Seville Airport

International airport in Spain From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Seville Airportmap

Seville Airport (IATA: SVQ, ICAO: LEZL)[1] (Spanish: Aeropuerto de Sevilla)[2] is the sixth busiest inland airport in Spain. It is the main international airport serving Western Andalusia in southern Spain, and neighbouring provinces. The airport has flight connections to 20 destinations in Spain and 57 destinations around the rest of Europe and Northern Africa, and handled 8,071,524 passengers in 2023.[3] It serves as a base for the low-cost carriers Vueling and Ryanair.[4] It is 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) east of central Seville, and some 110 kilometres (68 mi) north-east of Costa de la Luz. Seville Airport is also known as San Pablo Airport to distinguish it from the older Tablada Aerodrome, which was in operation as a military aerodrome until 1990.

Quick Facts Seville Airport Aeropuerto de Sevilla, Summary ...
Seville Airport

Aeropuerto de Sevilla
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Summary
Airport typePublic
Owner/OperatorAena
ServesSeville, Andalusia, Spain
Focus city for
Elevation AMSL34 m / 112 ft
Coordinates37°25′05″N 005°53′56″W
Websiteaena.es
Map
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SVQ
Location within Andalusia
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SVQ
SVQ (Spain)
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Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
09/27 3,360 11,024 Concrete/Asphalt
Statistics (2023)
Passengers8,071,524
Passenger change 22–23 19.1%
Aircraft movements64,774
Movements change 22–23 7.3%
Cargo (t)10,914
Cargo change 22-23 10.3%
Source: AENA
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Facilities

Seville Airport is capable of handling ten million passengers a year. There are 23 stands (all of which are self-maneuvering) 16 of which are remote. The airport has 42 check-in desks and 19 boarding gates. It was expanded in 1991 for the Seville Expo '92. In 2013, a new five-story car parking building was opened. In 2019, renovations to increase the airport's capacity began and were completed in 2022. These renovations increased the airport's handling capacity from six million passengers a year to its current capacity of ten million passengers a year.

In the airport grounds, there is an Airbus factory (San Pablo Sur), an Airbus maintenance center (San Pablo Norte) and a Ryanair maintenance center.

History

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Perspective

In 1914, the first plane flying between the peninsula and Morocco landed at the improvised aerodrome of Tablada, which had been fitted out the previous year for an air festival. Following this, the municipal government of Seville handed over a plot of land measuring to the Military Aeronautical Society for the construction of an aerodrome. Work on the aerodrome began in 1915 and that same year it began to be used for training pilots and observers.[5]

In 1919, the first commercial flights were operated between Seville and Madrid. The following year, an air postal service was established between Seville and Larache and in 1921, the first Spanish commercial service between Seville and Larache was set up. In 1923, various facilities such as hangars, workshops and premises were opened and approval was given for the construction of a municipal airport in Tablada at one end of the military aerodrome airfield, measuring 750 by 500 m (2,460 by 1,640 ft).

In April 1927, Unión Aérea Española established the air service Madrid-Seville-Lisbon. In February 1929, the Seville airport project was approved and in March, the Tablada aerodrome was opened to flights and air traffic. It was decided that this service would cease once the planned airport was constructed.

In 1929, the first flight was operated between Madrid and Seville and in 1930, this was extended to the Canary Islands. In February 1931, the service between Berlin and Barcelona was extended to Seville. In December 1933, LAPE began a service between Seville and the Canary Islands.

During the Spanish Civil War, Seville became the arrival point for African troops, whilst Iberia served air transport with flights between Tetuán-Seville-Vitoria, Seville-Salamanca and Seville-Larache-Las Palmas.

In September 1945, work began on the new Seville transoceanic airport in the land area that occupied the old blimp mooring station, which received the last flight in 1936.[6] The work started with construction of runways 05/23, 02/20 and 09/27. One year later, it was classified as a customs point and runways 05/23 and 02/20 were asphalted. In 1948, a goniometer was installed, the runway lighting was completed, and the runways became known as 04/22, 18/36 and 09/27. In 1956, runway 09/27 was extended and runway 18/36 became a taxiway. Tablada was relegated to serve as a military aerodrome, until its closure in 1990.[7]

In 1957, works were carried out on the terminal building and the control tower. Seville Airport was then included in the Spanish American Agreement for the installation of a supplies base. The facilities were developed near the threshold of 04, rendering the runway out of service.

In 1965, an Instrument Landing System was installed. Between 1971 and 1975, the terminal area was renovated, the apron was extended, a new terminal building was constructed and new access roads were developed.[citation needed]

In 1989, with a focus on the Seville Expo '92, the apron was extended, and a new access from the national motorway N-IV was opened; a new terminal building and a new control tower to the south of the runway were also built. The old terminal was repurposed as a cargo terminal. On 31 July, the new installations were inaugurated.

A program designed to cope with rapid passenger growth and increase the airport's capacity to 10 million passengers per year began in 2019 and was finished in 2022.[8] The terminal building was enlarged and some of the old facilities were renovated, and the power station was reformed to cope with future enlargements of the airport.

Airlines and destinations

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The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights at Seville Airport:

More information Airlines, Destinations ...
AirlinesDestinations
Aegean Airlines Seasonal: Athens[9]
Aer Lingus Seasonal: Dublin[10]
Air Europa Seasonal: Palma de Mallorca, Tenerife–North
Air France Paris–Charles de Gaulle[11][12]
Austrian Airlines Vienna[13][14]
British Airways London–Gatwick[15][16]
easyJet Amsterdam (begins 27 October 2025),[17] Basel/Mulhouse,[18] Berlin (begins 27 October 2025),[17] Geneva,[19] London–Gatwick,[20] Lyon (begins 26 October 2025),[17] Milan–Malpensa (begins 27 October 2025)[21]
Edelweiss Air Zürich
Eurowings Düsseldorf [22]
Iberia Almería,[23] Madrid,[24] Melilla,[23] Valencia
Seasonal: Funchal,[25] Lanzarote
Lufthansa Frankfurt,[26] Munich[26]
Pegasus Airlines Istanbul–Sabiha Gökçen[27][28]
Royal Air Maroc Casablanca[29]
Ryanair[30] Alicante,[19] Barcelona,[19] Beauvais,[19] Bergamo,[19] Birmingham,[31][32] Bologna,[19] Budapest, Cagliari,[19] Catania,[19] Charleroi,[19] Cologne/Bonn,[19] Cork,[33] Dublin,[19] Edinburgh,[19] Eindhoven,[19] Fuerteventura,[19] Gran Canaria,[19] Hahn,[31] Ibiza,[19] Karlsruhe/Baden-Baden,[19] Krakow,[19] Lanzarote,[19] Lisbon,[19] London–Luton,[19] London–Stansted,[34] Malta,[19] Manchester,[19] Marrakesh,[19] Marseille,[19] Milan–Malpensa,[19] Nantes,[19] Naples,[19] Nuremberg, Palma de Mallorca,[19] Pisa,[19] Porto,[35] Prague,[36] Rabat,[19] Rome–Fiumicino,[37] Santiago de Compostela,[19] Tangier,[19] Tenerife–North,[19] Tenerife–South,[19] Toulouse,[19] Treviso,[38] Turin,[39] Valencia,[19] Vienna,[19] Vitoria,[19] Weeze[40]
Seasonal: Bari,[41] Billund[citation needed], Brive,[42] Luxembourg,[31] Menorca,[19] Tétouan,[19] Trapani,[43] Trieste[42]
Scandinavian Airlines Seasonal: Copenhagen,[44] Stockholm–Arlanda[45][44]
TAP Air Portugal Lisbon[46]
Transavia Amsterdam,[47] Bordeaux,[48] Brussels,[49] Eindhoven,[50] Lyon, Montpellier, Nantes, Paris–Orly,[51] Rotterdam/The Hague (begins 28 October 2025)[52]
Turkish Airlines Istanbul (begins 17 September 2025)[53]
Volotea Asturias, Bilbao,[54] San Sebastián, Santander
Vueling Asturias, Barcelona,[55] Bilbao,[56] Fuerteventura,[56] Gran Canaria,[56] Ibiza,[56] Lanzarote,[56] Palma de Mallorca,[56] Paris–Charles de Gaulle,[56] Santiago de Compostela,[56] Tenerife–North,[56] Valencia[56]
Seasonal: Brussels,[57] London–Gatwick[58]
Wizz Air Bucharest–Otopeni, Rome–Fiumicino, Warsaw–Chopin
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Statistics

Annual traffic

More information Passengers, Movements ...
Traffic by calendar year
PassengersMovementsCargo (kilos)
2004 2,678,59544,2315,053,487
2005 3,521,11255,4236,352,705
2006 3,871,78558,57611,582,808
2007 4,507,26465,0927,395,854
2008 4,392,14865,0676,102,264
2009 4,051,39255,6014,983,425
2010 4,224,71854,4995,466,982
2011 4,959,35956,0215,126,653
2012 4,292,02048,5204,773,533
2013 3,687,71441,5915,089,015
2014 3,885,43442,3795,667,539
2015 4,308,84546,0866,007,279
2016 4,625,31445,8406,626,457
2017 5,108,81748,66110,715,967
2018 6,380,48357,91312,517,152
2019 7,544,35764,1129,891,790
2020 2,315,82533,6409,633,591
2021 3,444,46543,8419,126,189
2022 6,779,45360,3639,966,098
2023 8,071,52464,77410,913,974
Source: Aena Statistics[citation needed]
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Busiest routes

More information Rank, Destination ...
Busiest european routes from SVQ (2023)
Rank Destination Passengers Change 2022 / 23
1 London-Gatwick 357,547 Increase 51%
2 Paris-Orly 252,590 Increase 15%
3 Paris-Charles de Gaulle 215,688 Decrease 5%
4 Lisbon 179,011 Increase 26%
5 London-Stansted 174,491 Increase 18%
6 Amsterdam 148,981 Increase 6%
7 Eindhoven 116,704 Increase 10%
8 Charleroi 108.490 Increase 24%
9 Bergamo 98,107 Increase 44%
10 Rome-Ciampino 96,774 Increase 34%
11 Dublin 87,678 Increase 38%
12 Munich 85,256 Steady 0%
13 Nantes 83,058 Increase 10%
14 Bologna 77,208 Increase 31%
15 Marseille 75,932 Increase 17%
16 Porto 73,567 Increase 64%
17 Rome-Fiumicino 67,128 Increase 88%
18 Frankfurt 66,060 Decrease 7%
19 Milan-Malpensa 62,922 Increase 23%
20 Treviso 62,054 Increase 56%
Source: Estadísticas de tráfico aereo[59]
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More information Rank, Destination ...
Busiest intercontinental routes from SVQ (2023)
Rank Destination Passengers Change 2022 / 23
1 Marrakech 53,271 Increase 49%
2 Tangier 40,138 Increase 44%
3 Rabat 34,848 Increase 67%
4 Casablanca 12,604 Increase 927%
5 Tétouan 11,622 Decrease 30%
Source: Estadísticas de tráfico aereo[59]
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More information Rank, Destination ...
Busiest domestic routes from SVQ (2023)
Rank Destination Passengers Change 2022 / 23
1 Barcelona 1,011,777 Increase 9%
2 Palma de Mallorca 480,256 Increase 12%
3 Madrid 452,666 Increase 17%
4 Bilbao 382,254 Increase 24%
5 Tenerife-North 313,824 Increase 14%
6 Gran Canaria 279,271 Increase 7%
7 Valencia 258,865 Increase 32%
8 Santiago de Compostela 228,104 Increase 25%
9 Ibiza 146,732 Increase 14%
10 Lanzarote 110,934 Increase 42%
11 Asturias 90,287 Decrease 23%
12 Fuerteventura 79,493 Increase 10%
13 Tenerife-South 62,752 Increase 22%
14 Santander 61,433 Increase 95%
15 Alicante 57,965 Increase 5%
16 Vitoria 42,571 Increase 18%
17 San Sebastián 24,414 Increase 8%
18 Menorca 23,945 Decrease 40%
19 Almería 22,593 Decrease 8%
20 Melilla 20,657 Increase 16%
Source: Estadísticas de tráfico aereo[59]
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Ground transportation

Public transport

Urban Transport Line of Seville Airport Express connects the bus station Plaza de Armas, in the centre of the city with the airport. It has intermediate stops at strategic points of the city, including the AVE train station of Santa Justa. The whole trip takes approximately 40 minutes. Buses run from 04.30 till 00.45.[60]

Incidents and accidents

Notes

    References

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