Copenhagen Airport

Copenhagen Airport
Copenhagen Airport
Københavns Lufthavn
Copenhagen Airports Logo.gif
København terminal 3.jpg
IATA: CPHICAO: EKCH
CPH is located in Denmark
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CPH
Location of airport in Denmark
Summary
Airport type Public
Owner Københavns Lufthavne
Serves Copenhagen,  Denmark
Location Kastrup
Hub for
Elevation AMSL 5 m / 16 ft
Coordinates 55°37′43″N 12°38′49″E / 55.62861°N 12.64694°E / 55.62861; 12.64694Coordinates: 55°37′43″N 12°38′49″E / 55.62861°N 12.64694°E / 55.62861; 12.64694
Website http://www.cph.dk
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
04L/22R 3,600 11,811 Asphalt
04R/22L 3,300 10,827 Asphalt
12/30 2,800 9,186 Asphalt/Concrete
Statistics (2010)
Passengers 21,501,750
Aircraft movements 245,640
Cargo (tonnes) N.A.

Copenhagen Airport (Danish: Københavns Lufthavn, Kastrup) (IATA: CPHICAO: EKCH) is the main international airport serving Copenhagen, Denmark and the Oresund Region. It is located on the island of Amager, 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) south of Copenhagen city centre, and 24 kilometres (15 mi) west of Malmö city centre on the other side of the Oresund Bridge. The airport lies mainly in the municipality of Tårnby, with a small portion in neighboring Dragør. It is the largest airport in the Nordic countries, and one of the oldest international airports in Europe.

The airport is the main hub out of three used by Scandinavian Airlines and is also a hub for Cimber Sterling, Thomas Cook Airlines Scandinavia and Norwegian Air Shuttle. Copenhagen Airport handles 60 scheduled airlines and serves nearly 60,000 passengers per day; 21.5 million passengers passed through the facility in 2010, making it the busiest airport in the Nordic countries, with a maximum capacity of 83 loadings/hour and with room for 108 airplanes. Unlike other Scandinavian airports, a considerable share of the airport's passengers are international. The domestic part of the annual passengers is lower than 10%. The airport is owned by Københavns Lufthavne, which also operates Roskilde Airport. The airport employs 1700 staff (excluding shops, restaurants etc.).[1]

Copenhagen Airport was originally called Kastrup Airport, since it is located in the small town of Kastrup, now a part of the Tårnby municipality. The formal name of the airport is still Copenhagen Airport, Kastrup, to distinguish it from Roskilde Airport, which was previously called Copenhagen Airport, Roskilde. Locally many people still call the airport just Kastrup.

Contents

History

  • 1925: CPH opens for service on 20 April. One of the first private airports in the world, it opens with a grass runway.
  • 1932: 6000 take-offs and landings in the year.
  • 1936–1939: New terminal, considered one of the finest examples of Nordic functionalism, is built (Architect: Vilhelm Lauritzen).
  • 1941: First hard-surface runway is built.
  • 1946: SAS is founded, an important event for Copenhagen Airport, as Copenhagen was to be the main hub for the airline. Traffic increases rapidly in the first years SAS operates. Also, Copenhagen Airport becomes Europe's third-largest.
  • 1947: On 26 January, a KLM DC-3 crashes at the airport after stopping en route to Stockholm. 22 people die, including the Swedish prince Gustav Adolf, and the American opera singer Grace Moore.
  • 1948: 150 take-offs and landings per day, and 3000 passengers are handled per day.
  • 1950: 378,000 passengers are handled.
  • 1954: 11,000 tonnes of freight handled per year. SAS begins the world's first trans-polar route, flying initially to Los Angeles. The route proves to be a publicity coup, and for some years Copenhagen becomes a popular transit point for Hollywood stars and producers flying to Europe.
  • 1956: 1 million passengers handled per year. CPH wins the award for the world's best airport.
  • 1960s: With the advent of jet airliners, debate begins about a major expansion of the airport. Jets need longer runways than had previously been used, and plans are drawn up to expand the airport either into existing communities in Kastrup or onto Saltholm, a small island. Local protests ensue and expansion is stalled for some time.
  • 1960: On 30 April, Terminal 2, also designed by Lauritzen, opens. Also, a new control tower opens and the airport handles 2 million passengers per year.
  • 1970s: The airport suffers from acute space shortages, especially with the advent of large jets such as 747s. After initially deciding to expand to Saltholm, the project is eventually blocked by Denmark's parliament.
  • 1973: 8 million passengers handled per year. The third (long) runway opens and the dual runway system (04L/22R-04R/22L) opens, strongly expanding the capacity of possible numbers of starts and landings.
  • 1982: The Cargo terminal opens.
  • 1986: A parking garage with 2400 spaces opens.
  • 1991: The airport is partially privatised.
  • 1998: Terminal 3 opens, and the airport handles 17 million (international) passengers per year.
  • 1999: Baggage handling system is modernised, and the Vilhelm Lauritzen terminal is moved 3.8 km down the runway to make room for new terminals, a hotel, and a train station for regional trains opens..
  • 2000: The airport handles 18.4 million passengers per year. The train system becomes international, linking the airport also to southern Sweden.
  • 2001: A five-star Hilton hotel with 382 beds opens at the airport. 267,000 take-offs and landings.
  • 2005: Macquaire Airport buys 52% of stocks
  • 2006: Number of passengers exceeds 20 million for the first time (20.9 million).
  • 2007: A metro station opens, connecting the airport to the Copenhagen Metro.
  • 2008: A new control tower is opened by Naviair as part of a major renovation of the ATC system. Airport officials announce plan to build a new low-cost terminal at the facility, which is expected to be completed by 2010.
  • 2009: Macquaire Airport is spun off as MAp Airports
  • 2010: The new low cost terminal CPH Go opens the 31st of October.

Airlines and destinations

Copenhagen Airport has four terminals. Terminal 1 is used for all domestic flights. Terminals 2 and 3 handle international flights (both Schengen and non-Schengen) and share a common airside passenger concourse as well as the arrivals section - which houses customs and baggage claim and is physically located in Terminal 3. The newest terminal, CPH Go, dedicated to low-cost carriers opened the 31st of October 2010. So far EasyJet is the only airline operating from this terminal. An all new Terminal 4 is currently being planned.

Copenhagen Airport Map
SAS Airbus A330 rolling for takeoff
Terminal 2 behind The Four Winds sculpture by Henrik Starcke (1964).
Baggage Claim
Terminal 3
The terminals and runways - view from the air
Border control at Copenhagen Airport
Aerial view of the passenger terminal

Passenger

Airlines Destinations Terminal
Adria Airways Ljubljana 2
Aeroflot Moscow-Sheremetyevo 2
AirBaltic Riga 2
Air Berlin Berlin-Tegel [ends 2 June 2012], Berlin-Brandenburg [begins 3 June 2012], Düsseldorf
Seasonal: Palma de Mallorca
2
Air Canada Toronto-Pearson 3
Air China Beijing-Capital [begins 2 June 2012][2] TBA
Air France Marseille, Paris-Charles de Gaulle 2
Air Greenland Kangerlussuaq
Charter: Thule Air Base
2
Air Greenland operated by Jettime Seasonal: Kangerlussuaq, Narsarsuaq 2
Arkia Israel Airlines Seasonal Charter: Tel Aviv-Ben Gurion 3
Atlantic Airways Vágar (Faroe Islands) 2
Austrian Airlines Vienna 3
Austrian Airlines operated by Tyrolean Airways Vienna 3
B&H Airlines Banja Luka [begins 1 December], Sarajevo 2
Blue1 Helsinki 3
Blue1 operated by Golden Air Tampere 3
bmi operated by bmi Regional Edinburgh, Glasgow-International 3
British Airways London-Heathrow 2
British Airways operated by BA Cityflyer London-City 2
Brussels Airlines Brussels 2
Cimber Sterling Aalborg, Aarhus, Billund, Bornholm, Karup, Sønderborg 1
Cimber Sterling Funchal, Kiev-Boryspil, Málaga, Norrköping, Prague, Rome-Fiumicino, Tel Aviv-Ben Gurion
Summer: Alicante, Antalya, Athens, Barcelona, Burgas, Catania, Chania, Florence, Larnaca, Montpellier, Naples, Nice, Palma de Mallorca, Split
Winter: Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Salzburg, Tenerife-South
2
Continental Airlines Newark 2
Croatia Airlines Zagreb 2
Czech Airlines Prague 2
Delta Air Lines Seasonal: New York-JFK [3] 2
EasyJet Berlin-Schönefeld [ends 2 June 2012], Berlin-Brandenburg [begins 3 June 2012], Lisbon [begins 19 April 2012], London-Gatwick, London-Stansted, Manchester, Milan-Malpensa, Paris-Charles de Gaulle CPH Go1
EasyJet Switzerland Basel/Mulhouse, Geneva CPH Go1
EgyptAir Cairo 3
Emirates Dubai 3
Estonian Air Tallinn 3
Flybe Nordic Stockholm-Bromma [Begins 23 January] TBA
Finnair Helsinki 2
Germanwings Cologne/Bonn 2
Gulf Air operated by PrivatAir Bahrain 2
Iberia Madrid 2
Iceland Express Reykjavik-Keflavík
Summer: Akureyri
2
Icelandair Reykjavik-Keflavík 3
Iran Air Tehran-Imam Khomeini 2
Jat Airways Belgrade 2
KLM Amsterdam 2
LOT Polish Airlines Warsaw 2
Lufthansa Frankfurt, Munich 3
Malév Hungarian Airlines Budapest 2
Middle East Airlines Summer: Beirut 2
NextJet Linkoping, Örebro 2
Niki Vienna 2
Norwegian Air Shuttle Aalborg 1
Norwegian Air Shuttle Agadir, Alicante, Amsterdam, Barcelona, Belgrade [begins 25 June 2012], Bergen, Berlin-Schönefeld [begins 8 December, ends 2 June], Berlin-Brandeburg [begins 3 June 2012], Bratislava [begins 3 May 2012], Budapest, Dubai, Dublin, Dubrovnik, Edinburgh, Faro, Helsinki, Heraklion, Ibiza, Kos, Krakow, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, London-Gatwick, Málaga, Marrakech, Nice, Oslo-Gardermoen, Paris-Orly, Prague, Rhodos, Riga [begins 4 May], Rome-Fiumicino, Salzburg, Split, Stockholm-Arlanda, Szczecin [begins 30 April 2012], Trondheim, Venice-Marco Polo
Seasonal: Athens, Burgas, Grenoble [begins 7 January 2012], Larnaca, Malta, Marseille, Olbia, Palma de Mallorca, Pisa, Zagreb
2
Novair Seasonal: Colombo, Goa 2
Ostfriesische Lufttransport Bremen 2
Pakistan International Airlines Islamabad, Lahore, Oslo-Gardermoen 2
Pegasus Airlines Antalya, Istanbul-Sabiha Gökcen 2
Qatar Airways Doha 2
SATA International Funchal 2
Scandinavian Airlines Aalborg, Aarhus 1
Scandinavian Airlines Aberdeen, Amsterdam, Athens, Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi, Barcelona, Beijing-Capital, Bergen, Berlin-Brandenburg [begins 3 June], Berlin-Tegel [ends 2 June], Birmingham, Bologna, Brussels, Bucharest-Otopeni, Chicago-O'Hare, Dublin, Düsseldorf, Frankfurt, Gdansk, Geneva, Gothenburg-Landvetter, Hamburg, Helsinki, Kaliningrad [begins 25 March 2012], Katowice [begins 26 March 2012], London-Heathrow, Luxembourg, Lyon, Madrid, Málaga [begins 31 March 2012], Manchester, Milan-Linate, Milan-Malpensa, Moscow-Sheremetyevo, Munich, Newark, Nice, Oslo-Gardermoen, Palma de Malloca, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Rome-Fiumicino, St Petersburg, Shanghai-Pudong [resumes 1 March 2012],[4] Stavanger, Stockholm-Arlanda, Stuttgart, Tokyo-Narita, Trondheim, Turku, Venice-Marco Polo, Vilnius, Warsaw, Washington-Dulles, Wroclaw, Zürich
Seasonal: Dubrovnik [begins 4 July 2012], Pristina, Split [begins 31 March 2012]
3
Scandinavian Airlines operated by Cimber Sterling Aalesund, Aberdeen, Bucharest-Otopeni, Düsseldorf, Gdansk, Hamburg, Hanover, Helsinki, Luxembourg, Munich, Palanga, Poznan, Stuttgart, Trondheim, Vilnius 3
Singapore Airlines Singapore 3
Skyways Express Karlstad 3
Spanair Barcelona, Madrid, Málaga 3
Swiss International Airlines Basel/Mulhouse, Zürich 2
Syrian Air Damascus 2
TAP Portugal Lisbon 2
Thai Airways International Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi
Winter: Phuket3
3
Turkish Airlines Istanbul-Atatürk 2
Widerøe Haugesund , Kristiansand, Sandefjord 3
Vueling Barcelona [begins 25 March 2012], Madrid 2
Notes

^1 Check-in via Terminal 2.
^2 The list is not complete.
^3 3 weekly flights from Copenhagen to Phuket nonstop. No direct flight in the other way - from Phuket to Copenhagen.[5]
^4 Although some of these flights make an intermediate stop en route to their listed destination, they do not have rights to carry traffic solely between Copenhagen and the intermediate city.

Additionally, several airlines operate charter flights out of the airport, including:

  • Primera Air

Cargo airlines

Airlines Destinations
Air China Cargo Beijing-Capital, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Shanghai-Pudong
China Cargo Airlines Shanghai-Pudong
DHL Aviation East Midlands, Leipzig/Halle
DHL Aviation operated by Exin Stavanger
FedEx Express Helsinki, Stockholm-Arlanda, Paris-Charles de Gaulle
Korean Air Cargo Seoul-Incheon
Singapore Airlines Cargo Chennai, Singapore

Other facilities

SAS traffic office resides at the airport, and so do Cimber Sterling's. Thomas Cook Airlines has both its head- and traffic office here as well as a flight simulator center, OOA. All these reside at Copenhagen Airport South and in Dragør, Dragør Municipality together with a VIP-terminal. The VIP-terminal building is actually the very first terminal building, from the 1920s. It was moved about 2 km during the 1990s.

Special events

At four occasions the American president in office has landed at the airport. Bill Clinton in 1998, George W Bush in 2005 and Barack Obama twice, both in October and December 2009.

Ground transport

Train towards Malmö, Sweden at the Copenhagen Airport train station.

The airport can be accessed in various ways:

  • Rail - the airport's station is located underneath Terminal 3 on the Øresund Railway Line.
    • The station is served by Øresundstogene which are operated by DSBFirst. These trains have a dense stopping pattern insde Denmark, like local trains, going to the city centre and to Helsingør. They also go as regional/interregional trains to Sweden, to Malmö, Gothenburg, Kalmar and Karlskrona, with many intermediate stops.
    • DSB, the national Danish operator have InterCity and InterCityExpress trains using this station, going to domestic cities such as Esbjerg, Århus, Ålborg and Sønderborg or German Flensburg just by the border, and to Ystad in Sweden with a connecting ferry to the Danish island Bornholm
    • Also Swedish SJ have a few daily Express trains departures between Copenhagen central station to Stockholm and Gothenburg which stops at Kastrup underground train station.
  • Metro - Line M2 of the Copenhagen Metro links the airport with the city centre. The Metro station is two floors above the underground rail station and continues on elevated tracks until it goes underground after 5 stations.
  • Bus - Movia buses 5A, 35, 36 and Gråhundbus line 999 all stop at the airport; bus 888, express-bus to Jutland, also stops at the airport. Movia bus 2A stops near the airport. There are long-distance buses to Sweden and Norway operated by Swebus: 820 to Oslo via Gothenburg and 832 to Uppsala via Stockholm. GoByBus and Bus4You also operate the same routes.
  • Motorway - the E20 runs right by the airport. The E20 uses the toll road Oresund Bridge to Sweden. The airport has 8,600 parking spaces. Customers can pre-book their parking space online by visiting the Copenhagen Airport website [1].

Incidents and accidents

A Douglas Dakota, similar to the KLM aircraft that crashed in 1947.
  • On 26 January 1947, Douglas Dakota, PH-TCR of KLM crashed after takeoff from Copenhagen, killing all 22 onboard, including Prince Gustaf Adolf of Sweden. The delayed KLM flight from Amsterdam had landed at Copenhagen for a routine stop before continuing to Stockholm. Soon after the Douglas DC-3 aircraft took off, it climbed to an altitude of about 50 metres (150 feet), stalled, and plummeted nose-first to the ground where it exploded on impact. Also aboard the ill-fated flight was American singer and actress Grace Moore. The investigation showed that the crash had been caused by a forgotten rudder lock. Short of time, the captain never performed his checklist and took off not realizing the lock was still in place.
  • On 17 November 1957, Vickers Viscount G-AOHP of British European Airways crashed at Ballerup after the failure of three engines on approach to Copenhagen Airport. The cause was a malfunction of the anti-icing system on the aircraft.[6]
  • On 28 August 1971, a MALÉV Ilyushin Il-18, HA-MOC crashed into the sea while executing an instrument approach. The main cause of the accident was microburst, a particularly dangerous and unpredictable meteorological phenomenon. 23 passengers and the crew of 9 died. 2 passengers survived. The captain of the plane was World War II flying ace of the Royal Hungarian Air Force, Dezső Szentgyörgyi. He was due to retire in less than 3 weeks.

See also


References

 This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the Air Force Historical Research Agency.

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

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