Banja Luka International Airport

Banja Luka International Airport (IATA: BNX, ICAO: LQBK), also known as Mahovljani Airport, after the nearby village of the same name, is an airport located 18 km (11 mi) north northeast of the railway station[3] in the city of Banja Luka, the second largest city in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The airport is managed by the government-owned company "Aerodromi Republike Srpske".

Banja Luka International Airport

Међународни аеродром Бања Лука
Međunarodni aerodrom Banja Luka

Međunarodna zračna luka Banja Luka
Summary
Airport typePublic
OperatorBosnia and Herzegovina Directorate of Civil Aviation (BHDCA)[1]
ServesBanja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina
LocationMahovljani
Elevation AMSL122 m / 400 ft
Coordinates44°56′10″N 17°17′57″E / 44.93611°N 17.29917°E / 44.93611; 17.29917
Websitebnx.aero
Map
BNX is located in Bosnia and Herzegovina
BNX
BNX
Location of the airport in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
17/35 2,500 8,202 Asphalt/Concrete
Statistics (2023)
Passengers460,719Increase34.3%
Aircraft Movements4,380Increase9.7%
Freight (in tons)0
Source: Bosnian and Herzegovinian Directorate of Civil Aviation BHDCA[2]

History edit

The construction of the Banja Luka International Airport began in 1976. In accordance with the development plans, capacities were built defining Banja Luka as an airport of secondary importance, restricted to domestic air traffic on the territory of Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. After the Bosnian War, Republika Srpska was established with Banja Luka as the de facto capital. That gave Banja Luka Airport new importance and a completely different role. Banja Luka International Airport was opened for civilian air traffic on 18 November 1997. From 1999 to 2003 the airport served as the main hub of Air Srpska, which was the official flag carrier of Republika Srpska. The company was founded by Jat Airways and Government of Republika Srpska. The company ceased all operations in 2003 after increasing debt, and the withdrawal of Jat Airways from the partnership. There were plans for Sky Srpska, a state-owned airline founded in 2007, to start flights, however, the airline, which never had any aircraft, was closed in 2013. The airport's facilities were greatly improved in 2002 and 2003, ahead of the visit by Pope John Paul II to Banja Luka in June 2003.

On 15 December 2010, to celebrate the abolition of visa requirements for Bosnian citizens traveling to the Schengen Area countries, a symbolic charter flight was organised from Banja Luka to Brussels. In 2011, Banja Luka airport handled 8,367 passengers, a rise of 74% compared to 2010. Over the years, the airport has had flights connecting Banja Luka to Athens, Belgrade, Copenhagen, Frankfurt, Ljubljana, Salzburg, Tivat, and Vienna, partly thanks to Air Srpska which was an airline based at the airport. Austrian Airlines and Montenegro Airlines served Banja Luka during the late 1990s and early 2000s from their respective bases in Vienna and Tivat. Since Air Srpska stopped operations, the Government of Republika Srpska has tried to attract new airlines to fly to Banja Luka through various subsidies. Subsidised flights included Jat Airways flights to Belgrade between November 2007 and December 2009, operated with ATR 72, Austrojet flights to Salzburg and Tivat between July and December 2008, operated 3 times a week with Dash 8-100, and Adria Airways flights to Ljubljana between July 2010 and November 2011, operated 4 times a week with CRJ 200. B&H Airlines operated flights to Zürich for many years until airline went out of business in June 2015. BH Airlines operated seasonal charter flights to Tivat in Montenegro.

Passenger numbers more than doubled in 2014, as Air Serbia restarted flights to Belgrade, but suffered in 2015 due to BH Airlines' bankruptcy and the suspension of the Zurich route. Banja Luka airport owner Government of RS subsidises Air Serbia flights to Belgrade.[4] In April 2018, Ryanair announced that it would start its first ever flight from Banja Luka (and Bosnia as a whole) with twice-weekly services to each of Brussels Charleroi and Memmingen, while in May, it added Stockholm Skavsta and, in December, Berlin-Schönefeld to its list of new routes. The flights began in October 2018. Overall, the airline expected 100,000 passengers in 2019.[5] In April 2021, Wizz Air announced its arrival and launch of five routes from Banja Luka to Dortmund, Basel/Mulhouse, Eindhoven, Malmö and Stockholm Skavsta.[6]


Airlines and destinations edit

The following airlines operate regular flights to and from Banja Luka:[7]

AirlinesDestinations
Aegean Airlines Seasonal charter: Athens[8]
Air Cairo Seasonal: Hurghada[9][10]
Air Serbia Belgrade
Freebird Airlines Seasonal charter: Antalya[11]
Nouvelair Seasonal charter: Monastir[12]
Ryanair[13] Charleroi, Gothenburg, Karlsruhe/Baden-Baden,[14] Memmingen, Stockholm–Arlanda, Vienna
Tailwind Airlines Seasonal charter: Antalya[15]
Wizz Air[16] Basel/Mulhouse, Dortmund

Statistics edit

Passenger statistics[17]
Year/Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year total Change
2024 20,482 18,516 21,270 60,268  40.6%
2023 34,488 28,244 30,698 46,997 44,274 45,416 51,649 53,248 43,191 41,035 20,488 20,992 460,720  34.3%
2022 10,855 42 16,792 31,243 31,774 35,871 44,637 43,441 36,263 32,671 29,523 29,876 342,988  157.5%
2021 883 271 346 385 646 10,367 27,829 28,273 17,773 17,964 16,834 18,315 139,886  188.2%
2020 11,538 14,079 6,458 19 265 490 1,419 3,636 1,582 1,073 1,629 1,587 43,775  70.7%
2019 8,838 7,805 9,962 12,460 12,780 14,190 17,073 14,976 12,485 13,174 12,354 13,596 149,693  313.7%
2018 1,203 717 1,144 1,806 1,671 2,294 3,109 3,295 2,528 1,876 8,272 8,265 36,180  73.3%
2017 1,484 875 1,171 2,013 2,033 2,023 2,533 2,613 2,048 1,934 997 1,143 20,867  03.8%
2016 1,484 875 1,368 1,581 2,298 2,094 2,835 2,807 1,905 1,905 n/a n/a 21,694  04.9%
2015 1,830 1,154 1,327 2,090 2,353 2,085 2,554 2,591 2,185 1,782 1,078 1,771 22,800  17.5%
2014 1,522 1,352 1,566 1,942 2,201 2,797 3,457 4,011 2,633 2,503 1,661 1,991 27,636  212.7%
2013 518 448 400 431 601 530 844 893 713 824 434 2,201 8,837  37.6%
2012 791 424 178 408 402 377 589 688 610 642 550 765 6,424  23.2%
2011 560 422 640 719 680 536 1,209 942 707 830 545 577 8,367  74.4%
2010 - - - - - - - - 497 432 602 - 4,798
Passengers (in thousands) 2014–2024
Updated: 12 April 2024

Busiest operators edit

Busiest operators at Banja Luka Airport in 2023[18]
Airline Passengers No of flights
  Ryanair 236,947 1,706
  Wizz Air 155,089 850
  Air Serbia 10,135 210
  Air Montenegro 3,009 -
Charter flights 26,622 248
Other flights 1,929 -

Ground transportation edit

The airport was built in the area of Laktaši and Gradiška municipalities, in a wide valley of the Vrbas expanding into Lijevče. It is connected to the new Banja Luka – Gradiška motorway.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Airports Archived 30 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine. Bhdca.gov.ba.
  2. ^ "Подаци о промету аеродрома у БиХ у 2022. години". 9 March 2023.
  3. ^ EAD Basic. Ead.eurocontrol.int.
  4. ^ "Banja Luka extends Air Serbia subsidy deal". www.exyuaviation.com. 15 November 2016.
  5. ^ "New Banja Luka Route To Stockholm Skavsta - Ryanair's Corporate Website". corporate.ryanair.com. 24 May 2018.
  6. ^ "Wizz Air to commence Banja Luka operations". www.exyuaviation.com. 15 April 2021.
  7. ^ Departures and arrivals retrieved 26 July 2020
  8. ^ "EKSKLUZIVNO: Aegean otvara Banja Luka-Atena". zamaaero.com. 24 January 2023.
  9. ^ "Air Cairo schedules new EX-YU routes". exyuaviation.com. 11 February 2022.
  10. ^ "Od aprila se uvode direktni letovi za Hurghadu iz Sarajeva i Banje Luke". klix.ba. 9 February 2022.
  11. ^ "✈ Banja Luka International Airport – 2021 Summer Timetable". flyingbosnian.blogspot.com. 27 April 2021.
  12. ^ "EKSKLUZIVNO-NAJAVE: Pokreće se Banja Luka-Monastir – zamaaero".
  13. ^ "Rayanir website". Ryanair.com. [not specific enough to verify]
  14. ^ "Ryanair to launch new routes from Zadar and Banja Luka". exyuaviation.com. 3 December 2023.
  15. ^ "EKSKLUZIVNO-NAJAVE: Tailwind pokreće Banja Luka-Antalya – zamaaero".
  16. ^ "Wizz Air to commence Banja Luka operations". exyuaviation.com. 15 April 2021.
  17. ^ Statistical data for Bosnia and Herzegovina airports:Banja Luka Int. Airport. Bhdca.gov.ba.
  18. ^ Zamaaero.com

External links edit

  Media related to Banja Luka International Airport at Wikimedia Commons