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At 9.00am on Thursday, 19 January, 1940, Dublin Airport was officially opened when an Aer Lingus Lockheed 14 aircraft departed Dublin for Liverpool. Collinstown Airport, as it was known then, had just one flight a day to Liverpool whereas 70 years later Dublin Airport is a hive of activity, catering for an average of 67,000 passengers every day.
The airport has reached many milestones since it first opened for business.
In the late 1930's planning and development began on a terminal building and
grass runways at the Collinstown site. The architect of the new terminal
building was Desmond Fitzgerald, an elder brother of former Taoiseach, Dr.
Garret Fitzgerald. The curved building was designed to echo the lines of the
bridge of a great ocean liner and won many architectural awards for its
design.
By 1947 flights departing from Dublin ventured as far as Europe, with
Dutch airline KLM beginning the first continental service to Dublin. New
concrete runways were completed in 1948, and in 1950, after ten years in
operation, the airport had been used by 920,000 passengers. Just over 248
million passengers have travelled through Dublin Airport since that first flight
took off in 1940.
Work began in 1971 on a new building to cater for an expected six million passengers annually. The airport has expanded and developed since then with the addition of new piers, an extension to the terminal building, a new runway and taxiways to cater for the ever-increasing demand for air travel. Dublin Airport’s spacious new Pier D boarding gate facility opened in October 2007, offering passengers a transformed travel experience. This was followed in April 2009 when an extension to Terminal One was opened radically improving the travel experience for passengers using the A and D boarding gates at Dublin Airport. The new facility provides more circulation space for passengers and additional airside retail and catering options for passengers.
Dublin Airport is now engaged in a €2 billion capital development programme to transform the airport. This programme includes a new terminal, T2 and Pier E, acres of apron area to facilitate aircraft parking, a new reservoir facility and a new energy efficient power plant and a major upgrade of the airport’s campus internal road network. These new facilities will allow Dublin Airport to comfortably handle up to 35 million passengers per year and will create a vibrant modern airport that will be an efficient gateway to the Ireland of the 21st century.
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