Modlin Airport

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Coordinates: 52°27′04″N 020°39′06″E / 52.45111, 20.65167

Modlin Airport
port lotniczy Warszawa-Modlin
IATA: noneICAO: EPMO
Summary
Airport type Military (disused)
Owner Port Lotniczy Mazowsze Warszawa-Modlin Sp. z o.o.
Operator Port Lotniczy Mazowsze Warszawa-Modlin Sp. z o.o.
Serves Warsaw
Location Modlin, Nowy Dwór Mazowiecki, Poland
Elevation AMSL 104 m / 341 ft
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
08/26 2,500 8,202 Asphalt
Source: DAFIF[1]

Modlin Airport (ICAO: EPMO) is a disused military airfield, with plans for conversion into a passenger airport for low-cost carriers serving the Warsaw, Poland market. The airport is located 35 km north of the city centre near the village of Modlin in the town of Nowy Dwór Mazowiecki.

Originally designed as a military facility in the Second Polish Republic, construction commenced in 1937, although it actually opened in 1940 for Luftwaffe. Between 1945 and 2000 it was used by Polish and Soviet air forces. In 2000 the Polish Ministry of National Defence declared the airfield surplus.[2] Subsequently, much of its original area was made available as capital in a joint management limited liability company created to run the future airport, Port Lotniczy Mazowsze Warszawa-Modlin Sp. z o.o.

The airport features one asphalt runway in poor condition and lacking navigation lighting and modern radio aids such as ILS, 2500 m long and 60 m wide at the altitude of 104 m[1].

Plans call for converting the airport to civilian use, primarily as a replacement for the Etiuda terminal serving low-cost carriers at the Warsaw's main Okęcie airport, an idea which emerged in the early 2000s[3]. Numerous projected opening dates have slipped repeatedly[4] , and a new business plan with extensive infrastructure improvements, including building a new passenger terminal, was put forth in 2007. However, as of March 2008, no actual construction work has commenced, only signing various documents and carrying out environmental assessments.[5] The latest schedule, announced in February 2008[6] [7] has the airport finally open for business in early 2010, complete with a rail connection, and initially serving 1.5 million passengers annually. A new 5 km rail spur branching off from the existing Warsaw-Gdynia mainline will be built, allegedly allowing 30-minute commute to Warsaw centre, after railroad improvements have been made. Currently, chiefly owing to the technical limitations of the railbed and the use of outdated rolling stock, the journey from Modlin Station to a northern railway terminal in Warsaw, Warszawa Gdańska, takes twice as long.

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