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The Cluj Airport was founded on 1 April 1932 by the Romanian Ministry of Industry and Trade. [5] Until the civil airport was built, the area was used as a military airfield. On 15 December 1917, the County Council of Kolozsvár (today Cluj-Napoca ) gave land in the settlement of Szamosfalva (today the Someșeni district of Cluj-Napoca) in order ...
Rank Airport City Code (IATA/ICAO) Passengers [2] Annual change Rank change 1. Henri Coandă International Airport: Bucharest: OTP/LROP: 12,591,905: 82.7%: 2. Cluj Avram Iancu International Airport
Bistrița Airfield, 47°09'30"N 24°33'06"E 131.65 MHz Buziaș: Buziaș Airfield, 45°39'11"N 21°34'34"E Caransebeș / Reșița: LRCS CSB Caransebeș Airport: TWR 118.880 MHz Ciolpani: Ciolpani Airfield 122.1 MHz Cisnădie / Sibiu: LRCD Măgura Airfield, 45°44'21"N 24°9'50"E 122.7 MHz Clinceni / București: LRCN Clinceni Airfield, 44°21'38 ...
In February 2014, the new owners, a 50-50 joint venture between the city and county public administrations, started a new modernization program. [5] The project involved the construction of a passenger terminal, a control tower, a parking area, and an intermodal bus terminal, as well as the refurbishment of the runway. [ 7 ]
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Bucharest Henri Coandă International Airport (Romanian: Aeroportul Internațional Henri Coandă București) (IATA: OTP, ICAO: LROP) is Romania's busiest international airport, located in Otopeni, 16.5 km (10.3 mi) north of Bucharest's city centre. [1] It is currently one of the two airports serving the capital of Romania.
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