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Central Communication Port

Coordinates: 52°08′00″N 20°29′00″E / 52.1333°N 20.4833°E / 52.1333; 20.4833
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Central Communication Port

Centralny Port Komunikacyjny
  • IATA: WAW (once opened)
  • ICAO: EPWA (once opened)
Summary
Airport typePublic
OperatorCentralny Port Komunikacyjny Sp. z o.o.
ServesWarsaw
LocationGmina Baranów, Grodzisk Mazowiecki, Mazovia
Opened2032 (2032) (Planned) [1]
Hub forLOT Polish Airlines
Coordinates52°08′00″N 20°29′00″E / 52.1333°N 20.4833°E / 52.1333; 20.4833
Websitehttps://www.cpk.pl/en/
Map
Central Communication Port is located in Poland
Central Communication Port
Central Communication Port
Location of airport in Poland
Map


The Central Communication Port (Polish: Centralny Port Komunikacyjny, CPK) is a planned major infrastructure project in Poland aimed at the construction of a new international airport and the development of a nationwide integrated transport network.[2] The airport is planned to be located approximately 40 kilometres (25 mi) southwest of Warsaw, connected to a new high-speed rail network and controlled-access highway system linking it much of the rest of the country.

Originally approved by the Polish Government in November 2017,[3] plans for the CPK were reassessed by the winning October 15 Coalition after the 2023 Polish parliamentary election.[4] In June 2024, the coalition government confirmed that the airport element of the project would continue.[5] As of November 2024, construction is planned to start in 2026, with the airport opening in 2032 at the earliest.[1] The cost of the air and rail elements of the plan are expected to be 131 billion Polish złoty (approx. €30.4 billion).[2]

The airport will be designed by Foster + Partners in collaboration with Buro Happold.[6] Initially the airport is planned to have two runways (4,000 m × 45 m), but will eventually be expanded four. The combined airport and train station is planned to serve 40 million passengers per year, double the size of Berlin Brandenburg Airport,[citation needed] with the long-term goal of about 100 million passengers per year.[citation needed]

Planned train connections from the CPK will take 15 minutes to Warsaw Central railway station, 25 minutes to Łódź Fabryczna railway station, and 2 hours to most other major Polish cities, such as Kraków, Wrocław, Poznań and Gdańsk.[7] The construction of a high-speed train to Frankfurt (Oder) is also planned, which is to shorten the travel time on the Berlin-CPK route to under 3.5 hours. The opening of the CPK may result in the closure of Warsaw Chopin Airport; however no official decision has yet been made.[8]

Location

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Area of the planned airport

The airport's planned site is about 40 km west of Warsaw, next to the village Stanisławów which is part of Gmina Baranów in Grodzisk Mazowiecki County.[9] The Baranow commune occupies a significant part of the Grodzisk County and, despite its rural character, has an extensive road infrastructure. The A2 autostrada and railway lines run in the immediate vicinity of the potential construction site, and Wrocław (Expressway S8) and Poznań (National road 92) is nearby.[10]

The choice of the location was made after a number of areas were examined. Before recommending Baranów, the Arup consulting company analyzed a list of potential locations, including: Modlin, Wołomin, Sochaczew, Mszczonów, Babsk, Nowe Miasto nad Pilicą, Grójec and Radom-Sadków. Experts took into account the distance from Warsaw, transport accessibility, land accessibility and environmental restrictions, including noise levels. Analyses showed that Baranów offers an optimal location for the project.[11]

History

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Discussion about a new airport to replace Warsaw Chopin Airport date back to at least 1971, during the early years of Edward Gierek's rule.[12] In 1978, Bogusław Jankowski (died 2017)[13] first proposed his idea of a new central airport for Poland,[14] but it was only during the Cabinet of Leszek Miller (2001–2004) that the idea began to be seriously considered. On 12 May 2005, the Civil Aviation Office signed a contract with the Spanish consortium Ineco-Sener to carry out a feasibility study of the central airport.[15] Such a study was nevertheless not actually carried out during the next two years, which was interpreted as a sign that the project of a new big central airport was being postponed until an indeterminate future. Nevertheless, a new airport serving Warsaw was proposed in the government's Transport Infrastructure Development Strategy for 2010–2013.

After the Law and Justice party regained power in 2015 the project gained pace, with the government approving the plan in November 2017.[3]

Banner "Berlin welcomes the largest infrastructure programme in Europe. Solidarity Transport Hub. Poland." InnoTrans 2022, Berlin.
Banner "Berlin welcomes the largest infrastructure programme in Europe. Solidarity Transport Hub. Poland." InnoTrans 2022, Berlin.

On 17 June 2018, the residents of the district of Baranów, Grodzisk Mazowiecki County voted down the plan to build the new airport. With 47 percent voter turnout, 84 percent opposed the plan. The referendum was not binding, but Deputy Infrastructure Minister Mikołaj Wild said that the voice of the public would be taken under consideration.[16] The English name "Solidarity Transport Hub Poland" was originally proposed for the project, but was eventually phrased out in 2023.[17]

Architecture

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In June 2019, the British Embassy in conjunction with the Solidarity Transport Hub Company held architectural workshops, inviting well-known architectural firms to share their preliminary concepts for what the project might look like. The studies are meant to serve as inspiration in preparing the master plan, and the investor is not obliged to use any of the designs.[18] Terminal concepts were prepared by six top-name design studios: Foster + Partners, Grimshaw Architects, Chapman Taylor, Zaha Hadid Architects, Benoy, and Pascall+Watson:

  • Foster + Partners proposed the construction of two terminals: a main one, shaped like a "key" and with a layout very similar to Chek Lap Kok Airport (another airport project designed by Foster + Partners) plus a supplementary one with a letter "X" shape, which would be created in the second stage. Thus, the company proposed a modular construction of the airport, which can be expanded in time and adapted to the needs of growing air traffic. Both parts are to be integrated with each other (e.g. through a shuttle line between terminals), with the second one being created when market demand justifies airport expansion.[citation needed]
  • Grimshaw Architects came up with the concept of a "democratic hub", trying to invoke the Polish tradition, in particular to political changes after 1989 and to the history of the Solidarity movement. They intended the terminal to be unscaled, rational in size and devoid of the sort of megalomania that characterizes some recently built transport hubs. The idea is to reduce the transfer time and distance for passengers.[citation needed]
  • Chapman Taylor's concept involves hiding the base part of the terminal under a massive transparent dome to be located between the two runways. As its creators explain, the round dome is a symbol of infinite unity, and thus a reference to the history of Poland.[19]
  • Zaha Hadid Architects prepared three equivalent visions of CPK, which are based on a different approach to connecting the airport with rail. All three projects share good lighting of the airport space, made possible through the use of large-surface transparent elements, as well as the incorporation of vegetation into the terminal interior combined with a system for maintaining it in Polish climatic conditions. The first solution situates a railway junction directly below the airport, which would allow travelers to, for example, observe oncoming trains from higher levels. The second concept envisions that just the passenger part of the station will be located directly above the platforms, connecting to other elements of the airport included in the master plan. The designers also proposed a third, more futuristic solution, in which trains approach directly to separate parts of the terminals, on platforms situated at different heights.[citation needed]
  • Benoy's proposal emphasises ecology and sustainable development. They propose to build a solid Airport City around the proposed airport. Creating such an area around the port will be made possible by hiding underground parts of roads and railways in the immediate vicinity of the airport. At the heart of the system will be a glass roof covered with a transfer hub, which will integrate various means of transport and towards which communication routes will lead.[citation needed]
  • Pascall+Watson is the most general of the concepts presented.[citation needed] Project Director Nitesh Naidoo from Pascall+Watson presented solutions used at airports in Europe and Asia (e.g. in London, Munich, Hong Kong and Abu Dhabi), suggesting which of them should be adapted to the needs of the proposed airport. For the purposes of the presentation, he combined the idea of a "megahub" (referring to the new airport in Istanbul) and a "multi-hub" (pointing to Singapore Changi Airport in Singapore).[citation needed]

In October 2024, the design of the estimated PLN 131 billion (£25 billion) airport and transport interchange was finalized by an architectural consortium led by Foster + Partners and Buro Happold.[20] Construction work is set to begin in 2026.[21]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Donald Tusk mulls which of the previous government's plans to axe". The Economist. May 2, 2024. Retrieved May 2, 2024.
  2. ^ a b Tilles, Daniel (2024-06-26). "Tusk confirms previous government's "mega-airport" project will continue". Notes From Poland. Retrieved 2024-11-18.
  3. ^ a b "Poland Approves Plan to Build $9.6 Billion Central Airport". Bloomberg. 7 November 2017. Retrieved 23 March 2018.
  4. ^ "Targi o CPK po wyborach. Centralne megalotnisko w zawieszeniu, a szybką kolej czekają cięcia" (in Polish). wyborcza.pl. 2023-10-24. Retrieved 24 October 2023.
  5. ^ Tilles, Daniel (26 June 2024). "Tusk confirms previous government's "mega-airport" project will continue". Notes from Poland. Retrieved 27 June 2024.
  6. ^ "Foster + Partners' Woven Design Wins the Competition for the CPK Airport in Poland". ArchDaily. 2022-11-15. Retrieved 2024-11-18.
  7. ^ "Mikołaj Wild: W 25 minut z Łodzi do CPK". rynek-lotniczy.pl. 2018-09-28. Retrieved 11 November 2019.
  8. ^ "Chopin Airport would not be closed".
  9. ^ "Nowe lotnisko w Stanisławowie. 45 mln pasażerów rocznie, nowe centra kongresowe i autostrady za 6,9 mld złotych". wyborcza.pl. 17 September 2017. Retrieved 23 March 2018.
  10. ^ "Lotnisko w Baranowie żyłą złota?". propertydesign.pl. 23 November 2017. Retrieved 23 March 2018.
  11. ^ "Centralny Port Komunikacyjny. Rozwiewamy mity wokół CPK". TVP Info. 17 December 2019. Retrieved 30 December 2019.
  12. ^ https://open.icm.edu.pl/server/api/core/bitstreams/47665f00-abfd-45a4-93db-9c22663f74fa/content [bare URL]
  13. ^ "Zmarł Bogusław Jankowski".
  14. ^ ""CPK z historią w tle" - reportaż Urszuli Żółtowskiej-Tomaszewskiej o Bogusławie Jankowskim".
  15. ^ "Wiadomość z 12.05.2005". tr.ru. 2007-03-11. Archived from the original on 2007-03-11. Retrieved 19 February 2018.
  16. ^ "Planned Polish hub airport opposed in local vote". Polish Radio External Service. 18 June 2018. Retrieved 18 June 2018.
  17. ^ "Centralny Port Komunikacyjny". Centralny Port Komunikacyjny. Retrieved 2020-06-09.
  18. ^ "Program lotniskowy". 16 July 2019. Retrieved 30 December 2019.
  19. ^ "Solidarity Transport Hub". Chapman Taylor. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  20. ^ Rob Hakimian (17 October 2024). "Designs for Poland's new £25bn airport and transport hub finalised". newcivilengineer.com. Retrieved 19 October 2024.
  21. ^ "CPK Airport construction work to begin in 2026". aerospaceglobalnews.com. 19 October 2024. Retrieved 19 October 2024.
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