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Sofia Airport

Sofia Airport (IATA: SOF, ICAO: LBSF) (Bulgarian: Летище София, romanizedLetishte Sofiya) is the main international airport of Bulgaria, located 10 km (6.2 mi) east of the centre of the capital Sofia.[3] In 2019 the airport surpassed 7 million passengers for the first time.[4] The airport serves as the home base for BH Air, Bulgaria Air, European Air Charter and GullivAir, and as a base for both Ryanair and Wizz Air. The airport also houses the Bulgarian Air Force's Vrazhdebna Air Base.[5]

Sofia Airport

Летище София
Summary
Airport typePublic
OwnerState-owned
OperatorSOF Connect AD[1]
ServesSofia
LocationSofia, Bulgaria
Opened16 September 1937 (1937-09-16)
Hub for
Time zoneEET (UTC+2)
 • Summer (DST)EEST (UTC+3)
Elevation AMSL531 m / 1,742 ft
Coordinates42°41′42″N 023°24′30″E / 42.69500°N 23.40833°E / 42.69500; 23.40833
Websitewww.sofia-airport.eu
Map
SOF
Location in Bulgaria
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
09/27 3,600 11,811 Asphalt
Statistics (2023)
Passengers7,208,987
Passenger change 22-2320.8%
Aircraft movements60,561
Movements change 22-2312.6%
Cargo (t)19,688
Cargo change 22-234.1%
Source: Bulgarian AIP at EUROCONTROL[2]

History edit

Early years edit

On 16 September 1937, Tsar Boris III signed a decree which declared land within the Village of Vrazhdebna be allocated for the construction of an airport. Construction then began on the site, which was 11 km (6.8 mi) from the city centre. Two years later in 1939, Sofia Airport opened its first passenger waiting room, and after another two years was followed by a fully constructed airfield with a fully paved runway.[6][7]

From June through September 1938, Yugoslav airline Aeroput connected Sofia with Belgrade thrice weekly using Lockheed Model 10 Electra planes.[8]

During the Second World War, the facilities were used by the military. Mail, perishable freight and passenger operations began in 1947 from buildings on the north side of the airport. The passenger terminal (now Terminal 1) on the south side was completed during the Second World War in the manner of a then-modern European railway terminus to designs by the architect Ivan Marangozov. It opened after several years of delay in 1947. The structure comprised a government wing to the west, an international handling area in the middle, and a domestic handling area to the east. At that time, it was planned that the airport would eventually have two intersecting runways at a 30-degree angle to each other. [citation needed]

The terminal had substantially reached its capacity of some 600,000 passengers a year by the later 1960s and was subjected to a number of refurbishments and extensions beginning in the spring of 1968. In 1975, a new international arrivals handling extension was opened to the west of the building, the domestic area to the east was enlarged, the government handling area was removed to a dedicated terminal some distance to the west, a VIP handling area opened in the old terminal, apron area was extended to the east and new taxiways opened. A bonded warehouse opened to the east of the terminal square in 1969 and several new hangars followed to the east of the first maintenance base in the 1970s. A new checked baggage handling system opened to the north of the building in the early 1980s, cosmetic and traffic reorganising refurbishments were carried out in 1990, with a substantial landside extension following in 2000.[9]

By the late 1970s, the terminal was handling in the region of three million passengers a year, a million of them on domestic routes. Passenger numbers fell off sharply after the 1979 CMEA ("Comecon") oil price shock and recovered to just over a million a year by the late 1980s. In the early and mid-1990s, domestic traffic practically ceased, while foreign traffic reduced significantly. The latter began growing apace in the late 1990s and early 2000s to reach its current levels. The terminal was last refurbished partially in 1990. In 2000, it underwent a wholesale update in which the international arrivals area was moved to the east wing where domestic handling had been, the former international arrivals area to the west was closed, and the layout of the central international departures area was changed in line with world developments. Despite the work to the old terminal, the airport was becoming overwhelmed with passenger traffic.[9]

Options for different airport developments began to be examined in the mid-1960s. One option was to relocate the facility to a new site, with some locations up to 70 km (43 mi) from Sofia. [citation needed] Another option involved extending the airport's area radically to the north-east and gradually removing the focus of the airport there. A third option was to develop substantially the same site. By the later 1980s, the authorities had settled on the last option. [citation needed]

Development since the 1990s edit

 
Old Sofia Airport logo used until 2022

Jes Air launched a flight to Ottawa using Airbus A310s in June 1991.[10][11][12] The following December, Balkan Bulgarian Airlines commenced direct service to New York City aboard Boeing 767s.[13][14] Project design, involving a new terminal to the east of the old facility, a new runway to the north of (and parallel to) the existing runway, and taxiways, was completed by the mid-1990s. A finance package involving very significant European and Kuwaiti investment was initially agreed in 1998 and was in place by 2000. Work began in 2001. The new runway and some taxiways were completed in mid-2006. Terminal 2 was formally inaugurated on 27 December 2006.[9]

Design and construction of a new control tower was discussed in 2006 but this project appeared to be in abeyance by 2008. Over the years, Sofia Airport has been criticised for its lack of world class air freight facilities and for some access problems. Passengers to and from the Bulgarian interior have to access or egress the airport through crowded rail and coach facilities in central Sofia. A rail link has been discussed on several occasions since the 1960s. The next best thing, perhaps, was the extension of Sofia Metro Line 1 some 5 km from Blvd Tsarigradsko shose. This was opened on 2 April 2015 under the name Sofia Airport Metro Station.[15] The airport metro station is adjacent to Terminal 2. Connection with terminal 1 is by free shuttle bus.

The airport is occasionally criticised as a source of environmental noise and pollution and strict noise abatement procedures have been enforced for departing traffic since the mid-1970s, while arriving traffic is generally routed to approach the field from the east, clear of Sofia.[9]

A significant and recurring operational criticism of Sofia Airport has concerned its historical lack of all-weather operations capability. Though the new runway was designed for ICAO Category 3 operations, in 2007 it emerged that radio interference from security fencing, and most significantly from a large newly built lorry park, prevented certification (and hence use) of the associated radio navigational aids. During the winter months, the airport, located on a high alluvial plain surrounded by mountains, suffers from very significant and frequent fog precipitation. In such circumstances, flights are redirected to diversion airports in Bulgaria or neighbouring countries, lengthening journeys by many hours.[9]

On 3 June 2016, the Bulgarian government launched a tender for the operation of Sofia Airport.[16] Expected to bring in 1.2 billion lev (600 million euro) to the state over 35 years, the tender has reportedly attracted interest from the operators of airports in Munich, Frankfurt, Zurich, Lyon, Dublin and London-Heathrow and as well as other operators.[17]

As of 22 July 2020, the concessionaire of Sofia Airport is the Sof Connect consortium, consisting of the French investment fund Meridiam (99% stake) and Austria's Strabag (1% stake). The concession period runs for 35 years. The airport's operator for the first 12 years of the concession period will be Munich Airport International.[18] On 20 April 2021, SOF Connect AD officially became the concessionaire of the airport.[19]

Airport reconstruction edit

 
A model of the new airport terminal in the departures hall

As a result of growing air traffic and passenger numbers, the airport facilities struggled to cope despite several expansions in the years prior. Planning began in the 1990s for a new terminal to be constructed at the airport. The new runway was offset from the old by 210 m (690 ft) with the eastern end crossing the Iskar River bed on a specially constructed bridge. New taxiways were also constructed, allowing for 22 aircraft movements per hour. The old runway was then to be used as a taxiway only.[20] The new runway and taxiways were opened in mid-2006, and Terminal 2 formally opened in late 2006.[9]

The total cost of the project was planned at 200 million euros. Finance was secured in 1997–98 from the European Investment Bank (60 million euro), Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development (12.3 million Kuwaiti dinars, approximately 41.5 million euro), and the European Union PHARE Programme (7.6 million euro). In August 2000, an ISPA grant of 50 million euro was allocated and in December the financing memorandum was signed.[9]

The construction works were in two lots: the new terminal with its surrounding infrastructure and the new runway. The first lot was allocated to the German branch of Austrian company Strabag,[21] while the second was won by a consortium of Kuwaiti company Mohamed Abdulmohsin al-Kharafi & Sons and UAE-based Admak General Contracting Company.[22]

The initial completion deadline for the new terminal was 15 December 2004 to a total budget of 112.2 million euro. Immediately after work started, Strabag contested the geological surveys by Dutch consultants NACO B.V. and demanded additional funding for unexpected additional works. The delay was ten months, and construction resumed after the Bulgarian government agreed to augment the project's value by 4.8 million euro and extend the deadline to 31 August 2005.[23]

In 2004 Strabag demanded an additional 6 million euro due to rising steel prices.[24] The Ministry of Transportation rejected the claim, backed by a report from NACO. In May 2005, the contractor threatened to take the case to international arbitration.[25] In August 2005, it became clear that Strabag would not be able to meet the changed deadline, slippage being put at six to eight weeks.[26] In November 2005, Strabag asked for eight months' further extension.[27]

Infrastructure edit

Control tower edit

 
The 2012 air traffic control tower

A new 50 m (160 ft)[20] control tower was inaugurated officially on 5 December 2012 by the PM Boyko Borisov and the minister of transport Ivaylo Moskovski.[28]

The tower was built by Glavbolgarstroy AD. The contract for building the tower was signed on 19 August 2011 in the presence of Ivaylo Moskovski, minister of transport, information technology and communications, the BULATSA director general Diyan Dinev, Glavbolgarstroy AD chief executive director Pavel Kalistratov and Glavbolgarstroy AD executive director and management board member Nina Stoyanova signed the design execution and construction contract between BULATSA and Glavbolgarstroy AD for the new control tower at Sofia Airport (Sofia tower).[29] Glavbolgartroy AD were selected as contractor, as they were awarded the highest technical rating during the public procurement procedure having proposed the shortest construction timeframe. This project was financed entirely by BULATSA.

Runway system edit

On 31 August 2006, Sofia Airport put its new runway system into operation, replacing the old and out-of-date facilities. The new runway is offset 210 m (690 ft) to the north of the old runway, with the eastern end of its 3,600 m (11,811 ft) long strip crossing over the Iskar river bed on a specially constructed bridge. New rapid and connecting taxiways were built to open way for 20 aircraft movements per hour at a high level of safety. The navigational aids installed on the new runway enable landing operations under low visibility conditions at category IIIB of the ICAO standards.[7]

Two de-icing platforms were constructed to allow centralised de-icing procedures in winter. They are one element in the overall strategy of Sofia Airport for environmental protection and reduction of the harmful effects resulting from the airport operations. At the moment there is another de-icing platform under construction.[when?]

Lufthansa Technik Sofia edit

 
Lufthansa Technik maintenance base at Sofia Airport

Lufthansa Technik Sofia was founded in late 2007 as a joint venture between Lufthansa Technik (75.1%) and the Bulgarian Aviation Group (24.9%).[30] With the foundation of Lufthansa Technik Sofia, the Lufthansa Technik Group has created a fifth platform for the overhaul and maintenance of narrowbody aircraft in Europe. The Bulgarian facility serves customers in Europe, the Middle East and North Africa. The facility has undergone a major reconstruction and an upgrade and now can handle the heaviest stage of aircraft maintenance checks, D-Check, that is now being carried out in Bulgaria. The company have started with more than 350 staff trained in Bulgaria and at Lufthansa Technik facilities in Shannon Base Maintenance operations in the fourth quarter of 2008 with one Airbus A321 from Lufthansa as the first customer.[31] At the moment the facility in Sofia has more than 1100 employees and plans by the 2018 to hire another 200 employees to reach a total of 1300 employees. The company have completed the building of a new facility in October 2017 which will be used for the maintenance of wide-bodied aircraft and is able to handle Airbus A380.[32] With the completion of the new hangar now Lufthansa Technik Sofia has 8 production lines which is turning the Bulgarian unit into the biggest unit of Lufthansa Technik.

Rose Air Technik edit

On 4 July 2018, Rose Air in cooperation with Wizz Air opened a new maintenance base at Sofia Airport.[33] It is located at the northern part of the airport. The hangar lies on 5000 square meters and has three production lines with overall capacity of 300 planes per year and it can handle C-Check. The base started with more than 100 staff. This will be the first maintenance base for Wizz Air in the Balkans and the fourth in Europe.[34]

Vrazhdebna Air Base edit

The Vrazhdebna Air Base (also Vrajdebna Air Base) is located at the airport. Operated by the Bulgarian Air Force, it is home to the 16th Transport Squadron.[35]

Terminals edit

 
Inside Terminal 1
 
Interior of Terminal 2

Terminal 1 edit

This terminal was built in the 1930s and opened on 16 September 1937. It has been extended many times, and had a renovation in 2000. Terminal 1 serves low-cost and charter carriers with Wizz Air, easyJet and European Air Charter being the primary tenants. This smaller of the two terminals, consisting of only one main level, features a central check-in hall with 19 counters, two security screening and customs areas and a central waiting area split into two equal sections containing overall seven departure gates for bus boarding.[36]

Terminal 2 edit

Terminal 2 was officially opened on 27 December 2006 with the symbolic arrival of Bulgaria Air flight FB 408 from Brussels. It was one of the biggest projects in Bulgaria to receive funds from the EU ISPA programme. The price included the new terminal, new aircraft parking aprons, upgrading the existing aircraft parking aprons and the construction of connecting taxiways. The terminal has seven air-bridges (gates A1, B5–9 and C1), 38 check-in desks and covers an area of 50,000 m2 (540,000 sq ft) and has a car park for 820 vehicles. It is located to the east of Terminal 1 and is significantly bigger than the old one which continues to serve low-cost and charter airlines. From 16 January 2017 on Terminal 2 currently serves only one low-cost airline - Ryanair.[37]

For the first time in Bulgaria, a terminal has airbridge-equipped gates instead of relying on airside buses.

At the eastern end of the Terminal, a terminus for Line 1 of the Sofia Metro has been built under the name Sofia Airport Metro Station. It was brought into service on 2 April 2015. The journey between airport and central Sofia takes about 20 minutes with service provided during 05:30-24:00 hrs.[15]

The infrastructure surrounding the building was expected to be completed in 2007. It includes a new dual carriageway road connecting the terminal to the existing airport road, and landscaping including an artificial lake and a fountain. Terminal 2 is designed with special attention to disabled passengers. Their access to the different terminal levels and the multi-storey car park is facilitated via lifts and escalators.[38]

Terminal 3 edit

Terminal 1 and Terminal 2 will be redesigned so that passengers feel "immersed in Bulgarian culture". This is the development plan of the SOF Connect consortium, which won the concession at Sofia Airport. The new Terminal 3 will be built by 2030. This will be the main focus for this period and will be implemented along with the usage of Terminal 1 for VIP and business aviation services only.[39]

Other facilities edit

The VIP terminal is located in the western wing of Terminal 1 and has an entrance of its own, providing an access to four separate rooms – one main room and two separated rooms with about 20 seats each.[40]

The Government terminal is located in the western side of Sofia Airport. The terminal is operated by the 28th Air Detachment which operates government aircraft and operations involving the President, Prime Minister and other high-ranking government officials.

Airlines and destinations edit

In 1937 Sofia was used on a route from Berlin to Athens[41] and by 1938 regular direct flights linked Sofia to Belgrade.[8] Just before the end of the one-party socialist state at the end of the 1980s BALKAN (Bulgarian Airlines) were operating both domestic, and mainly European international routes, to numerous destinations, carrying 2.8m passengers.[42] The airport is used for scheduled, charter and seasonal operations on many European routes and on several further afield.[43]

The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights to and from Sofia:[44]

AirlinesDestinations
Aegean Airlines Athens
airBaltic Seasonal: Riga[45][46]
Air Serbia Belgrade
Austrian Airlines Vienna
Arkia Seasonal: Tel Aviv[47]
Azerbaijan Airlines Seasonal: Baku (begins 7 June 2024)[48]
BH Air[49] Seasonal charter: Antalya, Bari, Cairo, Djerba, Enfidha, Hurghada, Larnaca, Nevşehir, Sharm El Sheikh
British Airways London–Heathrow
Bulgaria Air[50] Amsterdam, Athens, Berlin, Brussels, Frankfurt, London–Heathrow, Madrid, Milan–Malpensa,[51] Paris–Charles de Gaulle, Prague, Rome–Fiumicino, Tel Aviv,[52] Varna, Zürich
Seasonal: Barcelona,[53] Burgas, Heraklion, Larnaca, Lisbon,[51] Málaga, Palma de Mallorca
Seasonal charter: Agadir,[54] Hambantota–Mattala,[55] Hurghada,[56] Mahé,[57] Mauritius,[58] Sal,[59] Sharm El Sheikh[56]
Corendon Airlines Seasonal charter: Antalya[60]
easyJet London–Gatwick, Manchester
Seasonal: Bristol
El Al Tel Aviv
European Air Charter Seasonal charter: Antalya,[61] Aqaba,[62] Bahrain,[63] Bodrum,[64] Cairo,[65] Dalaman,[66] Djerba,[67] Fès,[68] Hurghada,[69] Lamezia Terme,[70][71] Marrakesh,[72] Marsa Alam,[73]Mombasa,[74] Nevşehir,[75] Olbia,[71][76] Sharm El Sheikh,[77] Tirana,[78] Tivat,[79] Zanzibar[80]
flydubai Dubai–International
GullivAir Seasonal charter: Mexico City–AIFA[81]
Israir Airlines Seasonal: Tel Aviv[47]
ITA Airways Rome–Fiumicino
Jet2.com[69] Seasonal charter: Belfast–International, Bristol, East Midlands, London–Gatwick, Manchester, Newcastle upon Tyne
LOT Polish Airlines Warsaw–Chopin
Lufthansa Frankfurt, Munich
Norwegian Air Shuttle Seasonal: Helsinki (begins 3 June 2024),[82] Oslo[83]
Pegasus Airlines Antalya, Istanbul–Sabiha Gökçen[84]
Qatar Airways Doha
Ryanair[85] Alicante,[86] Barcelona, Bari, Beauvais, Bergamo, Berlin, Birmingham, Bologna, Bristol, Budapest, Catania, Charleroi, Cologne/Bonn, Copenhagen,[86] Dublin, Edinburgh, Eindhoven, Karlsruhe/Baden-Baden, Liverpool, London–Stansted, Madrid, Málaga, Malta, Memmingen, Naples, Nuremberg, Paphos, Rome–Ciampino, Tel Aviv, Treviso, Valencia, Vienna, Wrocław,
Seasonal: Bratislava,[87] Chania, Corfu, Palma de Mallorca, Rhodes,[88] Skiathos (begins 1 June 2024),[89] Zadar, Zagreb
Sky Express Athens
SkyUp Seasonal: Kyiv–Boryspil (suspended)[90]
SunExpress Seasonal: Antalya[91]
Swiss International Air Lines Zürich
TAROM Bucharest–Otopeni
TUI Airways[92] Seasonal: Birmingham, London–Gatwick, Manchester
Seasonal charter: Dublin[93]
Turkish Airlines Istanbul
Windrose Airlines Kyiv–Boryspil (suspended)[94]
Wizz Air[95] Alicante, Barcelona, Bari, Basel/Mulhouse, Beauvais, Bergamo, Bologna, Catania, Charleroi, Copenhagen, Dortmund, Eindhoven, Geneva, Hahn, Hamburg, Heraklion (begins 24 June 2024)[96], Larnaca, Lisbon, London–Luton, Madrid, Málaga, Memmingen, Naples, Nice, Rome–Fiumicino[97], Tel Aviv[98], Valencia, Yerevan
Seasonal: Abu Dhabi, Stockholm–Skavsta[99]

Cargo edit

Statistics edit

Traffic edit

Annual passenger traffic at SOF airport. See Wikidata query.
Traffic at Sofia Airport
Year Passengers Change Cargo (tonnes) Change Aircraft movements Change
1998 1,250,700   10,180   24,726  
1999 1,236,610  1.1% 12,378  21.6% 25,178  1.8%
2000 1,127,866  8.8% 11,036  10.8% 24,785  1.6%
2001 1,107,682  1.8% 10,381  5.9% 21,860  11.8%
2002 1,214,198  9.6% 12,482  20.2% 24,211  10.8%
2003 1,356,469  11.7% 13,461  7.8% 25,517  5.4%
2004 1,614,304  19.0% 14,472  7.5% 28,700  12.5%
2005 1,874,000  16.1% 14,725  1.7% 32,188  12.2%
2006 2,209,350  17.9% 15,241  3.5% 38,119  18.4%
2007 2,745,880  24.3% 17,392  14.1% 43,005  12.8%
2008 3,230,696  17.7% 18,294  5.2% 48,626  13.1%
2009 3,134,657  3.0% 15,093  17.5% 45,698  6.0%
2010 3,296,936  5.2% 15,322  1.5% 47,061  3.0%
2011 3,474,933  5.4% 15,887  3.7% 47,153  0.2%
2012 3,467,455  0.2% 16,249  2.3% 40,806  9.0%
2013 3,504,326  1.1% 17,039  4.9% 40,526  0.7%
2014 3,815,158  8.9% 17,741  4.1% 42,120  4.0%
2015 4,088,943  7.2% 18,727  5.6% 44,416  5.5%
2016 4,979,760  21.8% 20,886  11.5% 51,829  16.7%
2017 6,490,096  30.3% 20,818  0.3% 57,673  11.3%
2018 6,962,040  7.3% 22,251  6.6% 60,771  5.4%
2019 7,107,096  2.1% 23,987  7.8% 61,371  1%
2020 2,937,846  58.7% 23,042  3.9% 35,954  41.4%
2021 3,364,151  14.5% 21,141  8.3% 40,771  13.4%
2022 6,003,653[102]  78.4% 20,528[102]  2.8% 53,722[102]  31.7%
2023 7,208,987[103]  20.8% 19,688  4.1% 60,561  12.6%
2024 (29.02) 1,089,055  7.6% 3,294  7.0% 9,290  9.6%[104]

Busiest destinations edit

Top 10 busiest destinations at Sofia Airport (2023)[105][106]
Rank Destination Airport(s) Airlines Passengers
1.   London Heathrow Airport, Gatwick Airport, London–Luton Airport, Stansted Airport British Airways, Bulgaria Air, easyJet, Ryanair, Wizz Air 431,439
2.   Vienna Vienna Airport Austrian Airlines, Bulgaria Air, Ryanair 178,720
3.   Frankfurt Frankfurt Airport, Frankfurt-Hahn Airport Bulgaria Air, Lufthansa, Wizz Air 161,149
4.   Milan Orio al Serio Airport Ryanair, Wizz Air 136,534
5.   Istanbul Istanbul Airport Turkish Airlines 133,337
6.   Tel Aviv Ben Gurion Airport Arkia, Bulgaria Air, El Al, Ryanair, Wizz Air 124,294
7.   Varna Varna Airport Bulgaria Air, Ryanair 115,710
8.   Rome Ciampino–G. B. Pastine Airport, Leonardo da Vinci–Fiumicino Airport Bulgaria Air, ITA Airways, Ryanair, Wizz Air 115,358
9.   Munich Memmingen Airport, Munich Airport Lufthansa, Ryanair, Wizz Air 115,200
10.   Eindhoven Eindhoven Airport Ryanair, Wizz Air 100,653

Top carriers edit

Rank Carrier Market share (2021)[107]
1   Wizz Air 29.3%
2   Ryanair 24.8%
3   Bulgaria Air 15.9%
4   Lufthansa 8.6%
5   Turkish Airlines 3.9%
6   Austrian Airlines 3.2%
7   Aegean Airlines 1.8%
8   easyJet 1.8%
9   LOT Polish Airlines 1.4%
10   flydubai 1.3%

Ground transportation edit

Metro edit

 
Sofia Airport Metro Station

Sofia Airport Metro Station on the M4 line is situated next to Terminal 2 and provides connections to the city centre.[108]

A free shuttle bus service between Terminal 1 and Terminal 2 runs from 05:00 until 23:00, connecting arriving and departing passengers from Terminal 1 to metro services.[109]

Sofia Metro also provides a fast connection between the airport and Business Park Sofia, through interchange at Mladost 1 Metro Station to the M1 line.[110]

Bus edit

Two bus routes serve the airport. Bus line 84 and bus line 184 connect both terminals to the city centre. Bus line 84 starts its route from Terminal 2 of Sofia Airport, passing through Terminal 1 of Sofia Airport on its way to the city centre. The route of bus line 184, on the other hand, starts from Terminal 1 of Sofia Airport, passing through Terminal 2 of Sofia Airport on its way to the city centre.[111]

Car edit

Brussels Boulevard is the main thoroughfare to Sofia Airport. There is a new, faster road connection built from Terminal 2 to Brussels Boulevard.[112]

Via Brussels Boulevard and Tsarigradsko shose, Sofia Airport is connected to both the city centre and eastbound destinations via Trakia motorway (A1)  

From the northern parts of Sofia, Sofia Airport is conveniently accessible via the East Tangent route. Its junction with Botevgradsko Shose provides access to northbound destinations via Hemus motorway (A2)  [113]

Connecting to the southern parts of Sofia and Southwestern Bulgaria is the route via Brussels Boulevard and Boulevard Aleksandar Malinov to Sofia ring road   which has an interchange with southbound Struma motorway (A3)  

Train edit

A railway station at Iskarsko shose was inaugurated in April 2015, providing faster interchange from the airport to southbound services on the Bulgarian national railway system. Situated about 2.5 km (2 mi) from Terminal 2, the train station is accessible via a short trip to Iskarsko shose Metro Station which is two stops away from Sofia Airport Metro Station on the M4 line.[114]

Taxi edit

As of May 2023, Yellow! taxi company has been officially selected as the official and licensed operator for a period of five years, with a possibility of further extension with 3 more, following a tender with other larger taxi companies. Starting 1 January 2025, a minimum of 5% of the monthly taxi journeys operated from the airport should be conducted using electric vehicles and a year later the percentage should be increased to 10%.[115]

Airport transfers edit

Passengers arriving at Sofia Airport could order an individual airport transfer to any point in Sofia City or the country. Private companies usually do this and the price varies according to the destination and the individual wishes of the client. There are many companies that offer reliable airport transfers.[116]

Incidents and accidents edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Kamenov, Kalin (19 April 2021). "Концесионерът влиза във владение на Летище "София", плати 660 млн. лева". Dir.bg (in Bulgarian). Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  2. ^ "EUROCONTROL - The European AIS Database: Introduction to EAD Basic - Home". www.ead.eurocontrol.int. Retrieved 20 November 2022.
  3. ^ Thompson, Rossi (29 September 2017). "Maison Sofia Hotel Review, Bulgaria". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 5 February 2022. Sofia Airport is about six miles (10 kilometres) away [...].
  4. ^ Goranova, Kalina (30 January 2022). "Пътниците на летище София са с 3.8 млн. по-малко в сравнение с 2019 г." Capital (in Bulgarian). Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  5. ^ Yanakiev, Diliyan (12 April 2019). "Ден на отворените врати в авиобаза Враждебна". Stolica.bg (in Bulgarian). Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  6. ^ . 9 November 2014. Archived from the original on 7 January 2019. Retrieved 7 January 2019.
  7. ^ a b . Sofia-airport.bg. Archived from the original on 23 December 2021. Retrieved 9 May 2017.
  8. ^ a b admin (17 June 2010). "Drustvo za Vazdusni Saobracaj A D – Aeroput (1927-1948) – European Airlines". Retrieved 20 November 2022.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g "First-class upgrade to Bulgaria's international gateway". Ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 3 June 2015.
  10. ^ Lofaro, Tony (22 June 1991). "Travel notes". The Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved 17 September 2022.
  11. ^ Lofaro, Tony (18 May 1991). "Flying direct to Bulgaria". The Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved 18 September 2022.
  12. ^ "New York-Sofia air link launched". The Ottawa Citizen. 27 July 1991. Retrieved 18 June 2023.
  13. ^ Mladenov, Alex (2 July 2021). "The Rise and Fall of Balkan Bulgarian Airlines". Key Aero. Retrieved 18 June 2023.
  14. ^ Vasileva, Maria (16 March 2006). ""Хемус Ер" заема пазарните ниши, оставени от "Балкан"". Mediapool.bg (in Bulgarian). Retrieved 17 September 2022.
  15. ^ a b DVV Media UK. "Sofia airport metro link opens". Railway Gazette. Retrieved 3 June 2015.
  16. ^ "Bulgaria opens 35-year concession tender for Sofia Airport". Seenews.com. 3 June 2016.
  17. ^ "Bulgaria launches tender to operate Sofia airport". Reuters. 17 May 2016. Retrieved 18 May 2016.
  18. ^ "Bulgaria signs concession contract for Sofia Airport". Sofiaglobe.com. 22 July 2020.
  19. ^ "SOF Connect официално стана концесионер на летище София". Avioforum.com. 20 April 2021.
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External links edit

  Media related to Sofia Airport at Wikimedia Commons

  • Official website

sofia, airport, iata, icao, lbsf, bulgarian, Летище, София, romanized, letishte, sofiya, main, international, airport, bulgaria, located, east, centre, capital, sofia, 2019, airport, surpassed, million, passengers, first, time, airport, serves, home, base, bul. Sofia Airport IATA SOF ICAO LBSF Bulgarian Letishe Sofiya romanized Letishte Sofiya is the main international airport of Bulgaria located 10 km 6 2 mi east of the centre of the capital Sofia 3 In 2019 the airport surpassed 7 million passengers for the first time 4 The airport serves as the home base for BH Air Bulgaria Air European Air Charter and GullivAir and as a base for both Ryanair and Wizz Air The airport also houses the Bulgarian Air Force s Vrazhdebna Air Base 5 Sofia AirportLetishe SofiyaIATA SOFICAO LBSFSummaryAirport typePublicOwnerState ownedOperatorSOF Connect AD 1 ServesSofiaLocationSofia BulgariaOpened16 September 1937 1937 09 16 Hub forBH Air Bulgaria Air European Air Charter Ryanair Wizz AirTime zoneEET UTC 2 Summer DST EEST UTC 3 Elevation AMSL531 m 1 742 ftCoordinates42 41 42 N 023 24 30 E 42 69500 N 23 40833 E 42 69500 23 40833Websitewww wbr sofia airport wbr euMapSOFLocation in BulgariaRunwaysDirection Length Surface m ft 09 27 3 600 11 811 AsphaltStatistics 2023 Passengers7 208 987Passenger change 22 2320 8 Aircraft movements60 561Movements change 22 2312 6 Cargo t 19 688Cargo change 22 234 1 Source Bulgarian AIP at EUROCONTROL 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1 2 Development since the 1990s 1 3 Airport reconstruction 2 Infrastructure 2 1 Control tower 2 2 Runway system 2 3 Lufthansa Technik Sofia 2 4 Rose Air Technik 2 5 Vrazhdebna Air Base 3 Terminals 3 1 Terminal 1 3 2 Terminal 2 3 3 Terminal 3 3 4 Other facilities 4 Airlines and destinations 4 1 Cargo 5 Statistics 5 1 Traffic 5 2 Busiest destinations 5 3 Top carriers 6 Ground transportation 6 1 Metro 6 2 Bus 6 3 Car 6 4 Train 6 5 Taxi 6 6 Airport transfers 7 Incidents and accidents 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory editEarly years edit On 16 September 1937 Tsar Boris III signed a decree which declared land within the Village of Vrazhdebna be allocated for the construction of an airport Construction then began on the site which was 11 km 6 8 mi from the city centre Two years later in 1939 Sofia Airport opened its first passenger waiting room and after another two years was followed by a fully constructed airfield with a fully paved runway 6 7 From June through September 1938 Yugoslav airline Aeroput connected Sofia with Belgrade thrice weekly using Lockheed Model 10 Electra planes 8 During the Second World War the facilities were used by the military Mail perishable freight and passenger operations began in 1947 from buildings on the north side of the airport The passenger terminal now Terminal 1 on the south side was completed during the Second World War in the manner of a then modern European railway terminus to designs by the architect Ivan Marangozov It opened after several years of delay in 1947 The structure comprised a government wing to the west an international handling area in the middle and a domestic handling area to the east At that time it was planned that the airport would eventually have two intersecting runways at a 30 degree angle to each other citation needed The terminal had substantially reached its capacity of some 600 000 passengers a year by the later 1960s and was subjected to a number of refurbishments and extensions beginning in the spring of 1968 In 1975 a new international arrivals handling extension was opened to the west of the building the domestic area to the east was enlarged the government handling area was removed to a dedicated terminal some distance to the west a VIP handling area opened in the old terminal apron area was extended to the east and new taxiways opened A bonded warehouse opened to the east of the terminal square in 1969 and several new hangars followed to the east of the first maintenance base in the 1970s A new checked baggage handling system opened to the north of the building in the early 1980s cosmetic and traffic reorganising refurbishments were carried out in 1990 with a substantial landside extension following in 2000 9 By the late 1970s the terminal was handling in the region of three million passengers a year a million of them on domestic routes Passenger numbers fell off sharply after the 1979 CMEA Comecon oil price shock and recovered to just over a million a year by the late 1980s In the early and mid 1990s domestic traffic practically ceased while foreign traffic reduced significantly The latter began growing apace in the late 1990s and early 2000s to reach its current levels The terminal was last refurbished partially in 1990 In 2000 it underwent a wholesale update in which the international arrivals area was moved to the east wing where domestic handling had been the former international arrivals area to the west was closed and the layout of the central international departures area was changed in line with world developments Despite the work to the old terminal the airport was becoming overwhelmed with passenger traffic 9 Options for different airport developments began to be examined in the mid 1960s One option was to relocate the facility to a new site with some locations up to 70 km 43 mi from Sofia citation needed Another option involved extending the airport s area radically to the north east and gradually removing the focus of the airport there A third option was to develop substantially the same site By the later 1980s the authorities had settled on the last option citation needed Development since the 1990s edit nbsp Old Sofia Airport logo used until 2022 Jes Air launched a flight to Ottawa using Airbus A310s in June 1991 10 11 12 The following December Balkan Bulgarian Airlines commenced direct service to New York City aboard Boeing 767s 13 14 Project design involving a new terminal to the east of the old facility a new runway to the north of and parallel to the existing runway and taxiways was completed by the mid 1990s A finance package involving very significant European and Kuwaiti investment was initially agreed in 1998 and was in place by 2000 Work began in 2001 The new runway and some taxiways were completed in mid 2006 Terminal 2 was formally inaugurated on 27 December 2006 9 Design and construction of a new control tower was discussed in 2006 but this project appeared to be in abeyance by 2008 Over the years Sofia Airport has been criticised for its lack of world class air freight facilities and for some access problems Passengers to and from the Bulgarian interior have to access or egress the airport through crowded rail and coach facilities in central Sofia A rail link has been discussed on several occasions since the 1960s The next best thing perhaps was the extension of Sofia Metro Line 1 some 5 km from Blvd Tsarigradsko shose This was opened on 2 April 2015 under the name Sofia Airport Metro Station 15 The airport metro station is adjacent to Terminal 2 Connection with terminal 1 is by free shuttle bus The airport is occasionally criticised as a source of environmental noise and pollution and strict noise abatement procedures have been enforced for departing traffic since the mid 1970s while arriving traffic is generally routed to approach the field from the east clear of Sofia 9 A significant and recurring operational criticism of Sofia Airport has concerned its historical lack of all weather operations capability Though the new runway was designed for ICAO Category 3 operations in 2007 it emerged that radio interference from security fencing and most significantly from a large newly built lorry park prevented certification and hence use of the associated radio navigational aids During the winter months the airport located on a high alluvial plain surrounded by mountains suffers from very significant and frequent fog precipitation In such circumstances flights are redirected to diversion airports in Bulgaria or neighbouring countries lengthening journeys by many hours 9 On 3 June 2016 the Bulgarian government launched a tender for the operation of Sofia Airport 16 Expected to bring in 1 2 billion lev 600 million euro to the state over 35 years the tender has reportedly attracted interest from the operators of airports in Munich Frankfurt Zurich Lyon Dublin and London Heathrow and as well as other operators 17 As of 22 July 2020 the concessionaire of Sofia Airport is the Sof Connect consortium consisting of the French investment fund Meridiam 99 stake and Austria s Strabag 1 stake The concession period runs for 35 years The airport s operator for the first 12 years of the concession period will be Munich Airport International 18 On 20 April 2021 SOF Connect AD officially became the concessionaire of the airport 19 Airport reconstruction edit nbsp A model of the new airport terminal in the departures hall As a result of growing air traffic and passenger numbers the airport facilities struggled to cope despite several expansions in the years prior Planning began in the 1990s for a new terminal to be constructed at the airport The new runway was offset from the old by 210 m 690 ft with the eastern end crossing the Iskar River bed on a specially constructed bridge New taxiways were also constructed allowing for 22 aircraft movements per hour The old runway was then to be used as a taxiway only 20 The new runway and taxiways were opened in mid 2006 and Terminal 2 formally opened in late 2006 9 The total cost of the project was planned at 200 million euros Finance was secured in 1997 98 from the European Investment Bank 60 million euro Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development 12 3 million Kuwaiti dinars approximately 41 5 million euro and the European Union PHARE Programme 7 6 million euro In August 2000 an ISPA grant of 50 million euro was allocated and in December the financing memorandum was signed 9 The construction works were in two lots the new terminal with its surrounding infrastructure and the new runway The first lot was allocated to the German branch of Austrian company Strabag 21 while the second was won by a consortium of Kuwaiti company Mohamed Abdulmohsin al Kharafi amp Sons and UAE based Admak General Contracting Company 22 The initial completion deadline for the new terminal was 15 December 2004 to a total budget of 112 2 million euro Immediately after work started Strabag contested the geological surveys by Dutch consultants NACO B V and demanded additional funding for unexpected additional works The delay was ten months and construction resumed after the Bulgarian government agreed to augment the project s value by 4 8 million euro and extend the deadline to 31 August 2005 23 In 2004 Strabag demanded an additional 6 million euro due to rising steel prices 24 The Ministry of Transportation rejected the claim backed by a report from NACO In May 2005 the contractor threatened to take the case to international arbitration 25 In August 2005 it became clear that Strabag would not be able to meet the changed deadline slippage being put at six to eight weeks 26 In November 2005 Strabag asked for eight months further extension 27 Infrastructure editControl tower edit nbsp The 2012 air traffic control tower A new 50 m 160 ft 20 control tower was inaugurated officially on 5 December 2012 by the PM Boyko Borisov and the minister of transport Ivaylo Moskovski 28 The tower was built by Glavbolgarstroy AD The contract for building the tower was signed on 19 August 2011 in the presence of Ivaylo Moskovski minister of transport information technology and communications the BULATSA director general Diyan Dinev Glavbolgarstroy AD chief executive director Pavel Kalistratov and Glavbolgarstroy AD executive director and management board member Nina Stoyanova signed the design execution and construction contract between BULATSA and Glavbolgarstroy AD for the new control tower at Sofia Airport Sofia tower 29 Glavbolgartroy AD were selected as contractor as they were awarded the highest technical rating during the public procurement procedure having proposed the shortest construction timeframe This project was financed entirely by BULATSA Runway system edit On 31 August 2006 Sofia Airport put its new runway system into operation replacing the old and out of date facilities The new runway is offset 210 m 690 ft to the north of the old runway with the eastern end of its 3 600 m 11 811 ft long strip crossing over the Iskar river bed on a specially constructed bridge New rapid and connecting taxiways were built to open way for 20 aircraft movements per hour at a high level of safety The navigational aids installed on the new runway enable landing operations under low visibility conditions at category IIIB of the ICAO standards 7 Two de icing platforms were constructed to allow centralised de icing procedures in winter They are one element in the overall strategy of Sofia Airport for environmental protection and reduction of the harmful effects resulting from the airport operations At the moment there is another de icing platform under construction when Lufthansa Technik Sofia edit nbsp Lufthansa Technik maintenance base at Sofia Airport Lufthansa Technik Sofia was founded in late 2007 as a joint venture between Lufthansa Technik 75 1 and the Bulgarian Aviation Group 24 9 30 With the foundation of Lufthansa Technik Sofia the Lufthansa Technik Group has created a fifth platform for the overhaul and maintenance of narrowbody aircraft in Europe The Bulgarian facility serves customers in Europe the Middle East and North Africa The facility has undergone a major reconstruction and an upgrade and now can handle the heaviest stage of aircraft maintenance checks D Check that is now being carried out in Bulgaria The company have started with more than 350 staff trained in Bulgaria and at Lufthansa Technik facilities in Shannon Base Maintenance operations in the fourth quarter of 2008 with one Airbus A321 from Lufthansa as the first customer 31 At the moment the facility in Sofia has more than 1100 employees and plans by the 2018 to hire another 200 employees to reach a total of 1300 employees The company have completed the building of a new facility in October 2017 which will be used for the maintenance of wide bodied aircraft and is able to handle Airbus A380 32 With the completion of the new hangar now Lufthansa Technik Sofia has 8 production lines which is turning the Bulgarian unit into the biggest unit of Lufthansa Technik Rose Air Technik edit On 4 July 2018 Rose Air in cooperation with Wizz Air opened a new maintenance base at Sofia Airport 33 It is located at the northern part of the airport The hangar lies on 5000 square meters and has three production lines with overall capacity of 300 planes per year and it can handle C Check The base started with more than 100 staff This will be the first maintenance base for Wizz Air in the Balkans and the fourth in Europe 34 Vrazhdebna Air Base edit The Vrazhdebna Air Base also Vrajdebna Air Base is located at the airport Operated by the Bulgarian Air Force it is home to the 16th Transport Squadron 35 Terminals edit nbsp Inside Terminal 1 nbsp Interior of Terminal 2 Terminal 1 edit This terminal was built in the 1930s and opened on 16 September 1937 It has been extended many times and had a renovation in 2000 Terminal 1 serves low cost and charter carriers with Wizz Air easyJet and European Air Charter being the primary tenants This smaller of the two terminals consisting of only one main level features a central check in hall with 19 counters two security screening and customs areas and a central waiting area split into two equal sections containing overall seven departure gates for bus boarding 36 Terminal 2 edit Terminal 2 was officially opened on 27 December 2006 with the symbolic arrival of Bulgaria Air flight FB 408 from Brussels It was one of the biggest projects in Bulgaria to receive funds from the EU ISPA programme The price included the new terminal new aircraft parking aprons upgrading the existing aircraft parking aprons and the construction of connecting taxiways The terminal has seven air bridges gates A1 B5 9 and C1 38 check in desks and covers an area of 50 000 m2 540 000 sq ft and has a car park for 820 vehicles It is located to the east of Terminal 1 and is significantly bigger than the old one which continues to serve low cost and charter airlines From 16 January 2017 on Terminal 2 currently serves only one low cost airline Ryanair 37 For the first time in Bulgaria a terminal has airbridge equipped gates instead of relying on airside buses At the eastern end of the Terminal a terminus for Line 1 of the Sofia Metro has been built under the name Sofia Airport Metro Station It was brought into service on 2 April 2015 The journey between airport and central Sofia takes about 20 minutes with service provided during 05 30 24 00 hrs 15 The infrastructure surrounding the building was expected to be completed in 2007 It includes a new dual carriageway road connecting the terminal to the existing airport road and landscaping including an artificial lake and a fountain Terminal 2 is designed with special attention to disabled passengers Their access to the different terminal levels and the multi storey car park is facilitated via lifts and escalators 38 Terminal 3 edit Terminal 1 and Terminal 2 will be redesigned so that passengers feel immersed in Bulgarian culture This is the development plan of the SOF Connect consortium which won the concession at Sofia Airport The new Terminal 3 will be built by 2030 This will be the main focus for this period and will be implemented along with the usage of Terminal 1 for VIP and business aviation services only 39 Other facilities edit The VIP terminal is located in the western wing of Terminal 1 and has an entrance of its own providing an access to four separate rooms one main room and two separated rooms with about 20 seats each 40 The Government terminal is located in the western side of Sofia Airport The terminal is operated by the 28th Air Detachment which operates government aircraft and operations involving the President Prime Minister and other high ranking government officials Airlines and destinations editIn 1937 Sofia was used on a route from Berlin to Athens 41 and by 1938 regular direct flights linked Sofia to Belgrade 8 Just before the end of the one party socialist state at the end of the 1980s BALKAN Bulgarian Airlines were operating both domestic and mainly European international routes to numerous destinations carrying 2 8m passengers 42 The airport is used for scheduled charter and seasonal operations on many European routes and on several further afield 43 The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights to and from Sofia 44 AirlinesDestinationsAegean AirlinesAthensairBalticSeasonal Riga 45 46 Air SerbiaBelgradeAustrian AirlinesViennaArkiaSeasonal Tel Aviv 47 Azerbaijan AirlinesSeasonal Baku begins 7 June 2024 48 BH Air 49 Seasonal charter Antalya Bari Cairo Djerba Enfidha Hurghada Larnaca Nevsehir Sharm El SheikhBritish AirwaysLondon HeathrowBulgaria Air 50 Amsterdam Athens Berlin Brussels Frankfurt London Heathrow Madrid Milan Malpensa 51 Paris Charles de Gaulle Prague Rome Fiumicino Tel Aviv 52 Varna Zurich Seasonal Barcelona 53 Burgas Heraklion Larnaca Lisbon 51 Malaga Palma de Mallorca Seasonal charter Agadir 54 Hambantota Mattala 55 Hurghada 56 Mahe 57 Mauritius 58 Sal 59 Sharm El Sheikh 56 Corendon AirlinesSeasonal charter Antalya 60 easyJetLondon Gatwick Manchester Seasonal BristolEl AlTel AvivEuropean Air CharterSeasonal charter Antalya 61 Aqaba 62 Bahrain 63 Bodrum 64 Cairo 65 Dalaman 66 Djerba 67 Fes 68 Hurghada 69 Lamezia Terme 70 71 Marrakesh 72 Marsa Alam 73 Mombasa 74 Nevsehir 75 Olbia 71 76 Sharm El Sheikh 77 Tirana 78 Tivat 79 Zanzibar 80 flydubaiDubai InternationalGullivAirSeasonal charter Mexico City AIFA 81 Israir AirlinesSeasonal Tel Aviv 47 ITA AirwaysRome FiumicinoJet2 com 69 Seasonal charter Belfast International Bristol East Midlands London Gatwick Manchester Newcastle upon TyneLOT Polish AirlinesWarsaw ChopinLufthansaFrankfurt MunichNorwegian Air ShuttleSeasonal Helsinki begins 3 June 2024 82 Oslo 83 Pegasus AirlinesAntalya Istanbul Sabiha Gokcen 84 Qatar AirwaysDohaRyanair 85 Alicante 86 Barcelona Bari Beauvais Bergamo Berlin Birmingham Bologna Bristol Budapest Catania Charleroi Cologne Bonn Copenhagen 86 Dublin Edinburgh Eindhoven Karlsruhe Baden Baden Liverpool London Stansted Madrid Malaga Malta Memmingen Naples Nuremberg Paphos Rome Ciampino Tel Aviv Treviso Valencia Vienna Wroclaw Seasonal Bratislava 87 Chania Corfu Palma de Mallorca Rhodes 88 Skiathos begins 1 June 2024 89 Zadar ZagrebSky ExpressAthensSkyUpSeasonal Kyiv Boryspil suspended 90 SunExpressSeasonal Antalya 91 Swiss International Air LinesZurichTAROMBucharest OtopeniTUI Airways 92 Seasonal Birmingham London Gatwick Manchester Seasonal charter Dublin 93 Turkish AirlinesIstanbulWindrose AirlinesKyiv Boryspil suspended 94 Wizz Air 95 Alicante Barcelona Bari Basel Mulhouse Beauvais Bergamo Bologna Catania Charleroi Copenhagen Dortmund Eindhoven Geneva Hahn Hamburg Heraklion begins 24 June 2024 96 Larnaca Lisbon London Luton Madrid Malaga Memmingen Naples Nice Rome Fiumicino 97 Tel Aviv 98 Valencia Yerevan Seasonal Abu Dhabi Stockholm Skavsta 99 Cargo edit AirlinesDestinationsDHL AviationLeipzig Halle 100 SwiftairCologne Bonn 101 Statistics editTraffic edit Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Annual passenger traffic at SOF airport See Wikidata query Traffic at Sofia Airport Year Passengers Change Cargo tonnes Change Aircraft movements Change 1998 1 250 700 nbsp 10 180 nbsp 24 726 nbsp 1999 1 236 610 nbsp 1 1 12 378 nbsp 21 6 25 178 nbsp 1 8 2000 1 127 866 nbsp 8 8 11 036 nbsp 10 8 24 785 nbsp 1 6 2001 1 107 682 nbsp 1 8 10 381 nbsp 5 9 21 860 nbsp 11 8 2002 1 214 198 nbsp 9 6 12 482 nbsp 20 2 24 211 nbsp 10 8 2003 1 356 469 nbsp 11 7 13 461 nbsp 7 8 25 517 nbsp 5 4 2004 1 614 304 nbsp 19 0 14 472 nbsp 7 5 28 700 nbsp 12 5 2005 1 874 000 nbsp 16 1 14 725 nbsp 1 7 32 188 nbsp 12 2 2006 2 209 350 nbsp 17 9 15 241 nbsp 3 5 38 119 nbsp 18 4 2007 2 745 880 nbsp 24 3 17 392 nbsp 14 1 43 005 nbsp 12 8 2008 3 230 696 nbsp 17 7 18 294 nbsp 5 2 48 626 nbsp 13 1 2009 3 134 657 nbsp 3 0 15 093 nbsp 17 5 45 698 nbsp 6 0 2010 3 296 936 nbsp 5 2 15 322 nbsp 1 5 47 061 nbsp 3 0 2011 3 474 933 nbsp 5 4 15 887 nbsp 3 7 47 153 nbsp 0 2 2012 3 467 455 nbsp 0 2 16 249 nbsp 2 3 40 806 nbsp 9 0 2013 3 504 326 nbsp 1 1 17 039 nbsp 4 9 40 526 nbsp 0 7 2014 3 815 158 nbsp 8 9 17 741 nbsp 4 1 42 120 nbsp 4 0 2015 4 088 943 nbsp 7 2 18 727 nbsp 5 6 44 416 nbsp 5 5 2016 4 979 760 nbsp 21 8 20 886 nbsp 11 5 51 829 nbsp 16 7 2017 6 490 096 nbsp 30 3 20 818 nbsp 0 3 57 673 nbsp 11 3 2018 6 962 040 nbsp 7 3 22 251 nbsp 6 6 60 771 nbsp 5 4 2019 7 107 096 nbsp 2 1 23 987 nbsp 7 8 61 371 nbsp 1 2020 2 937 846 nbsp 58 7 23 042 nbsp 3 9 35 954 nbsp 41 4 2021 3 364 151 nbsp 14 5 21 141 nbsp 8 3 40 771 nbsp 13 4 2022 6 003 653 102 nbsp 78 4 20 528 102 nbsp 2 8 53 722 102 nbsp 31 7 2023 7 208 987 103 nbsp 20 8 19 688 nbsp 4 1 60 561 nbsp 12 6 2024 29 02 1 089 055 nbsp 7 6 3 294 nbsp 7 0 9 290 nbsp 9 6 104 Busiest destinations edit Top 10 busiest destinations at Sofia Airport 2023 105 106 Rank Destination Airport s Airlines Passengers 1 nbsp London Heathrow Airport Gatwick Airport London Luton Airport Stansted Airport British Airways Bulgaria Air easyJet Ryanair Wizz Air 431 439 2 nbsp Vienna Vienna Airport Austrian Airlines Bulgaria Air Ryanair 178 720 3 nbsp Frankfurt Frankfurt Airport Frankfurt Hahn Airport Bulgaria Air Lufthansa Wizz Air 161 149 4 nbsp Milan Orio al Serio Airport Ryanair Wizz Air 136 534 5 nbsp Istanbul Istanbul Airport Turkish Airlines 133 337 6 nbsp Tel Aviv Ben Gurion Airport Arkia Bulgaria Air El Al Ryanair Wizz Air 124 294 7 nbsp Varna Varna Airport Bulgaria Air Ryanair 115 710 8 nbsp Rome Ciampino G B Pastine Airport Leonardo da Vinci Fiumicino Airport Bulgaria Air ITA Airways Ryanair Wizz Air 115 358 9 nbsp Munich Memmingen Airport Munich Airport Lufthansa Ryanair Wizz Air 115 200 10 nbsp Eindhoven Eindhoven Airport Ryanair Wizz Air 100 653 Top carriers edit Rank Carrier Market share 2021 107 1 nbsp Wizz Air 29 3 2 nbsp Ryanair 24 8 3 nbsp Bulgaria Air 15 9 4 nbsp Lufthansa 8 6 5 nbsp Turkish Airlines 3 9 6 nbsp Austrian Airlines 3 2 7 nbsp Aegean Airlines 1 8 8 nbsp easyJet 1 8 9 nbsp LOT Polish Airlines 1 4 10 nbsp flydubai 1 3 Ground transportation editMetro edit nbsp Sofia Airport Metro Station Sofia Airport Metro Station on the M4 line is situated next to Terminal 2 and provides connections to the city centre 108 A free shuttle bus service between Terminal 1 and Terminal 2 runs from 05 00 until 23 00 connecting arriving and departing passengers from Terminal 1 to metro services 109 Sofia Metro also provides a fast connection between the airport and Business Park Sofia through interchange at Mladost 1 Metro Station to the M1 line 110 Bus edit Two bus routes serve the airport Bus line 84 and bus line 184 connect both terminals to the city centre Bus line 84 starts its route from Terminal 2 of Sofia Airport passing through Terminal 1 of Sofia Airport on its way to the city centre The route of bus line 184 on the other hand starts from Terminal 1 of Sofia Airport passing through Terminal 2 of Sofia Airport on its way to the city centre 111 Car edit Brussels Boulevard is the main thoroughfare to Sofia Airport There is a new faster road connection built from Terminal 2 to Brussels Boulevard 112 Via Brussels Boulevard and Tsarigradsko shose Sofia Airport is connected to both the city centre and eastbound destinations via Trakia motorway A1 nbsp From the northern parts of Sofia Sofia Airport is conveniently accessible via the East Tangent route Its junction with Botevgradsko Shose provides access to northbound destinations via Hemus motorway A2 nbsp 113 Connecting to the southern parts of Sofia and Southwestern Bulgaria is the route via Brussels Boulevard and Boulevard Aleksandar Malinov to Sofia ring road nbsp which has an interchange with southbound Struma motorway A3 nbsp Train edit A railway station at Iskarsko shose was inaugurated in April 2015 providing faster interchange from the airport to southbound services on the Bulgarian national railway system Situated about 2 5 km 2 mi from Terminal 2 the train station is accessible via a short trip to Iskarsko shose Metro Station which is two stops away from Sofia Airport Metro Station on the M4 line 114 Taxi edit As of May 2023 Yellow taxi company has been officially selected as the official and licensed operator for a period of five years with a possibility of further extension with 3 more following a tender with other larger taxi companies Starting 1 January 2025 a minimum of 5 of the monthly taxi journeys operated from the airport should be conducted using electric vehicles and a year later the percentage should be increased to 10 115 Airport transfers edit Passengers arriving at Sofia Airport could order an individual airport transfer to any point in Sofia City or the country Private companies usually do this and the price varies according to the destination and the individual wishes of the client There are many companies that offer reliable airport transfers 116 Incidents and accidents editOn 22 December 1971 a Balkan Airlines Il 18 crashed en route to Algeria 28 people on board died citation needed On 22 November 1975 a Balkan Bulgarian airlines An 24 crashed short of the runway after take off in icy conditions Of the 48 people on board three were killed citation needed On 10 January 1984 a Balkan Bulgarian Airlines Tupolev Tu 134 crashed on approach in bad weather All 50 people on board died citation needed On 2 August 1988 a Balkan Airlines Yak 40 crashed in the Iskar river There were 29 fatalities among the 37 passengers on board 117 See also editList of airports in Bulgaria List of airlines of Bulgaria List of the busiest airports in Europe by passenger trafficReferences edit Kamenov Kalin 19 April 2021 Koncesionert vliza vv vladenie na Letishe Sofiya plati 660 mln leva Dir bg in Bulgarian Retrieved 5 February 2022 EUROCONTROL The European AIS Database Introduction to EAD Basic Home www ead eurocontrol int Retrieved 20 November 2022 Thompson Rossi 29 September 2017 Maison Sofia Hotel Review Bulgaria The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 5 February 2022 Sofia Airport is about six miles 10 kilometres away Goranova Kalina 30 January 2022 Ptnicite na letishe Sofiya sa s 3 8 mln po malko v sravnenie s 2019 g Capital in Bulgarian Retrieved 5 February 2022 Yanakiev Diliyan 12 April 2019 Den na otvorenite vrati v aviobaza Vrazhdebna Stolica bg in Bulgarian Retrieved 5 February 2022 HISTORY 9 November 2014 Archived from the original on 7 January 2019 Retrieved 7 January 2019 a b Before and today Sofia Airport Sofia airport bg Archived from the original on 23 December 2021 Retrieved 9 May 2017 a b admin 17 June 2010 Drustvo za Vazdusni Saobracaj A D Aeroput 1927 1948 European Airlines Retrieved 20 November 2022 a b c d e f g First class upgrade to Bulgaria s international gateway Ec europa eu Retrieved 3 June 2015 Lofaro Tony 22 June 1991 Travel notes The Ottawa Citizen Retrieved 17 September 2022 Lofaro Tony 18 May 1991 Flying direct to Bulgaria The Ottawa Citizen Retrieved 18 September 2022 New York Sofia air link launched The Ottawa Citizen 27 July 1991 Retrieved 18 June 2023 Mladenov Alex 2 July 2021 The Rise and Fall of Balkan Bulgarian Airlines Key Aero Retrieved 18 June 2023 Vasileva Maria 16 March 2006 Hemus Er zaema pazarnite nishi ostaveni ot Balkan Mediapool bg in Bulgarian Retrieved 17 September 2022 a b DVV Media UK Sofia airport metro link opens Railway Gazette Retrieved 3 June 2015 Bulgaria opens 35 year concession tender for Sofia Airport Seenews com 3 June 2016 Bulgaria launches tender to operate Sofia airport Reuters 17 May 2016 Retrieved 18 May 2016 Bulgaria signs concession contract for Sofia Airport Sofiaglobe com 22 July 2020 SOF Connect oficialno stana koncesioner na letishe Sofiya Avioforum com 20 April 2021 a b FOR DESIGNATION OF A CONCESSIONAIRE AND AWARDING A WORKS CONCESSION FOR CIVIL AIRPORT FOR PUBLIC USE SOFIA PUBLIC STATE PROPERTY TENDER DOCUMENTS PDF Concession sof bg July 2018 Archived from the original PDF on 23 December 2021 Retrieved 7 July 2022 the Sofia Echo Archived from the original on 24 June 2016 Retrieved 23 December 2007 Nenova Svetlana 9 July 2002 Arabski konsorcium she stroi novata pista na letishe Sofiya Dnevnik The Sofia Echo Sofiaecho com Retrieved 3 June 2015 Standart Novini koito si struva da spodelim Archived from the original on 22 October 2007 Retrieved 3 June 2015 Economedia En dnevnik bg Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 3 June 2015 Ministry of transportation Minister Mutafchiev met Strabag representatives Archived 4 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine in Bulgarian Economedia News dnevnik bg Archived from the original on 4 October 2008 Retrieved 3 June 2015 Sofia Airport New ATC Tower Able to Serve 2nd Runway Novinite com Retrieved 3 June 2015 Nova kula i brza pista na letisheto 24chasa bg 18 August 2011 Portrait Lufthansa Technik Sofia Lufthansa Technik AG Lufthansa technik com StackPath www aviationpros com 28 October 2008 Shushkov Vasil 26 October 2017 Lufthansa Technik prevrsha Sofiya v naj golyamata si baza za remont na samoleti v Evropa Money bg Wizz Air otkri hangar za samoleti v Sofiya Technews bg 4 July 2018 Capital bg 4 July 2018 Wizz Air she poddrzha samoletite si v nov hangar na letisheto v Sofiya Capital bg Retrieved 25 December 2018 Bulgarian Military Air Bases and Airfields Aeroflight co uk sofia airport eu Airport Maps retrieved 6 February 2023 Ryanair se mesti na noviya terminal na letishe Sofiya M capital bg 12 January 2017 Sofia Airport Archived from the original on 18 January 2009 Sofia Airport High Flyer at 85 bta bg Letishe Sofiya Archived from the original on 15 September 2012 Retrieved 27 September 2012 texte Commission internationale de navigation aerienne Auteur du 25 December 2018 Statistiques du trafic aerien Commission internationale de navigation aerienne Gallica Retrieved 25 December 2018 Paxton J 28 December 2016 The Statesman s Year Book 1989 90 Springer ISBN 9780230271180 Retrieved 25 December 2018 via Google Books Flight Information Sofia airport bg Archived from the original on 6 December 2015 Retrieved 25 December 2018 sofia airport eu Destinations retrieved 7 September 2022 airBaltic Announces 11 New Routes in Summer 2024 13 May 2023 Latvian airline airBaltic to start direct flights from Sofia Airport to Riga in May 2024 30 August 2023 a b Flight Board 24 October 2023 AZAL launches ticket sales for flights from Baku to Sofia 9 April 2024 Flight map Where we fly Balkanholidays co uk Development Studio X Creative Web Design Airline ticket Airline Bulgaria Air Airline Bulgaria Air Retrieved 20 November 2022 a b Bulgaria Air NS24 Network Additions 17DEC קוטלר עמית 3 March 2024 עוד חברה בדרך בולגריה אייר חוזרת לישראל פספורטניוז in Hebrew Retrieved 3 March 2024 Bulgaria Air Resumes Barcelona Service in NS23 Turoperatort Ekvator predlaga pochivki v Maroko ot septemvri Shri Lanka posreshna blgarskite turisti s voden salyut i trzhestvena programa 27 December 2023 a b Blgariya Er she leti do ekzotichnite Hurgada Luksor i Sharm el Shejh Bgonair bg Pochivka na Sejshelite s chartr 28 01 2022 i 25 02 2022 My Way Travel Mywaytravel bg Development Studio X Creative Web Design Blgariya Er izplni prviya direkten polet ot Sofiya do Mavricij Air bg Blgariya Er izplni istoricheski prvi polet mezhdu Blgariya i Kabo Verde Flightzone bg 24 October 2021 Archived from the original on 27 October 2021 Retrieved 24 October 2021 Chetiri novi destinacii se predlagat ot letishe Sofiya Travelnews bg RIXOS PREMIUM BELEK 5 Pochivka v Antaliya s chartren polet ot Sofiya Pochivka v Antaliya Turciya Ekvator bg JORDANIYa 2022 PLAZh i VLNUVAShI EKSKURZII s chartr ot Sofiya Pochivka v Akaba Jordaniya Welcometravel bg Profi turs puska chartri do Bahrejn i prez 2023 Delta Beach Resort 5 Pochivka v Bodrum s chartren polet ot Sofiya Pochivka v Bodrum Turciya Ekvator bg Egipet ot A do Ya s polet ot SOFIYa do KAJRO 2023 Luksozen Kruiz po Nil Kajro Hurgada Ekvator bg Grand Yazici Marmaris Palace 5 Pochivka v Marmaris s chartren polet ot Sofiya do Dalaman Pochivka v Marmaris Turciya Ekvator bg Pochivka na o Dzherba 2023 polet ot Sofiya Ekvator bg Maroko Ot A Do Ya Samoletna Ekskurziya S Direkten Polet Ot Sofiya Planet bg a b Airlines Sofia airport eu Retrieved 7 July 2022 Oferta za pochivka prez 2021 v Kalabriya Italiya ss samolet Pochivka v Italiya Kalabriya 7 noshuvki na Jonijskoto krajbrezhie Turoperator Rad Festa Rad festa com Retrieved 7 July 2022 a b Airlines Sofia airport eu Pochivki Maroko Maroko Abax bg Iberotel Costa Mares 5 All Inclusive Pochivka v Marsa Alam s polet ot Sofiya 7 noshuvki Pochivka v Marsa Alam Egipet Ekvator bg Za prvi pt letim do Keniya ot Sofiya Plovdiv24 bg 27 October 2021 Pochivki ot Sofiya v Kapadokiya Ekvator bg Pochivka v Sardiniya prez 2022 s polet ot Sofiya Pochivka v Sardiniya Italiya Odans travel com Tropitel Naama Bay 5 All Inclusive v Sharm el Shejh polet ot Sofiya Pochivka v Sharm el Shejh Ekvator bg Splendid Conference and Spa Resort 5 Pochivka v Cherna gora s polet do Tirana Pochivka v Budva Cherna Gora Ekvator bg Splendid Conference and Spa Resort 5 Pochivka v Cherna gora s polet do Tivat Pochivka v Budva Cherna Gora Ekvator bg Prvi chartr trgva utre za Keniya Travelnews bg Hito historico Mega Travel traera al AIFA vuelo charter de Bulgaria 18 December 2023 Norwegian NS24 Network Additions 14NOV23 AeroRoutes Norwegian NS23 Oslo Routes Addition 17NOV22 AeroRoutes Retrieved 20 November 2022 Niskotarifnata Pegasus Airlines otnovo she leti mezhdu Sofiya i Istanbul Timetable Ryanair com a b Dobri novini ot Ryanair Oshe 2 novi destinacii prez 2024 g 18 December 2023 Ryanair NW23 Network Changes 17SEP23 Nova destinaciya Ryanair she leti ot Sofiya do Rodos poleti she ima i do oshe dva grcki ostrova 3 February 2023 Direktni poleti Sofiya Skiatos GuideGR com 6 December 2023 European winter fairytale SkyUp started flights to Bulgaria Skyup aero 23 December 2020 Book cheap flights to Sofia SOF SunExpress Flights with TUI Thomson now TUI Airways Tui co uk TUI Airways NW23 Ireland Network Additions Ukraine International S19 European network expansion Routes WIZZ Dream more Live more Be more Wizzair com Wizz Air puska poleti ot Sofiya do Heraklion Travel News in Bulgarian 30 April 2024 Retrieved 30 April 2024 Wizz Air NS24 Network Additions Wizz Air Flights to Operate Again between Budapest and Tel Aviv Hungary Today 17 January 2024 Retrieved 17 January 2024 Wizz Air NS24 Removed Routes Summary 04FEB24 Contacts Aviationcargo aviationcargo dhl com Retrieved 20 November 2022 ROUTES Swiftair in Spanish Retrieved 20 November 2022 a b c Statistics cdr PDF Sofia Airport Sofia airport 2024 traffic PDF Sofia Airport Sofia airport 2024 traffic PDF Sofia Airport Top Destinations 2023 PDF Sofia airport eu Statistics PDF Sofia airport eu Statistics cdr PDF Sofia Airport p 4 Retrieved 22 November 2022 Sofia Airport Metro Metrosofia com Retrieved 3 June 2015 sofia airport eu Shuttle Bus retrieved 6 February 2023 Mayor of Bulgaria capital to attend metro extension inauguration Focus fen nety Archived from the original on 18 May 2015 Retrieved 3 June 2015 Schedules Urban transport Sumc bg Archived from the original on 6 January 2011 Retrieved 3 June 2015 Pt s estakada do Terminal 2 na letishe Sofiya Novini Infrastructure bg Infrastructure bg Archived from the original on 6 May 2017 Retrieved 13 May 2017 Ot i do letisheto Letishe Sofiya Archived from the original on 6 February 2015 Retrieved 3 June 2015 Vse taka bez tabeli za metroto na Letishe Sofiya Btvnovinite bg Retrieved 3 June 2015 YELLOW WILL SERVE PASSENGERS AT SOFIA AIRPORT AS A TAXI OPERATOR Sofia Airport 24 May 2023 Airport Transfers Bulgaria 24 7 TAXI Around Bulgaria 2 avgust 1988 g katastrofa s ptnicheski samolet Yak 40 na BGA Balkan Pan bg External links edit nbsp Media related to Sofia Airport at Wikimedia Commons Official website Portals nbsp Bulgaria nbsp Aviation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sofia Airport amp oldid 1221983309, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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