RIX Riga Airport (
Latvian: RIX Rīgas lidosta;
IATA: RIX,
ICAO: EVRA) is the
international airport of
Riga, the capital of
Latvia, and the largest airport in the
Baltic states with direct flights to 76 destinations as of November 2019. It serves as a hub for
airBaltic,
SmartLynx Airlines and
RAF-Avia, and as one of the base airports for
Ryanair. The Latvian national carrier airBaltic is the largest carrier that serves the airport, followed by Ryanair. The airport is located in the
Mārupe Municipality west of Riga, approximately 10 km from its city centre.
In March 1995,
Uzbekistan Airways began a flight from Tashkent to New York City that stopped in Riga.[3][4] The carrier operated the service with an Airbus A310.[5] Due to poor demand, the airline rerouted it through Amsterdam three months later.[4][6] Renovation and modernization of the airport was completed in 2001, coinciding with the 800th anniversary of the founding of the city.[citation needed] Uzbekistan Airways moved the stop on its New York service back to Riga in October 2004. It employed Boeing 767s on the route. Closer ties between Uzbekistan and Latvia and the Latvian government's decision to lower the Riga airport's fees had encouraged the company to return.[4][6]
In 2006 and 2016, the new north terminal extensions were opened. A maintenance, repair and overhaul facility was opened in the autumn of 2006, to be run as a joint venture between two local companies: Concors and SR-Technik.[citation needed] In 2010, the first dedicated
business aviation terminal of the Baltics opened at the airport.[7] Uzbekistan Airways terminated the Riga–New York flight in October 2017.[8]
Facilities
Terminal
The airport features a single, two-storey passenger terminal building which has been expanded and upgraded to modern standards several times in recent years. The landside consists of a main hall containing a single row of 36 check-in counters as well as some shops and the security area on the upper floor while the arrivals area, baggage reclaim and some service counters are located on the ground floor below.[9] The airside features departure areas B and C split up into two piers with the former original, smaller boarding area A now only used for some arrivals. Both piers feature overall eight stands with
jetbridges plus four walk-boarding stands from the upper level as well as several more gates for bus boarding on their ground levels.[9] The B pier is used for Schengen Area departures and arrivals, while the C pier is for non-Schengen Area departures and arrivals. The terminal features outlets by
Narvesen,
Costa Coffee, and
TGI Fridays amongst others, as well as a single
airport lounge.[9]
Runway
The airport has a single runway in directions 18/36, which is 3,200 m in length and equipped with
ILS CAT II.[10]
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. There is more info on
Phabricator and on
MediaWiki.org.
Annual passenger traffic at RIX airport.
See
Wikidata query.
Ground transportation
Bus
Riga Airport is accessible by bus line 22, operated by
Rīgas Satiksme, which runs between Riga city centre and the airport. Moreover, there are international bus connections from the airport to cities in
Estonia,
Lithuania,
Poland and
Germany.
Car
Riga Airport can be reached by car via the highway P133 which connects the airport with
European route E22. The airport has 3 car parking areas, with ~1500 parking spaces, offering both short- and long-term parking.
Rail
An airport train station is included as part of the
Rail Baltica project. A contract for construction design was signed on 20 March 2018.[33]
Incidents and accidents
On 17 September 2016, an
airBalticBombardierDash 8 Q400 NextGen aircraft made an emergency landing without its nose landing gear deployed. The plane was carrying 63 passengers and 4 crew members and was forced to return to Riga following issues with its front chassis. The runway was closed between 10:26 and 15:55 as a safety precaution following an emergency landing. Seven inbound flights and four outbound flights were cancelled, 17 flights were diverted to
Tallinn Airport and
Kaunas Airport and others were delayed. The aircraft involved was YL-BAI and the flight BT 641 was scheduled to fly from Riga to
Zürich Airport. No injuries were reported.[34][35][36]
On 17 February 2017, a
VIM Airlines charter flight to
Ufa,
Russia slid off the runway during take-off. The aircraft was carrying the
Togliatti Lada ice hockey club team, including 40 passengers and 7 crew members. No injuries were reported. The aircraft's engine was damaged as it hit airport equipment.[37] The runway was inspected and closed for three hours after the incident. Flights were diverted to
Tallinn Airport and
Kaunas Airport and others were delayed.[citation needed]
On 3 December 2021, due to heavy snowfall, an
airBalticAirbus A220-300 (YL-CSE) slid off the runway after the landing from Stockholm on flight BT102.[citation needed]
On 8 March 2023, an airBaltic flight from Paris slid off the runway while landing. None of the 89 passengers or 7 crew members were injured.[38]