Nuremberg Airport , Albrecht Dürer Flughafen Nürnberg, is the international airport of the Franconian metropolitan area of Nuremberg and the second-busiest airport in Bavaria after Munich Airport. The year 2018, with 4.5 million, was the year with the highest passenger volume to date at this airport. It is Germany's 9th busiest airport in 2022. It is located approximately 5 km north of Nuremberg's city centre and offers flights within Germany as well as to European metropolitan and leisure destinations, especially along the Mediterranean Sea, on the Canary Islands and in Egypt.
Prior to World War II, the Nuremberg area was served by a number of airfields in quick succession, all of which became inadequate in the face of the rapid development of aviation or fell victim to the same wars that had played a part in their construction. The first airfield in the area was built in 1915 by the Bavarian Army in the neighboring town of Fürth as a military air base. This Old Atzenhof Airport (Fürth Airfield) () remained in civilian use (the Versailles Treaty forbade Germany from maintaining an airforce but was silent on civil aviation) throughout the Weimar Republic until the new Nazi government opened the new Marienberg Airport () in Nuremberg. While the plans to build Marienberg Airport had existed before the 1933 power grab of the Nazis and it served supposedly civilian purposes, it was intended from its opening as a military airfield, which became openly admitted policy in 1935 with the establishment of the Luftwaffe, which maintained a base at Nuremberg-Marienberg airport. Largely destroyed in the war, the site of the former Marienberg airport, located a few km due south of the current airport, is today a public park. The former Atzenhof airfield was taken over by the US Army after the war and is today used as a golf course with some of the erstwhile airport buildings still extant.
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Bologna Guglielmo Marconi Airport (Aeroporto di Bologna-Guglielmo Marconi) is an international airport serving the city of Bologna in Italy. It is approximately northwest of the city centre in the Emilia-Romagna region of Italy. The airport is named after Bologna native Guglielmo Marconi, an Italian electrical engineer and Nobel laureate. The original Bologna airport was opened in 1933 some 500 metres to the west of the present building.
Bari Karol Wojtyła Airport (Aeroporto di Bari-Karol Wojtyła) is an airport serving the city of Bari in Italy. It is approximately northwest from the town centre. Named after Pope John Paul II, who was born Karol Wojtyła, the airport is also known as Palese Airport (Aeroporto di Palese) after a nearby neighbourhood. The airport handled 3,289,239 passengers in 2021. The airport of Bari was originally a military airfield, built in the 1930s, by the Regia Aeronautica.
L'aéroport international de Sofia (en bulgare "Летище София") est un aéroport domestique et international desservant la ville de Sofia, capitale de la Bulgarie au pied du mont Vitocha, non loin du fleuve Iskar. C'est la plate-forme de correspondance de la compagnie aérienne Bulgaria Air et une des bases de Wizz Air. 250px|Tableau d'information. Édité le 21/01/2018 Actualisé le 21/02/2023 Metro : La ligne 2 du Métro de Sofia inaugurée le 31 août 2012 relie l'aéroport à la station Vitosha, en passant par la station Serdika.