Keflavík International Airport

Keflavík Airport (Icelandic: Keflavíkurflugvöllur [ˈcʰɛplaˌviːkʏrˌflʏɣˌvœtlʏr̥]) (IATA: KEF, ICAO: BIKF), also known as Reykjavík–Keflavík Airport, is the largest airport in Iceland and the country's main hub for international transportation. The airport is 1.7 nautical miles (3.1 kilometres) west of Keflavík[2] and 50 km (30 mi) southwest of Reykjavík. The airport has three runways, two of which are in use, and the airport area is about 25 km2 (10 sq mi).[citation needed] Most international journeys to or from Iceland pass through this airport.

Keflavík Airport

Keflavíkurflugvöllur
Summary
Airport typePublic
Owner/OperatorIsavia ohf.
ServesGreater Reykjavík Area, Iceland
LocationSuðurnesjabær
Opened1942 (1942)
Hub for
Elevation AMSL52 m / 171 ft
Coordinates63°59′06″N 22°36′20″W / 63.98500°N 22.60556°W / 63.98500; -22.60556
Websitewww.isavia.is/en/keflavik-airport
Map
KEF is located in Iceland
KEF
KEF
Location in Iceland
KEF is located in Arctic
KEF
KEF
KEF (Arctic)
KEF is located in Europe
KEF
KEF
KEF (Europe)
Runways
DirectionLengthSurface
mft
01/193,05410,020Asphalt
10/283,06510,056Asphalt
Statistics (2023)
Total passengers7,776,147
Aircraft movements76.575
Sources:[1] AIP Iceland at ICAA[2]
Statistics: Isavia Limited[3][4]

The main carrier at Keflavík is Icelandair, which has the airport as its main hub. The airport is only used for international flights; all domestic flights use the much smaller Reykjavík Airport, which lies three kilometres (two miles) from Reykjavík's city centre. Keflavík Airport is operated by Isavia, a government enterprise.

History edit

Early years edit

Originally, the airport was built by the United States military during World War II, as a replacement for a small British landing strip at Garður to the north. It consisted of two separate two-runway airfields, built simultaneously just 4 km apart. Patterson Field in the south-east opened in 1942 despite being partly incomplete. It was named after a young pilot who died in Iceland. Meeks Field to the north-west opened on 23 March 1943. It was named after another young pilot, George Meeks, who died on the Reykjavík airfield. Patterson Field was closed after the war, but Meeks Field and the adjoining structures were returned to Iceland's control and were renamed Naval Air Station Keflavik, for the nearby town of Keflavík. In 1951, the U.S. military returned to the airport under a defence agreement between Iceland and the U.S. signed on 5 May 1951.[5]

Development since the 1950s edit

With the reestablishment of the military air base at Keflavík during the 1950s, the air terminal found itself in the middle of a secure military zone. Travelers had to pass through military check points to reach their flights, until 1987, when the civilian terminal was relocated.[6]

The presence of foreign military forces in Iceland under the NATO-sponsored Iceland–U.S. Defense Agreement of 1951 was controversial in Iceland, which had no military forces other than the Icelandic Coast Guard.[7] During the 1960s and 1970s, rallies were held to protest the U.S. military presence in Iceland (and in particular at Keflavík), and every year protesters walked the 50-kilometre (30 mi) road from Reykjavík to Keflavík and chanted "Ísland úr NATO, herinn burt" (literally: Iceland out of NATO, the military away). The protests were not effective.

The two 3,000-metre-long (10,000 ft) and 60-metre-wide (200 ft) runways were large enough to support NASA's Space Shuttle as well as the Antonov An-225. On 29 June 1999, Concorde G-BOAA flew from Heathrow Airport to Reykjavík (Keflavik airport). The Concorde had been there earlier.[8] The airport is also an important emergency landing runway for large aircraft in transatlantic operation in the ETOPS system, which requires aircraft to always have less than a certain flight time from a suitable landing site.[9] The United States military base closed down in 2006.

The airport was used as a hub by WOW air until it ceased operations on 28 March 2019.[10]

Facilities edit

Airport Map

The terminal is named after Leif Erikson who was the first European to arrive in North America[11] (Flugstöð Leifs Eiríkssonar [is], "Leif Erikson Air Terminal"). It was opened in April 1987[12] and separated the airport's civil traffic from the military base. It was later extended with the opening of the South Building in 2001 (not a separate terminal) to comply with the requirements of the Schengen Agreement. The North Building was later enlarged and finished in 2007. The terminal has duty-free stores in the departure and arrival lounges. In 2016, the current terminal was expanded.[13] The expansion added seven gates.[14] There are also plans to add a third runway.[15]

Airlines and destinations edit

Passenger edit

Although the population of Iceland is only about 370,000, there are scheduled flights to and from numerous locations across North America and Europe. The largest carrier operating out of Keflavik is Icelandair. Play, which also uses Keflavik as a hub, is the second largest Icelandic carrier in 2022.[3] WOW air was the second largest Icelandic carrier and the second largest at Keflavík, following its acquisition of Iceland Express on 23 October 2012,[16] until it ceased operations on 28 March 2019.[10] The airport only handles international flights; domestic flights are operated from Reykjavík's domestic airport.

The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter services to and from Keflavík:[17]

AirlinesDestinations
Air Canada Seasonal: Montréal–Trudeau, Toronto–Pearson
Air Greenland Nuuk
Seasonal: Ilulissat
airBaltic Riga
Atlantic Airways Vágar
Austrian Airlines Seasonal: Vienna
British Airways London–Heathrow
Delta Air Lines Seasonal: Detroit, Minneapolis/St. Paul, New York–JFK
easyJet Edinburgh, London–Gatwick, London–Luton, Manchester, Milan–Malpensa, Paris–Orly (begins 3 September 2024)[18]
Seasonal: Bristol
Edelweiss Air Zürich
Eurowings Seasonal: Düsseldorf, Hamburg, Stuttgart (begins 19 May 2024)[19]
Finnair Helsinki
Iberia Express Seasonal: Madrid
Icelandair[20] Alicante, Amsterdam, Baltimore, Barcelona, Berlin, Boston, Brussels, Chicago–O'Hare, Copenhagen, Dublin, Frankfurt, Glasgow, Helsinki, Kulusuk, London–Gatwick, London–Heathrow, Manchester, Munich, Newark, New York–JFK, Nuuk, Oslo, Paris–Charles de Gaulle, Raleigh/Durham, Rome–Fiumicino, Seattle/Tacoma, Stockholm–Arlanda, Tenerife–South, Toronto–Pearson, Vancouver, Washington–Dulles, Zürich
Seasonal: Akureyri,1 Bergen, Billund, Chania, Denver, Detroit, Geneva, Gran Canaria, Halifax (resumes 31 May 2024),[21] Hamburg, Ilulissat, Innsbruck,[22] Madrid, Milan–Malpensa, Minneapolis/St. Paul, Narsarsuaq, Nice, Orlando, Pittsburgh,[23] Portland (OR), Prague, Salzburg, Vágar, Verona
Jet2.com Seasonal: Belfast–International, Birmingham, Bristol, East Midlands, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Leeds/Bradford, London–Stansted, Manchester, Newcastle upon Tyne
Lufthansa Frankfurt
Seasonal: Munich
Neos Seasonal: Alicante, Málaga, Tenerife–South, Verona
Norwegian Air Shuttle[24] Seasonal: Oslo
Play Alicante, Amsterdam, Baltimore, Barcelona, Berlin, Boston, Copenhagen, Dublin, Hamilton (ON), Lisbon, London–Stansted, Madrid, Málaga, Newburgh, Paris–Charles de Gaulle, Tenerife–South, Washington–Dulles
Seasonal: Athens, Billund, Bologna, Brussels, Cardiff (begins 10 October 2024),[25] Düsseldorf, Frankfurt, Fuerteventura, Funchal (begins 15 October 2024),[26] Geneva, Gothenburg, Gran Canaria, Hamburg, Liverpool, Marrakesh (begins 17 October 2024),[27] Palma de Mallorca, Porto, Prague, Salzburg, Split (begins 28 May 2024),[28] Stockholm–Arlanda, Venice, Verona, Vilnius (begins 24 May 2024),[29] Warsaw–Chopin
Scandinavian Airlines Copenhagen, Oslo
Transavia Amsterdam, Paris–Orly
TUI Airways Seasonal: Bristol, London–Gatwick, Manchester
United Airlines Seasonal: Chicago–O'Hare, Newark (resumes 24 May 2024)[30]
Vueling Barcelona
WestJet Calgary[31]
Wizz Air Budapest, Gdańsk, Katowice, Kraków, Milan–Malpensa, Rome–Fiumicino, Vienna, Warsaw–Chopin
Seasonal: London–Luton

^1 Icelandair's service between Akureyri and Keflavík is available only to connecting passengers flying with the airline internationally.[32]

Cargo edit

AirlinesDestinations
Icelandair Cargo[33] Boston,[34] Liège, Los Angeles[35][36]

Statistics edit

Aerial view of the main buildings
Main waiting area
Terminal seen from platform
Annual passenger traffic at KEF airport.See Wikidata query.

Passenger numbers edit

YearPassengers[37][38]Change
20041,883,725
20052,101,679+11.6%
20062,272,917+8.1%
20072,429,144+6.9%
20082,193,434-9.7%
20091,832,944-16.4%
20102,065,188+12.7%
20112,474,806+19.8%
20122,764,026+11.7%
20133,209,848+16.1%
20143,867,425+20.5%
20154,855,505+25.5%
20166,821,358+40.4%
20178,755,352+28.3%
20189,804,388+12.0%
20197,247,820-26.08%
20201,373,971-81.04%
20212,171,996+58.1%
20226,126,421+182.01%
20237,776,147+26.9%

Busiest destinations (from 2018 estimates) edit

Busiest routes to/from Keflavik (2018)[39]
RankAirportPassengersOperator(s)
1 Copenhagen582,199Icelandair, Play, SAS
2 London–Gatwick467,032easyJet, Icelandair, Norwegian, TUI Airways
3 Amsterdam449,590Icelandair, Transavia
4 Paris–Charles de Gaulle443,312Icelandair, Play
5 London–Heathrow378,029British Airways, Icelandair
6 Frankfurt355,520Icelandair, Lufthansa
7 Boston330,792Icelandair
8 Newark327,046Icelandair, United
9 New York–JFK323,781Delta, Icelandair
10 Oslo313,713Icelandair, Norwegian, SAS

Access edit

Transport between the airport and downtown Reykjavik is a 50-kilometre (30 mi) journey on Route 41. Buses are operated by Airport Express, Flybus, and Strætó bs to Reykjavík.[40] Taxis are available outside the terminal. Rental cars are available from various companies.[41]

Accidents and incidents edit

References edit

External links edit