The Flight Experience Catania offers one of the most imposing natural backdrops in flight simulation. Flying into Fontanarossa Airport (LICC) places you in the literal shadow of Mount Etna, Europe’s most active volcano. The visual scale here is deceiving; the runway sits at sea level, but just 15 miles north, the terrain skyrockets to over 11,000ft.
The approach is a stunning mix of fire and water. You typically arrive over the deep blue Ionian Sea, banking toward the gritty, baroque sprawl of the city, all while the smoking cone of Etna looms in your peripheral vision. It is the busiest airport in Sicily, meaning you will often be fitting a VFR pattern in between a steady stream of holiday charters and Ryanair 737s.
Visual Highlights
Mount Etna: The volcano is the absolute monarch of the scenery. In high-fidelity sims, you can spot the distinct craters (Bocca Nuova, Voragine) and the black scars of recent lava flows cutting through the green forests on the slopes.
Piazza del Duomo: The heart of the city is easily identifiable by the grey-and-white Cathedral of Saint Agatha. Look for the open square and the tiny dot of the "Elephant Fountain" in the center.
Castello Ursino: This 13th-century castle was originally built on a cliff by the sea, but massive lava flows in 1669 pushed the coastline out, leaving the castle surrounded by city streets inland—a detail clearly visible from the air.
The Port of Catania: The massive concrete arms of the harbor protect cruise ships and ferries. It serves as a critical visual reference for the base leg when landing on Runway 26.
Roman Amphitheatre: Nestled in the dense urban grid near Piazza Stesicoro, the dark semicircle of these ruins stands out against the lighter modern rooftops.
Pilot’s Note: Volcanic Ash Sectors. Real-world charts divide the airspace around Catania into specific "Ash Sectors" (Sector A, B, C, etc.). If you want to simulate real-world operations during an eruption, you often have to fly a non-standard approach or a steep "tear-drop" descent to stay upwind of the plume.
VFR Tip: When approaching from the south, look for the "Sierra Points": Sierra 1 is the town of Lentini, and Sierra 2 is the distinct mouth of the Simeto River. These are the standard reporting points to call up the tower before entering the control zone.