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Bilbao Airport (IATA: BIO, ICAO: LEBB) is a minor international airport located 9 km (5.6 mi) north[4] of Bilbao, in the municipality of Loiu, in Biscay. It is the largest airport in the Basque Country and northern Spain, with 5,469,453 passengers in 2018. It is famous for its new main terminal opened in 2000 designed by Santiago Calatrava.

Bilbao Airport

Bilboko aireportua (Basque)
Aeropuerto de Bilbao (Spanish)
Summary
Airport typePublic
Owner/OperatorAena
LocationBilbao metropolitan area
Focus city for
Built1928
Elevation AMSL42 m / 137 ft
Coordinates43°18′04″N 02°54′38″W
Websitewww.aena.es/en/bilbao.html
Map
BIO
Location of the airport in the Basque Country
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
10/28 2,000 6,562 Asphalt
12/30 2,600 8,530 Asphalt
Statistics (2018)
Passengers5,469,453
Passenger change 17-1810.0%
Aircraft Movements49,966
Movements change 17-186.3%
Cargo (t)1,216
Cargo change 17-18 37.8%
Sources: Passenger Traffic, AENA[1]
Spanish AIP, AENA[2][3]

History


After various aeronautic experiments in the province of Biscay, in October 1927 steps were taken by the Union of Public Works to establish an airport in Bilbao. A Provincial Board was created to study the possible location of the airport. It was not until 1936 that the General Aeronautics Management authorised the installation of an airport in Sondika. However, due to the site's many deficiencies, the airport was not considered of interest. Bilbao is surrounded by mountains and a flat valley without significant population had to be found.

The construction works commenced during the Civil War but during this time and until June 1937 the airport was only used as a base for military activities. In 1938, the second stage of the airport's development began. The council resumed procedures with the government to modify the primitive project of 1936 and the drafting of a new project was authorised and later approved by the General Management of Infrastructure.

In 1940, it was decided by common agreement with the local organisations affected to build a civilian airport in Sondika. The construction works progressed slowly and on 19 September 1948, the airport was at last opened to daytime traffic with the establishment of an air path to Madrid by Aviación y Comercio, SA. Two years later, the terminal, named Carlos Haya after the well-known pilot from Bilbao, began to give service. At this time, the airport had an asphalt runway, the 11/29 (measuring 1,440 by 45 m (4,724 by 148 ft)), another earth runway (measuring 1,500 by 150 m (4,921 by 492 ft)), a taxiway, a passenger terminal, a tower control, a radio beacon, a direction finder as well as police, post office, weather, health, fuel and telephone services. In 1955, a taxiway was built to link the runway with the parking stands and terminal. An apron measuring 124 by 60 m (407 by 197 ft), a hangar for the Royal Flying Club of Vizcaya and permanent facilities for Campsa were also built.

Between 1964 and 1965, an instrumental ILS landing system and a meteorological radio for storm detection were installed; the runway was extended to 2,000 m (6,562 ft) and the apron to 12,000 m2 (130,000 sq ft). In 1975, the runway was surfaced and its orientation became 10/28 due to the change in magnetic declination. In 1977, the parking stand was extended, a link road was built and an ILS system was installed. The runway 12/30, measuring 2,600 m (8,530 ft) long, was opened the same year and the airport was classified as first category the following year. As a result of the population density of the area, approaching planes may have to fly over the extensive Derio cemetery.

During the 1980s, the ILS landing system entered into service for runway 10/28; the communication centre, passenger terminal and parking facilities were enlarged; and a fire service building and cargo terminal were constructed.

On 19 February 1985, an Iberia flight from Madrid crashed into Mount Oiz, all passengers and crew died.[5]

In 1996, a new taxiway with two rapid exits and a new aircraft parking apron were built. The works required the removal of tons of soil poisoned with lindane residues. In May 1999, the new tower control was put into service, which allowed for a more centred vision of the airfield and at the same time facilitated airport operations. On 19 November 2000, a new terminal area was opened in the north zone, consisting of a new terminal building, with a surface area of 32,000 m2 (340,000 sq ft), a car park with 3,000 parking spaces measuring 95,000 m2 (1,020,000 sq ft) and a north apron for aircraft parking to serve the new terminal area.

In February 2009, plans were announced to expand the terminal building, the facilities and the car parking so as to double the current capacity to 8 million passengers. The work was expected be finished in 2014 and cost €114 million but in 2010 the Spanish Government announced the project would be delayed by at least 5 years due to spending cuts and a decline in passenger numbers.[6]


Design of the passenger terminal


The terminal has a sleek design, with two symmetrical "wings" and a sharp tip at its center which is especially visible when approaching the terminal from the sides. This original design has granted the building the nickname of La Paloma ("The Dove").[7] White concrete and glass have been used. The interiors are open and luminous spaces, distributed in two floors, the upper one for departures (check-in counters and gates) and the lower for arrivals.

There has been some criticism of Santiago Calatrava's design by Aena, the Spanish airport authority, because it seems difficult to make further enlargements in the terminal's capacity because the design is too closed. In spite of this, modifications took place in 2005–2006 in the check-in area to provide enhanced shopping facilities for travellers, which almost doubled the retail space now being offered.

Users of the airport widely complained about its lack of an arrivals area, since once passengers cleared customs, they stepped directly outside, and there they were often exposed to the elements. The airport built a glass-walled shelter to remedy this problem.[7]


Traffic


The airport has seen a constant increase in its traffic numbers, the old terminal was already saturated and obsolete in 1990, although it had been renewed only a few years earlier. At the present day Bilbao is the most important hub in northern Spain and the number of passengers using the new terminal continues to rise, especially after the increased tourist interest in the city since the opening of the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao.

With the past increase of traffic, the terminal would have become saturated again in a year because it is designed to handle about 4.5 million passengers per year, in 2007 it went nearly to its maximum capacity. However, the global financial crisis of 2008 has reversed the situation as of early 2009, decreasing the number of passengers by 24% in January compared to previous year. In 2014 traffic is on the rise again and saw the recovery of passengers up to 5.4 million passengers by 2018.[8]


Airlines and destinations


The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights at Bilbao Airport:

AirlinesDestinations
Aegean Airlines Seasonal: Athens
Aer Lingus Dublin
Air Arabia Maroc Tangier[9]
Air Cairo Cairo,[10] Hurghada (begins 27 March 2023),[11] Luxor[12]
Air Europa Lanzarote, Madrid, Palma de Mallorca, Tenerife–North
Seasonal: Ibiza, Menorca
Air France Hop Paris–Charles de Gaulle
airBaltic Seasonal: Riga (begins 4 May 2023)[13]
Azores Airlines Seasonal: Ponta Delgada (begins 1 July 2023)[14]
Brussels Airlines Brussels
easyJet Lisbon,[15] London–Gatwick, Manchester
Seasonal: Bristol, Geneva, Milan–Malpensa (resumes 29 March 2023)[citation needed]
Edelweiss Air Zürich[16]
Eurowings Düsseldorf, Hamburg,[17] Stuttgart
Iberia Madrid
Iberia Regional Santiago de Compostela, Valencia, Vigo
Seasonal: Funchal
KLM Amsterdam
Lufthansa Frankfurt, Munich
Norwegian Air Shuttle Seasonal: Oslo
TAP Air Portugal Lisbon
Transavia Eindhoven
Seasonal: Paris–Orly[18]
Turkish Airlines Istanbul
Volotea[19] A Coruña, Alicante, Málaga, Palma de Mallorca, Seville, Valencia, Venice
Seasonal: Athens,[20] Cagliari, Castellón,[21] Florence (begins 8 April 2023),[22] Ibiza, Marrakesh (begins 27 May 2023),[23] Menorca, Naples, Porto, Rome–Fiumicino (begins 1 April 2023)[24]
Vueling Alicante, Amsterdam, Barcelona,[25] Copenhagen, Fuerteventura, Granada, Gran Canaria, Ibiza, Jerez de la Frontera, Lanzarote, Lisbon, London–Gatwick, Málaga, Palma de Mallorca, Paris–Charles de Gaulle, Porto, Santiago de Compostela, Seville, Tenerife–North, Valencia
Seasonal: Almería, La Palma, Malta,[26] Marrakesh (begins 26 March 2023), Menorca, Milan–Malpensa, Murcia[26]
Wizz Air Warsaw–Chopin (begins 28 March 2023)[27]

Statistics


Bilbao Airport interior
Bilbao Airport interior
Bilbao Airport jetway
Bilbao Airport jetway
Control tower
Control tower
Annual passenger traffic at BIO airport. See Wikidata query.
PassengersChange from previous yearAircraft movementsChange from previous yearCargo (tonnes)Change from previous year
2000 2,556,37345,5064,038
2001 2,491,77002.5%44,16603%3,67409,1%
2002 2,463,69801.1%39,83209.9%3,69900.6%
2003 2,850,524015.7%44,009010.4%3,81303.1%
2004 3.395,773019.1%50,361014.4%4,15208.9%
2005 3,843,953013.2%56,285011.8%3,95604.7%
2006 3,876,07200.8%58,57404.1%3,417013.6%
2007 4,286,751010.6%63,07607.7%3,23005.5%
2008 4,172,90302.7%61,68202.2%3,17801.1%
2009 3,654,957012.4%54,148012.2%2,691015.3%
2010 3,888,96906.4%54,11900.12,54705.4%
2011 4,045,61304.0%54,43200.6%2,63303.4%
2012 4,171,09203.1%50,03008.1%2,66301.1%
2013 3,800,78908.9%42,683014.7%2,53604.8%
2014 4,015,35205.6%42,59000.2%2,855012.6%
2015 4,277,43006.5%43,86203%2,87200.6%
2016 4,588,26507.3%45,10502.8%2,97403.6%
2017 4,973,71208.4%46,98904.2%1,956034.2%
2018 5,469,453010%49,96606.3%1,216037.8%
Source: Aena Statistics[1]

Top Carriers


RankCarrierPassengers 2021 %Passenger %
Change 2020
Passenger %
Change 2019
1 Vueling1,351,07752.35 71.4 42.1
2 Iberia259,46910.05 50.5 52.5
3 Volotea238,7699.25 65.9 5.7
4 Lufthansa211,2038.18 80.1 62.2
5 Air Europa187,9697.28 33.2 59.1
6 KLM80,0093.10 36.3 60.1
7 Air Nostrum55,8312.16 47.2 63.8
8 Air France43,7081.69 30.2 79.6
9 Brussels Airlines23,8640.92 22.7 84.6
10 Eurowings22,0510.85 23.0 82.9
Source: Aena Statistics[1]

Busiest routes


Busiest routes from Bilbao Airport – 2021
Rank City Passengers 2021  % Passenger %
Change 2020
Passenger %
Change 2019
1 Madrid, Spain 355,298 13.77 42.7 57.5
2 Barcelona, Spain 322,573 12.50 63.9 48.3
3 Seville, Spain 206,138 7.99 72.8 30.9
4 Málaga, Spain 186,896 7.24 70.6 26.7
5 Palma de Mallorca, Spain 177,670 6.88 78.3 26.7
6 Frankfurt, Germany 132,362 5.13 111.4 43.8
7 Tenerife North, Spain 111,182 4.31 30.8 42.5
8 Alicante, Spain 107,488 4.16 64.4 40.4
9 Menorca, Spain 100,876 3.91 128.4 16.5
10 Amsterdam, Netherlands 96,642 3.74 48.8 59.9
Source: Aena Statistics[1]

Public transport



Bus



Metro extension


There is a project to extend Metro Bilbao's Line 3 to the airport in the near future, but there is no official timetable yet.


Accidents and incidents



See also



References


  1. AENA passenger statistics and aircraft movements
  2. Spanish AIP (AENA) Archived 13 January 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  3. "Bilbao".
  4. EAD Basic
  5. The Associated Press (20 February 1985). "48 Are Killed As Spanish Jet Hits Mountain". The New York Times.
  6. García, Josu (19 November 2010). "La ampliación del aeropuerto de Bilbao se retrasa al menos 5 años". El Correo (in Spanish). Vocento. Retrieved 17 September 2019.
  7. Daley, Suzanne (13 September 2013). "A Star Architect Leaves Some Clients Fuming". The New York Times. Retrieved 13 September 2013.
  8. "'La Paloma' pierde un 24% de pasajeros en el primer mes de un año "difícil"". Archived from the original on 1 August 2009. Retrieved 20 February 2009.
  9. "Flight schedule Tangier to Bilbao". airarabia.com. Retrieved 1 March 2021.
  10. "Spain, the country of beautiful architecture and flamenco songs". aircairo.com.
  11. "AIR CAIRO NS23 NETWORK ADDITIONS – 13OCT22". aeroroutes.com. 14 October 2022.
  12. "Air Cairo Adjusts Spain Service in NW22".
  13. "Air Baltic verbindet Hannover mit Riga". 28 September 2022.
  14. "Azores Airlines Adds Bilbao Service in 3Q23".
  15. "EasyJet lança 13 novas rotas a partir de Lisboa". 27 July 2022.
  16. "Bilbao".
  17. "Eurowings flies to more destinations in summer 2022 than ever before".
  18. "Transavia : 61 avions et 8 nouvelles lignes pour l'été 2022".
  19. volotea.com - Destinations retrieved 17 June 2022
  20. "El aeropuerto de Bilbao estrena rutas a Atenas y Cerdeña este verano". 9 February 2022.
  21. "VOLOTEA | Cheap flights, offers and plane tickets to Europe". 12 February 2022.
  22. https://italiavola.com/2022/11/03/e-base-volotea-a-firenze/
  23. https://www.preferente.com/noticias-de-transportes/noticias-de-aerolineas/volotea-lanza-una-nueva-ruta-entre-bilbao-y-marruecos-322041.html
  24. "VOLOTEA - Vuelos baratos, ofertas y billetes de avión a Europa". 26 August 2022.
  25. "Vueling volará a Bilbao este verano – aeroAlmería info".
  26. https://www.vueling.com/en/book-your-flight/new-routes [bare URL]
  27. "WIZZ – Dream more. Live more. Be more".
  28. Moovit, A3247: Aireportua/Aeropuerto (Etorrerak/Llegadas) (1003)→Bilbao Intermodal (2877), accessed 18 March 2021
  29. "Accident description in the Aviation Safety Network". Archived from the original on 24 May 2005.
  30. "Accident description on the Aviation Safety Network website". Archived from the original on 10 March 2005.


Media related to Bilbao Airport at Wikimedia Commons


На других языках


[de] Flughafen Bilbao

Der Flughafen Bilbao (spanisch Aeropuerto de Bilbao, baskisch Bilbo-Loiuko aireportua; IATA-Code: BIO, ICAO-Code: LEBB) ist ein internationaler Verkehrsflughafen nahe Bilbao in der Autonomen Gemeinschaft Baskenland im Norden Spaniens. Die Betreiberfirma des Flughafens ist die spanische Aktiengesellschaft Aena. Er gehört zu den meistfrequentierten Flughäfen in Spanien. Der Flughafen liegt ca. fünf Kilometer nördlich der Stadt Bilbao in der Gemarkung der Gemeinde Loiu.
- [en] Bilbao Airport

[es] Aeropuerto de Bilbao

El Aeropuerto Internacional de Bilbao (IATA: BIO, OACI: LEBB) es un aeropuerto público español, propiedad de Aena, ubicado a 12 km de la ciudad de Bilbao. La antigua terminal, la terminal de carga, y gran parte de los servicios aeroportuarios, se encuentran en el municipio de Sondica (Eus: Sondika), mientras que la nueva terminal, diseñada por Santiago Calatrava, está en el de Lujua (Eus: Loiu). El aeropuerto de Bilbao, recibió en 2021 un total de 2.580.911 viajeros, según datos de Aena.[2] Es el único rentable de todo el norte del país y el 14º de España por número de pasajeros.

[fr] Aéroport international de Bilbao

L'aéroport International de Bilbao (code IATA : BIO • code OACI : LEBB) est situé à 11 km au nord de la ville de Bilbao. C'est l'aéroport le plus important de la Communauté autonome basque avec 5 469 453 passagers en 2018. Le nouveau terminal ouvert en 2000 a été conçu par Santiago Calatrava. Le 19 février 1985, un accident d'avion s'y produisit, faisant 148 victimes (Iberia Airlines vol 610).

[it] Aeroporto di Bilbao

L'Aeroporto di Bilbao (IATA: BIO, ICAO: LEBB) è il principale aeroporto dei Paesi Baschi e il nord della Spagna con 4.045.613 passeggeri (2011); è situato vicino alla cittadina di Loiu nella provincia di Biscaglia.

[ru] Бильбао (аэропорт)

Бильбао (баск. Bilbo-Loiu aireportua, исп. Aeropuerto de Bilbao) — аэропорт, расположен в 9 км к северу от города Бильбао на территории муниципалитета Лухуа. Это крупнейший аэропорт в Стране Басков.



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