterdam, Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi, Luxembourg, Taipei-Taoyuan |
| Czech Airlines operated by Genex |
Minsk |
| Swiss WorldCargo | Zürich |
| TNT Airways | Brno, Katowice, Liege |
| UPS Airlines operated by Farnair Switzerland |
Cologne/Bonn |
| Yangtze River Express | Dhaka, Shanghai-Pudong, Shenzhen, Tianjin, Luxembourg |
Other facilities
Czech Airlines has its head office, the APC Building,9 on the grounds of Ruzyně Airport.10 On 30 December 2009 CSA announced that it will sell its head office to the airport for CZK 607 million.11
Travel Service Airlines and its low cost subsidiary Smart Wings have their head office on the airport property.1213
In addition the Civil Aviation Authority also has its head office on the airport property.14
Traffic and statistics
In 2004, the airport served 9.7 million passengers; in 2005 nearly 10.8 million;15 and 11.6 million in 2006. In 2007 the number of passengers rose to 12,440,000 and in 2008 reached 12,630,557. In 2009 the number decreased to 11,643,366, and only 143,060 were domestic passengers.16 It was the 32nd busiest airport in Europe in 2009. The top 10 destinations were:
| Rank | Airport | Passengers handled |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Paris-Charles de Gaulle | 550,902 |
| 2 | London-Heathrow | 430,453 |
| 3 | Frankfurt | 415,630 |
| 4 | Moscow-Sheremetyevo International | 404,024 |
| 5 | Amsterdam Schiphol | 374,220 |
| 6 | Madrid-Barajas | 300,432 |
| 7 | Rome-Fiumicino Leonardo da Vinci | 290,972 |
| 8 | Brussels | 265,756 |
| 9 | Zürich | 249,963 |
| 10 | Barcelona | 245,423 |
| Country | 2011 Passengers |
|---|---|
| 1Germany | 1,162,114 passengers |
| 2Great Britain | 1,138,899 passengers |
| 3France | 1,017,899 passengers |
| 4Italy | 872,933 passengers |
| 5Russia | 856,849 passengers |
| City | 2011 Passengers |
|---|---|
| 1Paris/Charles de Gaulle | 830,177 passengers |
| 2Moscow/Sheremetyevo | 539,108 passengers |
| 3Frankfurt | 514,061 passengers |
Incidents
- On 30 October 1975, an Inex Adria Aviopromet Douglas DC-9-32 hit high ground during an approach in fog to Prague Ruzyně Airport. 75 of the 120 passengers and crew on board were killed.17
Ground transportation
Public Transport
- Buses of Prague Public Transit Co. stop at both terminals every 10 minutes. A 90 min. ticket can be bought for CZK 32 at the arrival hall (CZK 40 from the bus driver).
- 119 – terminates in 24 minutes at the Dejvická station. Transfer to Metro line A to get to the centre. The ticket is valid on the Metro too.
- 100 – terminates in 18 minutes at the Zličín station. Transfer to Metro line B to get to the centre. The ticket is valid on the Metro too.
- 179, 225 – terminate in 45–53 minutes at the Nové Butovice station. Probably of no use for a tourist.
- 510 – a night service every 30 minutes. Goes to the south of the city, but passes near the centre ("Jiráskovo náměstí" or I. P. Pavlova stops) which takes 42 minutes.
- A Czech Railways public bus service, AE – AiportExpress, connects Terminals 1 and 2 with Praha hlavní nádraží every 30 minutes. The journey takes 40 to 50 minutes.
- Other buses
- Some local buses from Prague to Kladno stop at Terminal 1.
- Student Agency buses link Terminal 1 with Karlovy Vary.
Taxis
There are two taxi companies officially authorized at the airport [1]. Both Radiocab taxi and AAA RADIOTAXI should take you to the city centre for around CZK 500.
Taxi fares are regulated by the Prague City Council [2]. No taxi should charge more than CZK 40 per ride plus CZK 28 per km. Taxi meter should be turned on and print a receipt.
Other information
| This unreferenced section requires citations to ensure verifiability. |
Ruzyně Airport took part in the Onion News (comedy internet news magazine) with the episode dedicated to Franz Kafka. The Airport was renamed to Franz Kafka International Airport in it with funny scenes imitating Kafka's famous novels.
See also
References
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This article includes a list of references, but its sources remain unclear because it has insufficient inline citations. Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (August 2008) |
- ^ a b EAD Basic
- ^ "Petition to name the Prague - Ruzyne airport Václav Havel International Airport". http://vaclavhavelairport.com/. Retrieved 27 December 2011.
- ^ "Václav Havel International Airport". http://blog.aktualne.centrum.cz/blogy/robert-miller.php?itemid=15109/. Retrieved 27 December 2011.
- ^ Petr Švec, "Letištní expres: cesta za 120 korun" in Mladá fronta DNES, February 12, 2009
- ^ "About Airport." Prague Airport. Retrieved on 25 February 2012.
- ^ "Contacts." Prague Airport. Retrieved on 25 February 2012. "Letiště Praha, a. s. K Letišti 6/1019, 160 08 Praha 6"
- ^ "Basic Information." Prague Airport. 14 August 2006. Retrieved on 25 February 2012. "Airport Operator: Airport Prague Its office registered at: Prague - Ruzyne Airport, 160 08 Prague 6"
- ^ "ZÁKLADNÍ INFORMACE." Prague Airport. 29 August 2006. Retrieved on 25 February 2012. "Provozovatel letiště: Letiště Praha s.p. Letiště Praha - Ruzyně, 160 08 Praha 6"
- ^ "The Settlement of Land Relations between Czech Airlines and the Prague Airport Authority to Increase the Value of Both Companies Prior to their Privatisation." Czech Airlines. 22 August 2008. Retrieved on 15 February 2010.
- ^ "Imprint." Czech Airlines. Retrieved on 4 February 2010. "Letiště Ruzyně Prague 6 160 08 Czech republic"
- ^ Heijmans, Philip. "Czech Airlines sells headquarters to Prague Airport." The Prague Post. 8 January 2010. Retrieved on 15 February 2010.
- ^ "Contacts." Travel Service Airlines. Retrieved on 14 November 2011. "Travel Service, a. s. K Letišti 1068/30 160 08 Prague 6 Czech Republic"
- ^ "Contact." Smart Wings. Retrieved on 19 February 2012. "Office at Prague airport K letisti 1068/30 160 08 Praha 6 Czech Republic"
- ^ Home page. Civil Aviation Authority. Retrieved on 25 February 2012. "Postal and visitor´s address: Civil Aviation Authority Czech Republic Ruzyně Airport 160 08 Praha 6"
- ^ Official statistics for 2005PDF
- ^ TRAFFIC REPORT – 2009
- ^ PlaneCrashInfo.com
External links
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Prague Ruzyně Airport |
- Ruzyně Airport – official homepage (English)/(Czech)/(Russian)
- Prague Airport – Photogallery
- Prague Airport – Airport maps
- Mobile website (English)/(Czech)
- Architects' page about the building of the North Terminal 2 (Czech)
- Information about Ruzyně Airport
- Air Services Authorities (ŘLP) – website about Prague-Ruzyně Airport
- Onion News – Onion News report featuring Prague Airport.