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Budapest Ferenc Liszt International Airport

Budapest Ferenc Liszt International Airport[5] (Hungarian: Budapest Liszt Ferenc Nemzetközi Repülőtér) (IATA: BUD, ICAO: LHBP), formerly known as Budapest Ferihegy International Airport and still commonly called just Ferihegy (Hungarian pronunciation: [ˈfɛrihɛɟ]), is the international airport serving the Hungarian capital city of Budapest. It is by far the largest of the country's four commercial airports, ahead of Debrecen and Hévíz–Balaton. The airport is located 16 kilometres (8+12 nautical miles) southeast of the centre of Budapest (bordering Pest county) and was renamed in 2011 in honour of the famous Hungarian composer Franz Liszt (Hungarian: Liszt Ferenc) on the occasion of the 200th anniversary of his birth.[6] The facility covers 1,515 hectares (3,744 acres) and has two runways.[7]

Budapest Ferenc Liszt International Airport

Budapest Liszt Ferenc Nemzetközi Repülőtér
Summary
Airport typePublic
Owner/OperatorBudapest Airport Ltd.[1]
ServesBudapest metropolitan area
Location16 km (9.9 mi) south-east of center of Budapest
Hub for
Elevation AMSL151 m / 495 ft
Coordinates47°26′22″N 019°15′43″E / 47.43944°N 19.26194°E / 47.43944; 19.26194
Websitewww.bud.hu/en
Map
BUD
Location in Hungary
BUD
Location in Budapest
BUD
Location in Europe
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
13L/31R 3,707 12,162 Asphalt concrete
13R/31L 3,010 9,875 Asphalt concrete
Statistics (2022)
Passengers12,200,000[2]
Passenger change 2021–2022164%
Sources: Passenger Traffic, ACI Europe[3]
AIP of Hungary[4]

It offers international connections primarily within Europe, but also to Africa, to the Middle East, and to the Far East. In 2019, the airport handled 16.2 million passengers. The airport is the headquarters and primary hub for Wizz Air and base for Ryanair.[8] In 2012 it experienced a significant drop in aircraft movements and handled cargo, primarily due to the collapse of Malév Hungarian Airlines earlier in the year, hence lost a large portion of connecting passengers. It had been the hub for Malév until the airline's bankruptcy on 3 February 2012.[9][10]

Name edit

Originally called Budapest Ferihegy International Airport (Budapest Ferihegy Nemzetközi Repülőtér), on 25 March 2011 it was officially renamed Budapest Liszt Ferenc International Airport in honour of the Hungarian pianist and composer Franz Liszt (Modern Hungarian: Liszt Ferenc). Popularly, the airport is still called Ferihegy as before.

Ferihegy is the name of the neighbourhood around the airport. The name is derived from that of Ferenc Xavér Mayerffy (1776–1845), the former owner of an estate who established vineyards and contributed to the development of viticulture in Pest-Buda. "Feri" is a diminutive form of Ferenc while "hegy" means mountain. In fact, the area is almost totally flat; but originally there was a 147 m high sandy hillock which was levelled in the 1940s during the construction of the airport.[6]

History edit

Designing and construction (1939–1944) edit

In 1938, the idea of building a new airport in Budapest was born. The area in the boundary of three settlements (Pestszentlőrinc, Rákoshegy and Vecsés) was assigned as the area of the new airport. The airport was intended as jointly for civil-military-sporting purposes. Civil facilities were to be built up in the northwestern section and military ones in the southwestern section. Just as for each building, a public tender was invited for the designing and construction of the traffic building.[6]

In December 1939, upon an announcement of the results of the tender invited in September that year, the designs of Károly Dávid Jr. (1903–1973) were chosen. The designer, who was one of the originators of modern Hungarian architectural art, dreamt of a building which resembled an aircraft from the top-side view. The work commenced in 1942. To approach the airport from the city, a 16-kilometre (10 mi) high-speed road was constructed between 1940 and 1943, which, after improvements, remains in use today.[6]

The military buildings were constructed parallel to the civil construction from 1940 but, due to the war situation, faster. Aviation started at the airport in 1943. In wartime, the civil construction slowed down and then stopped at the beginning of 1944. Towards the end of World War II, many of the airport buildings were damaged. By the end of 1944, Budapest and its airport were under Soviet occupation.[6]

Reconstruction (1947–1950) edit

In 1947, it was decided that the airport would be reconstructed for civil aviation. Under the three-year plan, 40 million forints were voted for those works. The opening ceremony was held in May 1950 and the sections finished allowed Magyar-Szovjet Polgári Légiforgalmi Rt. (Hungarian-Soviet Civil Aviation Co. Ltd. – MASZOVLET), established in 1946, to operate here. At that time the airlines operated only a few foreign flights, in particular, those to Prague, Bucharest, Warsaw, and Sofia.[6]

Magyar Légiforgalmi Vállalat (Hungarian Airlines – Malév) was established on 25 November 1954. The first regular flight taking off from the airport to the West was the Malév's flight into Vienna in summer 1956. The first Western airline which launched a flight to Budapest was KLM Royal Dutch Airlines in 1957. The traffic building was finished in this period and the lengthening works of the 2,500-metre (8,202 ft) runway were started. At the end of 1958 the runway was lengthened to 3,010 metres (9,875 ft) and taxiway D was finished.[6]

Continued growth (1960–1980) edit

 
Budapest Airport in 1961
 
Budapest Airport in 1966

Between its opening and 1960, the number of landings at the Airport increased from 4,786 to 17,133, with passenger traffic increasing from 49,955 to 359,338 by 1960.[6]

In 1965, a study was made on the development of the airport, which was implemented with more than a 10-year delay from the end of the 1970s. Aviation, airport, and flight control all called for more capacity and infrastructure. The Aviation and Airport Directorate (LRI) was established on 1 January 1973 and performed as an airline company, a trading company, and an authority, as well as investment, operator, and air navigation tasks.

In 1974, passenger traffic reached one million. In 1977, a new control tower was built, as well as a second runway parallel to the old one and a technical base for maintaining MALÉV aircraft. Use of the new 3,707-metre (12,162 ft) runway was started in September 1983.[6]

New infrastructure (1980–2000) edit

 
A Boeing 767-200ER of former flag carrier Malév Hungarian Airlines at the airport in 2008

In 1980, the number of landing aircraft and passengers served reached 32,642 and 1,780,000, respectively. The growing number of passengers called for more capacity. A new terminal was decided upon. The foundation-stone of the new passenger traffic building to be built was laid down on 16 November 1983.[citation needed] Since 1 November 1985, passengers have been received in Terminal 2, a 24,000-square-meter facility funded with Austrian loans under general contracting. It was used first by Malév aircraft and passengers, and then by those of Lufthansa, Air France, and Swissair. The old terminal continued to receive residual airline traffic under a new name, Terminal 1.[citation needed]

There was an IED bus attack against Russian Jewish emigrants on the road leading to Ferihegy in the early 1990s. The perpetrators were members of the German Communist organisation Red Army Faction.[11]

In 1993, Malév launched the airport's first Hungarian overseas flight, to New York. According to the traffic figures forecast for the millennium, the two terminals serving 4 million passengers a year promised to be insufficient.[citation needed] The construction of Terminal 2B was started in 1997. The new building, with more than 30,000 square metres of space, together with a new apron, was opened in 1998, with all foreign airlines moving there. Terminal 2B can receive 3.5 million passengers a year, with its seven gates and five remote stands.[citation needed]

Public to public-private ownership (2000–2012) edit

 
Terminal 2 in 2008, prior to the construction of the Sky Court

On 8 December 2005, a 75% stake in Ferihegy Airport was bought by BAA plc for 464.5 billion HUF (approx. US$2.1 billion), including the right of operation for 75 years.[citation needed] On 20 October 2006, BAA announced intentions to sell its stake in Budapest Airport to a consortium led by the German airport group, HOCHTIEF AirPort GmbH, subject to the consent of the Hungarian State.[citation needed]

On 18 April 2007, the renovation of Terminal 1 at Ferihegy was awarded Europe's most prestigious heritage preservation prize, the Europa Nostra award.[citation needed] The designers, contractors, builders and investors (the latter being BA) received the joint award of the European Commission and of the pan-European heritage preservation organisation Europa Nostra for the renovation of the protected monument spaces, the central hall, the gallery and the furniture at T1.

On 6 June 2007, BAA and a consortium led by HOCHTIEF AirPort (HTA) formally closed and completed the transaction of the sale of BAA's shares in Budapest Airport (BA) to the HOCHTIEF AirPort Consortium. The ownership of the HOCHTIEF AirPort Consortium was as follows: HOCHTIEF AirPort (49.666%) and three financial investors: Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec, Montreal (23.167%), GIC Special Investments, Singapore (23.167%) and KfW IPEX-Bank, Frankfurt (4.0%).[12]

On 26 July 2010, after completing a security oversight investigation in May,[13] the EU authorities revoked Budapest Airport's official "Schengen Clear" certification, due to serious lapses observed in personal security check procedures and unauthorised passing of banned objects. This meant passengers connecting via another airport in the Schengen Zone would have to be rescreened through security, just as foreign non-Schengen connecting passengers, causing delays and inconvenience. The airport argued that it had not yet had time to fully implement new security measures introduced on 29 April 2010, and inspired by the Delta Air Lines' Amsterdam "underwear bomb scare" incident. The airport's layout was also cited as an excuse for the failure. Budapest Airport was the first airport to be checked through a stringent undercover evaluation for compliance with the new regulation. (Hungarian state news agency MTI reports: [2][permanent dead link]) In response, additional security measures were immediately implemented at Budapest Airport causing flight delays at both terminals. Unusually long passenger waiting queues were observed at the busier 2A-B terminal complex's departures area. These problems were solved over time, especially through the opening of the SkyCourt terminal including a central security zone.[citation needed]

On 15 November 2010, Budapest Airport regained the "Schengen Clear"-status, after implementing the necessary security actions and after that, the airport underwent the strict re-inspection.[14]

On 16 March 2011, the name of Budapest Ferihegy International Airport was changed to Budapest Ferenc Liszt International Airport.[2]

Sky Court, the new expansion project including shops, restaurants and lounges, also connecting Terminals 2A and 2B was opened on 27 March 2011. In summer that year, the refurbishing of the old terminal parts in T2 began and was completed in 2012.[15]

Collapse of Malév, aftermath, and future (2012-present) edit

In the wake of the collapse of Malév, Ryanair announced that it would expand its flights to Liszt airport. Ryanair began selling the flight tickets to the public, but Budapest airport said that the company had not secured all of the necessary slots (which were later negotiated successfully).[16] By 9 February 2012, only six days after the collapse of the Hungarian national carrier, Liszt Ferenc Airport had recovered over 60% of its point to point traffic. Airlines that announced that new services would begin included Wizz Air, Aegean Airlines, Air Berlin, Lufthansa, and Ryanair.

However, the airport had lost Malév's transfer passengers, which, prior to the airline's collapse, had amounted to 1.5 million passengers per year. A second effect of the Malév collapse was that the areas used to service the Malév fleet would no longer generate revenue even once point to point traffic had been restored. These factors created significant financial shortfalls in the airport's revenues.[17]

In February 2012, Hainan Airlines announced that they would cease services to Beijing from Budapest.[18] Prior to the collapse of Malév, Hainan had a partnership with Malév,[19] which included a codeshare.[20]

In May 2013, Hochtief Group announced the sale of its Airports unit HOCHTIEF AirPort which held a stake in the Budapest Airport and other airports to the Canadian Pension fund Public Sector Pension Investment Board (PSP Investments).[21] Following the sale HOCHTIEF AirPort was renamed AviAlliance.[22]

As of July 2015, the ownership of Budapest Airport is as follows:

 
Sky Court, the connection building between Terminals 2A and 2B which now houses the main departures waiting hall and shopping area

An expenditure of 261 million euros was spent to expanding and modernising the airports infrastructure until December 2012. Several of these future projects involve about further 300 million euros, and depends on regulatory decisions as well as third-party investors.[24] Since 2011, several projects have been completed, including the refurbishment of Terminals 2A and 2B including the inauguration of the Skycourt main departures hall in 2012 and an extension of Terminal 2B in 2018,[25] the construction of a new business and cargo area called Budapest Airport Business Park[26][27] as well as a new airport hotel[28] and expanded car parking facilities.

In 2014, Emirates opened daily flights to Dubai, UAE using the Boeing 777-300ER aircraft. It was followed by Air China's flights to Beijing Capital. In 2019, Shanghai Airlines launched a four-time weekly service to Shanghai–Pudong also with the Boeing 787 Dreamliner.

There are further projects for the expansion of the airport, including a new cargo facilities area as well as a new Terminal 3,[29] formerly called Terminal 2C and originally planned by 2020. In a 2021 interview, however, the newly appointed CEO stated that the construction of the new passenger hall could commence in 2025.[30]

In 2020, according to a report from Bloomberg, it was reported that the Hungarian government was looking at buying the airport from its foreign owners such as GIC (Singaporean sovereign wealth fund) and Canadian AviAlliance. Prime Minister Viktor Orbán was opposed to the 2005 privatization.[31] In September 2023 the government made a formal bid to buy Budapest Airport.[32]

Terminals edit

 
The now defunct Terminal 1
 
Terminal 2B
 
Sky Court interior

The airport's passenger buildings consist of four main areas:

  • Terminal 1 is only used for charter and private flights
  • Terminal 2A is used for flights inside the Schengen Area
  • Terminal 2B is used for flights outside the Schengen Area
  • Sky Court, a large central waiting and shopping area, also the connection of Terminals 2A and 2B

Terminal 1 (closed) edit

From 1 September 2005, re-opened Terminal 1 served low-cost carriers. Terminal 1 is divided into Schengen and Non-Schengen boarding gates.[33]

Being located within the premises of Budapest, it offers faster public transport time to the city centre, compared to the Terminal 2 about 3 kilometres farther. (Terminal 1 offers an about 20 minutes direct train journey to Budapest city centre, while Terminal 2 requires an 8-minute bus ride to the train station).[34]

On 14 March 2012, Budapest Airport announced that due to the traffic levels being too low in Terminal 1, extra capacity in Terminal 2, and cost saving, Terminal 1 will be closed temporarily. On 30 May 2012 all airlines were moved to Terminal 2, the low-cost airlines using now the check-in desks at hall 2B and gates at a makeshift shed outside the main building. This shed now does not operate, a new pier was opened instead.

Sky Court between Terminal 2A and 2B edit

Sky Court is a state-of-the-art building between terminals 2A and 2B with 5 levels. Passenger safety checks were moved here along with new baggage classifiers and business class lounges, such as the first MasterCard lounge in Europe.[35] New shops, restaurants and cafés were placed in the new building's transit hall. With the opening of Skycourt the Terminal 2 has become capable of receiving about 11 million passengers a year, instead of the former joint capacity of about 7 million.[citation needed]

Terminal 2A edit

The Schengen terminal, and formerly the "only" Terminal 2. It was inaugurated on 1 November 1985 for the exclusive use of the homeland carrier Malév Hungarian Airlines, and later renamed in 1998 to Terminal 2A. Its check-in hall serves all Skyteam and Star Alliance member airlines currently. Within its boarding area (Gates A1-A33) and arrivals level, it serves all flights to and from the Schengen-zone destinations of any airline.

Terminal 2B edit

The non-Schengen terminal, it is referred to as a separate object, opened in December 1998. Its check-in hall serves all flights of the OneWorld-alliance (intra- and extra-Schengen as well), as well as many other non-aligned airlines. For flights of the Hungarian low-cost airliner Wizz Air check-in desks can also be found at this terminal. However, its boarding (Gates B1-B44) and arriving area serve exclusively non-Schengen destinations.

Pier 2B edit

The project "Pier B" was started on 9 January 2017. The new state-of-the-art building was opened on 1 August 2018, and it is connected directly to Terminal 2B. It is 220 meters long and it includes 27 boarding gates and 10 jetbridges, which can serve more wide-body aircraft at the same time. The pier was planned to offer flexibility for traditional and low-cost airlines with boarding options via jetbridges, buses or walking directly to the aircraft.

Airlines and destinations edit

Passenger edit

As of December 2023, the following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter services to and from Budapest Ferenc Liszt Airport:[36]

AirlinesDestinations
Aegean Airlines Athens
Aer Lingus Dublin[37]
Aeroexpress Regional Cluj-Napoca[38]
Air Cairo Seasonal: Hurghada[39]
Air China Beijing–Capital,[40] Chongqing[41]
Air France Paris–Charles de Gaulle
Air Serbia Belgrade[42]
airBaltic Riga
AnadoluJet Istanbul–Sabiha Gökçen[43]
Arkia Seasonal: Tel Aviv
Austrian Airlines Vienna
Bluebird Airways Athens (begins 22 December 2023)[44]
Seasonal: Tel Aviv
British Airways London–Heathrow
Brussels Airlines Brussels
easyJet Basel/Mulhouse, Geneva, London–Gatwick
Egyptair Cairo, Hurghada[45]
El Al Tel Aviv[46]
Emirates Dubai–International
Eurowings Cologne/Bonn, Düsseldorf, Hamburg, Stuttgart
Finnair Helsinki
flydubai Dubai–International
Iberia Madrid
Jet2.com Birmingham, Leeds/Bradford, Manchester
Seasonal: Newcastle upon Tyne
KLM Amsterdam
Korean Air Seoul–Incheon[47]
LOT Polish Airlines Seoul–Incheon, Warsaw–Chopin
Lufthansa Frankfurt, Munich
Luxair Luxembourg
Norwegian Air Shuttle Copenhagen, Oslo, Stockholm–Arlanda
Pegasus Airlines Istanbul–Sabiha Gökcen
Seasonal charter: Antalya
Qatar Airways Doha
Ryanair[48] Alicante,[49] Amman–Queen Alia, Athens, Barcelona, Bari, Beauvais, Belfast–International,[50] Bergamo, Berlin, Billund, Birmingham,[51] Bologna, Bristol, Cagliari, Catania, Charleroi, Copenhagen, Dublin, Edinburgh, Gran Canaria, Lisbon, London–Stansted, Madrid, Málaga, Malta, Manchester, Marseille, Naples, Nuremberg, Palermo, Paphos, Pisa, Porto, Prague, Rome–Ciampino, Shannon, Stockholm–Arlanda,[52] Sofia, Tel Aviv, Tenerife–South, Thessaloniki, Treviso, Valencia, Warsaw–Modlin
Seasonal: Alghero,[53] Bournemouth, Burgas, Chania,[54] Corfu,[55] East Midlands,[56] Gothenburg,[56] Lanzarote, Mykonos, Palma de Mallorca, Preveza/Lefkada, Rhodes,[57] Rimini,[54] Seville,[58] Zadar,[59] Zakynthos[60]
Shanghai Airlines Ningbo,[61] Shanghai–Pudong[62]
Smartwings Seasonal charter: Antalya, Barcelona, Burgas, Corfu, Heraklion, Hurghada, Karpathos, Kefalonia, Marsa Alam, Palma de Mallorca, Preveza/Aktion,[63] Rhodes, Sharm El Sheikh, Tirana, Zakynthos[64][65]
SunExpress Seasonal: Antalya,[66] İzmir[67]
Swiss International Air Lines Zürich
TAROM Bucharest–Otopeni
TUI Airways Seasonal: London–Gatwick, Manchester (both begin 6 May 2024)[68]
Turkish Airlines Istanbul
Wizz Air[69] Abu Dhabi, Alicante, Amman–Queen Alia, Athens, Baku, Barcelona, Bari, Basel/Mulhouse, Berlin, Birmingham, Catania, Charleroi, Copenhagen,[70] Dammam,[71] Dortmund, Dubai–International, Eindhoven, Funchal, Giza,[72] Glasgow,[73] Hurghada, Istanbul, Jeddah, Kutaisi, Larnaca, Lisbon, Liverpool, London–Gatwick, London–Luton, Madrid, Málaga, Malta, Milan–Malpensa, Naples, Nice, Paris–Orly, Podgorica, Reykjavík–Keflavík, Riyadh, Rome–Fiumicino, Sharm El Sheikh,[70] Skopje, Stockholm–Arlanda,[74] Târgu Mureș, Tel Aviv, Tenerife–South, Thessaloniki, Tirana, Warsaw–Chopin
Seasonal: Alghero, Antalya,[75] Burgas, Chania, Corfu, Heraklion, Palma de Mallorca, Rhodes, Santorini, Zakynthos

Cargo edit

Statistics edit

Traffic figures edit

Traffic by calendar year. Official ACI Statistics
Passengers Change from previous year Aircraft operations Change from previous year Cargo
(metric tons)
Change from previous year
2010 8,179,406   01.2% 105 507   03.9% 65,515   020.5%
2011 8,911,273   09.0% 109,949   04.2% 106,595   029.0%
2012 8,493,569   04.7% 87,560   020.4% 93,125   012.6%
2013 8,510,896   00.2% 83,830   04.3% 92,112   01.1%
2014 9,146,723   07.5% 86,682   03.4% 89,987   02.3%
2015 10,289,180   012.5% 92,294   06.5% 91,421   01.6%
2016 11,441,999   011.1% 96,141   04.3% 112,142   022.7%
2017 13,097,239   014.5% 102,747   06.4% 127,145   011.8%
2018 14,867,491   013.5% 115,028   012.0% 146,113   015.2%
2019 16,173,489   08.8% 122,814   06.7% 135,521   07.2%
2020 3,665,317   069.6% n.a.   00.0% 134,459   00.8%
2021 4,622,882   026.1% n.a.   00.0% 183,362   036.4%
2022 12,205,070  0164.0% n.a.   0 * 194,000   05.8%

Top destinations edit

Busiest routes (2019)
Rank Airport Passengers handled % Change
2018/19
1   Frankfurt 725,600   10
2   London-Luton 568,081   1
3   Tel Aviv 509,371   18
4   Paris–Charles de Gaulle 487,029   5
5   Amsterdam 454,181   0
6   London–Stansted 440,792   3
7   Barcelona 380,331   10
8   London-Heathrow 371,288   2
9   Brussels–Charleroi 339,734   6
10   Munich 338,095   0
11   Warsaw-Chopin 313,642   20
12   London–Gatwick 305,005   75
13   Madrid 299,208   6
14   Eindhoven 295,990   10
15   Rome–Fiumicino 286,987   5
16   Berlin–Schönefeld 284,145   17
17   Moscow–Sheremetyevo 263,815   10
18   Dublin 257,550   8
19   Basel/Mulhouse 250,544   39
20   Milan–Malpensa 243,221   1
21   Zurich 235,851   1
22   Prague 233,067   16
23   Copenhagen 231,472   4
24   Helsinki 229,137   7
25   Istanbul 214,130   214
26   Oslo–Gardermoen 211,433   28
27   Athens 208,527   19
28   Dubai–International 207,802   6
29   Doha 207,068   24
30   Brussels–National 201,870   2
Busiest routes (2018)
Rank Airport Passengers handled % Change
2017/18
Rank Airport Passengers handled %Change
2017/18
Europe 16   Helsinki 246,616   8
1   Frankfurt 661,820   47 17   Copenhagen 241,153   2
2   London–Luton 564,603   2 18   Milan-Malpensa 240,803   8
3   Paris–Charles de Gaulle 462,651   2 19   Moscow–Sheremetyevo 240,499   22
4   Amsterdam 452,509   2 20   Dublin 238,254   1
5   London–Stansted 427,507   9 21   Zürich 234,034   4
6   London–Heathrow 363,483   9 22   Brussels–National 205,501   1
7   Brussels–Charleroi 361,246   3 23   Prague 200,864   83
8   Barcelona 345,210   32 24   Basel/Mulhouse 180,060   88
9   Berlin–Schönefeld 344,042   45 25   Athens 175,781   14
10   Munich 337,577   2 26   London–Gatwick 174,312   19
11   Madrid 281,704   22 27   Bergamo 167,626   23
12   Istanbul–Atatürk 277,848   13 Outside Europe
13   Rome–Fiumicino 273,830   13 1   Tel Aviv–Ben Gurion 430,502   19
14   Eindhoven 268,155   2 2   Dubai–International 220,589  
15   Warsaw–Chopin 262,000   10 3   Doha 167,532   29
Busiest routes (2017)
Rank Airport Passengers handled % Change
2016/17
1   London–Luton 574,074  
2   Paris–Charles de Gaulle 471,911   10
3   Frankfurt 449,214   7
4   Amsterdam 443,957   12
5   London–Stansted 390,608   6
6   Tel Aviv–Ben Gurion 363,235   21
7   Brussels–Charleroi 350,152   12
8   Munich 343,275   4
9   London–Heathrow 333,780   1
10   Eindhoven 262,914   6
11   Barcelona 262,497   8
12   Istanbul–Atatürk 246,337   5
13   Rome–Fiumicino 243,231   10
14   Warsaw–Chopin 238,238   12
15   Berlin–Schönefeld 237,772   74
16   Copenhagen 237,313   5
17   Dublin 235,418   2
18   Madrid 230,734   2
19   Helsinki 227,907   8
20   Zurich 224,605   19
21   Milan–Malpensa 223,112   5
22   Dubai–International 221,132   21
23   London–Gatwick 213,920   6
24   Brussels–National 203,636   13
25   Moscow–Sheremetyevo 197,455   18
26   Berlin-Tegel 181,310   6
27   Oslo 166,229   9
28   Manchester 152,710   11
29   Rome–Ciampino 141,525   15
30   Düsseldorf 136,259   13

Other facilities edit

  • Wizz Air has its head office in Building 221.[85] Wizz Air signed the lease agreement in October 2010 and moved there in June 2011 with 150 employees. The airline occupies over 2,000 square metres (22,000 sq ft) of space in an office building refurbished after the airline's arrival. The facility, with open plan offices, houses about 150 employees.[86] In addition, Farnair Hungary has its head office on the airport property.[87]
  • Malév Hungarian Airlines signed a lease agreement with the airport in the spring of 2011, agreeing to relocate its headquarters to the airport grounds by the summer of 2012.[86][88] Due to the collapse of the airline, in February 2012 the plans to move to Ferenc Liszt were cancelled.

Ground transportation edit

Public transport edit

Local buses edit

 
Bus line 100E (bus service to and from the airport and the city center)

Budapesti Közlekedési Központ (BKK), the public transit authority for Budapest, operates two major express bus services to the airport: 100E and 200E. Route 100E—modeled after the OrlyBus and RoissyBus airport bus services in Paris—provides nonstop service to the city center, stopping only at Kálvin tér and Deák Ferenc tér. Standard tickets and passes cannot be used on this route; a higher-fare ticket must be bought on board or at the airport's BKK ticket machines.

Bus route 200E provides service from the airport to Kőbánya-Kispest station, the nearest station of the Budapest Metro. Standard tickets and passes are valid on this route.

Long-distance buses edit

Flixbus operates long-distance routes from the airport to numerous Central European cities, including Prague, Vienna, Timișoara, and Sibiu.

Rail edit

Hungarian State Railways (MÁV) services stop at the nearby Ferihegy railway station, which can be accessed from Terminal 2 by bus route 200E. Trips into the city center from Ferihegy station take approximately 25 minutes, but service is infrequent. Ferihegy station formerly served the airport's Terminal 1, which no longer hosts passenger air services.

Taxi edit

Budapest Airport's official Taxi partner is Főtaxi which has a taxi order stand at both arrival site's exit (outside the building).[89]

 
Bus 200E (bus service from the airport to the nearest subway station, Köbánya-Kispest)

Mini buses and shuttles edit

Several companies operate airport shuttles taking passengers to any destination in the city. Other shuttles and coach services exist to outlying towns in Hungary, Romania, Slovakia, and Serbia.

Accidents and Incidents edit

  • On August 6, 1961, a Malev Hungarian Airlines Douglas DC-3 crashed into a residential area during a sightseeing flight. All 4 crew and 23 passengers were killed along with 3 on the ground.[90]
  • On January 15, 1975, Malev Hungarian Airlines Flight 801, an Ilyushin IL-18, a ferry/positioning flight, crashed 1360m beyond runway 31 and 120m left of the centerline because of bad weather, darkness, fog, lack of crew coordination and possible spatial orientation. All 9 occupants died.[91]
  • On February 22, 1994, a Malev Hungarian Airlines Tupolev TU-134 caught fire on the ground during a maintenance check at Budapest Airport. Four maintenance technicians died.[92]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . bud (Budapest Airport). 8 December 2014. Archived from the original on 6 January 2015.
  2. ^ "Centre for Aviation". 10 January 2023.
  3. ^ "ACI EUROPE Airport Traffic Report. December, Q4 and Full Year 2015" (PDF). Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  4. ^ "Hungary AIP (final, November 12, 2015)". Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  5. ^ . bud (Budapest Airport). Archived from the original on 6 March 2012. Retrieved 4 February 2012.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i "History". bud (Budapest Airport). Retrieved 17 July 2019.
  7. ^ "Budapest Airport Facts". www.bud.hu. Retrieved 10 October 2023.
  8. ^ "PORTFOLIO.HU – Online Financial Journal". Retrieved 3 June 2015.
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budapest, ferenc, liszt, international, airport, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, b. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Budapest Ferenc Liszt International Airport news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Budapest Ferenc Liszt International Airport 5 Hungarian Budapest Liszt Ferenc Nemzetkozi Repuloter IATA BUD ICAO LHBP formerly known as Budapest Ferihegy International Airport and still commonly called just Ferihegy Hungarian pronunciation ˈfɛrihɛɟ is the international airport serving the Hungarian capital city of Budapest It is by far the largest of the country s four commercial airports ahead of Debrecen and Heviz Balaton The airport is located 16 kilometres 8 1 2 nautical miles southeast of the centre of Budapest bordering Pest county and was renamed in 2011 in honour of the famous Hungarian composer Franz Liszt Hungarian Liszt Ferenc on the occasion of the 200th anniversary of his birth 6 The facility covers 1 515 hectares 3 744 acres and has two runways 7 Budapest Ferenc Liszt International AirportBudapest Liszt Ferenc Nemzetkozi RepuloterIATA BUDICAO LHBPSummaryAirport typePublicOwner OperatorBudapest Airport Ltd 1 ServesBudapest metropolitan areaLocation16 km 9 9 mi south east of center of BudapestHub forSmartwings Hungary Wizz AirElevation AMSL151 m 495 ftCoordinates47 26 22 N 019 15 43 E 47 43944 N 19 26194 E 47 43944 19 26194Websitewww wbr bud wbr hu wbr enMapBUDLocation in HungaryShow map of HungaryBUDLocation in BudapestShow map of BudapestBUDLocation in EuropeShow map of EuropeRunwaysDirection Length Surfacem ft13L 31R 3 707 12 162 Asphalt concrete13R 31L 3 010 9 875 Asphalt concreteStatistics 2022 Passengers12 200 000 2 Passenger change 2021 2022164 Sources Passenger Traffic ACI Europe 3 AIP of Hungary 4 It offers international connections primarily within Europe but also to Africa to the Middle East and to the Far East In 2019 the airport handled 16 2 million passengers The airport is the headquarters and primary hub for Wizz Air and base for Ryanair 8 In 2012 it experienced a significant drop in aircraft movements and handled cargo primarily due to the collapse of Malev Hungarian Airlines earlier in the year hence lost a large portion of connecting passengers It had been the hub for Malev until the airline s bankruptcy on 3 February 2012 9 10 Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Designing and construction 1939 1944 2 2 Reconstruction 1947 1950 2 3 Continued growth 1960 1980 2 4 New infrastructure 1980 2000 2 5 Public to public private ownership 2000 2012 2 6 Collapse of Malev aftermath and future 2012 present 3 Terminals 3 1 Terminal 1 closed 3 2 Sky Court between Terminal 2A and 2B 3 3 Terminal 2A 3 4 Terminal 2B 3 4 1 Pier 2B 4 Airlines and destinations 4 1 Passenger 4 2 Cargo 5 Statistics 5 1 Traffic figures 5 2 Top destinations 6 Other facilities 7 Ground transportation 7 1 Public transport 7 1 1 Local buses 7 1 2 Long distance buses 7 1 3 Rail 7 2 Taxi 7 3 Mini buses and shuttles 8 Accidents and Incidents 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksName editOriginally called Budapest Ferihegy International Airport Budapest Ferihegy Nemzetkozi Repuloter on 25 March 2011 it was officially renamed Budapest Liszt Ferenc International Airport in honour of the Hungarian pianist and composer Franz Liszt Modern Hungarian Liszt Ferenc Popularly the airport is still called Ferihegy as before Ferihegy is the name of the neighbourhood around the airport The name is derived from that of Ferenc Xaver Mayerffy 1776 1845 the former owner of an estate who established vineyards and contributed to the development of viticulture in Pest Buda Feri is a diminutive form of Ferenc while hegy means mountain In fact the area is almost totally flat but originally there was a 147 m high sandy hillock which was levelled in the 1940s during the construction of the airport 6 History editDesigning and construction 1939 1944 edit In 1938 the idea of building a new airport in Budapest was born The area in the boundary of three settlements Pestszentlorinc Rakoshegy and Vecses was assigned as the area of the new airport The airport was intended as jointly for civil military sporting purposes Civil facilities were to be built up in the northwestern section and military ones in the southwestern section Just as for each building a public tender was invited for the designing and construction of the traffic building 6 In December 1939 upon an announcement of the results of the tender invited in September that year the designs of Karoly David Jr 1903 1973 were chosen The designer who was one of the originators of modern Hungarian architectural art dreamt of a building which resembled an aircraft from the top side view The work commenced in 1942 To approach the airport from the city a 16 kilometre 10 mi high speed road was constructed between 1940 and 1943 which after improvements remains in use today 6 The military buildings were constructed parallel to the civil construction from 1940 but due to the war situation faster Aviation started at the airport in 1943 In wartime the civil construction slowed down and then stopped at the beginning of 1944 Towards the end of World War II many of the airport buildings were damaged By the end of 1944 Budapest and its airport were under Soviet occupation 6 Reconstruction 1947 1950 edit In 1947 it was decided that the airport would be reconstructed for civil aviation Under the three year plan 40 million forints were voted for those works The opening ceremony was held in May 1950 and the sections finished allowed Magyar Szovjet Polgari Legiforgalmi Rt Hungarian Soviet Civil Aviation Co Ltd MASZOVLET established in 1946 to operate here At that time the airlines operated only a few foreign flights in particular those to Prague Bucharest Warsaw and Sofia 6 Magyar Legiforgalmi Vallalat Hungarian Airlines Malev was established on 25 November 1954 The first regular flight taking off from the airport to the West was the Malev s flight into Vienna in summer 1956 The first Western airline which launched a flight to Budapest was KLM Royal Dutch Airlines in 1957 The traffic building was finished in this period and the lengthening works of the 2 500 metre 8 202 ft runway were started At the end of 1958 the runway was lengthened to 3 010 metres 9 875 ft and taxiway D was finished 6 Continued growth 1960 1980 edit nbsp Budapest Airport in 1961 nbsp Budapest Airport in 1966Between its opening and 1960 the number of landings at the Airport increased from 4 786 to 17 133 with passenger traffic increasing from 49 955 to 359 338 by 1960 6 In 1965 a study was made on the development of the airport which was implemented with more than a 10 year delay from the end of the 1970s Aviation airport and flight control all called for more capacity and infrastructure The Aviation and Airport Directorate LRI was established on 1 January 1973 and performed as an airline company a trading company and an authority as well as investment operator and air navigation tasks In 1974 passenger traffic reached one million In 1977 a new control tower was built as well as a second runway parallel to the old one and a technical base for maintaining MALEV aircraft Use of the new 3 707 metre 12 162 ft runway was started in September 1983 6 New infrastructure 1980 2000 edit nbsp A Boeing 767 200ER of former flag carrier Malev Hungarian Airlines at the airport in 2008In 1980 the number of landing aircraft and passengers served reached 32 642 and 1 780 000 respectively The growing number of passengers called for more capacity A new terminal was decided upon The foundation stone of the new passenger traffic building to be built was laid down on 16 November 1983 citation needed Since 1 November 1985 passengers have been received in Terminal 2 a 24 000 square meter facility funded with Austrian loans under general contracting It was used first by Malev aircraft and passengers and then by those of Lufthansa Air France and Swissair The old terminal continued to receive residual airline traffic under a new name Terminal 1 citation needed There was an IED bus attack against Russian Jewish emigrants on the road leading to Ferihegy in the early 1990s The perpetrators were members of the German Communist organisation Red Army Faction 11 In 1993 Malev launched the airport s first Hungarian overseas flight to New York According to the traffic figures forecast for the millennium the two terminals serving 4 million passengers a year promised to be insufficient citation needed The construction of Terminal 2B was started in 1997 The new building with more than 30 000 square metres of space together with a new apron was opened in 1998 with all foreign airlines moving there Terminal 2B can receive 3 5 million passengers a year with its seven gates and five remote stands citation needed Public to public private ownership 2000 2012 edit nbsp Terminal 2 in 2008 prior to the construction of the Sky CourtOn 8 December 2005 a 75 stake in Ferihegy Airport was bought by BAA plc for 464 5 billion HUF approx US 2 1 billion including the right of operation for 75 years citation needed On 20 October 2006 BAA announced intentions to sell its stake in Budapest Airport to a consortium led by the German airport group HOCHTIEF AirPort GmbH subject to the consent of the Hungarian State citation needed On 18 April 2007 the renovation of Terminal 1 at Ferihegy was awarded Europe s most prestigious heritage preservation prize the Europa Nostra award citation needed The designers contractors builders and investors the latter being BA received the joint award of the European Commission and of the pan European heritage preservation organisation Europa Nostra for the renovation of the protected monument spaces the central hall the gallery and the furniture at T1 On 6 June 2007 BAA and a consortium led by HOCHTIEF AirPort HTA formally closed and completed the transaction of the sale of BAA s shares in Budapest Airport BA to the HOCHTIEF AirPort Consortium The ownership of the HOCHTIEF AirPort Consortium was as follows HOCHTIEF AirPort 49 666 and three financial investors Caisse de depot et placement du Quebec Montreal 23 167 GIC Special Investments Singapore 23 167 and KfW IPEX Bank Frankfurt 4 0 12 On 26 July 2010 after completing a security oversight investigation in May 13 the EU authorities revoked Budapest Airport s official Schengen Clear certification due to serious lapses observed in personal security check procedures and unauthorised passing of banned objects This meant passengers connecting via another airport in the Schengen Zone would have to be rescreened through security just as foreign non Schengen connecting passengers causing delays and inconvenience The airport argued that it had not yet had time to fully implement new security measures introduced on 29 April 2010 and inspired by the Delta Air Lines Amsterdam underwear bomb scare incident The airport s layout was also cited as an excuse for the failure Budapest Airport was the first airport to be checked through a stringent undercover evaluation for compliance with the new regulation Hungarian state news agency MTI reports 2 permanent dead link In response additional security measures were immediately implemented at Budapest Airport causing flight delays at both terminals Unusually long passenger waiting queues were observed at the busier 2A B terminal complex s departures area These problems were solved over time especially through the opening of the SkyCourt terminal including a central security zone citation needed On 15 November 2010 Budapest Airport regained the Schengen Clear status after implementing the necessary security actions and after that the airport underwent the strict re inspection 14 On 16 March 2011 the name of Budapest Ferihegy International Airport was changed to Budapest Ferenc Liszt International Airport 2 Sky Court the new expansion project including shops restaurants and lounges also connecting Terminals 2A and 2B was opened on 27 March 2011 In summer that year the refurbishing of the old terminal parts in T2 began and was completed in 2012 15 Collapse of Malev aftermath and future 2012 present edit In the wake of the collapse of Malev Ryanair announced that it would expand its flights to Liszt airport Ryanair began selling the flight tickets to the public but Budapest airport said that the company had not secured all of the necessary slots which were later negotiated successfully 16 By 9 February 2012 only six days after the collapse of the Hungarian national carrier Liszt Ferenc Airport had recovered over 60 of its point to point traffic Airlines that announced that new services would begin included Wizz Air Aegean Airlines Air Berlin Lufthansa and Ryanair However the airport had lost Malev s transfer passengers which prior to the airline s collapse had amounted to 1 5 million passengers per year A second effect of the Malev collapse was that the areas used to service the Malev fleet would no longer generate revenue even once point to point traffic had been restored These factors created significant financial shortfalls in the airport s revenues 17 In February 2012 Hainan Airlines announced that they would cease services to Beijing from Budapest 18 Prior to the collapse of Malev Hainan had a partnership with Malev 19 which included a codeshare 20 In May 2013 Hochtief Group announced the sale of its Airports unit HOCHTIEF AirPort which held a stake in the Budapest Airport and other airports to the Canadian Pension fund Public Sector Pension Investment Board PSP Investments 21 Following the sale HOCHTIEF AirPort was renamed AviAlliance 22 As of July 2015 the ownership of Budapest Airport is as follows AviAlliance 52 666 owned by PSP Investments Canada Malton Investment 22 167 owned by GIC Special Investments Singapore Caisse de depot et placement du Quebec Canada 20 167 KfW IPEX Bank Germany 5 23 nbsp Sky Court the connection building between Terminals 2A and 2B which now houses the main departures waiting hall and shopping areaAn expenditure of 261 million euros was spent to expanding and modernising the airports infrastructure until December 2012 Several of these future projects involve about further 300 million euros and depends on regulatory decisions as well as third party investors 24 Since 2011 several projects have been completed including the refurbishment of Terminals 2A and 2B including the inauguration of the Skycourt main departures hall in 2012 and an extension of Terminal 2B in 2018 25 the construction of a new business and cargo area called Budapest Airport Business Park 26 27 as well as a new airport hotel 28 and expanded car parking facilities In 2014 Emirates opened daily flights to Dubai UAE using the Boeing 777 300ER aircraft It was followed by Air China s flights to Beijing Capital In 2019 Shanghai Airlines launched a four time weekly service to Shanghai Pudong also with the Boeing 787 Dreamliner There are further projects for the expansion of the airport including a new cargo facilities area as well as a new Terminal 3 29 formerly called Terminal 2C and originally planned by 2020 In a 2021 interview however the newly appointed CEO stated that the construction of the new passenger hall could commence in 2025 30 In 2020 according to a report from Bloomberg it was reported that the Hungarian government was looking at buying the airport from its foreign owners such as GIC Singaporean sovereign wealth fund and Canadian AviAlliance Prime Minister Viktor Orban was opposed to the 2005 privatization 31 In September 2023 the government made a formal bid to buy Budapest Airport 32 Terminals edit nbsp The now defunct Terminal 1 nbsp Terminal 2B nbsp Sky Court interiorThe airport s passenger buildings consist of four main areas Terminal 1 is only used for charter and private flights Terminal 2A is used for flights inside the Schengen Area Terminal 2B is used for flights outside the Schengen Area Sky Court a large central waiting and shopping area also the connection of Terminals 2A and 2BTerminal 1 closed edit From 1 September 2005 re opened Terminal 1 served low cost carriers Terminal 1 is divided into Schengen and Non Schengen boarding gates 33 Being located within the premises of Budapest it offers faster public transport time to the city centre compared to the Terminal 2 about 3 kilometres farther Terminal 1 offers an about 20 minutes direct train journey to Budapest city centre while Terminal 2 requires an 8 minute bus ride to the train station 34 On 14 March 2012 Budapest Airport announced that due to the traffic levels being too low in Terminal 1 extra capacity in Terminal 2 and cost saving Terminal 1 will be closed temporarily On 30 May 2012 all airlines were moved to Terminal 2 the low cost airlines using now the check in desks at hall 2B and gates at a makeshift shed outside the main building This shed now does not operate a new pier was opened instead Sky Court between Terminal 2A and 2B edit Sky Court is a state of the art building between terminals 2A and 2B with 5 levels Passenger safety checks were moved here along with new baggage classifiers and business class lounges such as the first MasterCard lounge in Europe 35 New shops restaurants and cafes were placed in the new building s transit hall With the opening of Skycourt the Terminal 2 has become capable of receiving about 11 million passengers a year instead of the former joint capacity of about 7 million citation needed Terminal 2A edit The Schengen terminal and formerly the only Terminal 2 It was inaugurated on 1 November 1985 for the exclusive use of the homeland carrier Malev Hungarian Airlines and later renamed in 1998 to Terminal 2A Its check in hall serves all Skyteam and Star Alliance member airlines currently Within its boarding area Gates A1 A33 and arrivals level it serves all flights to and from the Schengen zone destinations of any airline Terminal 2B edit The non Schengen terminal it is referred to as a separate object opened in December 1998 Its check in hall serves all flights of the OneWorld alliance intra and extra Schengen as well as well as many other non aligned airlines For flights of the Hungarian low cost airliner Wizz Air check in desks can also be found at this terminal However its boarding Gates B1 B44 and arriving area serve exclusively non Schengen destinations Pier 2B edit The project Pier B was started on 9 January 2017 The new state of the art building was opened on 1 August 2018 and it is connected directly to Terminal 2B It is 220 meters long and it includes 27 boarding gates and 10 jetbridges which can serve more wide body aircraft at the same time The pier was planned to offer flexibility for traditional and low cost airlines with boarding options via jetbridges buses or walking directly to the aircraft Airlines and destinations editPassenger edit As of December 2023 the following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter services to and from Budapest Ferenc Liszt Airport 36 AirlinesDestinationsAegean AirlinesAthensAer LingusDublin 37 Aeroexpress RegionalCluj Napoca 38 Air CairoSeasonal Hurghada 39 Air ChinaBeijing Capital 40 Chongqing 41 Air FranceParis Charles de GaulleAir SerbiaBelgrade 42 airBalticRigaAnadoluJetIstanbul Sabiha Gokcen 43 ArkiaSeasonal Tel AvivAustrian AirlinesViennaBluebird AirwaysAthens begins 22 December 2023 44 Seasonal Tel AvivBritish AirwaysLondon HeathrowBrussels AirlinesBrusselseasyJetBasel Mulhouse Geneva London GatwickEgyptairCairo Hurghada 45 El AlTel Aviv 46 EmiratesDubai InternationalEurowingsCologne Bonn Dusseldorf Hamburg StuttgartFinnairHelsinkiflydubaiDubai InternationalIberiaMadridJet2 comBirmingham Leeds Bradford Manchester Seasonal Newcastle upon TyneKLMAmsterdamKorean AirSeoul Incheon 47 LOT Polish AirlinesSeoul Incheon Warsaw ChopinLufthansaFrankfurt MunichLuxairLuxembourgNorwegian Air ShuttleCopenhagen Oslo Stockholm ArlandaPegasus AirlinesIstanbul Sabiha GokcenSeasonal charter AntalyaQatar AirwaysDohaRyanair 48 Alicante 49 Amman Queen Alia Athens Barcelona Bari Beauvais Belfast International 50 Bergamo Berlin Billund Birmingham 51 Bologna Bristol Cagliari Catania Charleroi Copenhagen Dublin Edinburgh Gran Canaria Lisbon London Stansted Madrid Malaga Malta Manchester Marseille Naples Nuremberg Palermo Paphos Pisa Porto Prague Rome Ciampino Shannon Stockholm Arlanda 52 Sofia Tel Aviv Tenerife South Thessaloniki Treviso Valencia Warsaw Modlin Seasonal Alghero 53 Bournemouth Burgas Chania 54 Corfu 55 East Midlands 56 Gothenburg 56 Lanzarote Mykonos Palma de Mallorca Preveza Lefkada Rhodes 57 Rimini 54 Seville 58 Zadar 59 Zakynthos 60 Shanghai AirlinesNingbo 61 Shanghai Pudong 62 SmartwingsSeasonal charter Antalya Barcelona Burgas Corfu Heraklion Hurghada Karpathos Kefalonia Marsa Alam Palma de Mallorca Preveza Aktion 63 Rhodes Sharm El Sheikh Tirana Zakynthos 64 65 SunExpressSeasonal Antalya 66 Izmir 67 Swiss International Air LinesZurichTAROMBucharest OtopeniTUI AirwaysSeasonal London Gatwick Manchester both begin 6 May 2024 68 Turkish AirlinesIstanbulWizz Air 69 Abu Dhabi Alicante Amman Queen Alia Athens Baku Barcelona Bari Basel Mulhouse Berlin Birmingham Catania Charleroi Copenhagen 70 Dammam 71 Dortmund Dubai International Eindhoven Funchal Giza 72 Glasgow 73 Hurghada Istanbul Jeddah Kutaisi Larnaca Lisbon Liverpool London Gatwick London Luton Madrid Malaga Malta Milan Malpensa Naples Nice Paris Orly Podgorica Reykjavik Keflavik Riyadh Rome Fiumicino Sharm El Sheikh 70 Skopje Stockholm Arlanda 74 Targu Mureș Tel Aviv Tenerife South Thessaloniki Tirana Warsaw Chopin Seasonal Alghero Antalya 75 Burgas Chania Corfu Heraklion Palma de Mallorca Rhodes Santorini ZakynthosCargo edit AirlinesDestinationsCargolux 76 77 Ashgabat Baku Bangkok Suvarnabhumi Hong Kong Luxembourg Shenzhen ZhengzhouEthiopian CargoHong Kong LiegeFedEx Express 78 Paris Charles de GaulleHungary Air Cargo 79 ZhengzhouKorean Air Cargo 80 Frankfurt Seoul IncheonQatar Airways Cargo 81 Doha PragueSichuan Airlines Cargo 82 Almaty Chengdu ShuangliuTurkish Cargo 83 IstanbulUPS Airlines 84 Cologne BonnStatistics editTraffic figures edit Traffic by calendar year Official ACI Statistics Passengers Change from previous year Aircraft operations Change from previous year Cargo metric tons Change from previous year2010 8 179 406 nbsp 0 1 2 105 507 nbsp 0 3 9 65 515 nbsp 0 20 5 2011 8 911 273 nbsp 0 9 0 109 949 nbsp 0 4 2 106 595 nbsp 0 29 0 2012 8 493 569 nbsp 0 4 7 87 560 nbsp 0 20 4 93 125 nbsp 0 12 6 2013 8 510 896 nbsp 0 0 2 83 830 nbsp 0 4 3 92 112 nbsp 0 1 1 2014 9 146 723 nbsp 0 7 5 86 682 nbsp 0 3 4 89 987 nbsp 0 2 3 2015 10 289 180 nbsp 0 12 5 92 294 nbsp 0 6 5 91 421 nbsp 0 1 6 2016 11 441 999 nbsp 0 11 1 96 141 nbsp 0 4 3 112 142 nbsp 0 22 7 2017 13 097 239 nbsp 0 14 5 102 747 nbsp 0 6 4 127 145 nbsp 0 11 8 2018 14 867 491 nbsp 0 13 5 115 028 nbsp 0 12 0 146 113 nbsp 0 15 2 2019 16 173 489 nbsp 0 8 8 122 814 nbsp 0 6 7 135 521 nbsp 0 7 2 2020 3 665 317 nbsp 0 69 6 n a nbsp 0 0 0 134 459 nbsp 0 0 8 2021 4 622 882 nbsp 0 26 1 n a nbsp 0 0 0 183 362 nbsp 0 36 4 2022 12 205 070 nbsp 0 164 0 n a nbsp 0 194 000 nbsp 0 5 8 Top destinations edit Busiest routes 2019 Rank Airport Passengers handled Change2018 191 nbsp Frankfurt 725 600 nbsp 102 nbsp London Luton 568 081 nbsp 13 nbsp Tel Aviv 509 371 nbsp 184 nbsp Paris Charles de Gaulle 487 029 nbsp 55 nbsp Amsterdam 454 181 nbsp 06 nbsp London Stansted 440 792 nbsp 37 nbsp Barcelona 380 331 nbsp 108 nbsp London Heathrow 371 288 nbsp 29 nbsp Brussels Charleroi 339 734 nbsp 610 nbsp Munich 338 095 nbsp 011 nbsp Warsaw Chopin 313 642 nbsp 2012 nbsp London Gatwick 305 005 nbsp 7513 nbsp Madrid 299 208 nbsp 614 nbsp Eindhoven 295 990 nbsp 1015 nbsp Rome Fiumicino 286 987 nbsp 516 nbsp Berlin Schonefeld 284 145 nbsp 1717 nbsp Moscow Sheremetyevo 263 815 nbsp 1018 nbsp Dublin 257 550 nbsp 819 nbsp Basel Mulhouse 250 544 nbsp 3920 nbsp Milan Malpensa 243 221 nbsp 121 nbsp Zurich 235 851 nbsp 122 nbsp Prague 233 067 nbsp 1623 nbsp Copenhagen 231 472 nbsp 424 nbsp Helsinki 229 137 nbsp 725 nbsp Istanbul 214 130 nbsp 21426 nbsp Oslo Gardermoen 211 433 nbsp 2827 nbsp Athens 208 527 nbsp 1928 nbsp Dubai International 207 802 nbsp 629 nbsp Doha 207 068 nbsp 2430 nbsp Brussels National 201 870 nbsp 2Busiest routes 2018 Rank Airport Passengers handled Change2017 18 Rank Airport Passengers handled Change2017 18Europe 16 nbsp Helsinki 246 616 nbsp 81 nbsp Frankfurt 661 820 nbsp 47 17 nbsp Copenhagen 241 153 nbsp 22 nbsp London Luton 564 603 nbsp 2 18 nbsp Milan Malpensa 240 803 nbsp 83 nbsp Paris Charles de Gaulle 462 651 nbsp 2 19 nbsp Moscow Sheremetyevo 240 499 nbsp 224 nbsp Amsterdam 452 509 nbsp 2 20 nbsp Dublin 238 254 nbsp 15 nbsp London Stansted 427 507 nbsp 9 21 nbsp Zurich 234 034 nbsp 46 nbsp London Heathrow 363 483 nbsp 9 22 nbsp Brussels National 205 501 nbsp 17 nbsp Brussels Charleroi 361 246 nbsp 3 23 nbsp Prague 200 864 nbsp 838 nbsp Barcelona 345 210 nbsp 32 24 nbsp Basel Mulhouse 180 060 nbsp 889 nbsp Berlin Schonefeld 344 042 nbsp 45 25 nbsp Athens 175 781 nbsp 1410 nbsp Munich 337 577 nbsp 2 26 nbsp London Gatwick 174 312 nbsp 1911 nbsp Madrid 281 704 nbsp 22 27 nbsp Bergamo 167 626 nbsp 2312 nbsp Istanbul Ataturk 277 848 nbsp 13 Outside Europe13 nbsp Rome Fiumicino 273 830 nbsp 13 1 nbsp Tel Aviv Ben Gurion 430 502 nbsp 1914 nbsp Eindhoven 268 155 nbsp 2 2 nbsp Dubai International 220 589 nbsp 15 nbsp Warsaw Chopin 262 000 nbsp 10 3 nbsp Doha 167 532 nbsp 29Busiest routes 2017 Rank Airport Passengers handled Change2016 171 nbsp London Luton 574 074 nbsp 2 nbsp Paris Charles de Gaulle 471 911 nbsp 103 nbsp Frankfurt 449 214 nbsp 74 nbsp Amsterdam 443 957 nbsp 125 nbsp London Stansted 390 608 nbsp 66 nbsp Tel Aviv Ben Gurion 363 235 nbsp 217 nbsp Brussels Charleroi 350 152 nbsp 128 nbsp Munich 343 275 nbsp 49 nbsp London Heathrow 333 780 nbsp 110 nbsp Eindhoven 262 914 nbsp 611 nbsp Barcelona 262 497 nbsp 812 nbsp Istanbul Ataturk 246 337 nbsp 513 nbsp Rome Fiumicino 243 231 nbsp 1014 nbsp Warsaw Chopin 238 238 nbsp 1215 nbsp Berlin Schonefeld 237 772 nbsp 7416 nbsp Copenhagen 237 313 nbsp 517 nbsp Dublin 235 418 nbsp 218 nbsp Madrid 230 734 nbsp 219 nbsp Helsinki 227 907 nbsp 820 nbsp Zurich 224 605 nbsp 1921 nbsp Milan Malpensa 223 112 nbsp 522 nbsp Dubai International 221 132 nbsp 2123 nbsp London Gatwick 213 920 nbsp 624 nbsp Brussels National 203 636 nbsp 1325 nbsp Moscow Sheremetyevo 197 455 nbsp 1826 nbsp Berlin Tegel 181 310 nbsp 627 nbsp Oslo 166 229 nbsp 928 nbsp Manchester 152 710 nbsp 1129 nbsp Rome Ciampino 141 525 nbsp 1530 nbsp Dusseldorf 136 259 nbsp 13Other facilities editWizz Air has its head office in Building 221 85 Wizz Air signed the lease agreement in October 2010 and moved there in June 2011 with 150 employees The airline occupies over 2 000 square metres 22 000 sq ft of space in an office building refurbished after the airline s arrival The facility with open plan offices houses about 150 employees 86 In addition Farnair Hungary has its head office on the airport property 87 Malev Hungarian Airlines signed a lease agreement with the airport in the spring of 2011 agreeing to relocate its headquarters to the airport grounds by the summer of 2012 86 88 Due to the collapse of the airline in February 2012 the plans to move to Ferenc Liszt were cancelled Ground transportation editPublic transport edit Local buses edit nbsp Bus line 100E bus service to and from the airport and the city center Budapesti Kozlekedesi Kozpont BKK the public transit authority for Budapest operates two major express bus services to the airport 100E and 200E Route 100E modeled after the OrlyBus and RoissyBus airport bus services in Paris provides nonstop service to the city center stopping only at Kalvin ter and Deak Ferenc ter Standard tickets and passes cannot be used on this route a higher fare ticket must be bought on board or at the airport s BKK ticket machines Bus route 200E provides service from the airport to Kobanya Kispest station the nearest station of the Budapest Metro Standard tickets and passes are valid on this route Long distance buses edit Flixbus operates long distance routes from the airport to numerous Central European cities including Prague Vienna Timișoara and Sibiu Rail edit Hungarian State Railways MAV services stop at the nearby Ferihegy railway station which can be accessed from Terminal 2 by bus route 200E Trips into the city center from Ferihegy station take approximately 25 minutes but service is infrequent Ferihegy station formerly served the airport s Terminal 1 which no longer hosts passenger air services Taxi edit Budapest Airport s official Taxi partner is Fotaxi which has a taxi order stand at both arrival site s exit outside the building 89 nbsp Bus 200E bus service from the airport to the nearest subway station Kobanya Kispest Mini buses and shuttles edit Several companies operate airport shuttles taking passengers to any destination in the city Other shuttles and coach services exist to outlying towns in Hungary Romania Slovakia and Serbia Accidents and Incidents editOn August 6 1961 a Malev Hungarian Airlines Douglas DC 3 crashed into a residential area during a sightseeing flight All 4 crew and 23 passengers were killed along with 3 on the ground 90 On January 15 1975 Malev Hungarian Airlines Flight 801 an Ilyushin IL 18 a ferry positioning flight crashed 1360m beyond runway 31 and 120m left of the centerline because of bad weather darkness fog lack of crew coordination and possible spatial orientation All 9 occupants died 91 On February 22 1994 a Malev Hungarian Airlines Tupolev TU 134 caught fire on the ground during a maintenance check at Budapest Airport Four maintenance technicians died 92 See also editList of airports in Hungary Transport in Hungary Aeropark aviation museumReferences edit Owners of Budapest Airport Zrt Ltd bud Budapest Airport 8 December 2014 Archived from the original on 6 January 2015 Centre for Aviation 10 January 2023 ACI EUROPE Airport Traffic Report December Q4 and Full Year 2015 PDF Retrieved 28 August 2016 Hungary AIP final November 12 2015 Retrieved 28 August 2016 Cargo City construction at Budapest Airport bud Budapest Airport Archived from the original on 6 March 2012 Retrieved 4 February 2012 a b c d e f g h i History bud Budapest Airport Retrieved 17 July 2019 Budapest Airport Facts www bud hu Retrieved 10 October 2023 PORTFOLIO HU Online Financial Journal Retrieved 3 June 2015 Press release of Malev Zrt bud Budapest Airport Archived from the original on 26 June 2015 Retrieved 3 June 2015 Dunai Marton and Gergely Szakacs Rivals swoop in as Hungary s Malev stops flying Archived 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine Reuters Friday 3 February 2012 Kirsten Grieshaber 29 September 2004 World Briefing Europe Germany Sentencing In 1991 Attack On Jews The New York Times Retrieved 3 January 2009 HOCHTIEF AirPort Consortium takes over Budapest Airport bud Budapest Airport Archived from the original on 25 July 2015 Budapest airport security status downgraded Civil aviation Retrieved 3 June 2015 Budapest Business Journal Archived from the original on 18 December 2013 Retrieved 3 June 2015 New shops opening one after the other bud Budapest Airport Archived from the original on 13 June 2015 Retrieved 3 June 2015 Eddy Kester Ryanair vs Budapest playing dirty Archived 24 May 2017 at the Wayback Machine Financial Times 7 February 2012 Retrieved on 9 February 2012 Simon Zoltan Hungary Seeks Budapest Airport Compromise to Protect Budget BusinessWeek 9 February 2012 Retrieved on 9 February 2012 Hainan Airlines arrete son Pekin Budapest Air Journal 14 February 2012 Retrieved on 30 August 2012 Felfuggesztik a Peking Budapest kozvetlen legi jaratot China Radio International 24 February 2012 Retrieved on 31 August 2012 Partner airlines Malev 3 January 2011 Retrieved on 31 August 2012 Budapest Airport stake sold to Canadian pension fund manager Budapest Business Journal History AviAlliance AviAlliance corporate website Ownership of the Budapest Airport bud Budapest Airport Archived from the original on 23 October 2013 Reszletes repulojarat informaciok parkolasi lehetosegek bud hu Property bud Budapest Airport Archived from the original on 24 December 2011 Retrieved 29 April 2017 New passenger pier inaugurated at Budapest Airport with Astana flight bud Budapest Airport 1 August 2018 Retrieved 7 August 2018 DHL moves to Budapest Airport Business Park bud Budapest Airport 7 August 2013 Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 3 June 2015 DHL moves to Budapest Airport Business Park bud Budapest Airport 15 December 2012 Archived from the original on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 3 June 2015 Business Traveller Szallas Vendegeket var az ibis Styles Budapest Airport Business Traveller Hungary Archived from the original on 10 January 2018 Retrieved 9 January 2018 2017 re Airport Hotelt 2020 ra C Terminalt epit a Budapest Airport By 2017 Airport Hotel by 2020 C Terminal is built by Budapest Airport in Hungarian 8 December 2015 Terminal 1 could reopen the construction of Terminal 3 could begin in 2025 at Ferihegy 13 May 2021 Orban Allies Seek to Grab Control Over Budapest Airport Bloomberg Bloomberg News Archived from the original on 11 October 2020 Hungary s government submits new formal bid for Budapest Airport shareholder says Reuters 6 September 2023 Retrieved 13 November 2023 Budapest Airport is prepared for Schengen accession as of 30 March Terminal 2A handles Schengen and Terminal 2B non Schengen traffic bud Budapest Airport Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 3 June 2015 By train bud Budapest Airport Archived from the original on 12 May 2015 Retrieved 3 June 2015 Emerald Media First MasterCard Lounge in Europe inaugurated at Budapest Airport Retrieved 29 April 2017 Timetable and route planner bud Budapest Airport Archived from the original on 9 January 2017 Retrieved 8 January 2017 Aer Lingus AeroexpressRegional Begins Operation in 5 Sept 2022 AIR CAIRO 4Q22 NETWORK ADDITIONS SUMMARY 13OCT22 aeroroutes com 13 October 2022 Air China Resumes Beijing Budapest Flight 27 June 2022 Air China NW22 International Operations 30OCT22 Aeroroutes Retrieved 31 October 2022 Air Serbia reveals third set of new routes 8 December 2022 Jaratokat indit Budapestre a Turkish Airlines diszkont legitarsasaga April 2022 https booking bluebirdair com Liu Jim 30 September 2020 EgyptAir Oct 2020 International operations as of 29Sep20 Routesonline Israel s El Al to drop UP budget brand ch aviation com Retrieved 7 January 2018 Korean Air Begins Budapest Service from Oct 2022 Ryanair www ryanair com Ryanair www ryanair com Ryanair announces flights from Belfast to Budapest Cardiff Mallorca and Valencia for 2023 www itv com Ryanair www ryanair com Budapest es Stockholm kozott indit jaratot a nyari menetrendben a Ryanair 25 January 2022 Cheap flights in Europe Low cost European flights Ryanair com a b Ryanair Ryanair Kerkyra Boydapesth apey8eias pthseis apo 29 Martioy 2022 Corfuland gr O ti paizei sthn Kerkyra a b Ryanair NW23 Network Changes 17SEP23 AeroRoutes Ryanair Launches 50 000 Additional Seats and Four New Routes from Budapest This Summer Ryanair s Corporate Website 31 March 2021 Rayanir website Ryanair com not specific enough to verify Ryanair opens a new Zadar base for summer 21 Zadar Airport Archived from the original on 18 April 2021 Retrieved 30 March 2021 Ryanair Nea dromologia Zakyn8os Boydapesth kai Santorinh Krakobia to kalokairi toy 2021 Ningbo Budapest Flight Route is of Great Importance in Light of the War China Eastern NW22 International Operations 30OCT22 AeroRoutes 31 October 2022 Retrieved 31 October 2022 Smartwings Hungary NS23 Charter Network Additions Travel Service Polska adds Budapest routes in S17 Retrieved 29 April 2017 Travel Service Harom uj utvonal es 13 os kapacitasbovites a nyari menetrendben 27 February 2018 SunExpress files additional new routes in S19 routesonline com 21 February 2019 Liu Jim SunExpress S20 network additions as of 22OCT19 Routesonline Retrieved 23 October 2019 Tui River Cruises unveils summer 2024 programme WIZZ Dream more Live more Be more a b Uj utvonalakat jelentett be a Wizz Air mar ide is elrepitenek oktobertol Startlap Utazas 21 March 2023 Wizz Air signals Saudi expansion with 20 new routes Kairoba indit jaratokat Budapestrol a Wizz Air 15 June 2023 Airline giant quits Scottish airport to launch flights from rival city 5 October 2023 Wizz Air establishes operations at Stockholm Arlanda with two new direct routes 26 September 2023 Wizz Air UJ JARATOK Magyarorszagrol Isztambulba es Antalyaba 19 January 2023 cargolux com Network amp Offices retrieved 24 July 2020 Cargolux Schedule Worldwide May 2023 PDF Cargolux Retrieved 11 May 2023 airlineroutemaps com FedEx retrieved 14 August 2022 aircargonews net retrieved 22 December 2022 Korean Air launches direct ICN BUD cargo flight AIRCARGOWORLD COM 21 February 2020 Retrieved 7 March 2020 qrcargo com retrieved 12 September 2019 1 retrieved 24 July 2020 turkishcargo com Flight Schedule retrieved 24 July 2020 airlineroutemaps com UPS retrieved 24 July 2020 Company overview Archived 12 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine Wizz Air Retrieved on 11 December 2011 Wizz Air Hungary Airlines Ltd BUD International Airport Building 221 H 1185 Budapest a b Property development bud Budapest Airport Archived from the original on 24 December 2011 Retrieved 11 December 2011 Our Offices Archived 5 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Farnair Europe Retrieved on 19 February 2012 H 1185 Budapest Liszt Ferenc ROK 17 Hungary MALEV HEADQUARTERS MOVES BACK TO BUDAPEST AIRPORT Malev Hungarian Airlines 20 April 2011 Retrieved on 4 February 2012 BUD s website about their official taxi partner bud Budapest Airport Retrieved 17 March 2018 Accident description for HA TSA at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on October 10 2023 Accident description for HA MOH at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on October 10 2023 Accident description for HA LBD at the Aviation Safety NetworkExternal links edit nbsp Media related to Budapest Liszt Ferenc International Airport at Wikimedia Commons Official website Current weather for LHBP at NOAA NWS Accident history for BUD at Aviation Safety NetworkPortals nbsp Hungary nbsp Aviation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Budapest Ferenc Liszt International Airport amp oldid 1187939608, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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