Paris-Charles de Gaulle Airport
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| Paris-Charles de Gaulle Airport Aéroport Paris-Charles-de-Gaulle Roissy Airport |
|||
|---|---|---|---|
| IATA: CDG – ICAO: LFPG | |||
| Summary | |||
| Airport type | Public | ||
| Owner/Operator | Aéroports de Paris | ||
| Serves | Paris | ||
| Location | 25 km (16 mi) NE of Paris | ||
| Elevation AMSL | 392 ft / 119 m | ||
| Coordinates | 49°00′35″N 002°32′52″E / 49.00972°N 2.54778°ECoordinates: 49°00′35″N 002°32′52″E / 49.00972°N 2.54778°E | ||
| Website | |||
| Runways | |||
| Direction | Length | Surface | |
| m | ft | ||
| 08L/26R | 4,215 | 13,829 | Asphalt |
| 08R/26L | 2,700 | 8,858 | Concrete |
| 09L/27R | 2,700 | 8,858 | Asphalt |
| 09R/27L | 4,200 | 13,780 | Asphalt |
| Statistics (2008) | |||
| Aircraft movements | 559,812 | ||
| Passengers | 60,851,998 | ||
| Source: French AIP[1] Airports Council International[2][3] |
|||
Paris-Charles de Gaulle Airport (IATA: CDG, ICAO: LFPG) (French: Aéroport Paris-Charles de Gaulle), also known as Roissy Airport (or just Roissy in French), in the Paris area, is one of the world's principal aviation centres, as well as France's main international airport. It is named after Charles de Gaulle (1890-1970), leader of the Free French Forces and founder of the French Fifth Republic. It is located within portions of several communes, 25 km (16 mi)[1] to the north-east of Paris. The airport serves as the principal hub for Air France.
In 2008, Charles de Gaulle Airport handled 60,851,998 passengers[3] and 559,812 aircraft movements[2], making it the world's fifth busiest airport in terms of passengers, and Europe's busiest (world's 8th busiest) airport in terms of aircraft movements. In terms of cargo traffic, the airport is the busiest in Europe and the world's 6th busiest, having handled 2,280,049 metric tonnes of cargo[4].
Contents |
[edit] Geography
Charles de Gaulle Airport extends over 32.38 km2 (12.50 sq mi) of land. The choice of this vast area was made based on the limited number of potential relocations and expropriations and the possibility to further expand the airport in the future. It straddles three départements and six communes:
- Seine-et-Marne département: communes of Le Mesnil-Amelot (Terminals 2E, 2F), Mauregard (Terminals 1, 3), Mitry-Mory
- Seine-Saint-Denis département: commune of Tremblay-en-France (Terminals 2A, 2B, 2C, 2D)
- Val-d'Oise département: communes of Roissy-en-France and Épiais-lès-Louvres
Management of the airport is solely under the authority of Aéroports de Paris, which also manages Orly, Le Bourget, several smaller airports in the suburbs of Paris, and Marsa Alam International in Egypt.
[edit] History
The planning and construction phase of what was known then as Aéroport de Paris Nord (Paris North Airport) began in 1966. On 8 March 1974 the airport, renamed Charles de Gaulle International Airport, began service. Terminal 1 was built to an avant-garde design of a ten-floor high circular building surrounded by seven satellite buildings each with four gates. The main architect was Paul Andreu, who was also in charge of the extensions during the following decades.
The grassy lands on which the airport is located are notorious for rabbits and hares, which can be seen by airplane passengers at certain times of the day. The airport organises periodic hunts and captures to keep the population to manageable levels.[5]
[edit] Corporate identity
The Frutiger typeface was commissioned for use in the airport, and implemented on signs throughout the building in 1975. Initially called Roissy, it was renamed for its designer Adrian Frutiger.
Until 2005, every P.A. announcement made at Terminal 1 was preceded by a distinctive chime, nicknamed "Indicatif Roissy" and composed by Bernard Parmegiani in 1971. The chime can be heard in the Roman Polanski film Frantic. The chime was replace by the "Indicatif ADP" in order to put a touch of magic to the airport.
[edit] Mehran Karimi Nasseri
On 26 August 1988, Mehran Karimi Nasseri found himself held at Charles de Gaulle airport by immigration. He claimed he was a refugee, but had had his refugee papers stolen. After years of bureaucratic wrangling, it was concluded that Nasseri had entered the airport legally and could not be expelled from its walls; but since he had no papers, there was no country to deport him to either, leaving him in residential limbo. Nasseri continued to live within the confines of the airport until 2006, even though French authorities had since made it possible for him to leave if he so wished.[6] He was the inspiration for the 2004 film The Terminal. In July 2006 he was hospitalised and later taken care of by charities; he did not return to the airport.
[edit] Collapse of Terminal 2E
Terminal 2E, with a daring design and wide open spaces, was CDG's newest addition. On 23 May 2004, not long after its inauguration, a portion of Terminal 2E's ceiling collapsed early in the day, near Gate E50, killing four people.[7] The Chinese government reported that two of the dead were Chinese travellers, and another of the dead was reported to be of Czech nationality. Three other people were injured in the collapse. Terminal 2E had been inaugurated in 2003 after some delays in construction and was designed by Paul Andreu. Administrative and judicial enquiries were started. Andreu also designed Terminal 3 at Dubai International Airport, which collapsed while under construction on 28 September 2004.
Before this accident, ADP had been planning for a public stock offering in 2005 with the new terminal as a major attraction for investors. The partial collapse and indefinite closing of the terminal just before the beginning of summer seriously hurt the airport's business plan.
In February 2005, the results from the administrative inquiry were published. The experts pointed out that there was no single fault, but rather a number of causes for the collapse, in a design that had little margin for safety. The enquiry found the concrete vaulted roof was not resilient enough and had been pierced by metallic pillars, and some openings weakened the structure. Sources close to the enquiry also disclosed that the whole building chain had worked as close to the limits as possible, so as to reduce costs. Paul Andreu denounced the building companies for having not correctly prepared the reinforced concrete.
On 17 March 2005, ADP decided to tear down and rebuild the whole part of Terminal 2E (the "jetty") of which a section had collapsed, at a cost of approximately €100 million.[8] The reconstruction will replace the innovative concrete tube style of the jetty with a more traditional steel and glass structure. During reconstruction, two temporary departure lounges have been constructed in the vicinity of the terminal that replicate the capacity of 2E before the collapse. The terminal reopened completely on 30 March 2008.
[edit] Terminals
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Charles de Gaulle International Airport has three terminals. Terminal 1[9] is the oldest. Terminal 2[10] was built for Air France, but now hosts other airlines. The third terminal (T3, formerly T9) hosts charter and low cost airlines.
Terminal 1 has a single main building for check-in and baggage reclaim with 7 satellites for arrivals and departures. Each satellite can handle about 5 aircraft at any given time. Underground walkways with moving sidewalks connect the satellites to the main building. Terminal 1 was built to an avant-garde design which is maintained today even though interior sections of the building have been face lifted and modernised.
The RER station for Terminal 1,[11] Aéroport Charles de Gaulle 1, is quite distant from Terminal 1 (not so far from Terminal 3), and Terminal 1 must be reached using the free CDGVAL automatic light rail system (Véhicule Automatique Léger (VAL)); previously, shuttle buses were used.
Terminal 2 today consists of multiple terminals joined together by at ground or below ground passageways. The seven terminals consist of 2A, 2B, 2C, 2D, 2E, 2F and the separate 2G. Terminal 2G is located 2.5 km (1.6 mi) away from the terminals 2A-2F, and a bus ride is needed for transfer. Terminal 2 also has an RER and TGV station, Aéroport Charles de Gaulle 2 – TGV, underneath in the between the 2C-2F halls.
Terminal 3 is a terminal with one hall. On the map it is located 1 km (0.62 mi) from Terminal 1, but along public roads it is 3 km (1.9 mi). It has around 300 m (980 ft) walking distance to the RER and CDGVAL trains.
Started on 4 April 2007, CDGVAL links all the three terminals (except hall 2G), although there is only a single station for Terminal 2, near the rail station, so the walk distance to the more distant halls 2A-2B is more than 500 m (1,600 ft) (and both CDGVAL and bus is needed to reach 2G from Terminal 1).
[edit] Expansion plans 2007-2012
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Apart from the reconstruction of Terminal 2E, two major terminal extensions are underway as of 2008.
The completion of giant 750 m (2,500 ft) long Satellite 3 (or S3) to the immediate east of Terminals 2E and 2F provides further jetways for large capacity airliners, and specifically the Airbus A380. Check-in and baggage handling are provided by the existing infrastructure in Terminals 2E and 2F. Satellite 3 was opened in part on 27 June 2007, and fully operational in September 2007. A similar in size and scope Satellite 4 is planned to open in 2012 to provide additional capacity, again relying on the brand new, 100% automated check-in and baggage handling infrastructure of 2E and 2F. This facility, built in collaboration with Air France-KLM, is so large (it's the second largest airline terminal in Europe after Madrid Barajas' T4 and before BA T5 at London Heathrow) it needed to open in phases in order to be fully operational by the end of Summer 2007. The high tech, futuristic concrete-steel-and-glass building provides relief to millions of passengers who do not have to endure anymore annoying and lengthy bus rides to board and disembark from flights. The new S3 terminal also means faster transfer times to connecting flights and fewer lost bags.[12]
Construction began on a new terminal building, Terminal 2G, to the east of the S3 construction site in September 2006 with the first stone of the new building itself laid in March 2007. This terminal was in operation in March 2009. It is connected to the Terminal 2 complex by shuttle buses and eventually an extension of the CDGVAL shuttle train service. 2G is used for passengers flying in the Schengen Area (and thus has no passport control) and handles Air France regional and European traffic and provides small capacity planes (up to 150 passengers) with a faster turn-around time than is currently possible by enabling them to park close to the new terminal building and boarding passengers primarily by bus, or walk on the ground. Its bus connection is outside the security area, and a security check is needed also for transfer passengers. At least 20 minutes must be planned as time when getting from another terminal to the 2G departure area.
Future use of Terminal 2 by Air France constantly evolves thanks to the development and opening of the S3 complex and the new 2G section of Terminal 2. On 30 March 2008, the reopening of Terminal 2E was completed allowing maximum passenger activity and full airport services. Air France operations are now concentrated at Terminals 2C, 2D, 2E, 2F and 2G and it has ceased operating from terminals 2A and 2B.
Terminal 3 is not really connected and is an outside 5+ minute walk from the tram station. Also, the information booth may direct people to Terminal 2 for certain airlines that are actually serviced by Terminal 3. In addition, in each of the terminals, they only show the flights in the that terminal.
[edit] Ground transportation
[edit] RER
CDG is connected to the RER suburban rail network, providing services into central Paris three to four times per hour.
CDG airport is connected to Paris by the RER B suburban route. Normally there are two types of services: 4tph to Saint-Rémy-lès-Chevreuse calling at all stations to Cité Universitaire, then Bourg-la-Reine, La Croix de Berny, Antony, Massy – Palaiseau and then all stations to Saint-Rémy-lès-Chevreuse, and 4tph to Massy – Palaiseau (on the Saint-Rémy line), first stop Gare du Nord and then all stations to Massy – Palaiseau. The fast services take about 30 minutes to the Gare du Nord, the stopping services about 35. There are two RER B stations inside the airport:
- one, called Aéroport Charles de Gaulle 1, is located inside Roissypôle (an area with hotels and company offices) next to Terminal 3, and is the preferred way to access Terminals 1 and 3;
- the other, called Aéroport Charles de Gaulle 2 – TGV, is located beside the TGV station under Terminal 2.
RER B both serves CDG airport (with a travelling clientele) as well as northern suburbs of Paris. The line, operated by RATP, suffers from slowness and saturation. For these reasons, French authorities have started two projects: one, CDG Express[13] (opening between 2012 and 2015), will link CDG to Paris Gare de l'Est with trains specifically designed for air travellers; the other, RER B Nord Plus,[14] will modernise and streamline the northern branches of RER B.
[edit] TGV
Terminal 2 includes a TGV station on the LGV Interconnexion Est high-speed line. SNCF operates direct TGV services to several French stations from CDG, including Angers, Avignon, Bordeaux, Dijon, Grenoble, Le Mans, Lille, Arras, Lyon, Marseilles, Montpellier, Nantes, Nîmes, Poitiers, Rennes, Strasbourg, Toulouse, Tours, and Valence.
[edit] Shuttle
Terminals 1, 2, the Roissypôle / Terminal 3 RER station, and parking lots PX and PR are connected by the free CDGVAL automated rail shuttle, replacing free shuttle buses.
[edit] Bus
Roissybus, operated by RATP, departs from terminals 1 and 2 and goes non-stop to Paris, behind the Palais Garnier.
There is a bus and coach station in Roissypôle, next to the RER B station. Buses departing from this station include RATP lines 350 and 351 going to Paris, and the bus going to the Parc Astérix.
[edit] Alternative Airports
The three other airports serving Paris are Orly Airport, the most important after CDG; Paris Beauvais Tillé Airport, which mainly serves low-cost airlines; and Le Bourget Airport for general aviation (business jets).
[edit] Appearances in films and other works
- In the video of the U2 song "Beautiful Day" the band can be seen walking through the airport. The cover photo for their album All That You Can't Leave Behind was also taken there.
- The airport tarmac was used in the Disneyland Resort Paris attraction film The Timekeeper (Le Visionarium), featuring an Air France Concorde and a Union des Transports Aériens McDonnell Douglas DC-10.
- Many scenes were filmed at the airport for the film The Concorde ... Airport '79.
- The distinctive escalator tubes of Terminal 1 are featured in the films Private Benjamin and French Kiss, and are used as the backdrop of the album cover for I Robot by The Alan Parsons Project.
- The check-in area of Terminal 2F is a favourite film location for French directors and can frequently be seen in French films that require an airport location.
- The film Décalage Horaire (Jet Lag) is set primarily at the airport and a nearby hotel.
- The movie Frantic features a scene in terminal one when Harrison Ford and Emmanuelle Béart pick up lost baggage.
- The movie Rush Hour 3 features Jackie Chan and Chris Tucker arriving from Terminal 2F and they get anally searched by French authorities.
- The movie Taken has a few scenes taking place at CDG Airport Terminal 2.
[edit] Photography restrictions
On 7 November 2005, prefectoral decision 05-4979 was issued, relating specifically to Charles de Gaulle airport. The law prohibits photographs being taken for private use of anything moving (e.g. aircraft) or not moving (e.g. buildings) within the "zone reservée" (the restricted area) from the "zone publique" (the public area).
[edit] Airlines and destinations
[edit] Terminal 1
| Airlines | Destinations |
|---|---|
| Adria Airways | Ljubljana |
| Aegean Airlines | Athens |
| Aer Lingus | Belfast-International, Cork, Dublin |
| Afriqiyah Airways | Tripoli |
| AirBaltic | Riga |
| Air China | Beijing-Capital, Shanghai-Pudong |
| Air Moldova | Chişinău |
| All Nippon Airways | Tokyo-Narita |
| Arkia Israel Airlines | Tel Aviv |
| Armavia | Yerevan |
| Asiana Airlines | Seoul-Incheon |
| Blue1 | Helsinki |
| Bmibaby | East Midlands |
| Brussels Airlines | Brussels |
| Croatia Airlines | Dubrovnik, Pula, Split, Zagreb |
| Cyprus Airways | Larnaca, Thessaloniki |
| Daallo Airlines operated by Jet2.com | Djibouti |
| EgyptAir | Cairo, Luxor |
| Estonian Air | Tallinn |
| EVA Air | Taipei-Taoyuan |
| Flybe | Birmingham, Cardiff, Exeter, Glasgow-International, Jersey, Manchester, Southampton |
| Gabon Airlines | Libreville |
| Gulf Air | Bahrain |
| Icelandair | Reykjavík-Keflavík |
| Kuwait Airways | Geneva, Kuwait, Rome-Fiumicino |
| LOT Polish Airlines | Kraków, Warsaw |
| Lufthansa | Düsseldorf, Frankfurt, Hamburg, Milan-Malpensa, Munich |
| Lufthansa Regional operated by Eurowings | Berlin-Tegel, Düsseldorf, Hanover, Nuremberg |
| Lufthansa Regional operated by Lufthansa CityLine | Cologne-Bonn, Hamburg, Munich, Stuttgart |
| Malaysia Airlines | Kuala Lumpur |
| Oman Air | Muscat [begins 11 October] |
| Olympic Airlines | Athens |
| Pakistan International Airlines | Islamabad, Lahore, Milan-Malpensa |
| Qatar Airways | Doha |
| Royal Air Maroc | Casablanca, Oujda |
| SATA International | Funchal |
| Saudi Arabian Airlines | Jeddah, Riyadh, Rome-Fiumicino |
| Scandinavian Airlines System | Copenhagen, Oslo-Gardermoen, Stockholm-Arlanda |
| Singapore Airlines | Singapore |
| SriLankan Airlines | Colombo, Rome-Fiumicino |
| Swiss International Air Lines | Zürich |
| TACV | Praia |
| TAP Portugal | Lisbon |
| TAP operated by Portugália | Porto |
| Thai Airways International | Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi |
| Turkish Airlines | Istanbul-Atatürk |
| United Airlines | Chicago-O'Hare, Washington-Dulles |
| US Airways | Charlotte [seasonal], Philadelphia |
| Vueling Airlines | Barcelona, Ibiza, Malaga, Rome-Fiumicino [all end 8 July], Alicante, Madrid, Santiago de Compostela |
| Yemenia | Sana'a |
[edit] Terminal 2
[edit] Hall A (Terminal 2A)
| Airlines | Destinations |
|---|---|
| Air Austral | Nouméa, St-Denis-de-la-Réunion, Sydney |
| Air Canada | Montréal-Trudeau, Toronto-Pearson, Vancouver [seasonal] |
| Air Madagascar | Antananarivo, Nosy Be [seasonal] |
| Air Tahiti Nui | Los Angeles, Papeete |
| American Airlines | Boston [seasonal], Chicago-O'Hare, Dallas/Fort Worth, Miami, New York-JFK |
| British Airways | London-Heathrow |
| British Airways operated by Sun Air of Scandinavia | Billund |
| Cathay Pacific | Hong Kong |
| Continental Airlines | Houston-Intercontinental, Newark |
| El Al | Eilat-Ovda, Tel Aviv |
| Ethiopian Airlines | Addis Ababa |
| Etihad Airways | Abu Dhabi |
| Sun d'Or International Airlines | Eilat-Ovda, Tel Aviv |
| TAM Airlines | Belo Horizonte, Recife, Rio de Janeiro-Galeão, Salvador da Bahia, São Paulo-Guarulhos |
| XL Airways France | Cancún, New York-JFK [seasonal; ends 14 September], Phuket, Punta Cana |
[edit] Hall B (Terminal 2B)
| Airlines | Destinations |
|---|---|
| Aigle Azur | Annaba, Hassi Messaoud, Oran |
| Air Algérie | Algiers |
| Azerbaijan Airlines | Baku |
| Belavia | Minsk |
| Bulgaria Air | Sofia |
| EasyJet | Ajaccio [begins 11 July], Barcelona, Bastia, Belfast-International, Biarritz, Bristol, Casablanca, Edinburgh, Glasgow-International, Ibiza [begins 11 July], Kraków, Lisbon, Liverpool, London-Luton, Marrakech, Milan-Malpensa, Newcastle, Nice, Porto, Tangier, Venice-Marco Polo |
| Georgian Airways | Tbilisi |
| Jat Airways | Belgrade |
| Montenegro Airlines | Podgorica, Tivat |
| Royal Jordanian | Amman, Aqaba [begins 3 October] |
| TAROM | Bucharest-Otopeni |
| Ukraine International Airlines | Kiev-Boryspil |
| Uzbekistan Airways | Tashkent |
[edit] Hall C (Terminal 2C)
| Airlines | Destinations |
|---|---|
| Air France | Abidjan, Antananarivo, Bangalore, Brazzaville, Conakry, Cotonou, Delhi, Douala, Havana, Kinshasa, Lagos, Libreville, Lomé, Mumbaï, Pointe-à-Pitre [seasonal], Punta Cana, Saint Martin, Santo Domingo, Yaoundé |
| Emirates Airline | Dubaï |
| Rossiya | St Petersburg |
| Vietnam Airlines | Hanoï, Ho Chi Minh City |
[edit] Hall D (Terminal 2D)
| Airlines | Destinations |
|---|---|
| Air Europa | Málaga, Valencia |
| Air France | Athens, Berlin-Tegel, Bologna, Bordeaux, Budapest, Copenhagen, Düsseldorf, Figari [seasonal], Frankfurt, Hamburg, Lisbon, Montpellier, Munich, Nantes, Oslo-Gardermoen, Prague, Stuttgart, Turin, Vienna |
| Air France operated by Régional | Bologna, Düsseldorf, Munich, Turin |
| Air Malta | Malta |
| Austrian Airlines | Vienna |
| Cimber Sterling | Billund [begins 3 September] |
| Czech Airlines | Prague |
| Finnair | Helsinki |
| Luxair | Luxembourg |
| Malév Hungarian Airlines | Budapest |
[edit] Hall E (Terminal 2E)
| Airlines | Destinations |
|---|---|
| Aeroflot | Moscow-Sheremetyevo |
| Aeroméxico | Mexico City |
| Air France | Amman, Atlanta, Bamako, Beijing-Capital, Boston, Brazzaville, Buenos Aires-Ezeiza, Chicago-O'Hare, Dakar, Damascus, Detroit, Guangzhou, Hong Kong, Houston-Intercontinental, Jeddah, Johannesburg, London-Heathrow, Los Angeles, Malabo, Manchester, Mexico City, Miami, Moscow-Sheremetyevo, N'djamena, New York-JFK, Newark, Niamey, Nouakchott, Osaka-Kansai, Ouagadougou, Philadelphia [ends 5 October], Rio de Janeiro-Galeão, Riyadh, Saint Petersburg, San Francisco, Santiago de Chile, Seattle/Tacoma, Seoul-Incheon, Singapore, Tel Aviv, Tokyo-Narita, Washington-Dulles, Yerevan |
| Air France operated by Airlinair | Bristol |
| Air France operated by Brit Air | Newcastle, Zagreb |
| Air France operated by CityJet | Birmingham, Dublin, Edinburgh, London-City, Shannon |
| Air France operated by Régional | Aberdeen, Manchester |
| China Southern Airlines | Guangzhou |
| Delta Air Lines | Atlanta, Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky, Minneapolis/St. Paul [seasonal], Philadelphia [begins 6 October], Pittsburgh, Raleigh/Durham [begins 2010], Salt Lake City |
| Japan Airlines | Nagoya-Centrair, Tokyo-Narita |
| Korean Air | Seoul-Incheon |
[edit] Hall F (Terminal 2F)
[edit] Hall 2F1 (Schengen Flights)
| Airlines | Destinations |
|---|---|
| Air France | Amsterdam, Barcelona, Geneva, Lyons, Madrid, Marseilles, Milan-Linate, Milan-Malpensa, Naples, Nice, Rome-Fiumicino, Stockholm-Arlanda, Toulouse, Venice-Marco Polo, Warsaw |
| Alitalia | Milan-Linate, Milan-Malpensa, Rome-Fiumicino |
| KLM | Amsterdam |
[edit] Hall 2F2 (Non-Schengen Flights)
| Airlines | Destinations |
|---|---|
| Air France | Algiers, Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi, Bangui, Beirut, Belgrade, Bogotá, Bucharest-Otopeni, Cairo, Caracas, Casablanca, Djibouti, Dubaï, Hanoï, Ho Chi Minh City, Istanbul-Atatürk, Kiev-Boryspil, Luanda, Mauritius, Montréal-Trudeau, Pointe-Noire, Rabat, São Paulo-Guarulhos, Shanghaï-Pudong, Sofia, Toronto-Pearson, Tunis |
| Air India | Delhi, Mumbaï |
| Air Mauritius | Mauritius |
| Air Seychelles | Mahé |
| China Eastern Airlines | Shanghaï-Pudong |
| Kenya Airways | Nairobi |
| Middle East Airlines | Beirut |
| TAAG Angola Airlines | Luanda |
[edit] Hall G (Terminal 2G)
| Airlines | Destinations |
|---|---|
| Air France | Brest, Pau |
| Air France operated by Brit Air | Bilbao, Brest, Clermont-Ferrand, Genoa, Pisa, Rennes, Strasbourg, Trieste |
| Air France operated by CityJet | Florence, Zürich |
| Air France operated by Régional | Asturias, Basel/Mulhouse, Bremen, Brest, Clermont-Ferrand, Gothenburg-Landvetter, Hanover, Leipzig/Halle, Ljubljana, Münster/Osnabrück, Nuremberg, Pau, Pisa, Verona, Vigo |
[edit] Terminal 3
| Airlines | Destinations |
|---|---|
| Air Arabia Maroc | Casablanca |
| Air Cairo | |
| Air Méditerranée | Athens, Heraklion, Ibiza, Monastir, Shannon, Tunis, Varna [all seasonal] |
| Air Transat | Calgary [seasonal], Montréal-Trudeau, Ottawa [seasonal charter], Québec City, Toronto-Pearson [seasonal], Vancouver [seasonal] |
| Atlas Blue | Oujda, Tangier |
| Blue Line (airline) | |
| Dubrovnik Airline | |
| Hewa Bora Airways | Kinshasa |
| Iceland Express | Reykjavík-Keflavík |
| InterSky | Friedrichshafen |
| Jet2.com | Leeds-Bradford |
| Meridiana | Cagliari, Milan-Linate, Olbia, Palermo |
| MyAir | Bari, Bologna, Brindisi, Bucharest-Băneasa, Rimini |
| New Axis Airways | Tel Aviv |
| Niki | Vienna |
| Nouvelair | Monastir |
| On Air operated by Hamburg International | Pescara |
| Onur Air | Antalya, Istanbul-Atatürk |
| Smart Wings | Prague |
| Tunisair | Djerba, Monastir |
| Windjet | Catania, Forli, Palermo |
| XL Airways France | Catania, Djerba, Figari, Heralklion, Palermo, Split [all seasonal] |
[edit] Cargo airlines
- Air France Cargo
- Cathay Pacific Cargo
- China Cargo Airlines
- Europe Airpost
- European Air Transport
- Farnair Hungary
- FedEx Express
- Korean Air Cargo
- MNG Airlines
- Star Air
- TNT Airways
- Turkish Airlines Cargo
- UPS
[edit] Accidents and incidents
- On 25 July 2000, a Concorde, Air France Flight 4590 from Charles de Gaulle to John F. Kennedy International Airport, crashed into the farthest hotel of Hotelissimo in Gonesse killing everyone on the aircraft and four people on the ground. Investigations concluded that a tire burst occurred on take off due to metal left on the runway from a previously departing aircraft. The Concorde was on a German charter flight for a tour company.
- On 2 August 2005, a A340-300, Air France Flight 358 from Charles de Gaulle to Toronto Pearson International Airport, made a successful landing during a thunderstorm but overran the runway crashing in a gully; miraculously, all 309 passengers including crew members survived the crash.
- On 1 June 2009, an A330-200, Air France Flight 447, departed Rio de Janeiro for Charles de Gaulle. The plane's computers transmitted messages stating that it had experienced various failures. Wreckage of the aircraft was found 370 miles off the coast of Brazil on 2 June 2009; all 228 people on board are presumed dead.
Other accidents and incidents involving CDG include:
- Avianca Flight 011 (1983), inbound from CDG to Bogotá (BOG) via Madrid (MAD), crashed near MAD.
- UTA Flight 772 (1989), bound for CDG from Brazzaville-N'Djamena, crashed when a bomb placed inside a luggage exploded when the aircraft was flying in Niger.
- TWA Flight 800 (1996), bound for CDG, exploded soon after takeoff, and crashed off the coast of Long Island
- Flash Airlines Flight 604 (2004), bound for CDG, crashed into the Red Sea
[edit] See also
[edit] References
[edit] Notes and references
- ^ a b LFPG – PARIS CHARLES DE GAULLE (PDF). AIP from French Service d'information aéronautique, effective 2 July 2009.
- ^ a b Traffic Movements 2008 preliminary from Airports Council International
- ^ a b Passenger Traffic 2008 Preliminary from Airports Council International
- ^ Cargo Traffic 2008 Preliminary from Airports Council International
- ^ "Journal L'Alsace / Le Pays". Alsapresse.com. http://www.alsapresse.com/jdj/97/10/01/IGF/1/article_2.html. Retrieved on 2008-09-07.
- ^ "Between 1988 and 2006, a man lived at a Paris airport.". Snopes.com. July 2, 2008. http://www.snopes.com/travel/airline/airport.htm. Retrieved on 2008-09-07.
- ^ "'Fresh cracks' at Paris airport". BBC News. 2004-05-24. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/3743081.stm.
- ^ Infos en direct et en vidéo, l'actualité en temps réel - tf1.fr[dead link]
- ^ Terminal 1 49°00′50.34″N 002°32′30.66″E / 49.0139833°N 2.54185°E
- ^ Terminal 2 49°00′15.81″N 002°34′36.56″E / 49.0043917°N 2.5768222°E
- ^ RER station, Terminal 1 49°00′36.3″N 002°33′35.12″E / 49.010083°N 2.5597556°E
- ^ "Fixing de Gaulle Will Lift Air France-KLM". businessweek.com. http://www.businessweek.com/globalbiz/content/jun2007/gb20070622_884614.htm. Retrieved on 2007-06-25.
- ^ CDG Express
- ^ RER B Nord Plus
[edit] External links
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Charles de Gaulle International Airport |
- General
- Aéroports de Paris (official website) (English)
- Aéroport de Paris - Roissy Charles de Gaulle (Union des Aéroports Français) (French)
- Accident history for CDG at Aviation Safety Network
- Airport information for LFPG at Great Circle Mapper. Data current as of October 2006.
- Current weather for LFPG at NOAA/NWS
- Airport information for LFPG at World Aero Data. Data current as of October 2006.
- Collapse of Terminal 2E
- Official report of the administrative enquiry commission (French)
- Photos of Terminal 2E before and after the collapse, and during reconstruction

