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| [[Europe Airpost]] |'''Summer''': [[Dublin Airport|Dublin]], [[La Rochelle – Île de Ré Airport|La Rochelle]], [[Strasbourg Airport|Strasbourg]]
| [[Europe Airpost]] |'''Summer''': [[Dublin Airport|Dublin]], [[La Rochelle – Île de Ré Airport|La Rochelle]], [[Strasbourg Airport|Strasbourg]]
| [[Flybe]] |'''Summer''': [[Innsbruck Airport|Innsbruck]], [[Menorca Airport|Minorca]], [[Palma de Mallorca Airport|Palma de Mallorca]], [[Reus Airport|Reus]]<br>'''Winter:''' [[Geneva International Airport|Geneva]]
| [[Flybe]] |'''Summer''': [[Innsbruck Airport|Innsbruck]], [[Menorca Airport|Minorca]], [[Palma de Mallorca Airport|Palma de Mallorca]], [[Reus Airport|Reus]]<br>'''Winter:''' [[Geneva International Airport|Geneva]]
| [[Iberworld]] | '''Summer''': [[Tenerife South Airport|Tenerife-South]]
| [[Jet2.com]] | '''Winter''': [[Chambéry Airport|Chambéry]], [[Geneva International Airport|Geneva]]
| [[Jet2.com]] | '''Winter''': [[Chambéry Airport|Chambéry]], [[Geneva International Airport|Geneva]]
| [[Orbest Orizonia Airlines]] | '''Summer''': [[Tenerife South Airport|Tenerife-South]]
| [[Thomas Cook Airlines]] |'''Summer''': [[Antalya Airport|Antalya]], [[Dalaman Airport|Dalaman]], [[Palma de Mallorca Airport|Palma de Mallorca]], [[Tenerife South Airport|Tenerife-South]]
| [[Thomas Cook Airlines]] |'''Summer''': [[Antalya Airport|Antalya]], [[Dalaman Airport|Dalaman]], [[Palma de Mallorca Airport|Palma de Mallorca]], [[Tenerife South Airport|Tenerife-South]]
| [[Thomson Airways]] | [[Lanzarote Airport|Arrecife]], [[Gran Canaria Airport|Gran Canaria]], [[Tenerife South Airport|Tenerife-South]] <br>'''Summer''': [[Cancún International Airport|Cancun]], [[Corfu International Airport|Corfu]], [[Dalaman Airport|Dalaman]], [[Enfidha – Hammamet International Airport|Enfidha]], [[Ibiza Airport|Ibiza]], [[Orlando-Sanford]], [[Palma de Mallorca Airport|Palma de Mallorca]], [[Paphos International Airport|Paphos]], [[Rhodes International Airport|Rhodes]] <br>'''Winter''': [[Geneva International Airport|Geneva]], [[Innsbruck Airport|Innsbruck]], [[Sharm el-Sheikh International Airport|Sharm el-Sheikh]]
| [[Thomson Airways]] | [[Lanzarote Airport|Arrecife]], [[Gran Canaria Airport|Gran Canaria]], [[Tenerife South Airport|Tenerife-South]] <br>'''Summer''': [[Cancún International Airport|Cancun]], [[Corfu International Airport|Corfu]], [[Dalaman Airport|Dalaman]], [[Enfidha – Hammamet International Airport|Enfidha]], [[Ibiza Airport|Ibiza]], [[Orlando-Sanford]], [[Palma de Mallorca Airport|Palma de Mallorca]], [[Paphos International Airport|Paphos]], [[Rhodes International Airport|Rhodes]] <br>'''Winter''': [[Geneva International Airport|Geneva]], [[Innsbruck Airport|Innsbruck]], [[Sharm el-Sheikh International Airport|Sharm el-Sheikh]]

Revision as of 00:56, 18 November 2012

Edinburgh Airport
File:Edinburgh Airport logo.png
Summary
Airport typePublic
OwnerGlobal Infrastructure Partners
OperatorEdinburgh Airport Ltd.
ServesEdinburgh
Lothian
Fife
Scottish Borders
Central Scotland
LocationTurnhouse, Edinburgh
Elevation AMSL136 ft / 41 m
Websitewww.edinburghairport.com
Map
EGPH is located in the City of Edinburgh council area
EGPH
EGPH
Location in Edinburgh
Map
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
06/24 2,556 8,386 Asphalt
12/30 1,797 5,896 Asphalt
Statistics (2011)
Passengers9,385,245
Passenger change 10-11Increase9.2%
Aircraft Movements113,357
Movements change 10-11Increase4.0%
Sources: UK AIP at NATS[1]
Statistics from the UK Civil Aviation Authority[2]

Edinburgh Airport (Template:Lang-gd) (IATA: EDI, ICAO: EGPH) is located at Turnhouse in the City of Edinburgh, Scotland, and was the busiest airport in Scotland in 2011, handling just under 9.4 million passengers in that year. It was also the sixth busiest airport in the UK by passengers and the fifth busiest by aircraft movements.[2] It is located 5 nautical miles (9.3 km; 5.8 mi)*[1] west of the city centre and is situated just off the M8 motorway.

The airport is owned and operated by Global Infrastructure Partners, which also owns and operates two other UK airports.[3]

The present terminal building, designed by Robert Matthew, was constructed in 1977 and has been upgraded in recent years, with new car parking facilities and an extended arrivals hall. A new control tower was completed in 2005.

There are plans for expansion of the airport, with passenger numbers expected to reach 26 million per annum by 2030.

On 19 October 2011, BAA Limited announced its intention to sell the airport, following a decision by the UK's Competition Commission requiring BAA to sell either Glasgow International or Edinburgh Airport.[4] BAA announced on 23 April 2012 that it had sold Edinburgh Airport to Global Infrastructure Partners for a price of £807.2 million.[5]

History

View of the control tower from the terminal building

Turnhouse Aerodrome was the most northerly British air defence base in World War I used by the Royal Flying Corps. The small base opened in 1915 and it was used to house the 603 (City of Edinburgh) Squadron from 1925, which consisted of DH 9As, Westland Wapitis, Hawker Harts, and Hawker Hind light bombers. All the aircraft used a grass air strip.

In 1918 the Royal Air Force was formed and the airfield was named RAF Turnhouse and ownership transferred to the Ministry of Defence.

When the Second World War broke out, RAF Fighter Command took control over the airfield and a runway of 3,900 ft (1,189 m) was paved to handle the Supermarine Spitfire. During the Battle of Britain, Nos 3, 65, and 141 Squadrons were present at the airbase.

When the war ended the airfield still remained under military control, but by the late 1940s the first commercial services were launched. In 1947, British European Airways started a service between Edinburgh and London using Vickers Vikings followed by the Viscount and Vanguard series.

In 1952 the runway was extended to 6000 ft to handle the Vampire FB5s; and an aircraft carrier Catcher Net (never used) to protect traffic on the adjacent A8 road. In 1956 a new passenger terminal was built to offer improved commercial service and five years later it was extended. The Ministry of Defence transferred ownership to the Ministry of Aviation in 1960 to offer improved commercial service to the airport. Flying was temporarily diverted to East Fortune, which had its runway extended to accommodate the airliners of the period. In 1971 the British Airports Authority took over the airport and immediately started to expand it by constructing a new runway and terminal building.

Although the original main runway 13/31 (which is now 12/30) served the airport well, its alignment had the disadvantage of suffering from severe crosswinds and the other two minor runways were very short and could not be readily extended, so movements were transferred to a new runway (07/25 which has since become 06/24) in an addition completely outside the original airfield boundary. This runway, completed in 1977 is 2,556 m (8,386 ft) in length, and was able to take all modern airliners including Concorde. A new terminal was built alongside the runway to cater for the additional traffic. The old terminal and hangars were converted into a cargo centre.

The only international services from Edinburgh during the 1980s were to Amsterdam and Dublin, but in the following years links were opened to destinations in France and Germany. By the end of the decade BAA had been privatised and funds were used to extend the current terminal building and create parking aprons.

In 2005, a new 57 m (187 ft) tall air traffic control tower was completed at a cost of £10m (€16m).

An extension to the terminal opened in September 2006 called the "South East Pier". This extension initially added six gates on a new pier to the South-East of the original building. A further four gates were added to the South East Pier at the end of 2008.

Airlines and destinations

Scheduled flights

AirlinesDestinations
Aer Lingus Dublin
Aer Lingus Regional
operated by Aer Arann
Cork, Dublin, Shannon
Air France
operated by CityJet
London-City, Paris-Charles de Gaulle
BMI Regional Brussels, Copenhagen, Manchester, Zürich
British Airways London-Heathrow, London-Gatwick
British Airways
operated by BA CityFlyer
London-City
Brussels Airlines Brussels
EasyJet Alicante, Athens, Amsterdam, Belfast-International, Berlin-Schönefeld [begins 21 March 2013], Bristol, Copenhagen [begins 21 March 2013], Dalaman, Hamburg [begins 21 March 2013], Kraków, London-Gatwick, London-Luton, London-Stansted, Lyon, Madrid, Milan-Malpensa, Munich, Naples, Paphos, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Prague [begins 21 March 2013], Reykjavik-Keflavik [begins 21 March 2013], Tenerife-South
Seasonal: Dubrovnik [begins 7 May 2013], Grenoble, Lisbon, Nice, Palma de Mallorca
EasyJet Switzerland Basel/Mulhouse, Geneva
Flybe Belfast-City, Birmingham, Cardiff, Exeter, Jersey, Knock, Manchester, Norwich, Nottingham/East Midlands, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Southampton
Seasonal: Bergerac, Newquay
Flybe
operated by Loganair
Isle of Man, Kirkwall, Stornoway, Sumburgh, Wick
Germanwings Seasonal: Cologne/Bonn
Iberia Express Summer Seasonal: Madrid
Jet2.com Budapest, Prague
Seasonal:Alicante, Chambéry [resumes 22 December 2012], Dubrovnik, Faro, Geneva, Ibiza, La Rochelle, Malaga, Minorca, Murcia, Olbia, Palma de Mallorca, Pisa, Salzburg [resumes 22 December 2012], Toulouse, Venice-Marco Polo
KLM Cityhopper Amsterdam
Lufthansa Frankfurt
Minoan Air London-Oxford [starts January 2013]
Niki Seasonal: Graz, Linz, Vienna
Norwegian Air Shuttle Copenhagen, Oslo-Gardermoen
Seasonal: Bergen, Stockholm-Arlanda, Copenhagen
Ryanair Alicante, Barcelona, Beauvais, Charleroi, Dublin, Faro, Fuerteventura, Gdansk, Gothenburg-City, Gran Canaria, Hahn, Kraków, Lanzarote, Málaga, Malta, Rome-Ciampino, Sandefjord, Stockholm-Skavsta, Szczecin, Tenerife-South, Weeze
Seasonal: Billund, Bordeaux, Memmingen, Marseille, Palma de Mallorca, Pisa, Poitiers, Tampere
Scandinavian Airlines Copenhagen [resumes 4 February 2012]
Seasonal: Stockholm-Arlanda
Scandinavian Airlines
operated by Blue1
Seasonal: Helsinki
Turkish Airlines Istanbul-Atatürk
United Airlines Newark
Vueling Airlines Barcelona

Charter flights

Ryanair and Flybe aircraft at the airport
Edinburgh Airport Terminal

A number of carriers operate charter services on behalf of tour operators from Edinburgh Airport. This list details the carrier, destinations and whether they operate year round or will operate during Summer 2012 or Winter 2012/13.

AirlinesDestinations
AlitaliaSummer: Milan-Linate
Austrian Airlines
operated by Tyrolean Airways
Innsbruck [begins 21 December]
BA CityFlyer Summer: Bologna, Faro, Ibiza, Palma de Mallorca
BH Air Summer: Burgas
Europe Airpost Summer: Dublin, La Rochelle, Strasbourg
Flybe Summer: Innsbruck, Minorca, Palma de Mallorca, Reus
Winter: Geneva
Jet2.com Winter: Chambéry, Geneva
Orbest Orizonia Airlines Summer: Tenerife-South
Thomas Cook Airlines Summer: Antalya, Dalaman, Palma de Mallorca, Tenerife-South
Thomson Airways Arrecife, Gran Canaria, Tenerife-South
Summer: Cancun, Corfu, Dalaman, Enfidha, Ibiza, Orlando-Sanford, Palma de Mallorca, Paphos, Rhodes
Winter: Geneva, Innsbruck, Sharm el-Sheikh

Cargo airlines

AirlinesDestinations
Benair Aberdeen, Inverness
DHL East Midlands
Jet2.com
operated for Royal Mail
East Midlands, London-Stansted
Loganair
operated for Royal Mail
Aberdeen, Inverness
Titan Airways
operated for Royal Mail
London-Stansted
TNT Airways Liege, East Midlands
Star Air
operated for UPS
East Midlands, Cologne/Bonn

Statistics

Passenger numbers

Passenger traffic at Edinburgh Airport increased each year between 1997 and 2007, after which numbers stabilised before dropping by 5.0% in 2010, then increasing to a record level of 9,385,245 in 2011 with 113,357 aircraft movements recorded.[2]

Edinburgh Airport Passenger Totals 1997-2011 (millions)
Updated: 8 March 2012.[2]
Number of Passengers[2] Number of Movements[6] Freight
(tonnes)[2]
1997 4,214,919 99,352 27,548
1998 4,588,507 100,134 23,260
1999 5,119,258 101,226 17,715
2000 5,519,372 102,393 17,894
2001 6,067,333 112,361 16,169
2002 6,930,649 118,416 21,232
2003 7,481,454 118,943 24,761
2004 8,017,547 125,317 27,376
2005 8,456,739 127,122 29,595
2006 8,611,345 126,914 36,389
2007 9,047,558 128,172 19,292
2008 9,006,702 125,550 12,418
2009 9,049,355 115,969 23,791
2010 8,596,715 108,997 20,357
2011 9,385,245 113,357 19,332
Source: United Kingdom Civil Aviation Authority[7]

Busiest routes

Gate lounge area in the South East Pier Extension at Edinburgh Airport
Aircraft from British Airways and Flybe at Edinburgh Airport
20 busiest routes to and from Edinburgh Airport (2011)[2]
Rank Airport Passengers handled % Change
2010 / 11
1 London Heathrow 1,271,459 Increase 2.1
2 London Gatwick 669,068 Increase 10.7
3 Amsterdam 559,255 Increase 13.0
4 Dublin 405,906 Increase 7.7
5 London Stansted 390,372 Increase 18.3
6 London City 344,868 Increase 3.0
7 Birmingham 288,955 Increase 0.3
8 Bristol 286,634 Increase 26.2
9 Paris Charles de Gaulle 274,044 Increase 1.8
10 London Luton 259,408 Increase 7.1
11 Belfast International 236,628 Increase 7.7
12 Southampton 203,591 Increase 4.9
13 United States Newark 154,907 Decrease 3.0
14 Palma de Mallorca 151,800 Increase 72.1
15 Frankfurt 133,593 Increase 12.9
16 Geneva 125,133 Increase 6.3
17 Malaga 124,702 Increase 55.6
18 Manchester 119,615 Decrease 5.5
19 Belfast City 115,330 Increase 3.4
20 Madrid 113,004 Increase 4.6

Access and ground transportation

Lothian Buses Airlink 100 airport express bus to Edinburgh

The airport lies on the A8 Glasgow-Edinburgh road, and can be easily reached by the M8 (from Glasgow) and the M9 (from Stirling). The airport is also within easy access from the M90 motorway (from Perth) via the Forth Road Bridge.

Lothian Buses provide public transportation to the airport with the Airlink 100 express bus from Edinburgh city centre,[8] as well as local bus services. Additionally, Stagecoach operates the newly formed JET express bus service, previously AirDirect 747 between the airport and Inverkeithing railway station and Ferrytoll Park and Ride in Fife, and the Gyle Shopping Centre and Heriot-Watt University.[9]

There are currently no direct rail links to Edinburgh Airport, although it lies very close to the Fife Circle and the Edinburgh-Glasgow railway lines. A project to build the Edinburgh Airport Rail Link was cancelled in 2007 after a change in Government.[10]

Diagram of the forthcoming Edinburgh Trams network

Work is underway to construct a light rail link from the airport to Edinburgh city centre on the Edinburgh Trams network. The new system will run from an airport station across the western suburbs of Edinburgh on a segregated track; when the trams reach Haymarket railway station they will switch to street-running mode and travel through the city along Princes Street. Edinburgh Trams are expected to begin operation in 2014.[11]

As a cheaper alternative to the cancelled Edinburgh Airport Rail Link project, it has been proposed that an additional interchange station be constructed on the Fife Circle Line. Gogar railway station would provide interchange with airport tram services. This proposal has not yet been approved or funded.[12]

Infrastructure

In April, 2008 work began on the resurfacing of the main runway. This project, at a cost of £16m,[13] was due to be completed by the end of November, 2008 and will prolong the life of the runway for a further 15 years.[14] In the end, the work was completed around 10 days ahead of schedule and on budget.[15]

A £40m extension to the departure lounge has been built, work commenced in December, 2008.[14]

£250m is to be spent on the airport over the next decade.[14] BAA has made provision in its Master Plan for the airport for an extension to the current runway 06/24, which would allow larger aircraft to serve longer haul destinations. There are plans to expand further by adding a new runway and terminal by 2020 which would accommodate up to 20 million passengers per annum.[16] BAA projects that by 2030 Edinburgh Airport will be handling 26 million passengers per annum. Development has recently begun at Edinburgh Airport on a £40 million departure lounge extension project which will see the current lounge double in size as well as a new security search area and a greater choice bars, restaurants and shops. The departure lounge opened on 18/11/09.[17]

The likelihood of an additional runway has been thrown into doubt following a revised masterplan in January 2011, with passenger numbers expected to be lower than previously thought - 12.3 million by 2020 and 20 million by 2040.[18]

Accidents and incidents

On 27 February 2001, a Loganair Shorts 360 (G-BNMT) operating a Royal Mail flight to Belfast, crashed into the Firth of Forth shortly after taking off from Edinburgh at 1730 GMT. Both crew members were killed, and there were no passengers on board. A fatal accident inquiry later blamed a build up of slush in the aircraft's engines before the crash. Protective covering had not been fitted to the engine intakes while the aircraft was parked for several hours in heavy snow at Edinburgh.[19][20]

Accolades

References

  1. ^ a b Edinburgh - EGPH
  2. ^ a b c d e f g CAA: UK Annual Airport Statistics Cite error: The named reference "stats" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  3. ^ [1]
  4. ^ BAA: "BAA to sell Edinburgh Airport"
  5. ^ BAA announces sale of Edinburgh Airport
  6. ^ Number of Movements represents total aircraft takeoffs and landings during that year.
  7. ^ UK Airport Statistics
  8. ^ "Edinburgh Airport - City Centre frequent express shuttle". Lothian Buses. Retrieved 20 January 2010.
  9. ^ "Airdirect 747". Stagecoach Group. Retrieved 20 January 2010.
  10. ^ "It's £30m down the drain". Edinburgh: The Scotsman. 27 September 2007. Retrieved 2010-01-20. [dead link]
  11. ^ "Route map". Edinburgh Trams. 2009. Retrieved 20 January 2010.
  12. ^ Stevenson, Stewart (27 September 2007). "Edinburgh Airport Rail Link". Scottish Parliament. Retrieved 12 January 2010. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  13. ^ Runway revamp ready for take-off
  14. ^ a b c /display.var.2469632.0.More_investment_for_airport_following_runway_resurfacing.php More investment for airport following runway resurfacing
  15. ^ New look runway set for take off after £16m upgrade project heralds "great future" for capital's airport
  16. ^ Evidence supporting airport expansion is flawed, says government adviser
  17. ^ Edinburgh Airport outlines 2030 vision
  18. ^ Edinburgh Evening News:Airport chiefs called on to ditch second runway plans
  19. ^ Scotsman: Pilots praised as sheriff confirms snow caused crash, 13 November 2003
  20. ^ http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=20010227-0 Accident description and details.
  21. ^ "ASQ Award for Best Airport in Europe" Airports Council International. 14 February 2012. Retrieved 2012-04-13