Lamezia Terme International Airport

Lamezia Terme
International Airport

Aeroporto Internazionale
di Lamezia Terme

IATA: SUFICAO: LICA

SUF

Location of airport in Italy

Summary
Airport type Public
Operator Sacal S.p.A.
Serves Lamezia Terme
Location Lamezia Terme, Italy
Elevation AMSL 39 ft / 12 m
Coordinates 38°54′19″N 16°14′32″E / 38.90528°N 16.24222°E / 38.90528; 16.24222
Website www.sacal.it
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
10/28 7,920 2,414 Asphalt
Statistics (2015)
Passengers 2,342,406
Passenger change 14–15 Decrease -2.8%
Aircraft movements 21,524
Movements change 14–15 Decrease -5.9%
Statistics from Assaeroporti[1]

Lamezia Terme International Airport (Italian: Aeroporto Internazionale di Lamezia Terme "Sant'Eufemia") (IATA: SUF, ICAO: LICA) is an airport in the Sant'Eufemia district of Lamezia Terme, Calabria, Italy. It is the principal airport of Calabria. Additionally, a military helicopter unit, the 2° Reggimento dell'Aria "Sirio", is based near the airport.

History

In 1965 a consortium, CONSAER, was formed to build a new airport near the motorway, the railway and the port of Gioia Tauro; level ground near Lamezia Terme was chosen as the site. The airport opened in June 1976. Its IATA airport code SUF derives from the name Sant'Eufemia. Itavia began scheduled flights to Rome-Fiumicino, Milan-Linate, Catania and Palermo in December of that year. The airport was expanded and modernised in 1982.

Since 1990 it has been managed by SACAL SpA, which is jointly owned by various local government administrations and by private investors.

A contract to extend the runway from the current 2414 metres to 3000 m was awarded on 27 December 2007. A design competition for a new passenger terminal to replace the present building was held in November 2008, and was won by Engco.

Airlines and destinations

AirlinesDestinations
Air Berlin Seasonal: Berlin–Tegel, Düsseldorf, Frankfurt, Leipzig/Halle, Munich, Zürich
Air Transat Seasonal: Toronto–Pearson
Alitalia[2]Milan–Linate, Rome–Fiumicino
Seasonal: Bologna, Turin
Alitalia
operated by Alitalia CityLiner
Milan–Linate
Austrian Airlines Seasonal: Vienna
Aviolet
operated by Air Serbia
Seasonal charter: Belgrade
Blue Air Turin
easyJetMilan–Malpensa
Edelweiss Air Seasonal: Zürich
Eurowings Seasonal: Vienna (begins 8 April 2017)[3]
Eurowings
operated by Germanwings
Seasonal: Cologne/Bonn, Düsseldorf, Hannover, Stuttgart
Helvetic Airways Seasonal: Zürich
LufthansaSeasonal: Munich
LuxairSeasonal: Luxembourg
Meridiana Seasonal: Milan-Malpensa
Neos Seasonal: Bergamo, Milan-Malpensa, Verona
NikiSeasonal charter: Innsbruck
Primera AirSeasonal: Malmö, Stockholm–Arlanda
RyanairBergamo, Bologna, Charleroi, Hahn, London–Stansted, Pisa, Rome–Fiumicino, Treviso
Seasonal: Weeze
Small Planet Airlines Seasonal charter: Vilnius
SmartWings
operated by Travel Service[4]
Seasonal: Brno, Ostrava, Prague
SmartWings
operated by Travel Service Slovakia
Seasonal: Bratislava, Košice
Sun d'Or
operated by El Al
Seasonal charter: Tel Aviv–Ben Gurion
SunExpress Deutschland Frankfurt, Leipzig/Halle
Swiss International Air Lines
operated by Swiss Global Air Lines
Seasonal: Geneva
TUIfly Belgium Seasonal: Brussels
Wizz Air Bucharest (begins 26 March 2017), Budapest (begins 12 April 2017),[5] Warsaw-Chopin (begins 2 July 2017)

References

Media related to Lamezia Terme International Airport at Wikimedia Commons

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