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Timișoara Airport was the first commercial destination of flights made with the only passenger jet aircraft produced in Romania, ROMBAC 1-11. This flight took place on 28 January 1983, on the Bucharest–Timișoara route. [8] Timișoara Airport was under siege during the 1989 Revolution.
Craiova Airport: TWR 129.530 Iași: LRIA IAS Iași International Airport: TWR 119.955 Oradea: LROD OMR Oradea International Airport: TWR 118.455 Satu Mare: LRSM SUJ Satu Mare International Airport: TWR 119.655 Sibiu: LRSB SBZ Sibiu International Airport: APP 126.430 TWR 121.305 Suceava: LRSV SCV Suceava "Ștefan cel Mare" International Airport ...
An airport rail link service to the main railway station, Gara de Nord (Bucharest North), runs from the Airport railway station located near the parking lot of the Arrivals hall. [138] As of August 2021, the trains, alternately operated by CFR and TFC depart every 40 minutes, seven days a week.
The first routes were Bucharest – Sibiu – Arad and Bucharest – Sibiu – Oradea. In 1944, Sibiu was connected by air with some other cities like Bucharest, Brasov, Deva, Oradea and Targu-Mures. In 1959, it was inaugurated the airport building with two floors, a control tower, a waiting room for 50 passengers on each way (embarking and ...
Rank Airport City Code (IATA/ICAO) Passengers [2] Annual change Rank change 1. Henri Coandă International Airport: Bucharest: OTP/LROP: 14,622,263: 16.1%: 2. Cluj Avram Iancu International Airport
The airport received 8,317,168 passengers in 2015 [citation needed]. It is accessible by STB buses 100 and the future M6 underground line, which will link the airport with the main train station of Bucharest. Until 2012 there was also another airport which is no longer used, except for charter/private flights:
This section of the motorway is fully operational and is composed of two segments: Bucharest – Pitești and Pitești bypass. The Bucharest – Pitești segment (95.9 km) is the first motorway class road built in Romania and remained the only one for more than 15 years, until the completion of the Fetești – Cernavodă segment on the A2 motorway in 1987.
The network is run by Metrorex. One of two parts of the larger Bucharest public transport network, Metrorex had an annual ridership of 142,783,000 passengers during 2023, [6] compared to over a billion annual passengers on Bucharest's STB transit system. [7] In total, the Metrorex system is 80.1 kilometres (49.8 mi) long and has 64 stations. [8]