Cairo International Airport

Cairo International Airport
مطار القاهرة الدولي
Maṭār al-Qāhirah al-Dawlyy
Summary
Airport type Public
Operator Cairo Airport Company
Serves Cairo, Egypt
Location Heliopolis
Hub for EgyptAir
EgyptAir Express
Nile Air
Elevation AMSL 382 ft / 116 m
Coordinates 30°07′19″N 31°24′20″E / 30.12194°N 31.40556°E / 30.12194; 31.40556Coordinates: 30°07′19″N 31°24′20″E / 30.12194°N 31.40556°E / 30.12194; 31.40556
Website cairo-airport.com
Map
CAI
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
05L/23R 3,301 10,830 Asphalt
05C/23C 3,999 13,120 Asphalt
05R/23L 4,000 13,123 Asphalt
Statistics (2012)
Passengers 14,711,500
Economic impact $2.0 billion[1]
Social impact 211.5 thousand[1]
Sources: Airport website[2] and DAFIF[3][4]
Passenger statistics[1]

Cairo International Airport (IATA: CAI, ICAO: HECA) (Arabic: مطار القاهرة الدولي; Maṭār al-Qāhirah al-Dawlyy) is the international airport of Cairo and the busiest in Egypt and serves as the primary hub for EgyptAir, EgyptAir Express and Nile Air as well as several other airlines. The airport is located in Heliopolis, to the northeast of the Cairo around 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) from the business area of the city and has an area of approximately 37 square kilometres (14 sq mi). It is the second busiest airport in Africa after OR Tambo International Airport in Johannesburg.

History

During World War II, the United States Army Air Forces built Payne Airfield to serve the Allied Forces, rather than take over the existing Almaza Airport located 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) away. Payne Field was a major Air Transport Command air cargo and passenger hub, connecting westwards through Benghazi Airport (during the war known as Soluch Airfield) to Algiers airport on the North African route to Dakar Airport, in French West Africa.

Other locations which transport routes were flown were RAF Habbaniya, Iraq on the Cairo – Karachi, India route; Lydda Airport, British Palestine; Jeddah, Arabia, on the Central African route to Roberts Field, Liberia (1941–1943), and later after the war ended, Athens, Greece and on to destinations in Europe.[5]

When American forces left the base at the end of the war, the Civil Aviation Authority took over the facility and began using it for international civil aviation. In 1963, Cairo International Airport replaced the old Heliopolis Airport, which had been located at the Hike-Step area in the east of Cairo.[6]

The airport is administered by the Egyptian Holding Company for Airports and Air Navigation, which controls the Cairo Airport Company, the Egyptian Airports Company, National Air Navigation Services and Aviation Information Technology, and the Cairo Airport Authority. In 2004, Fraport AG won the management contract to run the airport for eight years, with options to extend the contract twice in one year increments.[7]

Terminals

The terminal facilities include Departure Hall 1, International Hall 3, and Hall 4 for private and non-commercial aircraft services. As part of the recent upgrading and facility improvement scheme, the CAA demolished the old Hall 3, previously used for domestic arrivals and departures, to reconstruct a new hall to be used for international arrivals. Terminal 1 is locally known as the "Old Airport," although its facilities were recently given a complete overhaul and are newer than those of Terminal 2, which is still known as the "New Airport."

Terminal 1

Departures area at Terminal 1

Terminal 1 was originally used by EgyptAir and several Middle Eastern airlines. However, an increasing number of other foreign carriers, such as Air France and KLM transferred operations from Terminal 2 in 2006. In May 2009 EgyptAir moved all its operations to the new Terminal 3 (along with all Star Alliance airlines serving the airport). In March 2010, with the closure of Terminal 2 for major renovation works, all non-Star Alliance airlines serving the airport shifted operations to the terminal.

Departures and arrivals are with all airlines departing from Terminal 1 Hall 1, with the exception Saudia which is the sole tenant of Terminal 1 Hall 2 due to the size of their operations (SV accounted for 65% of Terminal 2's traffic in 2009). Most international airlines arrive in Hall 3. Arrival Hall 2 was recently reopened and serves international and domestic arrivals.

The CAC has inaugurated the "Airport City Concept" to provide an array of services and entertainment facilities to travelers, airport visitors, as well as the general public. The first phase, a new shopping mall called the 'AirMall,' has been built near Terminal 1's International Arrival Hall 3.

As of 2009 the facade of the terminal was being upgraded. A study on reorganizing the departure and arrival halls is ongoing as well as the feasibility study to include contact stands to improve the service and comfort levels to the passengers. Terminal 1 has 12 gates.

Hall 4

Terminal 1, Hall 4 is dedicated to private and executive jet services. Even though it is referred to as a 'Hall' under Terminal 1 it is operated independently from the commercial passenger terminal. It has proven to be one of the most successful general aviation halls in the Middle East.

Smart Aviation Company has been based at the building since 2007; it moved to a new executive FBO in 2010 adjacent to Hall 4.

Terminal 2

Apron view

Terminal 2 was inaugurated in 1986 with 7 boarding gates.[8] It primarily served European, Gulf and East Asian airlines. The terminal was closed in April 2010 for complete renovations starting in 2012 and lasting 36 months. The architecture of the building limited the opportunities for further expansion which necessitated the entire building to be closed for major structural overhaul at an estimated cost of approximately $400 million.

In February 2010 the World Bank's Board of Executive Directors approved a loan amount of $387 million to support the Cairo Airport Development Project (CADP) to overhaul the terminal with national banks providing the rest. The project aimed at increasing the terminal capacity from 3 million to 7.5 million passengers annually. The upgrade included the complete modernisation of the 20-year-old facility to reach the same level of service as the new Terminal 3. In August 2011, Turkey's Limak Holding won the tender for modernising the terminal.

After several project delays, the renovated terminal had its soft opening on 28 September 2016 with a capacity of 7.5 million passengers bringing the airport's total passenger capacity to 30 million passengers annually. The new terminal has 14 gates and an additional 5 remote stands.

During February 2017, Saudi Arabian Airlines launched its first international "Al-Fursan lounge" at Cairo International Airport Terminal 2. The 1,500 square-meter lounge can accommodate 300 guests at a time.

The renovated terminal is operating jointly with Terminal 3 as one integrated terminal via an air bridge, thus, reinforcing the role of Cairo International Airport as a regional hub.

Terminal 3

Nile Air Airbus A320 Special ' Egypt Tourism' Livery at Cairo International Airport (June 2016)
Aerial overview

Given projected growth, and the limited ability to expand Terminal 2, the Egyptian Ministry of Civil Aviation began construction of Terminal 3 in 2004. The terminal was officially inaugurated by the former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak on 18 December 2008 and opened for commercial operations on 27 April 2009. The facility is twice as large as the current two terminal buildings combined, with the capacity to handle 11 million passengers annually (6 million international and 5 million domestic) once the first phase is completed. It is adjacent to Terminal 2, and the two terminals are initially connected by a bridge.

With its hub at the airport, EgyptAir's operations were overhauled with the full transfer of its operations (international and domestic) into the state-of-the-art terminal between 27 April and 15 June 2009. To implement the Star Alliance "Move Under One Roof" concept, all Alliance members serving the airport were relocated to the terminal by the first of August 2009.

The new terminal includes:

Seasonal flight terminal

On 20 September 2011 Prime Minister Sharaf inaugurated the new Seasonal Flights Terminal (ST), located west of Terminal 3. During the start-up phase EgyptAir operates its daily flight to Medina from the new Terminal. All Hajj traffic of EgyptAir will move to the ST while Saudia's Hajj flights will still operate from Terminal 1. More destinations might be added during winter.

The terminal has an annual capacity of 3.2 million passengers with 27 check-in counters and 7 gates with a common gate and single security concept, the first in Cairo. It is designed to handle 1,200 passengers per hour. Passengers will be bussed to remote aircraft stands around Terminal 3. Its purpose is to ease operational strains on the existing terminals during pilgrim seasons.[9]

Facilities

EgyptAir Airbus A321-231 and Boeing 777-300ER at Cairo International Airport
EgyptAir Express Embraer 170 at Cairo International Airport

Overview

The airport has four terminals, the third (and largest) opened on 27 April 2009 and the Seasonal Flights Terminal opened on 20 September 2011. Terminal 2 was closed in April 2010 for major renovation works and was reopened on 28 September 2016. A third parallel runway replaced the crossing runway in 2010.[10] Runway 05L/23R is 3,301 metres (10,830 ft) long, 05C/23C has a length of 4,000 metres (13,000 ft), and the new runway is designated as 05R/23L and is 3,999 metres (13,120 ft).

Transfer Between Terminals Automated People Mover (APM): The main station is located between Terminals 2 and 3 and is an integral part of the bridge connecting the two terminals. The 1.8-kilometre (1.1 mi) track went into operation and links Terminal 1, the AirMall, the multi-storey car park and Terminals 2 and 3.

Airport Hotel A luxury 350-room five-star Le Méridien Cairo Airport hotel opened in front of Terminal 3 in December 2013. The hotel is linked to the terminal by a 230-metre-long (750 ft) skyway that is also equipped with a moving walkway. The hotel has 5 different dining venues, a fitness center, massage rooms, swimming pool, gift store, and more.

Future developments

With the national carrier, EgyptAir, and the Egyptian authorities planning to develop the airport as a hub for the Middle East and Africa, the airport facilities are in constant development.

Several projects are underway, including:

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

AirlinesDestinations
Aegean AirlinesAthens
Air AlgérieAlgiers
Air ArabiaRas al Khaimah, Sharjah
Air CairoJeddah, Hofuf, Yanbu[11]
Air FranceParis–Charles de Gaulle
Air LeisureCharter: Aswan, Athens, Beijing–Capital, Chengdu, Chongqing, Denpasar/Bali, Hong Kong, Hurghada, Shanghai–Pudong, Shenzhen, Tianjin, Wuhan[12]
Alexandria AirlinesCharter: Alexandria, Aqaba, Luxor
AlitaliaRome–Fiumicino
AlMasria Universal Airlines Bergamo
Austrian Airlines Vienna
Badr AirlinesKhartoum
British AirwaysLondon–Heathrow
Cairo AviationJeddah, Yanbu[13]
EgyptAirAbha, Abidjan, Abu Dhabi, Abuja, Accra, Addis Ababa, Alexandria–Borg el Arab, Algiers, Amman–Queen Alia, Amsterdam, Asmara, Assiut, Aswan, Athens, Baghdad, Bahrain, Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi, Barcelona, Beijing–Capital, Beirut, Berlin–Schönefeld, Brussels, Casablanca, Copenhagen, Dammam, Dar es Salaam, Dubai–International, Entebbe, Erbil, Frankfurt, Gassim, Geneva, Guangzhou, Hurghada, Istanbul–Atatürk, Jeddah, Johannesburg–OR Tambo, Juba, Kano, Khartoum, Kuwait, Lagos, London–Heathrow, Luxor, Madrid, Medina, Milan–Malpensa, Mumbai, Munich, Muscat, Nairobi–Jomo Kenyatta, N'Djamena, New York–JFK, Paris–Charles de Gaulle, Riyadh, Rome–Fiumicino, Sharjah, Sharm el-Sheikh, Tokyo–Narita (resumes 29 October 2017),[14] Toronto–Pearson, Tunis–Carthage, Vienna
Charter: Osaka–Kansai
Seasonal: Mykonos
EgyptAir
operated by Air Sinai
Tel Aviv–Ben Gurion
EgyptAir
operated by EgyptAir Express
Abu Simbel, Alexandria-Borg el Arab, Aswan, Athens, Budapest, Hurghada, Larnaca, Luxor, Marsa Alam, Sharm el-Sheikh, Sohag
Seasonal: El Alamein, Mersa Matruh
Emirates Dubai–International
Eritrean AirlinesAsmara, Khartoum[15]
Ethiopian AirlinesAddis Ababa
Etihad AirwaysAbu Dhabi
FlynasAbha[16] (starts 30 August 2017), Jeddah, Riyadh[17]
Gulf AirBahrain
Iraqi AirwaysBaghdad, Basra, Erbil, Sulaimaniyah[18]
Jazeera AirwaysKuwait
Jordan AviationAmman–Queen Alia[19][20][21]
Kenya Airways Nairobi
Kuwait AirwaysKuwait
LufthansaFrankfurt, Munich
MeridianaMilan–Malpensa
Middle East AirlinesBeirut
Nesma AirlinesAbha, Jeddah, Qassim, Tabuk, Ta'if, Yanbu
Nile AirAbha, Al Ain, Al-Jawf, Aswan, Baghdad, Basra, Buraidah, Ha'il, Hofuf, Hurghada,[22] Istanbul-Sabiha Gökçen, Jeddah, Jizan, Kuwait, Luxor, Port Sudan, Sharm el-Sheikh,[22] Tabuk, Ta'if, Yanbu
Oman AirMuscat
Petroleum Air ServicesCharter: El Kharga, Hurghada, Luxor, Port Said, Ras Shokeir, Sharm el-Sheikh, Sharq Al-Owainat, Antalya, Basra, Mykonos, Paphos[23]
Royal Air MarocCasablanca
Royal FalconAmman–Queen Alia
Royal JordanianAmman–Queen Alia
Royal WingsAqaba[24]
SaudiaAbha, Dammam, Jeddah, Medina, Riyadh, Tabuk[25]
Sudan AirwaysKhartoum, Port Sudan
Sun AirKhartoum
Syrian AirDamascus, Latakia
Swiss International Air LinesZürich
Tarco AirlinesKhartoum[26]
TunisairTunis–Carthage
Turkish AirlinesIstanbul–Atatürk
Yemenia Sana'a1
Notes

Cargo

AirlinesDestinations
Air France CargoParis-Charles de Gaulle, N'Djamena, Reunion
CargoluxBeirut, Luxembourg
DHL International Aviation MEBahrain
EgyptAir Cargo[28] Beirut, Cologne/Bonn, Istanbul-Atatürk, Milan-Malpensa, N'Djamena, Ostend/Bruges, Sharjah
Emirates SkyCargoDubai-Al Maktoum,[29] Frankfurt
Ethiopian Airlines CargoAddis Ababa, Beirut, Liège[30]
Kalitta AirCharleston
Lufthansa CargoFrankfurt, Hong Kong, Milan-Malpensa, Sharjah
MartinairAmsterdam[31]
RAM Cargo Casablanca
Royal Jordanian CargoAmman-Queen Alia, Maastricht/Aachen
Turkish Airlines CargoIstanbul-Atatürk[32]

Ground transport

Limousines and shuttle buses

There are several ways to leave Cairo airport upon arrival. The most convenient way is by one of the numerous "limousine services". Pick-up points are in front of the terminals (curb side). The prices are fixed depending on the destination and the car category. Category A are luxury limousines (e.g. Mercedes-Benz E-Class), Category B are Micro Buses for up to seven passengers, Category C are midsized cars (e.g. Mitsubishi Lancer) and new Category D are London Taxis.[33]

Public transport

Public buses leave outside terminal 1 and connect frequently to transportation hubs like Abbasia and Tahrir Square but can be confusing for visitors and are not suitable for persons carrying large pieces of baggage. Line 3 of the Cairo Metro will connect the airport to Heliopolis, Central Cairo and Giza in the future.

Taxi

The old black and white taxis usually do not have a meter and prices are negotiated before travelling while the newer white taxis have meters, but will generally refuse to use it when leaving from the airport and charge significantly more.

Car

The airport can be reached via Oroba Road from Heliopolis or via the new road, connection Terminal 3 with the intersection between Ring Road and Suez Road. The toll for driving to the airport is EGP 15.

Accidents and incidents

Accolades

See also

References

 This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency website http://www.afhra.af.mil/.

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  15. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 24 November 2015. Retrieved 2015-11-24.
  16. http://www.flynas.com/en/booking-flynas/route-map
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  18. http://www.iq-airways.com/AirqAirways/trips_special.php?w=45 Archived 13 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine.
  19. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queen_Alia_International_Airport
  20. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jordan_Aviation
  21. http://www.jordanaviation.jo/booking/DESTINATIONS.aspx
  22. 1 2 "Nile Air Schedules Domestic Egypt Service Launch in July 2016". Retrieved 10 May 2016.
  23. "Cairo International Airport". cairo-airport.com.
  24. http://rj.com/en/news/title/3848.html
  25. "Saudia Proposes New Service to Cairo / Dubai from Jan 2015". airlineroute. Retrieved 3 June 2015.
  26. http://tarcoair.co Archived 6 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine.
  27. "Schedule Tue 01 Sep 2015". Yemenia Airways. 31 August 2015. Retrieved 1 March 2016.
  28. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 27 January 2013. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  29. "Emirates SkyCargo Freighter Operations get ready for DWC move". Emirates SkyCargo. 2 April 2014.
  30. "Cargo Schedule". Ethiopian Airlines. 2016. Retrieved 8 February 2016.
  31. "Martinair Cargo". Martinair. Retrieved 7 February 2016.
  32. "Winter Schedule 2012/13" (PDF). Turkish Airlines Cargo. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 June 2013.
  33. Cairo Airport Company (2010): "Limousine Information". Official Brochure
  34. "Accident description". Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved 7 October 2009.
  35. "SU-AJG Accident description". Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved 24 July 2011.
  36. "The Most Improved Airports". 1 October 2010. Retrieved 29 October 2010.
  37. "ASQ Award for Best Airport in Africa". Airports Council International. 14 February 2012. Retrieved 13 April 2012.

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