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Charles de Gaulle Airport

Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport [a] (IATA: CDG, ICAO: LFPG), also known as Roissy Airport or simply Paris CDG, is the main international airport serving Paris, France. Opened in 1974, it is in Roissy-en-France, 23 km (14 mi) northeast of Paris and is named after World War II statesman Charles de Gaulle (1890–1970), whose initials (CDG) are used as its IATA airport code.

Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport

Aéroport de Paris-Charles-de-Gaulle

Roissy Airport
Aéroport de Roissy
Summary
Airport typePublic
OwnerGroupe ADP
OperatorParis Aéroport
ServesParis metropolitan area
LocationRoissy-en-France, France
Opened8 March 1974; 50 years ago (1974-03-08)
Hub for
Operating base for
Elevation AMSL119 m / 392 ft

Charles de Gaulle Airport serves as the principal hub for Air France and a destination for other legacy carriers (from Star Alliance, Oneworld and SkyTeam), as well as an operating base for easyJet and Norse Atlantic Airways. It is operated by Groupe ADP (Aéroports de Paris) under the brand Paris Aéroport.

In 2022, the airport handled 57,474,033 passengers and 34,657 aircraft movements,[1] thus making it the world's ninth busiest airport and Europe's third busiest airport (after Istanbul and Heathrow) in terms of passenger numbers. Charles de Gaulle is also the busiest airport within the European Union. In terms of cargo traffic, the airport is the eleventh busiest in the world and the busiest in Europe, handling 2,102,268 tonnes (2,069,066 long tons; 2,317,354 short tons) of cargo in 2019.[2] It is also the airport that is served by the greatest number of airlines, with more than 105 airlines operating at the airport.[3]

As of 2017, the airport offers direct flights to the most countries and hosts the most airlines in the world.[4] Marc Houalla has been the director of the airport since 12 February 2018.

Location edit

Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport covers 32.38 square kilometres (12.50 sq mi) of land. The airport area, including terminals and runways, spans over three départements and six communes:

The choice of constructing an international aviation hub outside of central Paris was made due to a limited prospect of potential relocations or expropriations and the possibility of further expanding the airport in the future.

Management of the airport lies solely on the authority of Groupe ADP, which also manages Orly (south of Paris), Le Bourget (to the immediate southwest of Charles de Gaulle Airport, now used for general aviation and Paris Air Shows), several smaller airfields in the suburbs of Paris, and other airports directly or indirectly worldwide.

History edit

Development edit

The planning and construction phase of what was known then as Aéroport de Paris Nord (Paris North Airport)[6] began in 1966. On 8 March 1974 the airport, renamed Charles de Gaulle Airport, opened. Terminal 1 was built in an avant-garde design of a ten-floors-high circular building surrounded by seven satellite buildings, each with six gates allowing sunlight to enter through apertures. The main architect was Paul Andreu, who was also in charge of the extensions during the following decades.

Terminal 2 opened in 1981 with the official inauguration in presence of the then President, Francois Mitterrand, in March 1982. Unlike Terminal 1, Terminal 2 was designed with a traditional linear layout, but has evolved over time into a series of distinct terminals, designated as 2A through to 2G.[7]

Following the introduction of the brand Paris Aéroport to all its Parisian airports, Groupe ADP also announced major changes for the Charles de Gaulle Airport: Terminals of the Satellite 1 will be merged, as well as terminals 2B and 2D. A new luggage automated sorting system and conveyor under Terminal 2E Hall L was installed to speed luggage delivery time for airlines operating Paris-Charles de Gaulle's hub. The CDG Express, the direct express rail link from Paris to Charles de Gaulle Airport, is scheduled to open in early 2027.[8]

Corporate identity edit

The Frutiger typeface was commissioned for use in the airport and implemented on signs throughout the building in 1975. Initially called Roissy, it was renamed after its designer Adrian Frutiger.

Until 2005, every PA announcement made at Terminal 1 was preceded by a distinctive chime, nicknamed "Indicatif Roissy" and composed by Bernard Parmegiani in 1971. The chime can be heard in the Roman Polanski film Frantic. The chime was officially replaced by the "Indicatif ADP" chime.

On 14 April 2016, the Groupe ADP rolled out the Connect 2020 corporate strategy and the commercial brand Paris Aéroport was applied to all Parisian airports, including Le Bourget airport.[9]

Terminals edit

 
Airport Diagram
 
Aerial view of Terminal 1 (before refurbishment)
 
Aerial view of Terminal 2A and 2B (before refurbishment)

Charles de Gaulle Airport has three terminals: Terminal 1 is the oldest and situated opposite to Terminal 3; Terminal 2 is located at another side with 7 sub-terminal buildings (2A to 2G). Terminal 2 was originally built exclusively for Air France;[6] since then it has been expanded significantly and now houses other airlines. Terminals 2A to 2F are interconnected by elevated walkways and situated next to each other. Terminal 2G is a satellite building connected by shuttle bus.[6]

Terminal 3 (formerly known as "Terminal 9") hosts charter and low-cost airlines. The CDGVAL light-rail shuttle connects Terminal 2 to Terminals 1/3 and their parking lots.

Before the pandemic, Charles de Gaulle Airport had assigned all Star Alliance members to use Terminal 1, Oneworld members to use Terminal 2A and SkyTeam members to use Terminals 2C, 2E (intercontinental), 2D, 2F and 2G (European routes). The assignments changed several times due to the pandemic.

Today, the airport has assigned Star Alliance airlines to Terminal 1, Oneworld airlines to use Terminal 1 for routes to the Middle East and Asia, and 2B for flights to the Americas, Africa, and Europe (due to the closure of Terminal 2A), and SkyTeam airlines to use Terminals 2E for international routes and 2F for Schengen routes.


Terminal 1 edit

The first terminal, designed by Paul Andreu, was built in the image of an octopus. It consists of a circular terminal building which houses key functions such as check-in counters and baggage claim conveyors. Seven satellites with boarding gates are connected to the central building by underground walkways.

The central building, with a large skylight in its centre, dedicates each floor to a single function. The first floor is reserved for technical operations and not accessible to the public. The second floor contains shops and restaurants, the CDGVAL inter-terminal shuttle train platforms (for Terminal 2 and trains to central Paris) and check-in counters from a recent renovation. The majority of check-in counters, however, are located on the third floor, which also has access to taxi stands, bus stops and special pick-up vehicles. Departing passengers with valid boarding passes can reach the fourth floor, which houses duty-free stores and border control posts, for the boarding gates. The fifth floor contains baggage claim conveyors for arriving passengers. All four upper floors have assigned areas for parking and airline offices.

Passages between the third, fourth and fifth floors are provided by a tangle of escalators arranged through the centre of the building. These escalators are suspended over the central court. Each escalator is covered with a transparent tube to shelter from all weather conditions. These escalators were often used in film shootings (e.g., The Last Gang of Ariel Zeitoun). The Alan Parsons Project album I Robot features these escalators on its cover.

Terminal 1 closed in March 2020 in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. ADP used this time for a €250 million refurbishment. Completed in 2023, the refurbishment included the creation of a new junction building linking satellites 1, 2 and 3, and modernisation of the central body of the terminal. Various design details in the refurbished terminal pay homage to the circular shape of the original Andreu design. The upgraded Terminal 2 also features a new departure lounge designed by French designers Maxime Liautard and Hugo Toro, which reflects the ambiance of a Parisian bistro.[10][11]

All Star Alliance airlines use Terminal 1. [12] Other carriers using Terminal 1 include Oneworld carriers Cathay Pacific, Qatar Airways and SriLankan Airlines and non-aligned carriers Aer Lingus, Emirates, Etihad Airways, Eurowings, Icelandair, Kuwait Airways and Oman Air.[13]

Terminal 2 edit

Terminal 2 is spread across seven sub-terminals: 2A to 2G. Terminals 2A to 2F are connected by inter-terminal walkways, but Terminal 2G is a satellite building 800 m (0.5 mi) away. Terminal 2G can only be accessed by shuttle bus from Terminals 1, 2A to 2F and 3. The CDGVAL inter-terminal shuttle train, Paris RER Regional-Express and high-speed TGV rail station, Aéroport Charles de Gaulle 2 TGV, is located within the Terminal 2 complex and between 2C and 2E (on one side) or 2D and 2F (on the opposite side).

Terminal 2F was used for the filming of the music video for the U2 song "Beautiful Day". The band also had their picture taken inside Terminal 2F for the album artwork of their 2000 album All That You Can't Leave Behind.

Terminals 2B and 2D are used by the majority of the airlines part of the Oneworld alliance, except Oneworld's long haul carriers to Asia and the Middle East, French overseas airlines Air Austral and Air Tahiti Nui, [13] and all other non SkyTeam short-haul and mid-haul airlines which do not operate from Terminal 1. [14] and SkyTeam carrier Czech Airlines also use this terminal.[13]

Terminals 2E and 2F are dedicated use for Air France and its SkyTeam partners except Czech Airlines (Terminal 2D) and Saudia (Terminal 1). Several other carriers also use Terminal 2E, these are Oneworld carrier Japan Airlines[14] and non-aligned carriers Air Mauritius, China Southern Airlines, Gulf Air, LATAM Chile, and WestJet. [13]

Collapse of Terminal 2E edit

 
Collapsed Terminal 2E, June 2004
 
Map of terminal 2 various halls

On 23 May 2004, shortly after the inauguration of terminal 2E, a portion of it collapsed near Gate E50, killing four people.[15] Two of the dead were reported to be Chinese citizens, one Czech and the other Lebanese.[16] Three other people were injured in the collapse. Terminal 2E had been inaugurated in 2003 after some delays in construction and was designed by Paul Andreu. Administrative and judicial enquiries were started. Andreu also designed Terminal 3 at Dubai International Airport, which collapsed while under construction on 28 September 2004.

Before this accident, ADP had been planning for an initial public offering in 2005 with the new terminal as a major attraction for investors. The partial collapse and indefinite closing of the terminal just before the beginning of summer seriously hurt the airport's business plan.

In February 2005, the results from the administrative inquiry were published. The experts pointed out that there was no single fault, but rather a number of causes for the collapse, in a design that had little margin for safety. The inquiry found the concrete vaulted roof was not resilient enough and had been pierced by metallic pillars and some openings weakened the structure. Sources close to the inquiry also disclosed that the whole building chain had worked as close to the limits as possible, so as to reduce costs. Paul Andreu denounced the building companies for having not correctly prepared the reinforced concrete.

On 17 March 2005, ADP decided to tear down and rebuild the whole part of Terminal 2E (the "jetty") of which a section had collapsed, at a cost of approximately €100 million.[17] The reconstruction replaced the innovative concrete tube style of the jetty with a more traditional steel and glass structure. During reconstruction, two temporary departure lounges were constructed in the vicinity of the terminal that replicated the capacity of 2E before the collapse. The terminal reopened completely on 30 March 2008.

Terminal 2G edit

 
Terminal 2, former display screen
 
Air France aircraft on stands at Terminal 2F at Charles de Gaulle Airport.

Terminal 2G, dedicated to regional Air France and HOP! flights and its affiliates, opened in 2008. This terminal is to the east of all terminals and can only be reached by shuttle bus. Terminal 2G is used for passengers flying in the Schengen Area (and thus has no passport control) and handles Air France regional and European traffic and provides small-capacity planes (up to 150 passengers) with a faster turnaround time than is currently possible by enabling them to park close to the new terminal building and boarding passengers primarily by bus, or walking. A bus line called "navette orange" connects the terminal 2G inside the security check area with terminals 2E and 2F. Passengers transferring to other terminals need to continue their trip with other bus shuttles within the security check area if they do not need to get their bags.

Terminal 2E Hall L (Satellite 3) edit

The completion of 750 m (2,460 ft) long Satellite 3 (or S3) to the immediate east of Terminals 2E and 2F provides further jetways for large-capacity airliners, specifically the Airbus A380. Check-in and baggage handling are provided by the existing infrastructure in Terminals 2E and 2F. Satellite 3 was opened in part on 27 June 2007 and fully operational in September 2007. It corresponds now to gates L of terminal 2E.

Terminal 2E Hall M (Satellite 4) edit

The satellite S4, adjacent to the S3 and part of terminal 2E, officially opened on 28 June 2012. It corresponds now to gates M of terminal 2E. Dedicated to long-haul flights, it has the ability to handle 16 aircraft at the same time, with an expected capacity of 7.8 million passengers per year. Its opening has led to the relocation of all SkyTeam airlines to terminals 2E (for international carriers), 2F (for Schengen European carriers) and 2G.

Recent terminal reassignments edit

Air France has moved all of its operations previously located at 2C to 2E. In October 2012, 2F closed its international operations and became completely Schengen, allowing for all Air France flights previously operating in 2D to relocate to 2F.

Further, in April 2013, Terminal 2B closed for a complete renovation (with all airlines relocating to 2D) and received upgrades including the addition of a second floor completely dedicated to arrivals. Terminal 2B reopened on 2 June 2021. Airlines including the Lufthansa group, Aegean Airlines, easyJet, Icelandair, LOT Polish Airlines, Norwegian Air Shuttle, Play, Royal Air Maroc, and Scandinavian Airlines began operations at Terminal 2B until 2 December 2022, when the airlines except easyJet and Royal Air Maroc moved back to Terminal 1. Low-cost carrier easyJet has shown interest in being the sole carrier at 2B.[18][irrelevant citation] To facilitate connections, a new boarding area between 2A and 2C was opened in March 2012. It allows for all security and passport control to be handled in a single area, allows for many new shopping opportunities as well as new airline lounges, and eases transfer restrictions between 2A and 2C. Terminal 2D was closed during the pandemic and received the same upgrade including an additional floor. Terminal 2D reopened on 18 April 2023 and some airlines have moved operations to the terminal.[13]

Terminals 2A and 2C are closed for baggage renovation system for 18 months (with all airlines relocating to Terminal 1 or 2B).[b]

Terminal 3 edit

Terminal 3 is located 1 km (0.62 mi) away from Terminal 1. It consists of one single building for arrivals and departures. The walking distance between Terminals 1 and 3 is 3 km (1.9 mi); however, the rail station (named as "CDG Airport Terminal 1") for RER and CDGVAL trains are only at a distance of 300 m (980 ft). Terminal 3 has no boarding gates constructed and all passengers are ferried by airport buses to the aircraft stands.

Terminal usage during COVID-19 pandemic edit

The airport's services during the pandemic were sharply reduced. On 30 March 2020, the airport announced it would temporary close Terminals 1 and 3, moving all remaining flights to Terminal 2. Terminal 2D was also closed during the pandemic and only Terminals 2A, 2C, 2E, 2F and 2G were opened. At the beginning of the pandemic, airlines were grouped by alliances: Star Alliance airlines operated at Terminal 2A, where Air Canada and Ethiopian Airlines operated prior to the pandemic, Oneworld airlines shifted their operations to Terminal 2C, and SkyTeam airlines operated at Terminals 2E and 2F. Between December 2020 and June 2021, only Terminals 2E and 2F were opened with non-Schengen flights operating at Terminal 2E and Schengen flights operated at Terminal 2F. 2B reopened on 2 June 2021 and some airlines were shifted to that concourse. Terminals 2A, 2C and 2D were then reopened for more space. Between June 2021 and December 2022, Star Alliance airlines operated at Terminals 2A (non-Schengen) and 2B (Schengen), Oneworld airlines operated at Terminals 2C (non-Schengen) and 2D (Schengen) and SkyTeam airlines operated at Terminals 2E (non-Schengen), 2F and 2G (both Schengen). However, Star Alliance airlines flights to Asia except Singapore Airlines, who operated at Terminal 2A were operating at Terminal 2E due to the capacity restrictions at Terminal 2A. Terminal 3 reopened on 3 May 2022 for the use of all charter and low cost airlines.[19] Terminal 1 remained closed for renovation at that time. It reopened on 1 December 2022 to reduce traffic at Terminal 2. [20]

Cancelled project for Terminal 4 edit

Plans for a new terminal, Terminal 4, were first announced in 2014. With an estimated cost of €9bn, the new terminal was to be built around 2025, when Charles de Gaulle Airport's maximum capacity of 80 million would have been reached. When constructed, the new terminal would have been able to accommodate 30–40 million passengers per year and would have likely been built north of Terminal 2E.[21][22] However, the Terminal 4 proposal was cancelled in 2021 due to reduced traffic resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic and new environmental regulations making the project unfeasible.[23] Environmentalist groups hailed the cancellation of the project as a "great victory."[22]

Roissypôle edit

Roissypôle is a complex consisting of office buildings, shopping areas, hotels, and a bus coach and RER B station within Charles de Gaulle Airport. The complex includes the head office of Air France,[24] Continental Square,[25] the Hilton Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport,[26] and le Dôme building. Le Dôme includes the head office of Air France Consulting, an Air France subsidiary.[27] Continental Square has the head office of Air France subsidiary Servair[28] and the Air France Vaccinations Centre.[29]

Airlines and destinations edit

Passenger edit

AirlinesDestinations
Aegean Airlines Athens
Seasonal: Heraklion,[30] Thessaloniki
Aer Lingus Dublin, Shannon[31]
Aeroméxico Mexico City
Air Algérie Algiers, Annaba, Béjaïa, Biskra, Chlef, Constantine, Oran
Seasonal: El Oued, Tlemcen
Air Arabia Fès, Rabat (begins 1 May 2024),[citation needed] Tangier
Air Austral Saint-Denis de la Réunion
Seasonal: Dzaoudzi
airBaltic Riga, Tallinn, Vilnius
Air Cairo Seasonal: Luxor[32]
Air Canada Montréal–Trudeau, Toronto–Pearson[33]
Air China Beijing–Capital
Air Corsica Seasonal: Bastia
Air France Abidjan, Abu Dhabi,[34] Abuja, Accra, Algiers, Amsterdam, Antananarivo, Athens, Atlanta, Bamako, Bangalore, Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi,[35] Bangui, Barcelona, Basel/Mulhouse, Beijing–Capital, Beirut, Bergen, Berlin, Biarritz, Bilbao, Billund, Birmingham, Bogotá, Bologna, Bordeaux, Boston, Brazzaville, Brest, Bucharest–Otopeni, Budapest, Buenos Aires–Ezeiza, Cairo, Calvi, Cancún, Casablanca,[36] Cayenne,[37] Chennai (resumes 28 October 2024),[38] Chicago–O'Hare, Clermont-Ferrand, Conakry, Copenhagen, Cotonou, Dakar–Diass, Dallas/Fort Worth, Dar es Salaam,[39] Delhi, Denver, Detroit, Djibouti, Douala, Dubai–International, Dublin, Düsseldorf, Edinburgh, Florence, Fortaleza, Fort-de-France, Frankfurt, Geneva, Gothenburg, Hamburg, Hannover, Havana, Helsinki, Ho Chi Minh City, Hong Kong,[40] Houston–Intercontinental, Istanbul, Johannesburg–O. R. Tambo, Kinshasa–N'djili, Kraków, Kyiv–Boryspil (suspended),[41] Lagos, Libreville, Lima, Lisbon, Ljubljana, Lomé, London–Heathrow, Los Angeles, Luanda, Lyon, Madrid, Malabo, Málaga, Manchester, Marrakesh, Marseille, Mauritius, Mexico City, Miami, Milan–Linate, Milan–Malpensa, Montpellier, Montréal–Trudeau, Mumbai, Munich, Nairobi–Jomo Kenyatta, Nantes, Naples, N'Djamena, Newark,[42] Newcastle upon Tyne, New York–JFK, Niamey, Nice, Nouakchott, Nuremberg, Oran, Osaka–Kansai, Oslo, Ottawa,[43] Ouagadougou, Panama City–Tocumen, Papeete, Pau, Phoenix–Sky Harbor (begins 23 May 2024),[44] Pointe-Noire, Porto, Prague, Rabat, Raleigh/Durham,[45] Rennes, Rio de Janeiro–Galeão, Rome–Fiumicino, Saint-Denis de la Réunion,[46] San Francisco, San José de Costa Rica, Santiago de Chile, São Paulo–Guarulhos, Seattle/Tacoma, Seoul–Incheon, Seville, Shanghai–Pudong, Singapore, Sint Maarten, Stockholm–Arlanda, Stuttgart, Tbilisi, Tel Aviv,[47] Tenerife–South, Tokyo–Haneda, Tokyo–Narita, Toronto–Pearson, Toulouse, Tromsø, Tunis, Turin, Valencia, Vancouver, Venice, Vienna, Warsaw–Chopin, Washington–Dulles, Yaoundé, Yerevan, Zagreb, Zanzibar, Zürich
Seasonal: Ajaccio, Bari, Bastia, Cagliari, Cape Town, Catania, Corfu, Cork, Djerba, Dubrovnik, Faro, Figari, Gran Canaria, Harstad/Narvik (begins 15 June 2024),[48] Heraklion, Ibiza, Innsbruck,[49] Kalamata (begins 6 July 2024),[48] Kittilä,[50] Malé, Malta, Minneapolis/St. Paul (resumes 13 May 2024),[51] Mykonos, Olbia, Palermo, Palma de Mallorca, Québec City, Rhodes, Rovaniemi, Salzburg,[49] Santorini, Sofia, Split, Tirana, Verona[48]
Air India Delhi
Air Madagascar Antananarivo
Air Mauritius Mauritius
Air Montenegro Podgorica[52]
Air Nostrum Seasonal charter: Palma de Mallorca[53]
Air Saint-Pierre Seasonal: Saint-Pierre[54]
Air Senegal Dakar–Diass
Air Serbia Belgrade
Air Tahiti Nui Los Angeles, Papeete, Seattle/Tacoma[55]
Air Transat Montréal–Trudeau, Québec City
Seasonal: Toronto–Pearson
All Nippon Airways Tokyo–Haneda[56]
American Airlines Chicago–O'Hare, Dallas/Fort Worth, New York–JFK, Philadelphia
Seasonal: Charlotte, Miami
AnadoluJet Ankara, Istanbul–Sabiha Gökçen
Arkia Seasonal: Tel Aviv
Asiana Airlines Seoul–Incheon
ASL Airlines France Algiers, Pau, Tel Aviv
Seasonal: Calvi, Chlef, Djerba, Oujda
Atlantic Airways Seasonal: Vágar
Aurigny Guernsey [57]
Austrian Airlines Vienna
Avianca Bogotá (resumes 3 July 2024)[58]
Azerbaijan Airlines Baku[59]
Azores Airlines Seasonal: Ponta Delgada[60]
British Airways London–Heathrow
Brussels Airlines Brussels
Bulgaria Air Sofia
Seasonal: Varna (begins 16 June 2024)[61]
Cabo Verde Airlines Praia, Sal, São Vicente[62]
Cathay Pacific Hong Kong[63]
China Eastern Airlines Shanghai–Pudong
China Southern Airlines Guangzhou
Corendon Airlines Seasonal: Antalya,[64] İzmir[64]
Croatia Airlines Zagreb
Seasonal: Dubrovnik, Split
Cyprus Airways Larnaca[65]
Czech Airlines Prague
Delta Air Lines Atlanta, Boston, Cincinnati, Detroit, Los Angeles,[66]Minneapolis/St. Paul, New York–JFK, Salt Lake City, Seattle/Tacoma
Eastern Airways East Midlands, Southampton [67]
easyJet Barcelona, Belfast–International, Bergamo, Berlin, Biarritz, Birmingham,[68][69] Bristol, Catania, Copenhagen, Edinburgh, Faro, Funchal,[70] Glasgow, Hurghada,[71] Kraków, Lanzarote, Larnaca, Lisbon, Liverpool,[72] London–Gatwick, London–Luton, London–Southend,[73] Madrid, Málaga, Manchester, Marrakesh, Milan–Linate, Milan–Malpensa, Nice, Palermo,[74] Pisa, Porto, Rabat,[75] Tel Aviv, Venice
Seasonal: Agadir, Ajaccio, Bari, Bastia, Calvi, Corfu, Figari, Heraklion, Ibiza (begins 29 June 2024),[76] Menorca, Mykonos, Naples, Olbia, Palma de Mallorca, Pula, Split, Tenerife–South, Toulon
Egyptair Cairo
Seasonal: Luxor
El Al Tel Aviv
Emirates Dubai–International
Ethiopian Airlines Addis Ababa
Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi
Eurowings Hamburg
EVA Air Taipei–Taoyuan
Finnair Helsinki
FlyOne Seasonal: Chișinău, Yerevan[77]
Georgian Airways Tbilisi
Gulf Air Bahrain
Hainan Airlines Chongqing,[78] Shenzhen[79]
Iberia Express Madrid
Icelandair Reykjavík–Keflavík
Iran Air Tehran–Imam Khomeini
ITA Airways Milan–Linate, Rome–Fiumicino[80]
Japan Airlines Tokyo–Haneda
Jet2.com Leeds/Bradford
JetBlue Boston,[81] New York–JFK[82]
Kenya Airways Nairobi–Jomo Kenyatta
KLM Amsterdam
KM Malta Airlines Malta[83]
Korean Air Seoul–Incheon
Kuwait Airways Kuwait City
LATAM Brasil São Paulo–Guarulhos
LOT Polish Airlines Warsaw–Chopin, Warsaw–Radom[84]
Lufthansa Frankfurt, Munich
Luxair Luxembourg
Middle East Airlines Beirut
Norse Atlantic Airways Los Angeles (begins 1 May 2024),[85] New York–JFK[86]
Seasonal: Miami[87]
Norwegian Air Shuttle Copenhagen, Oslo, Stockholm–Arlanda
Seasonal: Bergen, Stavanger,[88] Tromsø[89]
Nouvelair Monastir
Seasonal: Sfax[90]
Oman Air Muscat[91]
Pegasus Airlines Ankara, Istanbul–Sabiha Gökçen[92]
Play Reykjavík–Keflavík[93]
Qantas Perth (resumes 12 July 2024),[94] Sydney (begins 12 July 2024)[95][c]
Qatar Airways Doha
Royal Air Maroc Casablanca, Marrakesh[96]
Seasonal: Oujda[97]
Royal Jordanian Amman–Queen Alia
RwandAir Kigali[98]
Saudia Jeddah, Riyadh
Seasonal: Al Ula
Scandinavian Airlines Copenhagen, Oslo, Stockholm–Arlanda
Singapore Airlines Singapore
Sky Express Athens
Seasonal: Heraklion,[99] Rhodes[100]
SriLankan Airlines Colombo–Bandaranaike[101]
SunExpress Ankara, Antalya, İzmir
Seasonal: Bodrum[102]
Swiss International Air Lines Zürich
TAROM Bucharest–Otopeni
Thai Airways International Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi
Tunisair Djerba, Monastir, Tozeur
Turkish Airlines Istanbul
Tus Airways[103] Seasonal: Larnaca
United Airlines Chicago–O'Hare, Newark, San Francisco, Washington–Dulles
Uzbekistan Airways Tashkent, Urgench
Vietnam Airlines Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City
Vistara Delhi, Mumbai[104]
Vueling Barcelona, Bilbao, Gran Canaria, Santiago de Compostela, Seville
Seasonal: Rome–Fiumicino[105]
WestJet Calgary[106]
XiamenAir Xiamen[107]

Cargo edit

AirlinesDestinations
AirBridgeCargo[108] Moscow–Sheremetyevo (suspended)
Air France Cargo[109] Bangalore,[110] Chicago–O'Hare, Dublin, Glasgow–Prestwick, Guadalajara, Hong Kong, Houston–Intercontinental, Tokyo–Narita
ASL Airlines France[111] Hannover, Istanbul, Katowice, Kyiv–Boryspil, Leipzig/Halle, Marseille, Toulouse
Cathay Cargo[112] Hong Kong
Central Airlines Shenzhen, Tianjin, Xiamen
China Cargo Airlines[113] Shanghai–Pudong
CMA CGM Air Cargo[114] Abu Dhabi, Guangzhou, Hong Kong, Mumbai, Shanghai-Pudong
DHL Aviation[citation needed] Casablanca, Cincinnati, Leipzig/Halle, London–Heathrow
Emirates SkyCargo[115] Dubai–Al Maktoum
FedEx Express[citation needed] Amsterdam, Athens, Barcelona, Basel/Mulhouse, Beijing–Capital,[116] Cologne/Bonn, Copenhagen, Delhi, Dubai–International, Guangzhou, Helsinki, Hong Kong, Indianapolis, Istanbul, London–Stansted, Madrid, Manchester,[117] Memphis, Milan–Malpensa, Mumbai, Munich, Newark, Osaka–Kansai,[118] Singapore, Stockholm–Arlanda, Tel Aviv, Tokyo–Narita, Vienna
FedEx Feeder[citation needed] Berlin, Frankfurt, Hamburg, Hanover, Lyon, Newcastle upon Tyne, Nice, Prague, Rome–Fiumicino, Shannon, Stuttgart, Toulouse, Warsaw–Chopin
Geo-Sky[119] Türkmenabat
Korean Air Cargo[120] Seoul–Incheon
MNG Airlines[121] Cologne/Bonn, Istanbul
Turkish Cargo[122] Istanbul
UPS Airlines[citation needed] Cologne/Bonn, Louisville, Philadelphia

Ground transportation edit

 
Terminal 2, CDGVAL station
 
Terminal 2E, LISA station
 
RER station of Aéroport Charles de Gaulle 2 TGV
 
Train station of Aéroport Charles de Gaulle 2 TGV

CDGVAL edit

The airport's terminals are served by a free automated shuttle rail system, consisting of two lines (CDGVAL and LISA).

CDGVAL (Charles de Gaulle Véhicule Automatique Léger, English: Charles de Gaulle light automatic vehicle) links Terminal 1, parking lot PR, Aéroport Charles de Gaulle 1 RER station (located inside Roissypôle and next to Terminal 3), Parking lot PX, and the Aéroport Charles de Gaulle 2 TGV and RER station located between Terminals 2C, 2D, 2E, and 2F

LISA (Liaison Interne Satellite Aérogare, English: Connection internal satellite terminal) links Terminal 2E to the Satellite S3 (L Gates) and Satellite S4 (M Gates).

RER edit

Charles de Gaulle Airport is connected to central Paris by the RER B, a hybrid suburban commuter and rapid transit line. The service has two stations on the airport grounds:[123]

During most times, there are two types of services that operate on the RER B between Charles de Gaulle airport and Paris:

The RER B has historically suffered from slowness and overcrowding, so French authorities are building CDG Express, a train service that will operate non-stop from Charles de Gaulle Airport to Paris Gare de l'Est railway station (next to Gare du Nord) starting in 2027. It will however share the same sets of tracks that RER B, and will offer a lower frequency, resulting in an overall similar travel time.[124]

TGV edit

Terminal 2 includes a TGV station on the LGV Interconnexion Est line. TGV inOui, Ouigo and Thalys high-speed services operate from the station offering services to stations across France and into Belgium and the Netherlands.

Bus edit

  • Roissybus offers non-stop express service between Opéra station of the Paris Métro and Charles de Gaulle airport, making stops at all terminals (except 2G).
  • "Magical Shuttle" offers non-stop express service between Disneyland Paris and Charles de Gaulle airport, making stops at Terminal 1 and Terminal 2E/2F.
  • RATP bus 350 offers local (all-stops) service between Gare de l'Est/Gare du Nord in Paris and Charles de Gaulle airport, all terminals (except 2G) and other areas of the airport.
  • RATP bus 351 offers local service between Nation station in Paris, Gallieni station, all terminals (except 2G) and other areas of the airport.
  • Noctilien routes N140 and N143 offers local service during the overnight hours between Gare de l'Est/Gare du Nord in Paris and Charles de Gaulle airport, all terminals (except 2G) and other areas of the airport.

Long-distance bus edit

BlaBlaBus and Flixbus all offer services to international and domestic destinations from the bus station outside of the Aéroport Charles de Gaulle 1 RER station.

Car edit

Charles de Gaulle Airport is directly connected to Autoroute A1 which connects Paris and Lille.

Alternative airports edit

The two other airports serving Paris are Orly Airport (south of Paris, the other major airport in Paris) and Paris-Le Bourget Airport (north-northeast of Paris, for general aviation and private jets).

Several low-cost airlines also advertise Beauvais–Tillé Airport and Châlons Vatry Airport, respectively 85 kilometres (53 mi) and 165 kilometres (103 mi) from Paris proper, as serving "Paris" with Paris–Beauvais and Paris–Vatry. Beauvais airport has no railway connections, but there is a shuttle bus to central Paris 15 times daily.

Accidents and incidents edit

  • On 6 January 1993, Lufthansa Flight 5634 from Bremen to Paris, which was carried out under the Lufthansa CityLine brand using a Contact Air Dash 8–300 (registered D-BEAT), hit the ground 1,800 metres (5,900 ft) short of the runway of Charles de Gaulle Airport, resulting in the death of four out of the 23 passengers on board. The four crew members survived. The accident occurred after the pilot had to abort the final approach to the airport because the runway had been closed: the aircraft immediately ahead, a Korean Air Boeing 747, had suffered a blown tire upon landing.[125]
  • On 25 July 2000, a Concorde, Air France Flight 4590 from Charles de Gaulle to John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York, crashed into Les Relais Bleus Hotel in Gonesse, killing everyone on the aircraft and four people on the ground. Investigations concluded that a tire burst during take-off roll, after running over a metal strip on the runway that had detached from a McDonnell Douglas DC-10-30 operating as Continental Airlines Flight 55, which departed shortly before, leading to a ruptured fuel tank and resulting in engine failure and other damage. Concorde was conducting a charter flight for a German tour company.
  • On 25 May 2001, a freight-carrying Short SH36 (operated as Streamline flight 200), departing to Luton, England, collided on the runway with departing Air Liberté flight 8807, an MD-83 jet. The first officer of the SH36 was killed when the wing tip of the MD-83 tore through his side of the flight deck. The captain was slightly injured and all others aboard survived.

Statistics edit

Charles de Gaulle Airport Passenger Totals. See Wikidata query.
 
Countries served by CDG

The following table shows total passenger numbers.[126][127][1]

Year Passengers
2023 67,421,316 (+17.3%)
2022 57,474,033 (+119.4%)
2021 26,196,575 (+17.7%)
2020 22,257,469 (−70.8%)
2019 76,150,007 (+5.4%)
2018 72,229,723 (+4%)
2017 69,471,442 (+5.4%)
2016 65,933,145 (+0.3%)
2015 65,766,986 (+3.1%)
2014 63,813,756 (+2.8%)
2013 62,052,917 (+0.7%)
2012 61,611,934 (+1%)
2011 60,970,551 (+4.8%)
2010 58,167,062 (+0.5%)
2009 57,906,866 (−4.3%)
2008 60,874,681 (+1.5%)
Busiest Domestic Routes from Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport (2020)[128]
Rank Airport Departing passengers Change %
1 Nice–Côte d'Azur 374,820  33.6
2 Toulouse–Blagnac 262,822  47.6
3 Marseille–Provence 198,312  41.7
4 Bordeaux–Mérignac 148,430  55.0
5 Réunion–Roland Garros 129,135  31.8
6 Montpellier–Méditerranée 107,829  49.4
7 Lyon–Saint–Exupéry 102,055  63.5
8 Nantes–Atlantique 91,057  60.6
9 Brest–Bretagne 67,546  48.9
10 Biarritz–Pays Basque 59,024  55.7
Busiest European Routes from Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport (2020)[128]
Rank Airport Departing passengers Change %
1 Amsterdam 242,828  61.0
2 London–Heathrow 186,597  70.5
3 Rome–Fiumicino 174,089  73.3
4 Barcelona–El Prat 174,088  75.3
5 Istanbul 151,645  59.0
6 Frankfurt 151,374  72.4
7 Lisbon 148,383  57.1
8 Madrid–Barajas 146,822  73.8
9 Milan-Malpensa 143,117  76.6
10 Athens 113,546  60.5
Busiest Intercontinental Routes from Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport (2020)[128]
Rank Airport Departing passengers Change %
1   Dubai–International 208,847  64.4
2   Montreal–Trudeau 176,719  71.7
3   New York–JFK 167,430  79.5
4   Doha 116,097  68.2
5   Dakar 109,803  48.9
6   Tunis 105,392  57.1
7   Atlanta 105,000  75.0
8   Algiers 98,603  76.8
9   Los Angeles 95,538  82.0
10   Casablanca 94,622  66.3

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ French: Aéroport de Paris-Charles-de-Gaulle
  2. ^ All North American, Middle East, African and Asian routes expect American Airlines, El Al, Royal Jordanian and the two French overseas airlines moved operations to Terminal 1. All European routes, American Airlines, El Al, Royal Jordanian, and the two French overseas airlines moved operations to Terminal 2B.
  3. ^ Sydney is continuation of Perth flight as same flight number

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External links edit

  •   Media related to Paris-Charles de Gaulle Airport at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • Official website (in French)
  • Aéroports de Paris (in French)
  • Accident history for CDG at Aviation Safety Network
  • Paris-Charles de Gaulle Airport aviation weather (in Spanish, English, French, and Chinese)

charles, gaulle, airport, paris, iata, icao, lfpg, also, known, roissy, airport, simply, paris, main, international, airport, serving, paris, france, opened, 1974, roissy, france, northeast, paris, named, after, world, statesman, charles, gaulle, 1890, 1970, w. Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport a IATA CDG ICAO LFPG also known as Roissy Airport or simply Paris CDG is the main international airport serving Paris France Opened in 1974 it is in Roissy en France 23 km 14 mi northeast of Paris and is named after World War II statesman Charles de Gaulle 1890 1970 whose initials CDG are used as its IATA airport code Paris Charles de Gaulle AirportAeroport de Paris Charles de GaulleRoissy AirportAeroport de RoissyIATA CDGICAO LFPGWMO 07157SummaryAirport typePublicOwnerGroupe ADPOperatorParis AeroportServesParis metropolitan areaLocationRoissy en France FranceOpened8 March 1974 50 years ago 1974 03 08 Hub forAir FranceAir France CargoFedEx ExpressOperating base forAir France HopeasyJetNorse Atlantic AirwaysElevation AMSL119 m 392 ftCharles de Gaulle Airport serves as the principal hub for Air France and a destination for other legacy carriers from Star Alliance Oneworld and SkyTeam as well as an operating base for easyJet and Norse Atlantic Airways It is operated by Groupe ADP Aeroports de Paris under the brand Paris Aeroport In 2022 the airport handled 57 474 033 passengers and 34 657 aircraft movements 1 thus making it the world s ninth busiest airport and Europe s third busiest airport after Istanbul and Heathrow in terms of passenger numbers Charles de Gaulle is also the busiest airport within the European Union In terms of cargo traffic the airport is the eleventh busiest in the world and the busiest in Europe handling 2 102 268 tonnes 2 069 066 long tons 2 317 354 short tons of cargo in 2019 2 It is also the airport that is served by the greatest number of airlines with more than 105 airlines operating at the airport 3 As of 2017 update the airport offers direct flights to the most countries and hosts the most airlines in the world 4 Marc Houalla has been the director of the airport since 12 February 2018 Contents 1 Location 2 History 2 1 Development 2 2 Corporate identity 3 Terminals 3 1 Terminal 1 3 2 Terminal 2 3 2 1 Collapse of Terminal 2E 3 2 2 Terminal 2G 3 2 3 Terminal 2E Hall L Satellite 3 3 2 4 Terminal 2E Hall M Satellite 4 3 2 5 Recent terminal reassignments 3 3 Terminal 3 3 4 Terminal usage during COVID 19 pandemic 3 5 Cancelled project for Terminal 4 4 Roissypole 5 Airlines and destinations 5 1 Passenger 5 2 Cargo 6 Ground transportation 6 1 CDGVAL 6 2 RER 6 3 TGV 6 4 Bus 6 5 Long distance bus 6 6 Car 7 Alternative airports 8 Accidents and incidents 9 Statistics 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 External linksLocation editParis Charles de Gaulle Airport covers 32 38 square kilometres 12 50 sq mi of land The airport area including terminals and runways spans over three departements and six communes Seine et Marne departement Le Mesnil Amelot Terminal 2E Satellites S3 and S4 and Terminal 2F Mauregard Terminals 1 3 and Mitry Mory Terminal 2G communes 5 Seine Saint Denis departement Tremblay en France Terminals 2A 2B 2C 2D and Roissypole commune 5 Val d Oise departement Roissy en France and Epiais les Louvres communes The choice of constructing an international aviation hub outside of central Paris was made due to a limited prospect of potential relocations or expropriations and the possibility of further expanding the airport in the future Management of the airport lies solely on the authority of Groupe ADP which also manages Orly south of Paris Le Bourget to the immediate southwest of Charles de Gaulle Airport now used for general aviation and Paris Air Shows several smaller airfields in the suburbs of Paris and other airports directly or indirectly worldwide History editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Development edit The planning and construction phase of what was known then as Aeroport de Paris Nord Paris North Airport 6 began in 1966 On 8 March 1974 the airport renamed Charles de Gaulle Airport opened Terminal 1 was built in an avant garde design of a ten floors high circular building surrounded by seven satellite buildings each with six gates allowing sunlight to enter through apertures The main architect was Paul Andreu who was also in charge of the extensions during the following decades Terminal 2 opened in 1981 with the official inauguration in presence of the then President Francois Mitterrand in March 1982 Unlike Terminal 1 Terminal 2 was designed with a traditional linear layout but has evolved over time into a series of distinct terminals designated as 2A through to 2G 7 Following the introduction of the brand Paris Aeroport to all its Parisian airports Groupe ADP also announced major changes for the Charles de Gaulle Airport Terminals of the Satellite 1 will be merged as well as terminals 2B and 2D A new luggage automated sorting system and conveyor under Terminal 2E Hall L was installed to speed luggage delivery time for airlines operating Paris Charles de Gaulle s hub The CDG Express the direct express rail link from Paris to Charles de Gaulle Airport is scheduled to open in early 2027 8 Corporate identity edit The Frutiger typeface was commissioned for use in the airport and implemented on signs throughout the building in 1975 Initially called Roissy it was renamed after its designer Adrian Frutiger Until 2005 every PA announcement made at Terminal 1 was preceded by a distinctive chime nicknamed Indicatif Roissy and composed by Bernard Parmegiani in 1971 The chime can be heard in the Roman Polanski film Frantic The chime was officially replaced by the Indicatif ADP chime On 14 April 2016 the Groupe ADP rolled out the Connect 2020 corporate strategy and the commercial brand Paris Aeroport was applied to all Parisian airports including Le Bourget airport 9 Terminals editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Airport Diagram nbsp Aerial view of Terminal 1 before refurbishment nbsp Aerial view of Terminal 2A and 2B before refurbishment Charles de Gaulle Airport has three terminals Terminal 1 is the oldest and situated opposite to Terminal 3 Terminal 2 is located at another side with 7 sub terminal buildings 2A to 2G Terminal 2 was originally built exclusively for Air France 6 since then it has been expanded significantly and now houses other airlines Terminals 2A to 2F are interconnected by elevated walkways and situated next to each other Terminal 2G is a satellite building connected by shuttle bus 6 Terminal 3 formerly known as Terminal 9 hosts charter and low cost airlines The CDGVAL light rail shuttle connects Terminal 2 to Terminals 1 3 and their parking lots Before the pandemic Charles de Gaulle Airport had assigned all Star Alliance members to use Terminal 1 Oneworld members to use Terminal 2A and SkyTeam members to use Terminals 2C 2E intercontinental 2D 2F and 2G European routes The assignments changed several times due to the pandemic Today the airport has assigned Star Alliance airlines to Terminal 1 Oneworld airlines to use Terminal 1 for routes to the Middle East and Asia and 2B for flights to the Americas Africa and Europe due to the closure of Terminal 2A and SkyTeam airlines to use Terminals 2E for international routes and 2F for Schengen routes Terminal 1 edit The first terminal designed by Paul Andreu was built in the image of an octopus It consists of a circular terminal building which houses key functions such as check in counters and baggage claim conveyors Seven satellites with boarding gates are connected to the central building by underground walkways The central building with a large skylight in its centre dedicates each floor to a single function The first floor is reserved for technical operations and not accessible to the public The second floor contains shops and restaurants the CDGVAL inter terminal shuttle train platforms for Terminal 2 and trains to central Paris and check in counters from a recent renovation The majority of check in counters however are located on the third floor which also has access to taxi stands bus stops and special pick up vehicles Departing passengers with valid boarding passes can reach the fourth floor which houses duty free stores and border control posts for the boarding gates The fifth floor contains baggage claim conveyors for arriving passengers All four upper floors have assigned areas for parking and airline offices Passages between the third fourth and fifth floors are provided by a tangle of escalators arranged through the centre of the building These escalators are suspended over the central court Each escalator is covered with a transparent tube to shelter from all weather conditions These escalators were often used in film shootings e g The Last Gang of Ariel Zeitoun The Alan Parsons Project album I Robot features these escalators on its cover Terminal 1 closed in March 2020 in response to the COVID 19 pandemic ADP used this time for a 250 million refurbishment Completed in 2023 the refurbishment included the creation of a new junction building linking satellites 1 2 and 3 and modernisation of the central body of the terminal Various design details in the refurbished terminal pay homage to the circular shape of the original Andreu design The upgraded Terminal 2 also features a new departure lounge designed by French designers Maxime Liautard and Hugo Toro which reflects the ambiance of a Parisian bistro 10 11 All Star Alliance airlines use Terminal 1 12 Other carriers using Terminal 1 include Oneworld carriers Cathay Pacific Qatar Airways and SriLankan Airlines and non aligned carriers Aer Lingus Emirates Etihad Airways Eurowings Icelandair Kuwait Airways and Oman Air 13 Terminal 2 edit Terminal 2 is spread across seven sub terminals 2A to 2G Terminals 2A to 2F are connected by inter terminal walkways but Terminal 2G is a satellite building 800 m 0 5 mi away Terminal 2G can only be accessed by shuttle bus from Terminals 1 2A to 2F and 3 The CDGVAL inter terminal shuttle train Paris RER Regional Express and high speed TGV rail station Aeroport Charles de Gaulle 2 TGV is located within the Terminal 2 complex and between 2C and 2E on one side or 2D and 2F on the opposite side Terminal 2F was used for the filming of the music video for the U2 song Beautiful Day The band also had their picture taken inside Terminal 2F for the album artwork of their 2000 album All That You Can t Leave Behind Terminals 2B and 2D are used by the majority of the airlines part of the Oneworld alliance except Oneworld s long haul carriers to Asia and the Middle East French overseas airlines Air Austral and Air Tahiti Nui 13 and all other non SkyTeam short haul and mid haul airlines which do not operate from Terminal 1 14 and SkyTeam carrier Czech Airlines also use this terminal 13 Terminals 2E and 2F are dedicated use for Air France and its SkyTeam partners except Czech Airlines Terminal 2D and Saudia Terminal 1 Several other carriers also use Terminal 2E these are Oneworld carrier Japan Airlines 14 and non aligned carriers Air Mauritius China Southern Airlines Gulf Air LATAM Chile and WestJet 13 Collapse of Terminal 2E edit nbsp Collapsed Terminal 2E June 2004 nbsp Map of terminal 2 various hallsOn 23 May 2004 shortly after the inauguration of terminal 2E a portion of it collapsed near Gate E50 killing four people 15 Two of the dead were reported to be Chinese citizens one Czech and the other Lebanese 16 Three other people were injured in the collapse Terminal 2E had been inaugurated in 2003 after some delays in construction and was designed by Paul Andreu Administrative and judicial enquiries were started Andreu also designed Terminal 3 at Dubai International Airport which collapsed while under construction on 28 September 2004 Before this accident ADP had been planning for an initial public offering in 2005 with the new terminal as a major attraction for investors The partial collapse and indefinite closing of the terminal just before the beginning of summer seriously hurt the airport s business plan In February 2005 the results from the administrative inquiry were published The experts pointed out that there was no single fault but rather a number of causes for the collapse in a design that had little margin for safety The inquiry found the concrete vaulted roof was not resilient enough and had been pierced by metallic pillars and some openings weakened the structure Sources close to the inquiry also disclosed that the whole building chain had worked as close to the limits as possible so as to reduce costs Paul Andreu denounced the building companies for having not correctly prepared the reinforced concrete On 17 March 2005 ADP decided to tear down and rebuild the whole part of Terminal 2E the jetty of which a section had collapsed at a cost of approximately 100 million 17 The reconstruction replaced the innovative concrete tube style of the jetty with a more traditional steel and glass structure During reconstruction two temporary departure lounges were constructed in the vicinity of the terminal that replicated the capacity of 2E before the collapse The terminal reopened completely on 30 March 2008 Terminal 2G edit nbsp Terminal 2 former display screen nbsp Air France aircraft on stands at Terminal 2F at Charles de Gaulle Airport Terminal 2G dedicated to regional Air France and HOP flights and its affiliates opened in 2008 This terminal is to the east of all terminals and can only be reached by shuttle bus Terminal 2G is used for passengers flying in the Schengen Area and thus has no passport control and handles Air France regional and European traffic and provides small capacity planes up to 150 passengers with a faster turnaround time than is currently possible by enabling them to park close to the new terminal building and boarding passengers primarily by bus or walking A bus line called navette orange connects the terminal 2G inside the security check area with terminals 2E and 2F Passengers transferring to other terminals need to continue their trip with other bus shuttles within the security check area if they do not need to get their bags Terminal 2E Hall L Satellite 3 edit The completion of 750 m 2 460 ft long Satellite 3 or S3 to the immediate east of Terminals 2E and 2F provides further jetways for large capacity airliners specifically the Airbus A380 Check in and baggage handling are provided by the existing infrastructure in Terminals 2E and 2F Satellite 3 was opened in part on 27 June 2007 and fully operational in September 2007 It corresponds now to gates L of terminal 2E Terminal 2E Hall M Satellite 4 edit The satellite S4 adjacent to the S3 and part of terminal 2E officially opened on 28 June 2012 It corresponds now to gates M of terminal 2E Dedicated to long haul flights it has the ability to handle 16 aircraft at the same time with an expected capacity of 7 8 million passengers per year Its opening has led to the relocation of all SkyTeam airlines to terminals 2E for international carriers 2F for Schengen European carriers and 2G Recent terminal reassignments edit Air France has moved all of its operations previously located at 2C to 2E In October 2012 2F closed its international operations and became completely Schengen allowing for all Air France flights previously operating in 2D to relocate to 2F Further in April 2013 Terminal 2B closed for a complete renovation with all airlines relocating to 2D and received upgrades including the addition of a second floor completely dedicated to arrivals Terminal 2B reopened on 2 June 2021 Airlines including the Lufthansa group Aegean Airlines easyJet Icelandair LOT Polish Airlines Norwegian Air Shuttle Play Royal Air Maroc and Scandinavian Airlines began operations at Terminal 2B until 2 December 2022 when the airlines except easyJet and Royal Air Maroc moved back to Terminal 1 Low cost carrier easyJet has shown interest in being the sole carrier at 2B 18 irrelevant citation To facilitate connections a new boarding area between 2A and 2C was opened in March 2012 It allows for all security and passport control to be handled in a single area allows for many new shopping opportunities as well as new airline lounges and eases transfer restrictions between 2A and 2C Terminal 2D was closed during the pandemic and received the same upgrade including an additional floor Terminal 2D reopened on 18 April 2023 and some airlines have moved operations to the terminal 13 Terminals 2A and 2C are closed for baggage renovation system for 18 months with all airlines relocating to Terminal 1 or 2B b Terminal 3 edit Terminal 3 is located 1 km 0 62 mi away from Terminal 1 It consists of one single building for arrivals and departures The walking distance between Terminals 1 and 3 is 3 km 1 9 mi however the rail station named as CDG Airport Terminal 1 for RER and CDGVAL trains are only at a distance of 300 m 980 ft Terminal 3 has no boarding gates constructed and all passengers are ferried by airport buses to the aircraft stands Terminal usage during COVID 19 pandemic edit The airport s services during the pandemic were sharply reduced On 30 March 2020 the airport announced it would temporary close Terminals 1 and 3 moving all remaining flights to Terminal 2 Terminal 2D was also closed during the pandemic and only Terminals 2A 2C 2E 2F and 2G were opened At the beginning of the pandemic airlines were grouped by alliances Star Alliance airlines operated at Terminal 2A where Air Canada and Ethiopian Airlines operated prior to the pandemic Oneworld airlines shifted their operations to Terminal 2C and SkyTeam airlines operated at Terminals 2E and 2F Between December 2020 and June 2021 only Terminals 2E and 2F were opened with non Schengen flights operating at Terminal 2E and Schengen flights operated at Terminal 2F 2B reopened on 2 June 2021 and some airlines were shifted to that concourse Terminals 2A 2C and 2D were then reopened for more space Between June 2021 and December 2022 Star Alliance airlines operated at Terminals 2A non Schengen and 2B Schengen Oneworld airlines operated at Terminals 2C non Schengen and 2D Schengen and SkyTeam airlines operated at Terminals 2E non Schengen 2F and 2G both Schengen However Star Alliance airlines flights to Asia except Singapore Airlines who operated at Terminal 2A were operating at Terminal 2E due to the capacity restrictions at Terminal 2A Terminal 3 reopened on 3 May 2022 for the use of all charter and low cost airlines 19 Terminal 1 remained closed for renovation at that time It reopened on 1 December 2022 to reduce traffic at Terminal 2 20 Cancelled project for Terminal 4 edit Plans for a new terminal Terminal 4 were first announced in 2014 With an estimated cost of 9bn the new terminal was to be built around 2025 when Charles de Gaulle Airport s maximum capacity of 80 million would have been reached When constructed the new terminal would have been able to accommodate 30 40 million passengers per year and would have likely been built north of Terminal 2E 21 22 However the Terminal 4 proposal was cancelled in 2021 due to reduced traffic resulting from the COVID 19 pandemic and new environmental regulations making the project unfeasible 23 Environmentalist groups hailed the cancellation of the project as a great victory 22 Roissypole editRoissypole is a complex consisting of office buildings shopping areas hotels and a bus coach and RER B station within Charles de Gaulle Airport The complex includes the head office of Air France 24 Continental Square 25 the Hilton Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport 26 and le Dome building Le Dome includes the head office of Air France Consulting an Air France subsidiary 27 Continental Square has the head office of Air France subsidiary Servair 28 and the Air France Vaccinations Centre 29 Airlines and destinations editPassenger edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message AirlinesDestinationsAegean AirlinesAthens Seasonal Heraklion 30 ThessalonikiAer LingusDublin Shannon 31 AeromexicoMexico CityAir AlgerieAlgiers Annaba Bejaia Biskra Chlef Constantine Oran Seasonal El Oued TlemcenAir ArabiaFes Rabat begins 1 May 2024 citation needed TangierAir AustralSaint Denis de la Reunion Seasonal DzaoudziairBalticRiga Tallinn VilniusAir CairoSeasonal Luxor 32 Air CanadaMontreal Trudeau Toronto Pearson 33 Air ChinaBeijing CapitalAir CorsicaSeasonal BastiaAir FranceAbidjan Abu Dhabi 34 Abuja Accra Algiers Amsterdam Antananarivo Athens Atlanta Bamako Bangalore Bangkok Suvarnabhumi 35 Bangui Barcelona Basel Mulhouse Beijing Capital Beirut Bergen Berlin Biarritz Bilbao Billund Birmingham Bogota Bologna Bordeaux Boston Brazzaville Brest Bucharest Otopeni Budapest Buenos Aires Ezeiza Cairo Calvi Cancun Casablanca 36 Cayenne 37 Chennai resumes 28 October 2024 38 Chicago O Hare Clermont Ferrand Conakry Copenhagen Cotonou Dakar Diass Dallas Fort Worth Dar es Salaam 39 Delhi Denver Detroit Djibouti Douala Dubai International Dublin Dusseldorf Edinburgh Florence Fortaleza Fort de France Frankfurt Geneva Gothenburg Hamburg Hannover Havana Helsinki Ho Chi Minh City Hong Kong 40 Houston Intercontinental Istanbul Johannesburg O R Tambo Kinshasa N djili Krakow Kyiv Boryspil suspended 41 Lagos Libreville Lima Lisbon Ljubljana Lome London Heathrow Los Angeles Luanda Lyon Madrid Malabo Malaga Manchester Marrakesh Marseille Mauritius Mexico City Miami Milan Linate Milan Malpensa Montpellier Montreal Trudeau Mumbai Munich Nairobi Jomo Kenyatta Nantes Naples N Djamena Newark 42 Newcastle upon Tyne New York JFK Niamey Nice Nouakchott Nuremberg Oran Osaka Kansai Oslo Ottawa 43 Ouagadougou Panama City Tocumen Papeete Pau Phoenix Sky Harbor begins 23 May 2024 44 Pointe Noire Porto Prague Rabat Raleigh Durham 45 Rennes Rio de Janeiro Galeao Rome Fiumicino Saint Denis de la Reunion 46 San Francisco San Jose de Costa Rica Santiago de Chile Sao Paulo Guarulhos Seattle Tacoma Seoul Incheon Seville Shanghai Pudong Singapore Sint Maarten Stockholm Arlanda Stuttgart Tbilisi Tel Aviv 47 Tenerife South Tokyo Haneda Tokyo Narita Toronto Pearson Toulouse Tromso Tunis Turin Valencia Vancouver Venice Vienna Warsaw Chopin Washington Dulles Yaounde Yerevan Zagreb Zanzibar Zurich Seasonal Ajaccio Bari Bastia Cagliari Cape Town Catania Corfu Cork Djerba Dubrovnik Faro Figari Gran Canaria Harstad Narvik begins 15 June 2024 48 Heraklion Ibiza Innsbruck 49 Kalamata begins 6 July 2024 48 Kittila 50 Male Malta Minneapolis St Paul resumes 13 May 2024 51 Mykonos Olbia Palermo Palma de Mallorca Quebec City Rhodes Rovaniemi Salzburg 49 Santorini Sofia Split Tirana Verona 48 Air IndiaDelhiAir MadagascarAntananarivoAir MauritiusMauritiusAir MontenegroPodgorica 52 Air NostrumSeasonal charter Palma de Mallorca 53 Air Saint PierreSeasonal Saint Pierre 54 Air SenegalDakar DiassAir SerbiaBelgradeAir Tahiti NuiLos Angeles Papeete Seattle Tacoma 55 Air TransatMontreal Trudeau Quebec City Seasonal Toronto PearsonAll Nippon AirwaysTokyo Haneda 56 American AirlinesChicago O Hare Dallas Fort Worth New York JFK PhiladelphiaSeasonal Charlotte MiamiAnadoluJetAnkara Istanbul Sabiha GokcenArkiaSeasonal Tel AvivAsiana AirlinesSeoul IncheonASL Airlines FranceAlgiers Pau Tel Aviv Seasonal Calvi Chlef Djerba OujdaAtlantic AirwaysSeasonal VagarAurignyGuernsey 57 Austrian AirlinesViennaAviancaBogota resumes 3 July 2024 58 Azerbaijan AirlinesBaku 59 Azores AirlinesSeasonal Ponta Delgada 60 British AirwaysLondon HeathrowBrussels AirlinesBrusselsBulgaria AirSofia Seasonal Varna begins 16 June 2024 61 Cabo Verde AirlinesPraia Sal Sao Vicente 62 Cathay PacificHong Kong 63 China Eastern AirlinesShanghai PudongChina Southern AirlinesGuangzhouCorendon AirlinesSeasonal Antalya 64 Izmir 64 Croatia AirlinesZagreb Seasonal Dubrovnik SplitCyprus AirwaysLarnaca 65 Czech AirlinesPragueDelta Air LinesAtlanta Boston Cincinnati Detroit Los Angeles 66 Minneapolis St Paul New York JFK Salt Lake City Seattle TacomaEastern AirwaysEast Midlands Southampton 67 easyJetBarcelona Belfast International Bergamo Berlin Biarritz Birmingham 68 69 Bristol Catania Copenhagen Edinburgh Faro Funchal 70 Glasgow Hurghada 71 Krakow Lanzarote Larnaca Lisbon Liverpool 72 London Gatwick London Luton London Southend 73 Madrid Malaga Manchester Marrakesh Milan Linate Milan Malpensa Nice Palermo 74 Pisa Porto Rabat 75 Tel Aviv VeniceSeasonal Agadir Ajaccio Bari Bastia Calvi Corfu Figari Heraklion Ibiza begins 29 June 2024 76 Menorca Mykonos Naples Olbia Palma de Mallorca Pula Split Tenerife South ToulonEgyptairCairoSeasonal LuxorEl AlTel AvivEmiratesDubai InternationalEthiopian AirlinesAddis AbabaEtihad AirwaysAbu DhabiEurowingsHamburgEVA AirTaipei TaoyuanFinnairHelsinkiFlyOneSeasonal Chișinău Yerevan 77 Georgian AirwaysTbilisiGulf AirBahrainHainan AirlinesChongqing 78 Shenzhen 79 Iberia ExpressMadridIcelandairReykjavik KeflavikIran AirTehran Imam KhomeiniITA AirwaysMilan Linate Rome Fiumicino 80 Japan AirlinesTokyo HanedaJet2 comLeeds BradfordJetBlueBoston 81 New York JFK 82 Kenya AirwaysNairobi Jomo KenyattaKLMAmsterdamKM Malta AirlinesMalta 83 Korean AirSeoul IncheonKuwait AirwaysKuwait CityLATAM BrasilSao Paulo GuarulhosLOT Polish AirlinesWarsaw Chopin Warsaw Radom 84 LufthansaFrankfurt MunichLuxairLuxembourgMiddle East AirlinesBeirutNorse Atlantic AirwaysLos Angeles begins 1 May 2024 85 New York JFK 86 Seasonal Miami 87 Norwegian Air ShuttleCopenhagen Oslo Stockholm Arlanda Seasonal Bergen Stavanger 88 Tromso 89 NouvelairMonastir Seasonal Sfax 90 Oman AirMuscat 91 Pegasus AirlinesAnkara Istanbul Sabiha Gokcen 92 PlayReykjavik Keflavik 93 QantasPerth resumes 12 July 2024 94 Sydney begins 12 July 2024 95 c Qatar AirwaysDohaRoyal Air MarocCasablanca Marrakesh 96 Seasonal Oujda 97 Royal JordanianAmman Queen AliaRwandAirKigali 98 SaudiaJeddah Riyadh Seasonal Al UlaScandinavian AirlinesCopenhagen Oslo Stockholm ArlandaSingapore AirlinesSingaporeSky ExpressAthens Seasonal Heraklion 99 Rhodes 100 SriLankan AirlinesColombo Bandaranaike 101 SunExpressAnkara Antalya Izmir Seasonal Bodrum 102 Swiss International Air LinesZurichTAROMBucharest OtopeniThai Airways InternationalBangkok SuvarnabhumiTunisairDjerba Monastir TozeurTurkish AirlinesIstanbulTus Airways 103 Seasonal LarnacaUnited AirlinesChicago O Hare Newark San Francisco Washington DullesUzbekistan AirwaysTashkent UrgenchVietnam AirlinesHanoi Ho Chi Minh CityVistaraDelhi Mumbai 104 VuelingBarcelona Bilbao Gran Canaria Santiago de Compostela Seville Seasonal Rome Fiumicino 105 WestJetCalgary 106 XiamenAirXiamen 107 Cargo edit AirlinesDestinationsAirBridgeCargo 108 Moscow Sheremetyevo suspended Air France Cargo 109 Bangalore 110 Chicago O Hare Dublin Glasgow Prestwick Guadalajara Hong Kong Houston Intercontinental Tokyo NaritaASL Airlines France 111 Hannover Istanbul Katowice Kyiv Boryspil Leipzig Halle Marseille ToulouseCathay Cargo 112 Hong KongCentral AirlinesShenzhen Tianjin XiamenChina Cargo Airlines 113 Shanghai PudongCMA CGM Air Cargo 114 Abu Dhabi Guangzhou Hong Kong Mumbai Shanghai PudongDHL Aviation citation needed Casablanca Cincinnati Leipzig Halle London HeathrowEmirates SkyCargo 115 Dubai Al MaktoumFedEx Express citation needed Amsterdam Athens Barcelona Basel Mulhouse Beijing Capital 116 Cologne Bonn Copenhagen Delhi Dubai International Guangzhou Helsinki Hong Kong Indianapolis Istanbul London Stansted Madrid Manchester 117 Memphis Milan Malpensa Mumbai Munich Newark Osaka Kansai 118 Singapore Stockholm Arlanda Tel Aviv Tokyo Narita ViennaFedEx Feeder citation needed Berlin Frankfurt Hamburg Hanover Lyon Newcastle upon Tyne Nice Prague Rome Fiumicino Shannon Stuttgart Toulouse Warsaw ChopinGeo Sky 119 TurkmenabatKorean Air Cargo 120 Seoul IncheonMNG Airlines 121 Cologne Bonn IstanbulTurkish Cargo 122 IstanbulUPS Airlines citation needed Cologne Bonn Louisville PhiladelphiaGround transportation edit nbsp Terminal 2 CDGVAL station nbsp Terminal 2E LISA station nbsp RER station of Aeroport Charles de Gaulle 2 TGV nbsp Train station of Aeroport Charles de Gaulle 2 TGVCDGVAL edit The airport s terminals are served by a free automated shuttle rail system consisting of two lines CDGVAL and LISA CDGVAL Charles de Gaulle Vehicule Automatique Leger English Charles de Gaulle light automatic vehicle links Terminal 1 parking lot PR Aeroport Charles de Gaulle 1 RER station located inside Roissypole and next to Terminal 3 Parking lot PX and the Aeroport Charles de Gaulle 2 TGV and RER station located between Terminals 2C 2D 2E and 2FLISA Liaison Interne Satellite Aerogare English Connection internal satellite terminal links Terminal 2E to the Satellite S3 L Gates and Satellite S4 M Gates RER edit Charles de Gaulle Airport is connected to central Paris by the RER B a hybrid suburban commuter and rapid transit line The service has two stations on the airport grounds 123 Aeroport Charles de Gaulle 1 station located inside Roissypole and next to Terminal 3 The station provides the fastest access to Terminal 1 via a connection on CDGVAL Aeroport Charles de Gaulle 2 TGV station located between Terminals 2C 2D 2E and 2F During most times there are two types of services that operate on the RER B between Charles de Gaulle airport and Paris 4 trains per hour making all stops between Charles de Gaulle airport and Saint Remy les Chevreuse 4 trains per hour that offer non stop express service between Charles de Gaulle airport Aulnay sous Bois and Gare du Nord and then all stops to Massy PalaiseauThe RER B has historically suffered from slowness and overcrowding so French authorities are building CDG Express a train service that will operate non stop from Charles de Gaulle Airport to Paris Gare de l Est railway station next to Gare du Nord starting in 2027 It will however share the same sets of tracks that RER B and will offer a lower frequency resulting in an overall similar travel time 124 TGV edit Terminal 2 includes a TGV station on the LGV Interconnexion Est line TGV inOui Ouigo and Thalys high speed services operate from the station offering services to stations across France and into Belgium and the Netherlands Bus edit Roissybus offers non stop express service between Opera station of the Paris Metro and Charles de Gaulle airport making stops at all terminals except 2G Magical Shuttle offers non stop express service between Disneyland Paris and Charles de Gaulle airport making stops at Terminal 1 and Terminal 2E 2F RATP bus 350 offers local all stops service between Gare de l Est Gare du Nord in Paris and Charles de Gaulle airport all terminals except 2G and other areas of the airport RATP bus 351 offers local service between Nation station in Paris Gallieni station all terminals except 2G and other areas of the airport Noctilien routes N140 and N143 offers local service during the overnight hours between Gare de l Est Gare du Nord in Paris and Charles de Gaulle airport all terminals except 2G and other areas of the airport Long distance bus edit BlaBlaBus and Flixbus all offer services to international and domestic destinations from the bus station outside of the Aeroport Charles de Gaulle 1 RER station Car edit Charles de Gaulle Airport is directly connected to Autoroute A1 which connects Paris and Lille Alternative airports editThe two other airports serving Paris are Orly Airport south of Paris the other major airport in Paris and Paris Le Bourget Airport north northeast of Paris for general aviation and private jets Several low cost airlines also advertise Beauvais Tille Airport and Chalons Vatry Airport respectively 85 kilometres 53 mi and 165 kilometres 103 mi from Paris proper as serving Paris with Paris Beauvais and Paris Vatry Beauvais airport has no railway connections but there is a shuttle bus to central Paris 15 times daily Accidents and incidents editOn 6 January 1993 Lufthansa Flight 5634 from Bremen to Paris which was carried out under the Lufthansa CityLine brand using a Contact Air Dash 8 300 registered D BEAT hit the ground 1 800 metres 5 900 ft short of the runway of Charles de Gaulle Airport resulting in the death of four out of the 23 passengers on board The four crew members survived The accident occurred after the pilot had to abort the final approach to the airport because the runway had been closed the aircraft immediately ahead a Korean Air Boeing 747 had suffered a blown tire upon landing 125 On 25 July 2000 a Concorde Air France Flight 4590 from Charles de Gaulle to John F Kennedy International Airport in New York crashed into Les Relais Bleus Hotel in Gonesse killing everyone on the aircraft and four people on the ground Investigations concluded that a tire burst during take off roll after running over a metal strip on the runway that had detached from a McDonnell Douglas DC 10 30 operating as Continental Airlines Flight 55 which departed shortly before leading to a ruptured fuel tank and resulting in engine failure and other damage Concorde was conducting a charter flight for a German tour company On 25 May 2001 a freight carrying Short SH36 operated as Streamline flight 200 departing to Luton England collided on the runway with departing Air Liberte flight 8807 an MD 83 jet The first officer of the SH36 was killed when the wing tip of the MD 83 tore through his side of the flight deck The captain was slightly injured and all others aboard survived Statistics editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Charles de Gaulle Airport Passenger Totals See Wikidata query nbsp Countries served by CDGThe following table shows total passenger numbers 126 127 1 Year Passengers2023 67 421 316 17 3 2022 57 474 033 119 4 2021 26 196 575 17 7 2020 22 257 469 70 8 2019 76 150 007 5 4 2018 72 229 723 4 2017 69 471 442 5 4 2016 65 933 145 0 3 2015 65 766 986 3 1 2014 63 813 756 2 8 2013 62 052 917 0 7 2012 61 611 934 1 2011 60 970 551 4 8 2010 58 167 062 0 5 2009 57 906 866 4 3 2008 60 874 681 1 5 Busiest Domestic Routes from Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport 2020 128 Rank Airport Departing passengers Change 1 Nice Cote d Azur 374 820 nbsp 33 62 Toulouse Blagnac 262 822 nbsp 47 63 Marseille Provence 198 312 nbsp 41 74 Bordeaux Merignac 148 430 nbsp 55 05 Reunion Roland Garros 129 135 nbsp 31 86 Montpellier Mediterranee 107 829 nbsp 49 47 Lyon Saint Exupery 102 055 nbsp 63 58 Nantes Atlantique 91 057 nbsp 60 69 Brest Bretagne 67 546 nbsp 48 910 Biarritz Pays Basque 59 024 nbsp 55 7Busiest European Routes from Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport 2020 128 Rank Airport Departing passengers Change 1 Amsterdam 242 828 nbsp 61 02 London Heathrow 186 597 nbsp 70 53 Rome Fiumicino 174 089 nbsp 73 34 Barcelona El Prat 174 088 nbsp 75 35 Istanbul 151 645 nbsp 59 06 Frankfurt 151 374 nbsp 72 47 Lisbon 148 383 nbsp 57 18 Madrid Barajas 146 822 nbsp 73 89 Milan Malpensa 143 117 nbsp 76 610 Athens 113 546 nbsp 60 5Busiest Intercontinental Routes from Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport 2020 128 Rank Airport Departing passengers Change 1 nbsp Dubai International 208 847 nbsp 64 42 nbsp Montreal Trudeau 176 719 nbsp 71 73 nbsp New York JFK 167 430 nbsp 79 54 nbsp Doha 116 097 nbsp 68 25 nbsp Dakar 109 803 nbsp 48 96 nbsp Tunis 105 392 nbsp 57 17 nbsp Atlanta 105 000 nbsp 75 08 nbsp Algiers 98 603 nbsp 76 89 nbsp Los Angeles 95 538 nbsp 82 010 nbsp Casablanca 94 622 nbsp 66 3See also editCDG Express Groupe ADP Paris Aeroport Transportation in France List of airports in France List of the busiest airports in FranceNotes edit French Aeroport de Paris Charles de Gaulle All North American Middle East African and Asian routes expect American Airlines El Al Royal Jordanian and the two French overseas airlines moved operations to Terminal 1 All European routes American Airlines El Al Royal Jordanian and the two French overseas airlines moved operations to Terminal 2B Sydney is continuation of Perth flight as same flight numberReferences edit a b Traffic Paris Aeroport and Groupe ADP airports www parisaeroport fr Retrieved 7 April 2023 Statistiques annuelles Union des aeroports Francais Archived from the original on 29 February 2012 Retrieved 24 February 2012 which airport serves the most airlines travelupdate com 4 June 2020 Archived from the original on 13 November 2022 Retrieved 31 May 2022 Frankfurt and Paris CDG lead global analysis of airports in S17 anna aero 15 February 2017 Archived from the original on 29 January 2023 a b le 5 janvier 1993 Rapport preliminaire relatif a l accident survenu sur l aeroport de Roissy Charles de Gaulle Archived 18 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine Bureau d Enquetes et d Analyses pour la Securite de l Aviation Civile 26 34 Retrieved on 14 July 2010 a b c Charles de Gaulle Airport Paris history and terminals Charlesdegaulleairport co uk Archived from the original on 19 August 2022 Retrieved 16 October 2017 Hayward Justin Joshi Gaurav 25 July 2021 The History Of Paris Charles De Gaulle Airport Simple Flying Retrieved 25 September 2023 Allix Gregoire 29 May 2019 La future ligne de train CDG Express ne sera finalement pas en service pour les JO de 2024 The planned CDG Express train line will ultimately not be operational for the 2024 Olympic Games Le Monde in French Retrieved 12 October 2020 Charlotte Turner 19 April 2016 ADP reveals rebrand and opens Orly South Pier Trbusiness com Archived from the original on 26 October 2022 Retrieved 22 March 2018 Paris CDG Terminal 1 reopens Business Traveller Retrieved 25 September 2023 Our flagship boutique terminal Groupe ADP launches Extime retail and hospitality brand at stunning new look Paris CDG T1 The Moodie Davitt Report 3 February 2023 Retrieved 25 September 2023 Stewart Kyle 4 December 2022 Terminal 1 at Paris CDG Re Opens Retrieved 5 June 2023 a b c d e Which terminal Easy CDG Retrieved 20 April 2023 a b PARIS CHARLES DE GAULLE INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT Japan Airlines Retrieved 30 April 2023 Fresh cracks at Paris airport BBC News 24 May 2004 Archived from the original on 18 May 2022 Paris airport collapse blamed on design The Independent 16 February 2005 Archived from the original on 26 October 2022 Info et actualite en direct Toutes les actualites et infos LCI Archived from the original on 24 January 2022 Le future satellite 4 de l aeroport Paris Charles de Gaulle PDF ADP Archived PDF from the original on 10 August 2014 Retrieved 28 January 2011 Terminal 3 at Paris CDG Airport Reopens 9 May 2022 Retrieved 17 February 2023 Paris Charles de Gaulle Terminal 1 reopens Before Olympics 2024 Retrieved 17 February 2022 Gliszczynski Fabrice Mabille Philippe 6 June 2014 Roissy CDG un nouveau terminal colossal est prevu dans 10 ans PDG d Aeroports de Paris Roissy CDG a new colossal terminal is planned in 10 years CEO of Aeroports de Paris La Tribune Retrieved 12 October 2020 a b France to scrap obsolete Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport expansion The Independent 12 February 2021 Retrieved 25 September 2023 Charles de Gaulle Plans for huge new airport terminal in Paris scrapped BBC News Archived from the original on 3 September 2022 Retrieved 11 February 2021 AIR FRANCE HEAD QUARTERS ROISSYPOLE Archived 11 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Groupement d Etudes et de Methodes d Ordonnancement GEMO Retrieved on 20 September 2009 Continental Square Archived 4 October 2003 at the Wayback Machine Seifert Architects Retrieved on 21 June 2010 Hilton Paris Charles De Gaulle Airport Hilton Hotels Retrieved on 21 June 2010 Air France Consulting Air France Retrieved on 21 June 2010 Archived 3 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine Servair Air France Retrieved on 21 June 2010 Archived 17 November 2011 at the Wayback Machine Prevention and Vaccinations Archived 5 November 2009 at the Wayback Machine Air France Retrieved on 19 June 2010 Aegean Airlines NS24 Animawings A320 Operations AeroRoutes Shannon Airport Latest News from Shannon Airport Airport News AIR CAIRO 4Q22 FRANCE ITALY NETWORK ADDITIONS aeroroutes com 12 July 2022 Archived from the original on 10 January 2023 Dit Glurps 7 July 2021 Air Canada rebatit son reseau long courrier Air Journal Archived from the original on 26 October 2022 Hendry Jonathan E 17 July 2023 Air France Returns To Abu Dhabi With The Airbus A350 Simple Flying Retrieved 17 July 2023 Air France NS24 Bangkok Aircraft Changes AeroRoutes Air France NS24 North Africa Service Changes 31DEC23 AeroRoutes Air France NW23 Cayenne Service Changes Aeroroutes Retrieved 23 June 2023 Air France NS24 Intercontinental Network Changes AeroRoutes Retrieved 21 December 2023 Air France Resumes Dar es Salaam Service in June 2023 Aeroroutes Archived from the original on 30 November 2022 Retrieved 30 November 2022 Air France Moves Hong Kong Service Resumption to Dec 2022 Archived from the original on 4 October 2022 Retrieved 25 August 2022 Air France suspends flights to Ukraine This winter Air France will launch a non stop service from Paris Charles de Gaulle to New York Newark Liberty EWR in addition to its service to From New York John F Kennedy JFK Air France Press release Paris Air France KLM 28 July 2022 Air France Schedules Ottawa Late June 2023 Launch AeroRoutes 3 February 2023 Archived from the original on 3 February 2023 Retrieved 3 February 2023 Air France bringing non stop flights between Phoenix Paris to Sky Harbor AZ Family 22 January 2024 Retrieved 22 January 2024 Bon Voyage Air France to replace Delta flight to Paris CBS17 12 July 2023 Retrieved 12 July 2023 KLM Adds Air France Reunion Codeshare From Jan 2024 AeroRoutes Air France to resume flights to Israel from January 24 with 3 weekly trips THE TIMES OF ISRAEL Reuters 9 January 2024 Retrieved 9 January 2024 a b c Air France KLM New routes for summer 2024 December 21 2023 at 12 16 pm EST MarketScreener 21 December 2023 a b Air France sets course for Salzburg and Innsbruck 15 September 2022 AIR FRANCE EXPANDS SCANDINAVIA NETWORK FROM DEC 2022 Aeroroutes 21 July 2022 Archived from the original on 21 July 2022 Retrieved 21 July 2022 AIR FRANCE NS24 INTERCONTINENTAL NETWORK CHANGES 21DEC23 AeroRoutes Retrieved 21 December 2023 Air Montenegro to launch three new routes February 2022 Archived from the original on 31 December 2022 Air Nostrum NS23 Palma de Mallorca Charter Network Additions Air Saint Pierre NS24 Paris Operations Aeroroutes Retrieved 16 November 2023 Air Tahiti Nui extends Seattle service into NW23 aeroroutes com 16 January 2023 Archived from the original on 21 January 2023 ANA NW23 European Operations 15SEP23 https engine aurigny com prod VARS public b flightCal aspx bare URL Avianca Resumes Bogota Paris From July 2024 26 March 2024 News for Airlines Airports and the Aviation Industry CAPA SATA reliera Ponta Delgada a Paris et Londres Air Journal Air Journal 9 December 2020 Archived from the original on 26 October 2022 Bulgaria Air NS24 Network Additions 17DEC CABO VERDE AIRLINES VAI RETOMAR VOOS PARA PARIS 29 April 2023 Blancmont Thierry 13 July 2021 Cathay Pacific va de nouveau relier Hong Kong a Paris AirJournal in French Archived from the original on 26 October 2022 a b Corendon Schedules Regular Service to Paris in 3Q22 Cyprus Airways to launch services to Paris and Rome World Airline News 9 November 2022 Archived from the original on 29 November 2022 Retrieved 17 February 2023 Seet Charlotte 23 September 2022 Gatwick amp Geneva Delta Air Lines Adds 9 New Transatlantic Routes For 2023 Simple Flying London Archived from the original on 18 October 2022 Cardiff to lose Paris flight as Heathrow gains new service 15 February 2024 News for Airlines Airports and the Aviation Industry CAPA Easyjet Launches New BHX Routes Paris and Lyon 25 May 2023 Retrieved 25 May 2023 Infos de l aerien Cyprus Airways Air Corsica ITA Airways Resaneo Air France KLM Emirates etc easyJet NW23 Network Additions 09JUL23 AeroRoutes EasyJet adds three routes to UK winter schedule EasyJet to launch year round Southend Paris route this winter Home easyjet com Archived from the original on 16 February 2023 Retrieved 19 July 2022 https www easyjet com en routemap bare URL News for Airlines Airports and the Aviation Industry CAPA FLYONE Cheap flights from Chisinau flyone eu Archived from the original on 15 February 2023 Chongqing Airport to resume direct flights to Paris in November 13 October 2023 Archived from the original on 13 October 2023 Hainan Airlines resumes flights between Shenzhen amp Paris That s Magazine 13 April 2023 Retrieved 28 August 2023 The Network ITA Airways Archived from the original on 8 April 2022 Retrieved 19 July 2022 A Celtic Combo JetBlue Announces Seasonal Flights to Dublin and Edinburgh on Sale Today JetBlue com 25 October 2023 Lynch Baldwin Sarah 7 March 2023 JetBlue announces direct flights between New York and Paris will begin June 29 CBS News New York Paramount Global Retrieved 7 March 2023 New airline replacing Air Malta to fly on March 31 2024 2 October 2023 News for Airlines Airports and the Aviation Industry CAPA Norse Atlantic Schedules Paris Los Angeles May 2024 Launch Aeroroutes Retrieved 6 September 2023 Norse Atlantic Airways unveils new route from New York to Paris businesswire 29 November 2022 Archived from the original on 9 December 2022 Retrieved 29 November 2022 Norse Atlantic Expands Miami Network From Dec 2023 Aeroroutes Retrieved 10 July 2023 Norwegian apner nye direkteruter fra Trondheim 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September 2021 Archived from the original on 26 October 2022 Casey David SunExpress Schedules New Summer Routes Routesonline Archived from the original on 28 November 2022 Retrieved 19 January 2022 TUS adds new destinations from Cyprus 2 March 2022 Archived from the original on 26 October 2022 Vistara to launch flights to Paris CDG from Mumbai Network Thoughts Retrieved 9 January 2024 Vueling NS23 network additions 08Mar23 Aeroroutes 9 March 2023 WestJet Plans Big European Network Changes Next Summer 5 December 2022 Xiamen Airlines Adds Xiamen Paris Service From July 2023 Aeroroutes Retrieved 23 May 2023 AirBridgeCargo Airlines ABC in Europe afklcargo com Network retrieved 6 November 2021 Network Archived from the original on 29 January 2023 Retrieved 1 February 2022 aslairlines fr Cargo network retrieved 6 November 2021 cathaypacificcargo com Check Flight Schedule retrieved 6 November 2021 ckair com Cargo Network International retrieved 6 November 2021 Scheduled flights CMA CGM Scheduled flights CMA CGM Retrieved 1 March 2023 Emirates SkyCargo route map PDF Emirates Archived PDF from the original on 4 March 2018 Retrieved 13 January 2019 FedEx Express expands Asia Europe connections 13 June 2022 https x com SPD travels status 1760329487126860020 s 20 FedEx Express expands air network with launch of new Japan Europe flight path 8 October 2021 Archived from the original on 28 June 2022 1 retrieved 28 November 2023 cargo koreanair com Schedule retrieved 6 November 2021 MNG schedule Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 31 July 2013 turkishcargo com Flight Schedule retrieved 6 November 2021 Paris RER parisbytrain com August 2016 Retrieved 30 October 2017 Qu est ce que le projet CDG Express cdgexpress com Archived from the original on 27 January 2023 Retrieved 25 January 2021 Harro Ranter 6 January 1993 ASN Aircraft accident de Havilland Canada DHC 8 311 D BEAT Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport CDG Aviation safety net Archived from the original on 6 August 2022 Retrieved 2 June 2015 Passenger numbers Archived from the original on 6 October 2014 Retrieved 12 January 2019 2019 full year traffic 14 January 2020 Archived from the original on 7 October 2022 a b c Air passenger transport between the main airports of France and their main partner airports routes data Eurostat Archived from the original on 26 October 2022 Retrieved 6 December 2021 External links editMap all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates nbsp Media related to Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport travel guide from Wikivoyage Official website in French Aeroports de Paris in French Accident history for CDG at Aviation Safety Network Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport aviation weather in Spanish English French and Chinese Portals nbsp France nbsp Aviation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles de Gaulle 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