Dubrovnik Airport

Dubrovnik Airport
Čilipi Airport
Zračna luka Dubrovnik/Čilipi
IATA: DBVICAO: LDDU
Summary
Airport type Public
Operator Dubrovnik Airport Ltd.
Serves Cavtat, Dubrovnik, Herceg Novi
Location Čilipi, Croatia
Hub for Croatia Airlines
Elevation AMSL 527 ft / 161 m
Coordinates 42°33′41″N 018°16′06″E / 42.56139°N 18.26833°E / 42.56139; 18.26833Coordinates: 42°33′41″N 018°16′06″E / 42.56139°N 18.26833°E / 42.56139; 18.26833
Website airport-dubrovnik.hr
Map
DBV

Location of the airport in Croatia

Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
12/30 3,300 10,827 Concrete/Asphalt
Statistics (2015)
Passengers 1,693,934 Increase 6,9%
Croatian Aeronautical Information Publication[1] Statistics from Dubrovnik Airport site[2]

Dubrovnik Airport (IATA: DBV, ICAO: LDDU), also referred to as Čilipi Airport (Croatian pronunciation: [tʃǐlipi]), is the international airport of Dubrovnik, Croatia. The airport is located approximately 15.5 km[1] (9.5 mi) from Dubrovnik city centre, near Čilipi. It was the third busiest airport in Croatia in 2014 after Zagreb Airport and Split Airport in terms of passenger throughput and has the country's longest runway. The airport is a major destination for leisure flights during the European summer holiday season.

History

Dubrovnik Airport opened in 1962. The city was originally served by the Gruda Airfield which opened for commercial traffic in 1936 and was in use only during the summer months. The domestic airline Aeroput linked Dubrovnik with Belgrade (via Sarajevo) first in 1936, and a year later a route to Zagreb was opened.[3]

During 1987, the busiest year in Yugoslav aviation, the airport handled 835,818 passengers on international flights and a further 586,742 on domestic services. Following the breakup of Yugoslavia, the airport surpassed the one-million passenger mark in 2005. Today, Dubrovnik boasts the most modern passenger terminal in the country. A new terminal is being planned in place of the old airport building, constructed in 1962, which has now been demolished to make way for a new modern structure. The price tag of the project amounts to seventy million euros and is to be financed out of a loan from the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development. In May 2010 a new terminal opened stretching over 13,700 square metres. It has the capacity to handle two million passengers per year.[4]

Terminal

Interior view of the existing terminal
The control tower at Dubrovnik Airport.

Further expansion is planned for completion in 2019. A new 24,181 square metres (260,282 sq ft) terminal with four jet bridges is under construction; the new terminal will have a projected annual capacity of 3.5 million passengers. Future airport plans call for an extensive commercial zone and a large four-star airport hotel, and long-term plans call for a new runway and the conversion of the existing runway into a taxiway.

Airlines and destinations

Scheduled

TUIfly Boeing 737-700 taxiing at Dubrovnik Airport
Croatia Airlines, Star Alliance logojet Airbus A320 at Dubrovnik Airport
AirlinesDestinations
Aegean AirlinesSeasonal: Athens
Aegean Airlines
operated by Olympic Air
Seasonal: Athens
Aer LingusSeasonal: Dublin
Air BerlinSeasonal: Berlin–Tegel, Düsseldorf
Air SerbiaSeasonal: Belgrade
airBalticSeasonal: Riga
ASL Airlines FranceSeasonal: Nice, Paris–Charles de Gaulle
Austrian Airlines Seasonal: Vienna
British Airways London–Gatwick
Brussels Airlines Seasonal: Brussels
Condor Seasonal: Frankfurt (resumes 22 April 2017)
Croatia Airlines Frankfurt, Zagreb
Seasonal: Amsterdam, Athens, Berlin–Tegel, Düsseldorf, Nice, Osijek, Paris–Charles de Gaulle, Pula, Rome–Fiumicino, Split, Tel Aviv–Ben Gurion, Venice–Marco Polo, Vienna, Zürich
Croatia Airlines
operated by Trade Air[5]
Seasonal: Athens, Zagreb
easyJetSeasonal: Amsterdam, Berlin–Schönefeld, Bristol, Edinburgh, London–Gatwick, London–Luton, London–Stansted, Lyon, Milan–Malpensa, Paris–Orly, Toulouse
easyJet SwitzerlandSeasonal: Geneva
Enter AirSeasonal: Katowice
EurowingsSeasonal: Düsseldorf, Salzburg (begins 27 March 2017) [6]
Eurowings
operated by Germanwings
Seasonal: Berlin–Tegel, Cologne/Bonn, Düsseldorf, Hannover, Hamburg, Stuttgart
FinnairSeasonal: Helsinki
Germania Seasonal: Toulouse (begins 8 April 2017)[7]
IberiaSeasonal: Madrid
IsrairSeasonal: Tel Aviv–Ben Gurion
Jet2.comSeasonal: Belfast–International, East Midlands, Edinburgh, Glasgow (begins 30 April 2017),[8] Leeds/Bradford, London-Stansted (begins 29 April 2017),[9] Manchester, Newcastle upon Tyne
LufthansaSeasonal: Frankfurt, Munich
Lufthansa Regional
operated by Lufthansa CityLine
Seasonal: Munich
LuxairSeasonal: Luxembourg
Monarch Airlines Seasonal: Birmingham, London–Gatwick
Niki Seasonal: Vienna
Norwegian Air Shuttle Seasonal: Barcelona, Bergen, Copenhagen, Helsinki, London–Gatwick, Madrid, Oslo–Gardermoen, Stavanger, Stockholm–Arlanda, Trondheim
Primera AirSeasonal: Göteborg–Landvetter, (begins 28 May 2017) [10] Stockholm–Arlanda (begins 07 June 2017) [11]
S7 AirlinesSeasonal: Moscow–Domodedovo
Scandinavian Airlines Seasonal: Bergen, Copenhagen, Oslo–Gardermoen, Stockholm–Arlanda
SmartWings
operated by Travel Service Airlines[12]
Seasonal: Prague
Thomas Cook Airlines Belgium Seasonal: Brussels, Lille
Thomson AirwaysSeasonal: Birmingham, Bristol, Doncaster (begins 4 May 2017), London–Gatwick, Glasgow, Manchester, Newcastle upon Tyne
Trade Air
operated by AIS Airlines
Seasonal: Rijeka, Split
Transavia Seasonal: Amsterdam, Munich,[13] Paris–Orly
Travel Service Seasonal: Lisbon
TUIfly BelgiumSeasonal: Brussels
Turkish Airlines Istanbul–Atatürk[14]
Ukraine International AirlinesSeasonal: Kiev–Boryspil
VoloteaSeasonal: Bordeaux, Marseille, Nantes, Strasbourg (begins 27 May 2017),[15] Venice–Marco Polo
Vueling Rome–Fiumicino

Seasonal: Barcelona

Charters

AirlinesDestinations
Adria AirwaysSeasonal charter: Ljubljana
Aigle AzurSeasonal charter: Paris–Charles de Gaulle
Air EuropaSeasonal charter: Zaragoza
Air MaltaSeasonal charter: Malta
All Nippon Airways Seasonal charter: Osaka–Kansai, Tokyo–Narita, Sendai
ASL Airlines FranceSeasonal charter: Bordeaux, Lille, Marseille
ASL Airlines IrelandSeasonal charter: Dublin, Shannon
AtlasGlobalSeasonal charter: Istanbul–Atatürk
Croatia AirlinesSeasonal charter: Cork, Beirut, Harstad/Narvik, Knock, Shannon, Skellefteå
Enter AirSeasonal charter: Bydgoszcz, Gdańsk, Poznań, Warsaw–Chopin, Wrocław
GermaniaSeasonal charter: Lyon, Toulouse
Iberia
operated by Air Nostrum
Seasonal charter: Valencia
Jet TimeSeasonal charter: Copenhagen, Göteborg–Landvetter
Middle East AirlinesSeasonal charter: Beirut
Primera AirSeasonal charter: Malmö, Stockholm–Arlanda
Wings of LebanonSeasonal charter: Beirut

Statistics

Traffic figures

Traffic at Dubrovnik Čilipi Airport[16][17]
Year Passengers Cargo
1987 1,460,354 2,490
2000 395,458 680
2001 461,322 646
2002 507,459 657
2003 716,592 592
2004 880,967 822
2005 1,008,240 677
2006 1,120,453 741
2007 1,144,038 847
2008 1,191,474 997
2009 1,122,355 516
2010 1,270,062 406
2011 1,349,501 420
2012 1,480,470 357
2013 1,522,629 375
2014 1,584,471 375
2015 1,693,934 256

Largest airlines

Rank Carrier Passengers 2013 % Passenger %
Change 2012
1 Croatia Airlines 389,397 25.68
2 EasyJet 153,134 10.05
3 Norwegian Air Shuttle 105,292 6.92
4 Lufthansa 75,240 4.95
5 Jet2.com 73,754 4.09
6 Monarch Airlines 73,374 3.5
7 British Airways 62,117 3.5
8 Austrian Airlines 61,561 4.05
9 Air Méditerranée 46,777 3.0
10 Germanwings 35,207 4.5 2.32
Source: Dubrovnik Airport[18]

Trivia

References

Media related to Dubrovnik Airport at Wikimedia Commons

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