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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Operations  





3 Terminals  



3.1  Terminal 1  





3.2  Terminal 2  







4 Airlines and destinations  





5 Statistics  



5.1  Annual traffic  





5.2  Busiest routes  







6 Ground transportation  



6.1  Rail  





6.2  Road  





6.3  Bus  







7 Incidents and accidents  





8 See also  





9 Notes  





10 External links  














Josep Tarradellas BarcelonaEl Prat Airport






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Coordinates: 41°1749N 002°0442E / 41.29694°N 2.07833°E / 41.29694; 2.07833
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from Barcelona Airport)

Josep Tarradellas Barcelona–El Prat Airport


Aeropuerto Josep Tarradellas Barcelona-El Prat[1]
Aeroport Josep Tarradellas Barcelona-El Prat
  • ICAO: LEBL
  • WMO: 08181
  • Summary
    Airport typePublic
    Owner/OperatorAena
    ServesBarcelona metropolitan area
    LocationEl Prat de Llobregat
    Hub for
    Focus city for
    Elevation AMSL14 ft / 4 m
    Coordinates41°17′49N 002°04′42E / 41.29694°N 2.07833°E / 41.29694; 2.07833
    Websiteaena.es
    Map
    BCN is located in Spain
    BCN

    BCN

    Location within Spain

    Runways
    Direction Length Surface
    m ft
    06L/24R 3,743 12,281 Asphalt concrete
    06R/24L 2,660 8,727 Asphalt concrete
    02/20 2,528 8,293 Asphalt concrete
    Statistics (2023)
    Total passengers49,909,544
    Aircraft movements318,957
    Cargo (t)156,485,423

    Sources: Passenger traffic, AENA,[2]
    Spanish AIP, AENA[3][4]

    Josep Tarradellas Barcelona–El Prat Airport[1][5] (IATA: BCN, ICAO: LEBL) (Catalan: Aeroport Josep Tarradellas Barcelona-El Prat, Spanish: Aeropuerto Josep Tarradellas Barcelona-El Prat), and also known as Barcelona-El Prat Airport, is an international airport located 15 km (9.3 mi) southwest[6][7] of the centre of Barcelona, lying in the municipalities of El Prat de Llobregat, Viladecans, and Sant Boi, in Catalonia, Spain.

    It is the second-largest and second-busiest airport in Spain, the busiest international airport of Catalonia (largely surpassing Girona, Reus and Lleida), and the sixth busiest in Europe. In 2019, Barcelona Airport handled a record 52,686,314 passengers, up 5.0% from 2018. It is a hub for Level and Vueling, and a focus city for Air Europa, Iberia, EasyJet and Ryanair.

    The Barcelona–Madrid air shuttle service, known as "Pont Aeri" (inCatalan) or『Puente Aéreo』(inSpanish), literally "Air Bridge", was the world's busiest route until 2008, with the highest number of flight operations (971 per week) in 2007.[8] The schedule has been reduced since February 2008, when a Madrid–Barcelona high-speed rail line was opened, covering the distance in 2 hours 30 minutes, and quickly became popular.[9]

    The airport was renamed by the central Government of Spain to its current name on December 21, 2018 in honour of the first Catalan president under the current Spanish Constitution, Josep Tarradellas - a move widely criticised by the Generalitat de Catalunya and separatists due to non-consultation.[10]

    History[edit]

    Airport layout

    Barcelona's first airfield, located at El Remolar, began operations in 1916. However, it did not have good expansion prospects, so a new airport at El Prat opened in 1918. The first plane was a Latécoère Salmson 300 which arrived from Toulouse with final destination Casablanca. The airport was used as headquarters of the Aeroclub of Catalonia and the base for the Spanish Navy's Zeppelin fleet. Scheduled commercial service began in 1927 with an Iberia service to Madrid Cuatro Vientos Airport. This was Iberia's first route. During the time of the Second Spanish Republic El Prat was one of the bases of LAPE (Líneas Aéreas Postales Españolas).[11]

    In 1948, a runway was built (now called runway 07-25); in the same year the first overseas service was operated by Pan American World AirwaystoNew York City, using a Lockheed Constellation. Between 1948 and 1952, a second runway was constructed (runway 16–34), perpendicular to the previous, also taxiways were constructed and a terminal to accommodate passengers. In 1963, the airport reached one million passengers a year. A new control tower was built in 1965. In 1968, a new terminal was opened, which still exists and is in use as what is now Terminal 2B.[12]

    On 3 August 1970, Pan American World Airways inaugurated regular service between Barcelona, Lisbon and New York, operated by a Boeing 747. [citation needed] On 4 November of the same year, Iberia began the "Air-shuttle" service between Barcelona and Madrid–Barajas. A few years later, in 1976, a terminal was built specifically for Iberia's air-shuttle service and a terminal exclusively for cargo, an annexed mail service and an aircraft ramp for air cargo. In 1977, the airport handled over 5 million passengers annually. [citation needed]

    From the late seventies to the early nineties, the airport was stalled in traffic and investments until the 1992 Summer Olympics held in Barcelona. El Prat underwent a major development consisting of the modernization and expansion of the existing terminal, which became known as Terminal B, and the construction of two further terminals flanking that, known as Terminals A and C respectively.[12]

    The new Terminal 1 was inaugurated on 16 June 2009, covering 545,000 m2 (5,866,331 sq ft). 70% of today's flights operate from Terminal 1. The old Terminals A, B and C are now known as Terminals 2A, 2B and 2C.

    Due to the strong drop in air traffic after 1999 and the crisis in the aviation sector in 2001 many charter operations from Girona and Reus were diverted to El Prat, which helped the airport to survive the crisis.[citation needed]

    On 1 February 2014, Barcelona–El Prat was the first Spanish airport to receive a daily flight with the Airbus A380-800, on the Emirates route to Dubai International Airport. Emirates also offers a second daily flight, also operated by the A380-800.

    International Airlines Group (IAG) announced in December 2016 flights from Barcelona to the US, Latin America and Asia for the summer of 2017. IAG, formed by British Airways, Iberia, Vueling and Aer Lingus, created Level, the second airline, after Norwegian, launching low-cost long haul flights from the Catalan city.[13] They announced flights from June 2017 to Los Angeles, Oakland, Punta Cana and Buenos Aires.[relevant?]

    On 14 October 2019, the airport was the first target of protesters after the sentencing of the trial of Catalonia independence leaders. In the morning, called upon by Democratic Tsunami thousands flocked all the accesses and concourses disrupting normal operations. Catalan Police ordered the closing of all transportation services (bus, Metro and Rail) to avoid further arrivals of demonstrators. The blockade of the main access road (C-32 highway) with people walking between the terminals and city center made Taxi and other services unavailable. Deployment of riot police from Civil Guard, National Police and Mossos d'Esquadra to evict protesters lead to massive confrontations leaving dozens injured. Using social media the organizers called off the action by night time but disruption continued. More than a hundred flights were cancelled during the 14th of October and twenty more were announced for the next day by the main operator, Vueling.[14][15][16][17]

    Operations[edit]

    Barcelona Airport in May 2014

    Most of the traffic at Barcelona Airport is domestic and European, in which Vueling has an operational base. Intercontinental connections have not generated a significant amount of passenger traffic during the last years. In the early twenty-first century the airport passenger carried numbers and the number of operations increased significantly.

    Low-cost airline traffic grew significantly, especially after the creation of operating bases by Vueling and Clickair at the airport. Vueling and Clickair merged in July 2009, operating under the Vueling name. Other low-cost airlines operate from the airport, including Ryanair, EasyJet, Norwegian Air International, EasyJet Switzerland, Wizz Air and Transavia. A new base was established at the airport in September 2010.

    The airport has 3 runways, two parallel, nominated 06L/24R and 06R/24L (the latter opened in 2004), and a cross runway 02/20. There are two terminals: T2, which is the sum of the previous Terminals A, B and C, located on the north side of the airport and T1, on the west side, which opened on 16 June 2009. As of 2014 the two terminals had a combined total of 268 check-in counters and 64 boarding gates. Operations at the airport are restricted exclusively to Instrument flight rules (IFR) flights, except for sanitary, emergency and government VFR flights.

    A plan for expansion (Plan Barcelona)[18] was completed in 2009, adding a third terminal building (also designed by Ricardo Bofill) and control tower. An additional runway (07R/25L) was also built. The airport became capable of handling 55 million passengers annually (up from 33 million in 2007). The airport expanded in area from 8.45 to 15.33 square kilometres (3.26 to 5.92 sq mi).[19] Further expansion was planned to be finished by 2012, with a new satellite terminal to raise capacity to 70 million passengers annually, this is better explained in Terminal T1 section.

    The airport is the subject of a political discussion over management and control between the Generalitat of Catalonia and the Spanish Government, which has involved AENA (airport manager) and various airlines, Iberia and Spanair mainly. Part of the controversy is about the benefits that the airport generates, which are used in maintenance and investments in other airports in the network of AENA and government investments in other economic areas. [by whom?]

    Terminals[edit]

    The new control tower is a hyperboloid structure.
    Terminal 1
    Terminal 2

    Terminal 1[edit]

    A new Terminal 1, designed by Ricardo Bofill Taller de Arquitectura was inaugurated on 16 June 2009. The airport terminal has an area of 548,000 m2 (5,900,000 sq ft), an aircraft ramp of 600,000 m2 (6,500,000 sq ft), 13,000 new parking spaces and 45 new gates expandable to 60. This terminal is also capable of handling large aircraft like the Airbus A380-800 or Boeing 747-8I.

    The terminal handles both Schengen and non-Schengen flights. It is split into 5 Modules with Module A handling flights to Madrid, Module B handling Schengen flights, Module C handling Air Nostrum flights, Module D handling non-Schengen European flights and Module E handling non-Schengen non-European flights.

    Its facilities include:

    The forecast is that the airport will be able to handle 55 million passengers annually —as opposed to the 30 million people before its construction— and will reach 90 operations an hour.

    The extension of the airport with a total investment of €5.1 billion in the future[when?] will include a new satellite terminal and refurbishment of existing terminals. The civil engineering phase of the South Terminal had a budget of €1 billion.

    It is also planned the construction of a satellite terminal —T1S or Terminal 1 Satèl·lit, in Catalan— considering that the airport is on the verge of overcrowding because terminals cannot handle all passengers because of space shortage. This terminal will be at 1,5 kilometres from the current T1 terminal, behind the 02-20, transversal, runway. With this action, the airport will be able to increase its passenger capacity to 70 million people annually.

    There are two lounges located in Terminal 1.

    Terminal 2[edit]

    Terminal 2 is divided into three linked sections, known as Terminal 2A, 2B and 2C. Terminal 2B is the oldest part of the complex still in use, dating back to 1968. Terminals 2A and 2C were added in order to expand the airport capacity before the arrival of the 1992 Summer Olympics held in the city.[12] This expansion was also designed by Ricardo Bofill.

    This terminal is mostly occupied by low-cost airlines, although there are some full-service airlines which also use this terminal.

    Following the opening of Terminal 1 in 2009, Terminal 2 became almost empty until the airport authorities lowered landing fees to attract low-cost and regional carriers to fill the terminal. Whilst this has helped, the complex is nowhere near full capacity and Terminal 2A is currently unused for departures. Terminal 2C is used only by EasyJet and EasyJet Switzerland flights, with flights to the UK and other non-Schengen destinations using gates M, whilst flights to destinations in the Schengen area use gates R. Terminal 2B is mostly used by Ryanair and others, like Transavia. And T2A is adapted for large airplanes, such as B777. The terminal is also split into gate areas, where flights to Schengen destinations use gates U and flights to non Schengen destinations use gates W and Y.

    Airlines and destinations[edit]

    The following airlines operate regular scheduled flights to and from Barcelona:[20]

    AirlinesDestinations
    Aegean Airlines Athens, Thessaloniki
    Aer Lingus Dublin
    Air Algérie Algiers
    Air Arabia Casablanca, Fès, Nador, Oujda, Rabat,[21] Tangier, Tétouan[22]
    Air Canada Montréal–Trudeau
    Seasonal: Toronto–Pearson
    Air China Beijing–Capital[23]
    Air Europa Madrid, Palma de Mallorca
    Seasonal: Lanzarote
    Air France Paris–Charles de Gaulle
    Air Premia Charter: Seoul–Incheon[24]
    Air Serbia Belgrade
    Air Transat Seasonal: Montréal–Trudeau, Toronto–Pearson
    airBaltic Riga
    American Airlines Miami, New York–JFK, Philadelphia
    Seasonal: Chicago–O'Hare, Dallas/Fort Worth[25]
    Arkia Tel Aviv
    Asiana Airlines Seoul–Incheon
    Atlantic Airways Seasonal: Vágar
    Austrian Airlines Vienna
    Avianca Bogotá
    Azerbaijan Airlines Baku[26]
    Azores Airlines Ponta Delgada
    Bluebird Airways Tel Aviv[27]
    British Airways London–City, London–Heathrow
    Brussels Airlines Brussels
    Bulgaria Air Seasonal: Sofia
    Cathay Pacific Hong Kong[28]
    Croatia Airlines Seasonal: Zagreb
    Cyprus Airways Larnaca (begins 3 July 2024)[citation needed]
    Dan Air Bacău[29]
    Delta Air Lines Atlanta, New York–JFK
    easyJet Basel/Mulhouse/Freiburg, Berlin, Birmingham,[30] Bristol, Geneva, Glasgow, Lisbon, Liverpool, London–Gatwick, London–Luton, Lyon, Manchester, Milan–Malpensa, Naples, Paris–Charles de Gaulle, Strasbourg (begins 28 October 2024)[31]
    Seasonal: Belfast–International, Faro, Nice, Pisa (begins 26 June 2024),[32] Salzburg (begins 11 January 2025)[33]
    Egyptair Cairo
    Seasonal: Luxor[34]
    El Al Tel Aviv
    Emirates Dubai–International, Mexico City
    Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi
    Eurowings Cologne/Bonn, Düsseldorf, Hamburg, Prague, Stuttgart
    Finnair Helsinki
    FlyOne Seasonal: Chișinău
    FlyOne Armenia Seasonal: Yerevan[35]
    HiSky Bucharest–Otopeni
    Iberia Badajoz, León, Madrid, Melilla, Pamplona, Valencia
    Seasonal: Funchal, Strasbourg (begins 6 December 2024)[36]
    Iberojet Seasonal: Cancún, Punta Cana, Tegucigalpa (begins 8 October 2024)[37]
    Icelandair Reykjavík–Keflavík
    ITA Airways Rome–Fiumicino
    Jet2.com Birmingham, Leeds/Bradford, Manchester
    KLM Amsterdam
    Korean Air Seoul–Incheon (ends 23 September 2024)[38]
    Kuwait Airways Kuwait City[39]
    LATAM Brasil São Paulo–Guarulhos
    Level Boston, Buenos Aires–Ezeiza, Los Angeles, Miami,[40] New York–JFK, Santiago de Chile
    Seasonal: San Francisco
    LOT Polish Airlines Warsaw–Chopin
    Lufthansa Frankfurt, Munich
    Luxair Luxembourg
    Norwegian Air Shuttle[41] Copenhagen, Helsinki, Oslo, Stockholm–Arlanda
    Seasonal: Aalborg, Bergen, Gothenburg, Sandefjord (begins 5 June 2024),[42] Stavanger
    Nouvelair Tunis
    Pegasus Airlines Istanbul–Sabiha Gökçen
    Play Reykjavík–Keflavík
    Qatar Airways Doha
    Royal Air Maroc Casablanca
    Seasonal: Tangier
    Royal Jordanian Amman–Queen Alia
    Ryanair Alicante,[43][44] Beauvais, Bergamo, Berlin, Billund, Birmingham, Bologna, Bordeaux (ends 26 October 2024),[45] Brussels, Budapest, Charleroi, Cologne/Bonn, Copenhagen (begins 29 October 2024),[46] Cork,[47] Dublin, Edinburgh, Eindhoven, Fez, Fuerteventura, Ibiza, Jerez de la Frontera, Kraków, Liverpool, London–Luton, London–Stansted, Luxembourg, Málaga, Malta, Manchester, Marrakesh, Menorca, Nador, Naples, Newcastle upon Tyne, Ouarzazate, Palermo, Palma de Mallorca, Perugia, Poitiers, Porto, Prague, Rabat, Reggio Calabria,[48] Riga, Rome–Fiumicino, Santiago de Compostela, Seville, Stockholm–Arlanda, Sofia, Tallinn, Tangier, Tenerife–North, Tenerife–South, Turin, Valladolid, Venice, Vienna, Vigo, Vilnius, Warsaw–Modlin
    Seasonal: Alghero, Corfu, East Midlands, Faro,[49] Gdańsk, Glasgow–Prestwick, Gran Canaria, Hahn,[49] Maastricht, Oujda,[49] Santander, Trieste, Zadar[50]
    Saudia Jeddah
    Seasonal: Riyadh[51]
    Scandinavian Airlines Copenhagen, Stockholm-Arlanda
    Seasonal: Oslo
    Shenzhen Airlines Shenzhen
    Singapore Airlines Milan–Malpensa, Singapore
    SunExpress Seasonal: İzmir
    Swiss International Air Lines Zürich
    TAP Air Portugal Lisbon
    Transavia Amsterdam, Eindhoven, Paris–Orly, Rotterdam/The Hague
    Tunisair Tunis
    Turkish Airlines Istanbul
    T'way Air Seoul–Incheon (begins 11 September 2024)[52]
    United Airlines Newark
    Seasonal: Chicago–O'Hare, San Francisco,[53] Washington–Dulles
    Volotea Asturias, Brest,[54] Cagliari, Murcia,[55] Nantes, Strasbourg
    Seasonal: Lille, Marseille, Olbia, Verona
    Vueling[56] A Coruña, Algiers, Alicante, Almería, Amsterdam, Asturias, Athens, Banjul, Bari, Basel/Mulhouse/Freiburg, Beirut, Berlin, Bilbao, Billund, Birmingham, Bologna, Bordeaux, Brussels, Cagliari, Cairo, Catania, Copenhagen, Dakar–Diass, Dublin, Düsseldorf, Edinburgh,[57][better source needed] Florence, Fuerteventura, Geneva, Genoa, Gothenburg, Granada, Gran Canaria, Hamburg, Hannover, Ibiza, Jerez de la Frontera, Lanzarote, La Palma, Lisbon, London–Gatwick, London–Heathrow,[58] Lyon, Madrid, Málaga, Malta, Manchester, Marrakesh, Marseille, Menorca, Milan–Malpensa, Munich, Nantes, Naples, Nice, Nuremberg, Oslo, Palermo, Palma de Mallorca, Paris–Charles de Gaulle, Paris–Orly, Porto, Prague, Rome–Fiumicino, San Sebastián, Santander, Santiago de Compostela, Seville, Stockholm–Arlanda, Stuttgart, Tangier, Tel Aviv,[59] Tenerife–North, Tenerife–South, Turin, Valencia, Valladolid, Venice, Vienna, Vigo, Zürich
    Seasonal: Amman–Queen Alia, Bastia, Bergen, Comiso (begins 13 June 2024),[60] Dubrovnik, Faro, Helsinki, Heraklion, Luxor,[61] Mykonos, Olbia, Oran,[62] Rovaniemi,[63] Reykjavík–Keflavík, Sal, Santorini, Sharm El Sheikh,[64] Split, Tunis
    WestJet Seasonal: Calgary
    Wizz Air Belgrade, Bucharest–Otopeni, Budapest, Cluj-Napoca, Gdańsk, Iași, Katowice, Kraków, Kutaisi, Milan–Malpensa,[65] Rome–Fiumicino, Sofia,[66] Timişoara, Tirana, Vienna, Vilnius, Warsaw–Chopin, Wrocław
    Fly Lili Brasov (begins 20 July 2024)[67]

    Statistics[edit]

    Annual traffic[edit]

    Annual passenger traffic at BCN airport. See Wikidata query.
    Traffic by calendar year
    Passengers Aircraft movements Cargo (tonnes)
    2000 19,809,567 255,913 88,269
    2001 20,745,536 273,119 81,882
    2002 21,348,211 271,023 75,905
    2003 22,752,667 282,021 70,118
    2004 24,558,138 291,369 84,985
    2005 27,152,745 307,798 90,446
    2006 30,008,152 327,636 93,404
    2007 32,898,249 352,501 96,770
    2008 30,208,134 321,491 104,329
    2009 27,311,765 278,965 89,813
    2010 29,209,595 277,832 104,279
    2011 34,398,226 303,054 96,572
    2012 35,144,503 290,004 96,522
    2013 35,216,828 276,497 100,288
    2014 37,559,044 283,850 102,692
    2015 39,711,276 288,878 117,219
    2016 44,154,693 307,864 132,754
    2017 47,284,500 323,539 156,105
    2018 50,172,457 335,651 172,939
    2019 52,686,314 344,558 177,271
    2020 12,739,259 122,638 114,263
    2021 18,874,896 163,679 136,107
    2022 41,639,622 283,394 155,600
    Source: Aena Statistics[2]

    Busiest routes[edit]

    Busiest international routes from BCN (2022)
    Rank Destination Passengers Change 2021 / 22
    1 Amsterdam 1,207,600 Increase 97%
    2 Paris-Charles de Gaulle 1,105,095 Increase 160%
    3 London-Gatwick 1,009,236 Increase 485%
    4 Rome-Fiumicino 952,609 Increase 168%
    5 Paris-Orly 946,676 Increase 55%
    6 Lisbon 919,826 Increase 176%
    7 Milan-Malpensa 796,950 Increase 190%
    8 Frankfurt 782,724 Increase 102%
    9 Brussels 700,387 Increase 113%
    10 Munich 696,318 Increase 175%
    Source: Estadísticas de tráfico aereo[68]
    Busiest Spanish routes from BCN (2022)
    Rank Destination Passengers Change 2021 / 22
    1 Palma de Mallorca 2,034,184 Increase 66%
    2 Madrid 1,716,673 Increase 69%
    3 Ibiza 1,101,508 Increase 44%
    4 Seville 929,924 Increase 60%
    5 Menorca 836,556 Increase 28%
    6 Málaga 774,185 Increase 50%
    7 Tenerife-North 581,382 Increase 56%
    8 Bilbao 528,396 Increase 63%
    9 Gran Canaria 470,101 Increase 49%
    10 Granada 396,119 Increase 100%
    Source: Estadísticas de tráfico aereo[68]

    Ground transportation[edit]

    Rail[edit]

    Train Terminal 2 has its own Rodalies Barcelona commuter train station on the line R2, which runs from the Maçanet-Massanes station every 30 minutes, with major stops at Barcelona Sants railway station and the fairly central Passeig de Gràcia railway station to provide transfer to the Barcelona Metro system, also in Clot station. Passengers for T1 must take a connecting bus from Terminal 2B to Terminal 1. As part of the major expansion above, a new shuttle train is going to be built from Terminal 1 to Barcelona Sants (connected with the high speed train, the AVE) and Passeig de Gràcia Stations was expected by the end of 2020.

    Metro Also this airport is linked to Barcelona by underground (metro) since 12 February 2016[69][70]byLine 9 of the Barcelona Metro with a station in each terminal, the Aeroport T1 station situated directly underneath the airport terminal T1 and the Aeroport T2 station close to the Aeroport rail station at the terminal T2. The line connects with several Barcelona Metro lines to the city center.

    Road[edit]

    The C-32B highway connects the airport to a main traffic interchange between Barcelona's Ronda de Dalt beltway and major motorways. There is provision for parking cars at the airport, with about 24,000 parking spaces.

    Bus[edit]

    The Transports Metropolitans de Barcelona (TMB) public bus line 46 runs from Paral·lel Avenue. The Aerobús offers direct transfers from T1 and T2 to the city center at Plaça Catalunya. Another company offers transfers from Barcelona Airport to nearest airports like Reus AirportorGirona–Costa Brava, provincial and national capitals and links with FranceorAndorra.

    Incidents and accidents[edit]

    See also[edit]

    Notes[edit]

    1. ^ a b "BOE.es – Documento BOE-A-2019-2943". www.boe.es (in Spanish). Retrieved 30 April 2019. Modificar la denominación oficial del aeropuerto de Barcelona-El Prat, que en adelante pasa a denominarse «Aeropuerto Josep Tarradellas Barcelona-El Prat».
  • ^ a b "Tráfico de pasajeros, operaciones y carga en los aeropuertos españoles" (PDF) (in Spanish). AENA. 2018. Retrieved 14 January 2019.
  • ^ "Spanish AIP (AENA)". Archived from the original on 7 March 2012.
  • ^ "Presentación – Aeropuerto de Barcelona-El Prat – Aena.es". aena.es.
  • ^ "Barcelona-El Prat Airport – Official website – Aena.es". www.aena.es. Retrieved 8 March 2019.
  • ^ Aena (ed.). "Aeropuerto de Barcelona-El Prat". Archived from the original on 21 November 2014. Retrieved 31 August 2015.
  • ^ Eurocontrol basic Archived 17 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine. Eurocontrol.int. Retrieved on 4 October 2011.
  • ^ "Air passenger transport in Europe in 2007". eurostat.eu. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
  • ^ "Why the train in Spain is more popular than the plane". elpais.com. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
  • ^ "Barcelona-El Prat airport to be renamed Josep Tarradellas". 21 December 2018.
  • ^ "Airline memorabilia: Alas de la República: CLASSA, LAPE (1934)". 14 April 2011. Retrieved 1 June 2015.
  • ^ a b c "History – Barcelona–El Prat Airport". aena. Retrieved 12 December 2014.
  • ^ "IAG operará vuelos 'low cost' de largo radio desde El Prat a partir de junio". La Vanguardia. 22 December 2016.
  • ^ "Continúan las cancelaciones en el Prat: estos son los aviones que se quedan en tierra hoy". El Confidencial (in Spanish). 15 October 2019. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  • ^ "Las protestas independentistas colapsan los accesos al aeropuerto de El Prat". Canarias7 (in Spanish). Barcelona. EFE. 15 October 2019. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  • ^ "Protests in Spain leave at least 37 injured, dozens of flights canceled in Barcelona". CBS News. 14 October 2019. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  • ^ "Tsunami Democratic desconvoca la movilización en el Aeropuerto de Barcelona". Europa Press (in Spanish). El Prat de Llobregat. 14 October 2019. Retrieved 2 September 2022.
  • ^ Barcelona / Plan Barcelona Archived 5 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine. Aena.es. Retrieved on 4 October 2011.
  • ^ "About Barcelona-El Prat Airport". aviatechchannel.com. Retrieved 1 November 2023.
  • ^ aena.es – Destinos retrieved 16 February 2017
  • ^ "Air Arabia Maroc adds Rabat international service in NS24". Aeroroutes. 14 February 2024.
  • ^ "Air Arabia Maroc Launches Tetouan – Europe Service in NS24". Aeroroutes. Retrieved 15 January 2024.
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  • ^ "Azerbaijan Airlines NS24 Barcelona Aircraft Changes". AeroRoutes. 1 January 2024. Retrieved 1 January 2024.
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  • ^ "Cathay Pacific hace oficial su vuelta a Barcelona y reanudará los vuelos directos entre Hong Kong y Barcelona". Retrieved 28 December 2023.
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  • ^ "Iberia Adds Seasonal Barcelona - Strasbourg Service in NW24". AeroRoutes. 7 May 2024. Retrieved 7 May 2024.
  • ^ "Iberojet Schedules Honduras OCT 2024 Launch". AeroRoutes. 31 May 2024. Retrieved 9 June 2024.
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  • ^ Accident description for EC-CGG at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on October 13, 2023.
  • ^ Accident description for EC-GDG at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on October 13, 2023.
  • ^ Accident description for EC-FXD at the Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved on October 13, 2023.
  • External links[edit]

    Media related to Barcelona Airport at Wikimedia Commons
    Barcelona El Prat Airport travel guide from Wikivoyage

    Accident history for BCNatAviation Safety Network

  • Aviation

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