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Difino
| • | |-! bgcolor="lightgrey"|IATA|OSL! bgcolor="lightgrey"|ICAO|ENGM|-!bgcolor="#0099FF" colspan="4"|Runways|-!bgcolor="lightgrey" rowspan="2"|Direction!bgcolor="lightgrey" colspan="2"|Length!bgcolor="lightgrey" rowspan="2"|Surface|-!bgcolor="lightgrey"|(ft)!bgcolor="lightgrey"|(m)|-!align="left" valign="top"|01R-19L|valign="top"|9,678|valign="top"|2,950|valign="top"|Paved|-!align="left" valign="top"|01L-19R|valign="top"|11,811|valign="top"|3,600|valign="top"|Paved|-!bgcolor="#0099FF" colspan="4"|Statistics|-!colspan="4" bgcolor="lightgrey"|2004|-! colspan="3"|Number of Passengers|14,856,460|-! colspan="3"|Number of Takeoffs/Landings|197,052|} Oslo Airport, Gardermoen is located in Gardermoen in Ullensaker, Norway, 50 km north of Oslo, and is a modern, international airport with two runways. It is a hub of Braathens and a focus city for Scandinavian Airlines System (Braathens is now part of the Norwegian part of Scandinavian Airlines System - together they form SAS Braathens). In addition to the European route E6, the connection to Oslo is via a high-speed train service (Flytoget) which takes just over 20 minutes for the journey to Oslo's central station (Oslo S). Gardermoen was adopted from a WWII airfield. Gardermoen took over as the main Oslo airport on 8 October 1998, when Fornebu airport was closed. The transfer happened overnight, and was a major operation. Approx. 14 million passengers travel through Oslo Airport annually (as of 2004). Sandefjord Airport also serves Oslo. Oslo Airport has 3 Check-in Islands: Source: [wikipedia: oslo airport, gardermoen]
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