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Lublin Airport (Port Lotniczy Lublin) (IATA: LUZ, ICAO: EPLB) is an airport in Poland serving Lublin and the surrounding region. The site is located about 10 km (6.2 miles) east of central Lublin, adjacent to the town of Świdnik. The airport has a 2520 × (45 + 2 × 7.5) m runway (8,270 × 200 ft), and the terminal facilities are capable of handling four Boeing 737-800 class aircraft simultaneously.[3] Construction began in the fall of 2010[4] and the official opening took place on December 17, 2012.[5][6] The new airport replaced the grass airstrip (1,200 × 50 m or 1,312 × 55 yd), which had served the PZL-Świdnik helicopter factory, and was known as Świdnik Airport with the ICAO identifier EPSW.

Lublin Airport

Port Lotniczy Lublin
Summary
Airport typePublic
ServesLublin, Poland
LocationŚwidnik
OpenedDecember 17, 2012 (2012-12-17)
Elevation AMSL193 m / 633 ft
Coordinates51°14′25.00″N 022°42′49.00″E
Websiteairport.lublin.pl
Map
LUZ
Location of the airport in Poland
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
06/24 1,200 3,937 Grass
07/25 2,520 8,267 Asphalt
Statistics (2018)
Passengers455,188
Aircraft Movements4,980
Sources: GCM,[1] STV[2]

History



Early years


The construction of the Świdnik airfield began in 1935 and it was officially opened on 4 June 1939.[7] It was to serve as a training centre with a pilot school, and was built by the Airborne and Antigas Defence League, a mass organisation propagating aviation among the general public. During World War II, it was used by the Luftwaffe after Poland was occupied in September 1939, and then by the Soviet Air Force once Lublin was captured by the Red Army in July 1944. The Germans destroyed the airfield's buildings before withdrawing.


After World War II


The airport opened for passenger traffic on 30 November 1945. A domestic service was opened with flight number 1/2 that flew the route Warsaw – Łódź – Kraków – Rzeszów – Lublin – Warsaw. Unfortunately, there is very little written material from the time that mentions this route, so proper sources are required. [citation needed]. The route was later discontinued and Lublin lost all domestic services. In 1949, the Polish government made a decision to build an aviation factory in Świdnik, located next to the airfield.[8] It assembled its first helicopters in 1956, with full-scale production beginning in 1957.[9]

The factory employed some staff from the pre-war Lubelska Wytwórnia Samolotów, an airplane manufacturer in Lublin that functioned from 1936 to 1939, being itself the successor of Plage i Laśkiewicz factory which functioned between 1920 and 1935. That factory had its own airfield within the Lublin city limits,[10][11] but it was closed and built over after the war. One of the streets running through the area where the airfield used to be is named Lotnicza (Aviation Street).


Current facilities


The need for an air terminus in Lublin, the 9th biggest city in Poland, has been felt for the better half of 20th century. In 2008, the project received €84.1 million financing backing from the European Union.[12] Subsequently, the airport design competition was won by a Polish-Spanish consortium of SENER Ingeniería y Sistemas (engineering & master plan) and Warsaw-based architectural firm ARÉ (architecture).[13] The architectural design was well received by the design community; however the fit and finish of the completed terminal building fell short of the winning proposal.[14] The contract to build the runway was signed in August, 2011, with completion in late 2012.[4] Operations commenced on December 17, 2012 with a Category I instrument landing system, which was later upgraded to a Category II system for low visibility operations.[4]

A Reuters special report in December 2014 highlighted Lublin Airport (along with Łódź and Rzeszów airports) as a target of inefficient EU subsidies with disappointing passenger numbers.[15]

In July 2016, Lufthansa announced the termination of its route from Frankfurt Airport to Lublin due to low demand by 29 October 2016 after only two years of service.[16]

In September 2015 WizzAir opened its base at Lublin Airport with one Airbus A320 Aircraft. In November 2017, the company announced that they will close its base in Lublin that resulted in terminating services to Doncaster Sheffield, Liverpool and Tel-Aviv in June 2018, decreasing frequency on the route to Oslo and further termination of service to Kiev Zhulyany and Stockholm Skvasta in late October 2018.

In October 2018, EasyJet ended its only route from Lublin, a service to Milan Malpensa.[17]

In January 2021, the airport opened a small cargo facility.


Airlines and destinations


AirlinesDestinations
Enter Air Seasonal charter: Antalya[18]
LOT Polish Airlines[19]Warsaw–Chopin (resumes 26 March 2023)[20]
Ryanair[21] Dublin, Gdańsk, London–Luton
Wizz Air[22] Eindhoven, London–Luton, Sandefjord
Seasonal: Burgas, Split[23]

Passenger statistics


Terminal interior.
Terminal interior.
Annual passenger traffic at LUZ airport. See Wikidata query.
Traffic by calendar year[24]
Passengers Change Movements
2012 5,70250
2013 189,69903226.9%2,246
2014 187,59501.1%3,254
2015 265,111041.3%3,732
2016 377,606042.4%4,234
2017 430,346014.0%4,980
2018 455,18805.4%5,283
2019 357,366022%4,389

Ground transportation



Train


Train at airport terminal station
Train at airport terminal station

Lublin Airport was accessible by rail, a railway station inside the airport terminal built at the end of a dedicated 3.7 kilometre line. The connection to Lublin's main railway station was provided by EMU (Electric Multiple Unit), EN57AL series 3000. The journey took approximately 15 minutes from Lublin Central Station.[25] With patronage having fallen to below 50 passengers a day, it was replaced by a bus service in November 2021.[26]


Bus


There is a dedicated bus service to the airport, with a flexible schedule, which starts its run to the airport 2 hours before each flight departure, and leaves the airport 25 minutes after flight arrival.[27]


Car


The airport is located close to Expressways S17 and S12.


See also



References


  1. Airport information for LUZ at Great Circle Mapper.
  2. Airport information for Lublin Airport at Transport Search website.
  3. "Data from official website". Archived from the original on 2011-07-07. Retrieved 2011-07-08.
  4. "Lotnisko w Świdniku: Rusza budowa pasa startowego". Kurier Lubelski (in Polish). August 8, 2011.
  5. "Airport. Wielka przeprowadzka lotniska na... lotnisko". gazeta.pl. November 20, 2012.
  6. "Lublin Airport: Polecimy nad morze, na Wyspy i do Egiptu". Dziennik Wschodni. March 10, 2012.
  7. Wielki dzień Lublina! - article from www.historia.swidnik.net
  8. 1978 map of Świdnik, showing the factory and adjacent helicopter landing pads. The airfield itself (not marked as such) is in the empty area to the west of the factory buildings
  9. Powstanie WSK article from www.historia.swidnik.net
  10. "1932 map with the old Lublin airfield marked".
  11. "German military map with old Lublin airfield highlighted".
  12. "European Commission - PRESS RELEASES - Press release - Commission gives go-ahead for finance packages for airports at Lublin and Gdańsk". europa.eu.
  13. article from bustler.net, the sister site to the leading architecture platform, Archinect
  14. article from dezeen.com, an online architecture and design magazine
  15. Lowe, Christian (14 December 2014). "Special Report: EU funds help Poland build 'ghost' airports". Reuters.
  16. pasazer.com - Lufthansa kasuje loty z Lublina (Polish) 10 July 2016
  17. anna.aero - easyJet confirms 1,000th route, however airline is closing 32 airport pairs this winter; 28 destinations see capacity cuts (English) 16 July 2018
  18. "Charter flights". Tui.pl. Retrieved 4 September 2018.
  19. "Route map". lot.com.
  20. Stemski, Szymon (28 October 2022). "LOT zawiesi trasę z Lotniska Chopina do Lublina". Pasazer.com (in Polish). Retrieved 8 November 2022.
  21. "Rayanir website". Ryanair.com. [not specific enough to verify]
  22. "WIZZ – Dream more. Live more. Be more".
  23. "Wizz Air announced additional two routes from Poland to Croatia". avioradar.hr. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  24. "Figures and Statistics. Lublin Airport". Lublin Airport. Retrieved 9 January 2014.
  25. Lublin Airport
  26. Short-Lived Airport Railway Closes Modern Railways issue 880 January 2022 page 101
  27. "Bus timetable per link from official site". Archived from the original on 2014-09-10. Retrieved 2013-03-04.


Media related to Lublin Airport at Wikimedia Commons


На других языках


[de] Flughafen Lublin-Świdnik

Der Flughafen Lublin ist der Verkehrsflughafen von Lublin, der Hauptstadt der gleichnamigen Woiwodschaft im Osten Polens. Im November 2008 begannen die Vorarbeiten für den Bau des Flughafens unter anderem mit den Abrissarbeiten an einigen Gebäuden und der Verlegung eines Soldatenfriedhofs; er ging am 17. Dezember 2012 in Betrieb.[5]
- [en] Lublin Airport

[fr] Aéroport de Lublin

L'Aéroport de Lublin (Port Lotniczy Lublin) (code IATA : LUZ • code OACI : EPLB) est un aéroport polonais desservant la ville de Lublin et de la région environnante. Le site est situé à 6,2 kilomètres à l'est du centre de Lublin, à proximité de la ville de Świdnik. L'aéroport dispose d'une piste d'atterrissage de 2 520 mètres lui permettant d'accueillir des appareils de l'envergure d'un Boeing 737-800 simultanément[1]. Sa construction a commencé à l'automne 2010[2] et l'ouverture officielle a eu lieu le 17 décembre 2012[3],[4]. Le nouvel aéroport a remplacé le vieil aérodrome et sa piste en gazon utilisé par l'usine d'hélicoptères PZL-Świdnik.

[it] Aeroporto di Lublino

L'Aeroporto di Lublino (IATA: LUZ, ICAO: EPLB) è un aeroporto polacco situato a 10 km ad est di Lublino, operativo da dicembre 2012.

[ru] Люблин (аэропорт)

Аэропорт Люблин (польск. Port Lotniczy Lublin; ИАТА: LUZ, ИКАО: EPLB) — польский аэропорт, обслуживающий город Люблин и прилегающий к нему регион. Он находится примерно в 10 километрах к востоку от центральной части Люблина, рядом с городом Свидник. Аэропорт имеет ВПП длиной в 2520 метров и терминал, способный одновременно обслуживать 4 самолёта класса Boeing 737-800[1]. Строительство началось осенью 2010 года[2], а официальное открытие состоялось 17 декабря 2012 года[3][4]. Аэропорт заменил собой аэродром с грунтовой взлётно-посадочной полосой (1200×50 м), который использовался вертолётным заводом PZL-Swidnik[en] и был известен как аэропорт Свидник с кодом ИКАО EPSW.



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