Milan Bergamo Airport

Orio al Serio International Airport,[2] also styled as Milan Bergamo Airport for commercial purposes,[3][4] (IATA: BGY, ICAO: LIME) is the third-busiest international airport in Italy.[1] The airport is also officially called Il Caravaggio International Airport after the Baroque painter Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio, who originally hailed from the nearby town of Caravaggio.[5]

Il Caravaggio International Airport

Aeroporto Internazionale Il Caravaggio
Summary
Airport typePublic
OperatorSACBO
ServesBergamo, Metropolitan City of Milan
LocationOrio al Serio, Lombardy, Italy
Operating base for
Elevation AMSL782 ft / 238 m
Coordinates45°40′08″N 009°42′01″E / 45.66889°N 9.70028°E / 45.66889; 9.70028
Websitewww.milanbergamoairport.it
Map
BGY is located in Bergamo
BGY
BGY
Location of airport on map of Bergamo
BGY is located in Lombardy
BGY
BGY
BGY (Lombardy)
BGY is located in Italy
BGY
BGY
BGY (Italy)
Runways
DirectionLengthSurface
mft
10/282,9379,630Asphalt
12/307782,552Asphalt
Statistics (2022)
Passengers13,155,806
Passenger change 21-22Increase 103.4%
Movements88,846
Movements change 21-22Increase 71.3%
Cargo (tons)20,826.7
Cargo change 21-22Decrease -20.0%
Source: List of the busiest airports in Europe, Italian AIP, Assaeroporti[1]

The airport is located in Orio al Serio, 3.7 km (2.3 mi) southeast of Bergamo and 45 km (28 mi) northeast of Milan. The airport is part of the airport network of the Milan metropolitan area, alongside Malpensa Airport and Linate Airport. The airport served almost 13 million passengers in 2018 and is one of Ryanair's three main operating bases, along with Dublin Airport and London Stansted Airport.[6]

Overview edit

The airport is managed by SACBO, a company partially owned by SEA – Aeroporti di Milano, the operator of Linate and Malpensa airports. SEA, the company that runs the latter two airports, also holds a 31% stake in SACBO.[7] The airport has one passenger terminal and two jet-bridge gates.[citation needed]

The terminal is split into two zones, A (Gates A1-A15) and B (Gates B1-B5). Gates A13 and B5 are equipped with boarding bridges, the remaining gates are remote gates

In March 2021, DHL Aviation announced plans to relocate their hub from Bergamo to Milan Malpensa Airport where DHL opened new logistics facilities.[8] In early 2022, DHL confirmed the end of all operations at Bergamo.[9]

Airlines and destinations edit

Passenger edit

The following airlines operate scheduled and charter services in Bergamo:[10]

AirlinesDestinations
AeroItalia Bacău,[11] Perugia, Rome–Fiumicino
Seasonal: Catania, Comiso, Heraklion, Karpathos, Lampedusa, Mykonos, Olbia, Zakynthos
Air Arabia Alexandria, Cairo, Casablanca, Sharjah
Air Nostrum Seasonal charter: Palma de Mallorca[12]
AJet Seasonal: Istanbul–Sabiha Gökçen
AlbaStar Seasonal: Fuerteventura, Lourdes, Sal
Seasonal charter: Marsa Alam, Sharm El Sheikh
AlMasria Universal Airlines Seasonal: Cairo
Cabo Verde Airlines Sal[13]
Dan Air Bacău[14]
easyJet Amsterdam, Lisbon, London–Gatwick, Paris–Charles de Gaulle
Seasonal: Olbia
Eurowings Düsseldorf
Seasonal: Hannover[15]
flydubai Dubai–International
Georgian Airways Seasonal: Tbilisi
HiSky Chișinău
Lumiwings Foggia[16]
Neos Seasonal: Catania, Heraklion, Karpathos, Kos, Marsa Alam, Menorca, Rhodes, Sharm El Sheikh
Nile Air Cairo (begins 28 June 2024)[17]
Norwegian Air Shuttle Seasonal: Bergen, Copenhagen,[18] Helsinki (begins 2 June 2024),[18] Oslo, Stavanger,[18] Tromsø
Pegasus Airlines Istanbul–Sabiha Gökçen
Ryanair Agadir, Alghero, Alicante, Athens, Barcelona, Bari, Beauvais, Belfast–International, Berlin, Billund, Birmingham, Bordeaux (ends 25 October 2024),[19] Bratislava, Brindisi, Bristol, Brno, Bucharest–Otopeni, Budapest, Cagliari, Catania, Charleroi, Cluj-Napoca, Cologne/Bonn, Copenhagen, Crotone, Dublin, East Midlands, Edinburgh, Eindhoven, Faro, Fès, Fuerteventura, Gdańsk, Gothenburg, Gran Canaria, Hahn, Hamburg, Helsinki, Iași, Katowice, Kaunas,[20] Kraków, Lamezia Terme, Lanzarote, Lappeenranta, Lisbon, Liverpool, London–Stansted, Lourdes, Lublin, Luxembourg, Madrid, Málaga, Malta, Manchester, Marrakesh, Marseille, Naples, Newcastle upon Tyne, Olbia,[21] Palermo, Palma de Mallorca, Paphos, Pescara, Porto, Poznan, Prague, Riga, Sandefjord, Santander, Santiago de Compostela, Sarajevo,[22] Seville, Sofia, Stockholm–Arlanda, Tallinn, Tangier, Tel Aviv (resumes 2 June 2024),[23] Tenerife–South, Thessaloniki, Tirana,[24] Toulouse, Trapani, Valencia, Vienna, Vilnius, Vitoria, Warsaw–Modlin, Wrocław, Zagreb, Zaragoza
Seasonal: Beni Mallal,[25] Biarritz (begins 3 June 2024),[20] Castellón, Chania, Corfu, Cork, Dubrovnik,[26] Heraklion, Ibiza, Kalamata, Karlsruhe/Baden-Baden,[27] Kefalonia, Knock, Kos, Łódź, Preveza, Rhodes, Rovaniemi, Santorini, Skiathos,[20] Weeze, Zadar, Zakynthos
SpiceJet Seasonal: Amritsar
Transavia Seasonal: Rotterdam/The Hague
TUI fly Belgium Seasonal: Casablanca
Volotea Asturias
Seasonal: Lampedusa, Lyon, Nantes, Olbia, Pantelleria
Vueling Paris–Orly
Wizz Air Belgrade, Bucharest–Otopeni, Cluj-Napoca, Craiova, Iași, Sofia, Tel Aviv, Timișoara, Tirana, Warsaw–Chopin

Cargo edit

AirlinesDestinations
UPS Airlines[28] Cologne/Bonn

Statistics edit

Apron view
Aerial view
Departures area

Traffic edit

Annual passenger traffic at BGY airport.See Wikidata query.
Orio al Serio Airport – traffic information[29]
YearPassengersMovementsCargo tons
20054,356,14351,635136,339
20065,244,794 (+20.4%)56,358 (+9.1%)140,630 (+3.1%)
20075,741,734 (+9.5%)61,364 (+8.9%)134,449 (−4.4%)
20086,482,590 (+12.9%)64,390 (+4.9%)122,398 (−9.0%)
20097,160,008 (+10.4%)65,314 (+1.4%)100,354 (−18.0%)
20107,661,061 (+7.2%)67,167 (+6.3%)106,050 (+6.5%)
20118,419,948 (+9.7%)71,514 (+5.7%)112,556 (+5.3%)
20128,801,392 (+5.5%)72,420 (+4.3%)116,730 (+4.0%)
20138,882,611 (+0.9%)69,974 (−3.4%)115,950 (−0.7%)
20148,696,085 (−2.1%)66,390 (−5.1%)122,488 (+5.6%)
201510,404,625 (+18.6%)76,078 (+12.4%)121,045 (−1.8%)
201611,159,631 (+7.3%)79,953 (+5.1%)117,765 (−2.7%)
201712,336,137 (+10.5%)86,113 (+7.7%)125,948 (+6.9%)
201812,938,572 (+4.9%)89,533 (+4.0%)123,032 (−2.3%)
201913,857,257 (+7.1%)95,377 (+6.5%)118,964 (−3.3%)
20203,833,063 (−72.3%)38,668 (−59.5%)51,543 (−56.7%)
20216,467,296 (+68.7%)51,879 (+34.2%)26,044 (−49.5%)
202213 155 806 (+130,4%)88 846 (+71,3%)20 827 (-20%)
202315,974,386 (+21.4%)101,696 (+14.5%)

Busiest routes edit

Busiest domestic routes from Bergamo (from 2012)[30]
RankCityPassengers 2014Passengers 2013Passengers 2012 (o.w.)Airline
1Bari, Apulia395,912398,801185,188Ryanair
2Cagliari, Sardinia351,967378,223189,440Ryanair
3Lamezia Terme, Calabria337,278344,402175,985Ryanair
4Brindisi, Apulia321,557320,075160,847Ryanair
5Catania, Sicily316,688197,628n.a.Ryanair
6Palermo, Sicily316,099310,468151,766Ryanair
7Trapani, Sicily221,158225,746111,730Ryanair
8Alghero, Sardinia171,972169,04185,680Ryanair
9Pescara, Abruzzo149,862151,38978,868Ryanair
Busiest European routes from Bergamo (from 2012)[30]
RankCityPassengers 2014Passengers 2013Passengers 2012Airline
1London–Stansted, United Kingdom433,762372,387346,870Ryanair
2Charleroi, Belgium276,701298,445293,707Ryanair
3Barcelona, Spain249,108223,236299,985Ryanair
4Beauvais, France216,251218,509219,474Ryanair
5Valencia, Spain206,733196,978186,484Ryanair
6Madrid, Spain170,258125,762201,613Ryanair
7Dublin, Ireland148,368132,571123,659Ryanair
8Bucharest, Romania144,255152,895159,272Blue Air, Wizz Air
9Manchester, United Kingdom118,321114,136102,345Ryanair
10Berlin–Schönefeld, Germany116,14883,65189,554Ryanair
11Vilnius, Lithuania113,56099,49395,044Ryanair, Wizz Air
12Sevilla, Spain112,252110,611112,710Ryanair
13Stockholm–Skavsta, Sweden110,575112,713112,259Ryanair
14Kraków, Poland109,426110,264104,214Ryanair
15Eindhoven, Netherlands109,320109,824107,090Ryanair
16Ibiza, Spain105,69395,67897,635AlbaStar, Ryanair
17Sofia, Bulgaria98,201102,54694,794Wizz Air
18Luqa, Malta92,24478,863Ryanair
19Budapest, Hungary91,377102,955185,536Ryanair
20Porto, Portugal90,41993,279n.a.Ryanair
Busiest non-EU routes from Bergamo (from 2012)[30]
RankCityPassengers 2014Passengers 2013Passengers 2012Airline
1Istanbul–Sabiha Gökçen, Turkey107,222120,750106,643Pegasus Airlines
2Marsa Alam, Egypt75,91957,83864,772Neos, Meridiana, Small Planet, Trawel Fly
3Casablanca, Morocco72,80879,88263,737Air Arabia Maroc
4Kyiv, Ukraine63,81784,543n.a.Wizz Air
5Tirana, Albania52,27663,730n.a.Belle Air

Accidents and incidents edit

  • On 30 October 2005, Trade Air Flight 729 crashed near Bergamo, Italy, shortly after taking off in poor weather. The flight was a night-time cargo flight from Bergamo to Zagreb operated by a Let L-410 Turbolet with the registration 9A-BTA. All three people on board, two pilots and a passenger, were killed.[31]
  • On 5 August 2016, during the night, Boeing 737-476 (SF) registered HA-FAX, operated by ASL Airlines Hungary, overshot while landing on runway 28 in Bergamo and came to a stop on a parking lot and on a secondary highway lane that is around the airport, 300 m (980 ft) from the runway end. No one was injured, but some cars were destroyed and the plane sustained substantial damages. The plane was removed from the street the same day. The air traffic remained unvaried without delays.[32]

Ground transportation edit

Car edit

The A4 is one of the main road networks that links the airport.

Bus edit

There are several public transportation links to and from downtown Milan, including express coaches.[33] There are further connections to/from Bergamo city center, Arezzo, Bologna, Brescia, Monza, Turin, Malpensa Airport, and Milan Trade Exhibition Center, Parma, Torino, and Verona.

Railway edit

While a railway station is currently being built at Bergamo airport, scheduled to open in 2026,[34] the current nearest railway station is Bergamo railway station, 3.5 miles (5.6 km) away. There is no official shuttle between the airport and the railway station. A bus service operated by ATB connects to the airport, about 10 minutes from the train station.[35]

See also edit

References edit

External links edit

Media related to Orio al Serio International Airport at Wikimedia Commons