Hans Christian Andersen Airport

Hans Christian Andersen Airport (Danish: Odense Lufthavn, also often referred to as Beldringe Lufthavn) (IATA: ODE, ICAO: EKOD) is a small airport serving the Danish city of Odense. It is located in the village of Beldringe, some 9 km north-northwest of the city.

Hans Christian Andersen Airport

Odense Lufthavn
Summary
Airport typePublic
OperatorOdense Lufthavn S.m.b.a.
ServesOdense, Denmark
Elevation AMSL56 ft / 17 m
Coordinates55°28′36″N 010°19′51″E
Websitehca-airport.dk
Map
ODE
Location of airport in Denmark
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
06/24 6,562 2,000 Asphalt
13/31 2,280 695 Grass
Statistics (2016)
Passengers23,183

History

The airstrip was constructed for military purposes in the early 1940s during the German occupation of Denmark.

Passenger numbers from the airport fell significantly after the Great Belt Fixed Link was opened in 1998, and today there are no longer any commercial flights between Odense and Copenhagen. Government operations of the airport were suspended in 1998, and operations were continued as a limited company operated by Funen County and the municipalities of Odense, Bogense, Munkebo, Søndersø, and Otterup. Effective 1 January 2007, the airport is owned by Odense (84.38%), Nordfyn (12.94%) and Kerteminde municipalities (2.68%).[2]

In 2000, a joint venture was established with Plane Station Denmark A/S for operating the facility. The arrangement was later terminated with politicians citing the low number of flights from the facility, and operations were resumed by the county and municipalities.

In 2006, flights commenced between Odense and northern Italy and in 2007, a route operated from Odense to Nîmes, France. There were also flights to Burgas but these were cancelled by Hemus Air citing that the runway was too short. Tyrkiet Eksperten cancelled a scheduled route to Turkey citing the same concern.[3]

In 2007, the runway was extended to 2,000 meters.[2] In 2008, Falk Lauritsen & Apollo Rejser started weekly summer flights to Chania, Greece with an Airbus A320-200 from Iberworld[4] and Gislev Rejser replaced the Nîmes flight with a route to Béziers, France.

Airlines and destinations

The following airlines operate seasonal and seasonal charter services to and from Odense:[5]

AirlinesDestinations
Aegean Airlines Seasonal charter: Chania[6]
DAT Seasonal: Bornholm
Seasonal charter: Dublin, Edinburgh, Verona
Sunclass Airlines Seasonal charter: Palma de Mallorca [7]
gollark: Well, if you extrapolate from current trends, probably JS will be gone and replaced with some even weirder thing.
gollark: ++delete communist revolutions
gollark: No communist revolutions!
gollark: Videos are sent uncompressed at "16k³", the marketing name for multi-layer transparent 16k displays which don't actually have 16000 layers.
gollark: 2050: JavaScript development is conducted entirely on Google gPhones™. Hello World imports over 2000 packages, one of which is deprecated per day. Types have now been deprecated and everything is implicitly converted based on a 1000-page spec nobody ever reads. Applications take up about 50GB of space each and use about half of a recent 60GHz carbon-nanotube ARMv18 CPU's processing power. Each browser tab uses 1TB of RAM, more if it's playing videos.

See also

  • List of the largest airports in the Nordic countries

References

  • AIP Denmark: Odense - EKOD
  • VFR Flight Guide Denmark: Odense - EKOD
  • Most of this article is based on the corresponding article on the Danish Wikipedia, accessed on 30 May 2006.

Media related to Odense Airport at Wikimedia Commons

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.