Trieste Airport
Airport in Ronchi dei Legionari, Italy From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Trieste Airport (IATA: TRS, ICAO: LIPQ)[3] (Italian: Aeroporto di Trieste) is an international airport located 0.3 NM (0.56 km; 0.35 mi) west of Ronchi dei Legionari (Province of Gorizia),[1] near Trieste in Friuli-Venezia Giulia, north-eastern Italy. The airport has a catchment area of approximately 4 million people, stretching beyond Friuli-Venezia Giulia into neighboring Slovenia, Austria and Croatia.
Trieste Airport Aeroporto di Trieste | |||||||||||||
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Summary | |||||||||||||
Airport type | Public | ||||||||||||
Operator | Aeroporto FVG S.p.A. | ||||||||||||
Serves | Trieste | ||||||||||||
Location | Ronchi dei Legionari, Italy | ||||||||||||
Elevation AMSL | 39 ft / 12 m | ||||||||||||
Coordinates | 45°49′39″N 013°28′20″E | ||||||||||||
Website | triesteairport | ||||||||||||
Map | |||||||||||||
Runways | |||||||||||||
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Statistics (2022) | |||||||||||||
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Overview
The first official documents citing the airfield of Ronchi dei Legionari date back to 30 November 1935, when the 4th Fighter Wing of the Royal Italian Air Force was based here. Commercial operations officially began on 2 December 1961. In 2007, the airport was dedicated to Pietro Savorgnan di Brazzà, a 19th century explorer with Friulian origins. In 2016 the airport was officially renamed Trieste Airport. In recent years[which?], the airport has witnessed growth in low-cost and cargo traffic.[4]
The airport is owned and operated by Aeroporto Friuli Venezia Giulia SpA, a jointly owned company controlled by F2i and the Friuli-Venezia Giulia government.[citation needed]
Following a record-breaking 2023, the airport became Ryanair's 17th Italian base in early 2024.[citation needed]
Airlines and destinations
The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights to and from Trieste:
Airlines | Destinations |
---|---|
Air Dolomiti | Frankfurt |
Eurowings | Seasonal charter: Düsseldorf[citation needed] |
ITA Airways | Milan–Linate,[5] Rome–Fiumicino Seasonal: Olbia |
Ryanair[6] | Barcelona, Bari, Beauvais,[7] Berlin,[8] Brindisi,[9] Budapest,[10] Catania, Charleroi,[11] Dublin, Kraków, London–Stansted, Malta, Naples, Palermo, Seville,[12] Valencia Seasonal: Cagliari,[13] Lamezia Terme (begins 30 March 2025),[14] Olbia,[15] Prague (begins 30 March 2025),[14] Stockholm–Arlanda (begins 2 July 2025)[16] |
Transavia | Rotterdam (begins 1 April 2025)[17] |
Wizz Air | Bucharest–Otopeni,[18] Tirana[19] |
Statistics
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki.org. |
Ground transportation
The airport is connected to the national railway and highway networks thanks to the Intermodal Transit Hub completed in March 2018, serving as an air-road-rail interchange.
Rail
Trieste Airport railway station links the passenger terminal directly to the Venice–Trieste railway thanks to a 425-metre (1,394 ft) raised walkway.
Road
A bus terminal with 16 platforms, a multi-storey car park with 500 spaces and a grade level car park with 1000 spaces provide rapid access to and from the A4 Trieste-Turin highway for public and private motor vehicles. In the southern direction, this highway also offers connections to Slovenia's A1 Motorway with two crossings at Fernetti and Rabuiese, linking the airport with the highway networks in Croatia, Hungary and the Balkans. At the interchange near Palmanova, the A4 branches off to Autostrada A23 linking to Austria's Süd Autobahn A2 via Udine and Tarvisio.
References
External links
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