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Dubrovnik Ruđer Bošković Airport (Croatian: Zračna luka Ruđer Bošković Dubrovnik; IATA: DBV, ICAO: LDDU), also referred to as Čilipi Airport (Croatian pronunciation:), is the international airport of Dubrovnik, Croatia.
Dubrovnik Airport Mali Lošinj: LDLO LSZ ... Aerodrom Hvar ... Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; ...
The road was closed on 7 April 2010 due to terms negotiated with the European Union during Croatian accession negotiations. [4] In 2020, an underpass was built and the road was reopened. In April 2013, Zadar Airport became a Ryanair base with a stationed Boeing 737-800 .
It started operations in 2005. In 2006, Dubrovnik Airline carried 380,000 passengers while the first seven months of 2007, saw it transport 360,000 passengers. [3] The airline was loss making since 2009 and ceased all operations on 23 October 2011 after defaulting on its debts thus declaring bankruptcy. [4]
Aerodrom u Boru uskoro i za putničke avione (Blic, 21 March 2012) "Cessna 172" na borskom aerodromu (RTV Bor, 19 March 2012) Pista pala u zaborav Archived 15 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine (MEDIJA CENTAR BOR – Borski Info-centar, 28 September 2010) U kakvom je stanju vazdušna luka planirana za obnovu; S. Trifunović (Glas javnosti) (9 ...
In January 2018, the Government of Serbia granted a 25-year concession of the Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport to the French airport operator Vinci Airports for a sum of 501 million euros. [16] On 21 December 2018, Vinci formally took over the airport. [ 17 ]
The operation involved 39 attack aircraft and another 16 in charge of pre-strike surveillance, resupply, early warning, command and control, post-strike surveillance and electronic countermeasures. According to British sources, only French Air Force and RAF Jaguar [ 11 ] fighters actually dropped bombs on the airbase and anti-aircraft sites in ...
It is the busiest airport in Croatia, handling about 4.31 million passengers and some 13,025 tons of cargo in 2024. [1] Named after Franjo Tuđman, the first President of Croatia, the airport is located some 10 km (6.2 mi) southeast of Zagreb Central Station [2] in Velika Gorica.