Girona-Costa Brava Airport

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Girona-Costa Brava Airport
Aeroport de Girona
IATA: GRO - ICAO: LEGE
Summary
Airport type Public
Operator Aena
Serves Girona
Elevation AMSL 465.8 ft (142 m)
Coordinates 41°54′00″N, 2°46′00″E
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
02/20 7,874 2,400 Asphalt

Girona-Costa Brava Airport (IATA: GROICAO: LEGE) is an airport located twelve kilometres south from the city of Girona, next to the small village of Vilobí d'Onyar, in the north-east of Catalonia, Spain. It is well connected to the Costa Brava, Barcelona and the Pyrenees.

The airport was built in 1965, but it has been only over the last couple of years that the passenger traffic at the Airport has grown spectacularly due to Ryanair choosing it as one of its European hubs.

In 1993 Girona Airport only dealt with 275,000 passengers but by 2005 that number had escalated to more than 3.5 million passengers.

Many people use Girona Airport as an alternative airport for Barcelona. Girona Airport is actually about 100 km to the north of Barcelona so the transfer times do put some people off. You can transfer into Barcelona via a direct airport bus, taxi or by heading into Girona city and catching one of the trains.

Contents

[edit] Statistics

Passenger numbers 1996 to 2005:

Year Passengers Year Passengers
1996 480,506 2001 622,410
1997 533,445 2002 557,187
1998 610,607 2003 1,448,796
1999 631,235 2004 2,962,988
2000 651,402 2005 3,533,567

[edit] To and around the airport

From Girona Airport you can easily reach the resorts along the Costa Brava, places such as Lloret de Mar, l'Estartit, Blanes. You are also only about a 40 minute drive from the French border and many people use Girona Airport as a way of getting to the Pyrenees and the Ski Resort of Andorra.

[edit] By car

The airport is connected by three main roads: AP-7 (toll road France-South of Spain), C-25 (Lleida-Girona), and N-II (Madrid-Barcelona-France). Driving down to Barcelona will take between 60 and 90 minutes via the AP-7 toll road. The hard bit of the drive is knowing where to go once you get to Barcelona.

[edit] By bus

There are 4 bus lines operating in the airport:

[edit] By train

There is no train station at the airport. The closest one is in Girona city. There is a project to build a station for the future AVE line Barcelona-France (Spanish TGV).

[edit] Facilities

There are plenty of companies offering car hire etc. There are also a couple of shops to look around and cafes serving sandwiches and drinks.

There is a non-free parking area in the airport for 1020 cars and 35 buses.

[edit] Airlines and destinations

  • Ryanair (Aarhus [starts March 25, 2007], Alghero, Altenburg [starts March 1, 2007], Blackpool, Bologna [starts March 9, 2007], Bournemouth, Bremen, Brescia [starts March 9, 2007], Bristol [starts March 25, 2007], Brussels-Charleroi, Cagliari [starts March 27, 2007] Doncaster Sheffield, Dublin, Durham Tees Valley [starts February 12, 2007], Düsseldorf, East Midlands, Eindhoven, Faro [starts March 2, 2007], Fuerteventura [starts March 8, 2007], Frankfurt-Hahn, Glasgow-Prestwick, Gothenburg-City [starts March 27, 2007], Karlsruhe-Baden, Liverpool, London-Luton, London-Stansted, Malmo [starts March 25, 2007], Marrakech [starts March 27, 2007], Milan Orio al Serio, Newcastle [starts March 25, 2007], Oslo-Torp [starts March 25, 2007], Paris Beauvais, Pescara [starts March 27, 2007], Pisa, Porto [starts March 2, 2007], Rome-Ciampino, Shannon, Stockholm-Skavsta, Tenerife-North [starts March 9, 2007], Trapani [starts March 27, 2007], Venice-Treviso)
  • transavia.com (Rotterdam)

[edit] Airliner crash, 1999

See main article Britannia Airways Flight BY226A

On 14 September 1999, at 21:47 UTC, a Boeing 757 charter flight from Cardiff, Wales, UK, with 236 passengers and 9 crew left the runway when landing in a storm and broke apart. After leaving the runway, it ran 343 metres across flat grassland beside the runway, before going diagonally over a substantial earth mound adjacent to the airport boundary, becoming semi airborne as a result. Beyond the mound it hit a number of medium sized trees and the right engine struck the boundary fence. The aircraft then passed through the fence, re-landed in a field and both main landing gears collapsed. It finally stopped after a 244 metre slide across the field. Damage was substantial: the fuselage was broken in two places and the landing gear and both engines detached. Remarkably, there were no fatalities and the injuries were few: 2 serious and 42 minor.[1] [2]

[edit] External links

[edit] Notes and references

  1. ^ "Special Bulletin S1/2000 - Boeing 757-204, G-BYAG", Air Accidents Investigation Branch, 2000. Retrieved on 2006-09-27.
  2. ^ "BBC report of air crash", BBC, 1999. Retrieved on 1999-09-15.
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