Venice Marco Polo Airport (IATA: VCE, ICAO: LIPZ) is the international airport of Venice, Italy. It is located on the mainland near the village of Tessera, a frazione of the comune of Venice located about 4.1 nautical miles (7.6 kilometres; 4.7 miles) east of Mestre (on the mainland) and around the same distance north of Venice proper. Due to the importance of Venice as a leisure destination, it features flights to many European metropolitan areas as well as some partly seasonal long-haul routes to the United States, Canada, South Korea and the Middle East. The airport handled 11,184,608 passengers in 2018,[4] making it the fourth-busiest airport in Italy. The airport is named after Marco Polo and serves as a base for Volotea, Ryanair, Wizz Air and easyJet.[5]
Another airport located in the Venice area, Treviso Airport, is sometimes unofficially labelled Venice – Treviso and serves low-cost airlines Ryanair and Wizz Air.
Overview
A modern terminal was opened in 2002, but it is already at full capacity.[when?][citation needed] The airport is managed by SAVE S.p.A., a company partially owned by local authorities that also controls the smaller Treviso Airport, dedicated to low-cost carriers. The airport was named after the Venetian traveller Marco Polo.
Terminal
The airport terminal has three floors: the ground floor for arrivals and the second floor for departures. The departure area has 70 check-in desks and has two airside lounges. The "Tintoretto Lounge" is for SkyTeam passengers and the "Marco Polo Room" is for all other passengers. The third floor of the terminal has offices for the operating company and airlines. The departure floor has separate areas for Schengen and non-Schengen flights.
Airlines and destinations
The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights to and from Venice:[6]
Statistics
Ground transportation
The mainland airport has scheduled bus connections to the nearby railway stations of Venice Mestre and Piazzale Roma. The airport is also directly connected to several destinations in the lagoon by public transit Alilaguna water shuttle services (Blue, Red and Orange lines); by the express Gold Line to Piazza San Marco or by water taxi. From the airport it is possible to reach:
Venice Piazzale Roma by ATVO (provincial company) buses[28] and by ACTV (city company) buses (route 5 aerobus);[29]
Venice, Lido and Murano by Alilaguna (private company) motorboats;
Mestre, the mainland and Venice Mestre railway station, providing connections to Milan, Padua, Trieste, Verona and the rest of Italy, by ACTV buses (route 15 and 45)[29] and ATVO buses;
regional destinations (Treviso, Padua, beaches ...) by ATVO buses and by Busitalia Sita Nord[30] buses (national company).
Accidents and incidents
On 6 March 1967, a Short BrothersSC.7 Skyvan 2–102, operated by Soc. Aeralpi, crashed while attempting to land in bad weather, crashing into the lagoon. All 3 on board survived.[31]
On 14 September 1993, an Italian Air ForcePiaggio PD.808 crashed while attempting to land in bad weather, killing all 3 on board.[32]
References
^"Easyjet launches Venice base". Business Traveller.
^"New Ryanair Base At Venice Marco Polo Airport". ryanair.com. 7 October 2021.
^"WIZZ AIR CONTINUES ITS EXPANSION IN ITALY WITH THE OPENING OF ITS 7TH BASE IN VENICE". wizzair.com. 6 October 2021.
^"Statistiche Dicembre 2017". 24 January 2018.
^"Easyjet opens Venice base". February 2016.
^veniceairport.it – Seasonal schedule retrieved 30 October 2016
^"Air Cairo apre la Venezia – Sharm el Sheikh". 7 February 2024.
^ a b c d"Ryanair Removes 1 Aircraft & Closes 6 Routes at Venice Marco Polo Airport Due to Venice Municipality's Excessive Tax Increase – Ryanair's Corporate Website". 28 June 2023.
^"SAS NS23 EUROPEAN NETWORK ADDITIONS". AeroRoutes. 12 December 2022. Retrieved 12 December 2022.
^"Volotea cresce a Venezia e annuncia nuova rotta verso Tolosa" [Volotea grews in venice and announces ner route to Tolouse]. ansa.it (in Italian). 28 November 2023.
^"Venice Airport bus service". www.atvo.it.
^ a b"linee urbane | ACTV".
^"Information" (PDF). www.fsbusitalia.it. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 April 2016. Retrieved 28 February 2012.