A gate is an area in an airport terminal that controls access to a passenger aircraft . While the exact specifications vary from airport to airport and country to country, most gates consist of a seated waiting area, a counter and a doorway leading to the aircraft. A gate adjacent to the stand where the aircraft is parked may be a contact gate , providing access by way of a jet bridge , or a ground-loaded gate , providing a path for passengers to leave the building to board via mobile stairs or airstairs built into the aircraft itself. A remote stand serves an aircraft stand further away, providing access to ground transportation to move passengers between the gate and the stand, where they board via stairs.
15-423: LIML may refer to: Linate Airport (ICAO airport code) Limited information maximum likelihood , a method for estimating the linear simultaneous equations model in econometrics Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title LIML . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change
30-471: A major accident at Linate with many illegal and non- ICAO -regulation practices and layouts part of its then operation. From 27 July to 27 October 2019, Linate was closed for runway resurfacing and terminal upgrades. The latter project is expected to continue after the airport's reopening, concluding some time in 2021. During this closure, most flights were rerouted to Malpensa, displacing approximately 2.5 million passengers. In July 2023, Linate Airport
45-515: A route from Piazza Duomo in the city centre to the Airport, as well as San Felice. The urban section of the line was cut to only serve the neighborhood of Forlanini when the M4 metro opened, and the line was subsequently renamed to the 973. Recently, plans have been set forward to reintorduce service back along the former route to Piazza Cinque Giornate. Other bus lines serve Linate as well, including
60-421: A secondary departure gate area for bus-boarding. The first floor features the main departure area with several shops, restaurants and service facilities. The second floor is used for office space. The terminal building features five aircraft stands, all of which are equipped with jet-bridges. Several more parking positions are available on the apron which are reached from several bus-boarding gates. The airport
75-580: Is a city airport located in Milan , the second-largest city and largest urban area of Italy . It served 9,425,962 passengers in 2022 with 101,956 aircraft movements in 2022 making it one of the busiest airports in Italy . It is the third busiest airport in the Milan metropolitan area in terms of passenger numbers, after Malpensa and Bergamo , and the second busiest in terms of aircraft movements. Together with Malpensa Airport and Bergamo Airport , it forms
90-530: Is on level 4+ of the Airport Carbon Accreditation. The following airlines operate scheduled services to and from Linate Airport: The Milan Metro Line 4 connects the airport to the city centre with a travel time of about 15 minutes. The airport can be reached by coach services from other places within the city. Coaches from and to Monza , Brescia and Milan Malpensa Airport are also available. The ATM bus 73 used to serve
105-418: Is parked is precisely termed an aircraft stand , in commercial passenger aviation the term gate is also used to refer to the gate and aircraft stand together as a single area. At most domestic gates, a single doorway connects the passenger waiting area with the jet bridge. International gates at U.S. international airports always have a second doorway to a separate corridor system that leads directly to
120-717: The 1950s and again in the 1980s. Its name comes from the small village where it is located in the town of Peschiera Borromeo . Its official name is Airport Enrico Forlanini , after the Italian inventor and aeronautical pioneer born in Milan. Linate airport buildings are located in the Segrate Municipality, and the field is located for a large part in the Peschiera Borromeo Municipality. Since 2001, because of Linate's close proximity to
135-566: The ATM 901 and 903, and the suburban buses Z509 and K511. The airport is located in Viale Enrico Forlanini next to its intersection with Autostrada A51 (exit 6 Aeroporto Linate ). A51 is part of the city's highway ring, so the airport can be reached from any direction. [REDACTED] Media related to Milan Linate Airport at Wikimedia Commons Gate (airport) Each gate typically corresponds to one parking stand on
150-410: The Milan airport system with 51.4 million passengers in 2023, the largest airport system in Italy by number of passengers. The airport was built next to Idroscalo of Milan in the 1930s when Taliedo Airport, located 1 km (0.62 mi) from the southern border of Milan and one of the world's first aerodromes and airports, became too small for commercial traffic. Linate was completely rebuilt in
165-473: The airport's U.S. Customs and Border Protection port of entry facility. For international arrivals from airports without preclearance , the door leading to the waiting area is closed and all arriving passengers are directed through the second doorway to CBP immigration and customs inspection. Before the era of the jet bridge or jetway, airline passengers embarked onto the aircraft from ground level via airstairs . If initially indoors, passengers would exit
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#1732798689654180-414: The airport's apron . A gate that provides access to multiple stands/jet bridges may have separate, designated doorways – sometimes termed sub-gates – for each stand. Commercial airport stands have airside components to facilitate passenger boarding and aircraft ground handling . While the term gate precisely refers only to the point of access for passengers, and the area where the aircraft itself
195-540: The centre of Milan – only 7 km (4 mi) east of the city centre, compared with Malpensa, which is 41 km (25 mi) northwest of the city centre – its capacity has been reduced by law from 32 slots per hour (technical capacity) down to 22 slots per hour (politically decided capacity) and only domestic or international flights within the EU or to the United Kingdom have been allowed. That year, 2001, also saw
210-415: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=LIML&oldid=1254831518 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Linate Airport Milan Linate Airport ( IATA : LIN , ICAO : LIML )
225-566: Was named Europe's Best Airport in the 5-10 Million Passenger category by the Airport Council International. AIRAC A10/23 (valid from 30 November 2023) has determined the new QFU of the runway in 17/35 (was earlier 18/36) due to magnetic variation, and declass of the "old" 17/35 as taxiway only. Linate Airport features one three-story passenger terminal building. The ground level contains the check-in and separate baggage reclaim facilities as well as service counters and
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