Charles de Gaulle International Airport
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|- !colspan="4" style="text-align: center; background-color: #4682B4; color: white;" |Runways |- !bgcolor="lightgrey" rowspan="2"|Direction !bgcolor="lightgrey" colspan="2"|Length !bgcolor="lightgrey" rowspan="2"|Surface |- !bgcolor="lightgrey"|ft !bgcolor="lightgrey"|m |- !align="left" valign="top"|8L/26R |valign="top" align="right"|13,829 |valign="top" align="right"|4,215 |valign="top"|Paved |- !align="left" valign="top"|8R/26L |valign="top" align="right"|8,858 |valign="top" align="right"|2,700 |valign="top"|Paved |- !align="left" valign="top"|9L/27R |valign="top" align="right"|8,858 |valign="top" align="right"|2,700 |valign="top"|Paved |- !align="left" valign="top"|9R/27L |valign="top" align="right"|13,780 |valign="top" align="right"|4,200 |valign="top"|Paved
Paris's Charles de Gaulle International Airport () (French: Aéroport de Roissy-Charles de Gaulle), also known as Roissy Airport (or just Roissy in French), is one of Europe's principal aviation centres, as well as France's main international airport. It is named after Charles de Gaulle (1890-1970), a French general and former president. It is located near Roissy, 25 km to the north-east of Paris. The construction of this airport lasted about 10 years.
In 2004, Charles de Gaulle Airport ranked second in Europe in terms of passenger traffic with 51,260,363 passengers [link], behind London Heathrow Airport (67,344,054), and just above Frankfurt International Airport (51,098,271). In terms of plane movements, Charles de Gaulle Airport was number one in Europe with 525,660 planes [link], above Frankfurt International Airport (477,475) and Heathrow (475,999). In terms of cargo traffic, Charles de Gaulle Airport was also number one in Europe in 2004 with 1,876,900 metric tonnes (2,068,928 US tons) [link], above Frankfurt (1,838,894 metric tonnes) and Heathrow (1,412,033 metric tonnes).
CDG is connected to the RER urban rail network, providing service into downtown Paris three or four times per hour, and the high-speed rail TGV network. SNCF French Rail operates direct TGV services to several French stations from CDG, including Angers Rail Station in Angers, TGV Rail Station in Avignon, Gare de Bordeaux in Bordeaux, Grenoble Rail Station in Grenoble, Le Mans Rail Station in Le Mans, Lille-Europe in Lille, Lyon Rail Station in Lyon, Marseille Rail Station in Marseille, Montpellier Rail Station in Montpellier, Nantes Rail Station in Nantes, Nimes Rail Station in Nîmes, Poitiers Rail Station in Poitiers, Rennes Rail Station in Rennes, Toulouse Rail Station in Toulouse, Tours Rail Station in Tours, and Valence Rail Station in Valence.
Also codeshared is Thalys International's service to Brussels's South station.
The other important airport in the Paris area is Orly Airport.
- 1 Geography
- 2 History
- 3 Terminals
- 4 Trivia
- 5 Photography restrictions
- 6 Airlines
- 6.1 Terminal 1
- 6.2 Terminal 2
- 6.2.1 Hall A (Terminal 2A)
- 6.2.2 Hall B (Terminal 2B)
- 6.2.3 Hall C (Terminal 2C)
- 6.2.4 Hall D (Terminal 2D)
- 6.2.5 Hall E (Terminal 2E)
- 6.2.6 Hall F (Terminal 2F)
- 6.3 Terminal 3 (formerly ''T9'')
- 7 See also
- 8 External links
Geography
Charles de Gaulle Airport extends over 32.38 km² (12.5 sq. miles) of land. It straddles three départements and seven communes:- Seine-et-Marne département: communes of Le Mesnil-Amelot (terminals 2E, 2F), Mauregard (terminals 1, 3), Mitry-Mory, and Compans
- Seine-Saint-Denis département: commune of Tremblay-en-France (terminals 2A, 2B, 2C, 2D)
- Val-d'Oise département: communes of Roissy-en-France and Épiais-lès-Louvres
History
After seven years of planning and construction, CDG began service on March 8, 1974. Terminal one was built to an avant-garde design consisting of a ten-floor high circular building surrounded by seven satellite buildings each with four gates. The main architect was Paul Andreu, who was also in charge of the extensions during the following decades.
On 26 August 1988, one Merhan Karimi Nasseri found himself held at Charles de Gaulle airport by immigration. He claimed he was a refugee, but had had his refugee papers stolen. After years of bureaucratic wrangling, it was concluded that Nasseri had entered the airport legally and could not be expelled from its walls; but since he had no papers, there was no country to deport him to either, leaving him in residential limbo. Nasseri has continued to live within the confines of the airport to this day, even though French authorities have since made it possible for him to leave if he so [chooses].
On 19 September 1989, UTA Flight 772 exploded over the Sahara Desert while on the second leg of the Brazzaville-Ndjamena-Paris route, killing all on board.
On 24 December, 1994, Air France Flight 8969 was hijacked shortly after it took off from Algiers to Paris. It was flown to Marseille, where hijackers wanted it to be refuelled in order to run it into the Eiffel Tower. French commandos intervened and shot all four hijackers dead.
On 17 July, 1996, TWA Flight 800, which was bound for Charles de Gaulle International Airport from John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York, exploded near Long Island.
On 25 July 2000, Air France Flight 4590, a Concorde bound from Charles de Gaulle Airport for JFK crashed into the nearby hotel of Hotelissimo in Gonesse after coming in contact with material that had been left by another plane on the runway. The Concorde was on a German charter flight for a tour company. Everyone on board died, as did four people on the ground.
On 22 December, 2001, an Al-Qaeda terrorist named Richard Reid tried to ignite explosives hidden in his shoes onboard American Airlines Flight 63, which was headed from Charles de Gaulle to Miami International Airport in Miami, Florida. He was subdued after a passenger smelled sulfur.
The collapse of Terminal 2E
Terminal 2E, with a daring design and wide open spaces, was CDG's newest addition. However, on 23 May, 2004, not long after its inauguration, a portion of Terminal 2E's ceiling collapsed early in the day, near Gate E50, killing five people [link]. Terminal 2E had been inaugurated in 2003 after some delays in construction and was also designed by Paul Andreu. Administrative and judicial enquiries were started. Coincidentally, Andreu had also designed Terminal 3 at Dubai International Airport, which collapsed while under construction on September 28, 2004.Before this accident, ADP had been planning for a public stock offering in 2005 with the new terminal as a major attraction for investors. The partial collapse and indefinite closing of the terminal just before the beginning of summer could seriously hurt the airport's business plan.
In February 2005, the results from the administrative enquiry were published. The experts pointed out that the there existed no single fault, but rather a multiplicity of causes to the collapse, in a design that had little margins of safety. According to them, the concrete vaulted roof was not resilient enough and had been pierced by metallic pillars; and some openings weakened the structure. Sources close to the enquiry also disclosed that the whole building chain had worked as close to the limits as possible, so as to reduce costs. Paul Andreu denounced the building companies for having not correctly prepared the reinforced concrete.
On March 17, 2005, ADP decided to tear down and rebuild the whole part of Terminal 2E (the "jetty") of which a section had collapsed, at a cost of approximately €100 million [link].
Terminals
Charles de Gaulle International Airport has three terminals. Terminal 2 was built for Air France, but now hosts other airlines as well. The third terminal (T3, formerly T9) hosts charter and low cost airlines, such as easyJet.
The so-called "terminal 2" is actually not really a terminal, but rather a name applied to six distinct so-called "halls", which each possess a letter (from A to F). In other airports, such as JFK or LAX, these "halls" would simply be called terminals, so that Charles de Gaulle International Airport can be more properly described as having eight terminals altogether. When landing at or taking off from Charles de Gaulle International Airport, one should always know precisely which of the eight terminals/halls the plane lands or takes off from, as these can be located quite far apart from each other. The eight terminals/halls are indicated distinctly on plane tickets: 1, 2A, 2B, 2C, 2D, 2E, 2F, 3.
The six halls at Terminal 2, the newest part of the airport, have their own RER and TGV station underneath. Passengers may reach trains going to Paris or to other French and foreign cities by going through passages and moving walkways.
The RER station for Terminal 1 is quite distant from Terminal 1, and this terminal must, in fact, be reached using a free shuttle bus from the RER station. Shuttle buses also link Terminals 1, 2 (and its associated TGV station) and 3.
A VAL transit system, CDGVAL, is currently under construction and should link all the eight terminal/halls in the near future. Its opening is forecast for the end of 2006.
Trivia
- The grassy lands on which the airport is located are notorious for hosting a large population of rabbits and hares, which can clearly be seen by airplane passengers at certain times of the day. The airport organizes periodic hunts and captures to keep the population to manageable levels. [link]
- In the video of the U2 song Beautiful Day the band can be seen walking through the airport.
- Tarmac was used in the Walt Disney attraction film, Le Visionarium and featured a Concorde of Air France and DC-10 of UTA.
- Many scenes were filmed at the airport for the film,
Photography restrictions
There is a new French law number 05-4979 relating specifically to Charles de Gaulle airport: the law prohibits photographs being taken for private use of anything moving (e.g. airplanes) or not moving (e.g. buildings) within the "zone reservée" - the restricted area - from the "zone publique" - the public area. It is not clear whether the public area refers to all areas from which the airport is visible, or only to areas within the grounds of the airport. The law is much to the consternation of plane spotters. [link]Airlines
Terminal 1
- Adria Airways (Ljubljana)
- Aer Lingus (Cork, Dublin)
- Aerolíneas Argentinas (Buenos Aires-Ezeiza, Madrid)
- Air China (Beijing, Shanghai-Pudong)
- Air Europa (Barcelona, Madrid)
- Air Exel (Eindhoven)
- Air Gabon (Libreville)
- Air Malta (Valletta)
- Air Moldova (Chişinău)
- All Nippon Airways (Tokyo-Narita)
- Arkia Israel Airlines (Tel Aviv)
- Armavia (Yerevan)
- Armenian International Airways (Yerevan)
- Blue1 (Helsinki)
- bmi (Leeds/Bradford, London-Heathrow)
- * bmibaby (Cardiff, Durham Tees Valley, Nottingham)
- Cubana (Havana)
- Croatia Airlines (Dubrovnik, Split, Zagreb)
- Cyprus Airways (Larnaca)
- Ethiopian Airlines (Addis Ababa, Frankfurt)
- EVA Air (Taipei-Chiang Kai Shek)
- flyLal (Vilnius)
- Germanwings
- Gulf Air (Abu Dhabi, Bahrain)
- Hellas Jet (Athens)
- Iberworld (Palma de Mallorca)
- Icelandair (Keflavik)
- Kuwait Airways (Kuwait City, Rome-Fuimicino)
- LOT Polish (Warsaw)
- Lufthansa (Frankfurt, Munich)
- * Lufthansa CityLine (Berlin-Tegel, Cologne, Düsseldorf, Hamburg, Hanover, Munich, Nuremberg, Stuttgart)
- Malaysia Airlines (Kuala Lumpur)
- Olympic Airlines (Athens)
- Pakistan International Airlines (Islamabad, Lahore)
- Pulkovo Aviation (St. Petersburg (RU))
- Qatar Airways (Doha)
- Saudi Arabian Airlines (Beirut, Jeddah, Riyadh)
- Scandinavian Airlines System (Copenhagen, Stockholm-Arlanda)
- *SAS Braathens (Oslo)
- Singapore Airlines (Singapore)
- South African Airways (Johannesburg)
- Srilankan (Colombo)
- Star Airlines (Cancun, Santiago de Cuba, Varadero)
- TACV Cabo Verde (Sal)
- TAP Portugal (Lisbon)
- Thai Airways International (Bangkok)
- United Airlines (Chicago-O'Hare, Washington-Dulles)
- US Airways (Philadelphia)
- Uzbekistan Airways (Tashkent)
- Varig (Rio de Janeiro-Galeão, São Paulo-Guarulhos)
- Yemenia (Sanaa)
Terminal 2
Hall A (Terminal 2A)
- Air Austral (Reunion Island, Mauritius, Comoros, Madagascar)
- Air Canada (Montréal, Toronto)
- Air France (Cotonou, Delhi, Havana, Lome, Mumbai, Nouakchott, Tehran-Mehrabad)
- Air India (Mumbai, Newark)
- Air Madagascar (Antananarivo)
- Air Tahiti Nui (Los Angeles, New York-JFK, Papeete)
- American Airlines (Boston, Chicago-O'Hare, Dallas/Fort Worth, Miami, New York-JFK)
- Cathay Pacific (Hong Kong)
- Continental Airlines (Houston-Intercontinental, Newark)
- El Al (Tel Aviv)
- TAAG Air Angola (Luanda)
- TAM (Recife, São Paulo-Guarulhos)
Hall B (Terminal 2B)
- Aeroflot (Moscow-Sheremetyevo)
- Air Algerie (Algiers)
- Air France (Belgrade, Bucharest, Budapest, Istanbul, Kiev, Ljubljana, Moscow-Sheremetyevo, Prague, Rabat, Sofia, St. Petersburg (RU), Warsaw, Zagreb)
- Airzena Georgian Airlines (Tbilisi)
- Austrian Airlines (Vienna)
- Azal Azerbaijan (Baku)
- Belavia (Minsk)
- British Airways (London-Heathrow)
- * BA Connect (Birmingham (UK), Bristol, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Manchester (UK))
- Bulgaria Air (Sofia)
- Czech Airlines (Prague)
- Estonian Air (Tallinn)
- Jat Airways (Belgrade)
- MALÉV Hungarian Airlines (Budapest)
- Master Airways (Belgrade)
- Royal Air Maroc (Casablanca)
- Swiss International Air Lines (Zürich)
- TAROM (Bucharest)
- Tunisair (Tunis)
- Ukraine International (Kiev)
Hall C (Terminal 2C)
- Air France (Abidjan, Antanarivo, Atlanta, Bangkok, Beijing, Boston, Chicago-O'Hare, Dakar, Delhi, Douala, Djibouti, Fort-de-France, Guangzhou, Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, Hong Kong, Libreville, Los Angeles, Mauritius, Miami, Newark, New York-JFK, Niamey, Ouagadougou, Papeete, Philadelphia, Pointe-à-Pitre, Port Harcourt, San Francisco, Shanghai-Pudong, Singapore, São Paulo-Guarulhos, St.Maarten, Yaounde, Washington-Dulles)
- Air Mauritius (Mauritius)
- Air Seychelles (Mahe)
- China Eastern Airlines (Beijing, Shanghai-Pudong)
- China Southern Airlines (Guangzhou)
- Emirates (Dubai)
- Vietnam Airlines (Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City)
Hall D (Terminal 2D)
- Air France (Athens, Basel/Mulhouse, Berlin-Tegel, Biarritz, Bologna, Bordeaux, Bremen, Brest, Clermont, Copenhagen, Düsseldorf, Florence, Frankfurt, Hamburg, Hanover, Lisbon, Málaga, Montpellier, Munich, Nantes, Nuremberg, Oporto, Oslo, Stockholm-Arlanda, Strasbourg, Stuttgart, Valencia, Vienna, Vigo)
- Air Nostrum (Alicante)
- Austrian Airlines (Vienna)
- Brit Air (Bilbao, Genoa, Limoges, Rennes, Southampton)
- CityJet (Florence)
- Eurofly
- Finnair (Helsinki)
- Iberia (Madrid)
- Jersey European Airways
- Luxair (Luxembourg)
- Styrian Spirit (Maribor, Salzburg)(Services suspended)
Hall E (Terminal 2E)
- Aeroméxico (Mexico City)
- Air France (Buenos Aires-Ezeiza, Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky (seasonal), Dakar, Detroit, Mexico City, Santiago, Yerevan)
- Delta Air Lines (Atlanta, Chennai [ends September 12, 2006], Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky, New York-JFK, Mumbai [ends November 1, 2006])
- Northwest Airlines (Detroit)
Hall F (Terminal 2F)
- Air France (Aberdeen, Amman, Amsterdam, Bamako, Bangui, Barcelona, Bogota, Cairo, Caracas, Casablanca, Conakry, Dubai, Geneva, Houston-Intercontinental, Jeddah, Johannesburg, Kinshasa, Kuwait, Lagos, London-Heathrow, Luanda, Lyon, Madrid, Malabo, Manchester (UK), Milan-Linate, Milan-Malpensa, Montréal, Naples, N'Djamena, Newcastle, Nice, Osaka-Kansai, Pointe Noire, Punta Cana, Rio de Janeiro-Galeão, Rome-Fiumicino, Santo Domingo, Seoul-Incheon, Tel Aviv, Tokyo-Narita, Toronto, Toulouse, Tunis, Turin, Venice, Verona)
- Alitalia (Milan-Linate, Milan-Malpensa, Rome-Fiumicino)
- British European
- Flybe (Birmingham (UK))
- CityJet (Dublin, Edinburgh, Gothenburg, London-City, Zürich)
- Japan Airlines (Nagoya, Tokyo-Narita)
- Jersey European Airways
- KLM Royal Dutch Airlines (Amsterdam, Basel/Mulhouse)
- Korean Air (Seoul-Incheon)
- Middle East Airlines (Beirut)
Terminal 3 (formerly T9)
- Aegean Airlines (Athens)
- Afriqiyah Airways (Tripoli)
- Aigle Azur (Cairo)
- Air Berlin (Dusseldorf, Nuremberg)
- Air Cairo
- Air Europa (Aberdeen)
- Air Horizons (Agadir, Marrakech)
- Air Mauritanie
- Air Mediterranee
- Air Memphis
- Air Plus Comet
- Air Senegal International (Cap Skirring, Dakar)
- Air Togo
- Air Transat (Montréal, Quebec City, Toronto)
- AMC Airlines
- Axis Airways (Ancona)
- Azzurra
- Blue Line
- Britannia Airways
- Channel Express Air Services
- Cowjet
- Daallo Airlines
- easyJet (Belfast-International, Dortmund, Lisbon, Liverpool, London-Luton, Milan-Malpensa, Newcastle, Nice)
- *easyJet Switzerland (Basel/Mulhouse, Geneva)
- Eagle Aviation
- Eurocypria
- Eurofly
- European Air Charter
- Excel Airways
- Fly Air Havayolarri (Antalya)
- Free Bird Airlines
- Girjet
- Hamburg International
- Hifly
- Ivoire Airways
- Jet2.com
- Karthago Airlines
- Lotus Air
- Luxor Air
- Meridiana
- Montenegro Airlines (Tivat)
- Niki (Vienna)
- Nouvelair
- Onur Air (Antalya, Istanbul)
- Pegasus Airlines
- Portugalia
- SkyEurope
- Spanair
- Star Airlines (Antalya)
- STA Trans African
- Transavia
- Turkish Airlines (Istanbul)
- VLM Airlines
- Vueling Airlines (Barcelona)
- Windjet (Forli)
- Zoom Airlines (Calgary, Montréal, Toronto and Vancouver)
See also
- Transportation in France
- List of French Airports
- Merhan Karimi Nasseri, an Iranian refugee who has been living there since 1988
External links
General
- [Aéroports de Paris] Official website
- [World Aero Data on this airport (LFPG)]
- [Structurae: Charles de Gaulle Airport]
- [Official report of the administrative enquiry commission] (in French)
- [BBC News Report] on the Air France Flight 4590 Concorde crash
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