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Milan Malpensa Airport "Silvio Berlusconi" (IATA: MXP, ICAO: LIMC) [3] [4] [5] is an international airport in Ferno, in the Province of Varese, Lombardy, Italy. It is the largest airport in northern Italy, serving Lombardy, Piedmont , and Liguria , as well as the Swiss canton of Ticino .
Volandia Park and Flight Museum is the largest Italian aeronautical museum, as well as one of the largest in Europe. Volandia displays over 100 aircraft. Volandia displays over 100 aircraft. The museum covers an area of ca. 60,000 m 2 (645,000 sq ft ) [ 1 ] of which 20,000 m 2 (215,000 sq ft) are indoors. [ 2 ]
Development prototype #5, (Italian Air Force MMX599) is on display at the Volandia Park and Flight Museum located in Somma Lombardo and adjacent to the Milan-Malpensa Airport [45] The first prototype built in Brazil is displayed on an open museum called Memorial Aeroespacial Brasileiro in São José dos Campos. [46]
Malpensa Airport – the main international airport; Linate Airport – a smaller airport for domestic and European services; Il Caravaggio International Airport, near Bergamo – another airport for domestic and European services; Bresso Airport – used only by general aviation
Malpensa Aeroporto Terminal 1 is a railway station serving Terminal 1 of Milan–Malpensa Airport. It opened in 1999 as Malpensa Aeroporto , as the then western terminus of the Busto Arsizio–Malpensa Airport railway, and is managed by Ferrovienord . [ 1 ]
The Malpensa Express then continues to Saronno (roughly halfway between Cadorna and Malpensa), which offers interchange with the lines for the cities of Varese-Laveno, or Como, or Seregno. From Saronno, the Malpensa Express proceeds along the Saronno–Novara railway , to the junction at Sacconago, located just beyond Busto Arsizio , which is ...
2 July 1983 - An Altair Caravelle III registered as F-BHRS experienced an uncontained engine failure while accelerating for takeoff at Milan Malpensa Airport, Italy. Takeoff was quickly aborted and all 89 occupants survived but the aircraft was damaged beyond repair. The derelict aircraft remained at Milan Malpensa Airport for years afterward. [68]
Strada statale 336 dell'Aeroporto della Malpensa (SS 336) is an Italian state highway 38.8 kilometres (24.1 mi) long in Italy in the region of Lombardy that connects the Milan-Varese motorway with the Turin-Trieste motorway, skirting the Milan Malpensa Airport.