List of Estonian Air destinations
This is a list of destinations that were served by the now defunct Estonian Air.
Europe
- Austria
- Vienna – Vienna International Airport seasonal
- Belgium
- Croatia
- Split – Split Airport seasonal
- Denmark
- Estonia
- Tallinn – Lennart Meri Tallinn Airport (also known as Ülemiste Airport) Hub
- France
- Paris – Charles de Gaulle Airport seasonal
- Nice – Nice Côte d'Azur Airport seasonal
- Germany
- Munich – Munich Airport seasonal
- Berlin – Berlin Tegel Airport seasonal
- Italy
- Lithuania
- Vilnius – Vilnius International Airport
- Netherlands
- Amsterdam – Amsterdam Schiphol Airport
- Norway
- Russia
- Sweden
- Stockholm – Stockholm-Arlanda Airport
- Stockholm - Stockholm Bromma Airport
- Örebro - Örebro Airport[2]
- Turkey
- Antalya – Antalya Airport seasonal
- Ukraine
- Kiev – Boryspil Airport
- United Kingdom
- London – London Gatwick Airport
Terminated destinations
- Belarus – Minsk National Airport
- Croatia – Dubrovnik Airport
- Estonia – Kärdla Airport, Kuressaare Airport, Tartu Airport
- Finland – Helsinki Airport, Joensuu Airport, Jyväskylä Airport, Kajaani Airport, Tampere-Pirkkala Airport
- Georgia – Tbilisi Airport
- Germany – Frankfurt Airport, Hamburg Airport, Hannover Airport
- Greece – Athens International Airport "Eleftherios Venizelos"
- Ireland – Dublin Airport
- Italy – Bergamo Airport, Rome Fiumicino Airport, Venice Marco Polo Airport
- Latvia – Riga Airport
- Spain – Barcelona–El Prat Airport
- Sweden – Göteborg Landvetter Airport, Växjö Småland Airport
- Ukraine – Simferopol International Airport
- United Kingdom – Manchester Airport
gollark: Internal antennas or something, I assume.
gollark: Signals are strong enough you can receive them on basically anything, apparently.
gollark: There are also phones with headphone-jackless FM radio.
gollark: The 3a does have one actually.
gollark: Also an OLED display and I don't like those.
References
- Estonian Air. "Estonian Air to add flights between Tallinn and Milan next year". Estonian Air. Retrieved 7 May 2015.
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 5 September 2015. Retrieved 27 August 2015.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.