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Rome Urbe Airport

Coordinates: 41°57′07″N 12°29′56″E / 41.95194°N 12.49889°E / 41.95194; 12.49889
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Rome Urbe Airport
  • IATA: none
  • ICAO: LIRU
    Rome Urbe Airport is located in Italy
    Rome Urbe Airport
    Location of airport in Italy
Summary
Airport typeCivilian
OwnerENAC
OperatorENAC
ServesRome
LocationRome
Elevation AMSL55 ft / 17 m
Map
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
16/34 1,080 3,543 Bitumen
Source: Rome's Aeroclub Website[1]

Rome Urbe Airport (Italian: Aeroporto di Roma-Urbe) (IATA: none, ICAO: LIRU) is a small civilian airport in Rome, situated in the northern part of the city, between Via Salaria and the Tiber River, about 2.7 NM (5 km, 3,1 mi) inside the Greater Ring Road (Italian: Grande Raccordo Anulare or GRA), the circular motorway around the city.[2]

History

The airport was inaugurated in Benito Mussolini's presence in 1928, with the name "Lictor Airport" (the name was chosen by Mussolini himself).[2] Until the World War II it was the main civilian airport in Italy, and the base for the Italian national airline Ala Littoria. Inside the perimeter it was also constructed a racetrack, named Autodromo del Littorio ("Lictor Racetrack").[3][4] In 1931 a car/plane challenge took place on the racetrack inside the airport: Vittorio Suster, piloting a Caproni Ca.100, defeated Tazio Nuvolari, who drove a Alfa Romeo 8C 2300.[3]

Heavily damaged by bombardments during the war, the airport was reactivated with the current name in the first postwar years. But just a few years later the commercial activity was transferred to the Ciampino Airport[5]: since that moment the Rome Urbe Airport turned mostly into a facility for flying club activity, touristic flights and air taxi.[5] It is currently the base for the Aeroclub di Roma (Rome's flying club).[6] In 2010, thanks to the investment of 800.000€ by the ENAC (the civil aviation authority of Italy, that manages the airport) it was opened a new terminal for helicopters.[7] On 18 September 1997 the airport was the scene for a U2 concert, part of their Pop Mart Tour: a 70,000 audience attended the event[8]

Transports

The Rome Urbe Airport can be easily reached with public transport by bus or by train: the Nuovo Salario Station (FR1 line) is 400m from the airport.[9]

References

  1. ^ "AeroClub Roma". Aeroclubroma.it. Retrieved 2012-04-19.
  2. ^ a b "Apertura di un nuovo aeroporto in Roma per aeroplani e idrovolanti". Scribd.com. Retrieved 2012-04-19.
  3. ^ a b "Sfide F1 - Aerei". Digilander.libero.it. Retrieved 2012-04-19.
  4. ^ "Aeroporto Urbe". RomaFree.it. Retrieved 2012-04-19.
  5. ^ a b http://www.fiorenzadebernardi.it/SecondoLivello/Urbe.htm
  6. ^ "AeroClub Roma". Aeroclubroma.it. Retrieved 2012-04-19.
  7. ^ Cecilia Cirinei. "Aeroporto dell' Urbe, nuovo terminal. E una corsia in più fino allo scalo - Repubblica.it » Ricerca". Ricerca.repubblica.it. Retrieved 2012-04-19.
  8. ^ http://www.rockol.it/news-2715/In-70.000-a-Roma-applaudono-la-prima-data-italiana-degli-U2-versione-POP-MART-
  9. ^ "ATAC S.p.A. | Azienda per la mobilità". Atac.roma.it. 2000-12-18. Retrieved 2012-04-19.

41°57′07″N 12°29′56″E / 41.95194°N 12.49889°E / 41.95194; 12.49889