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Berlin-Schönefeld Airport ( Schönefeld Airport is situated outside the city proper, unlike Berlin Tegel Airport. Noise pollution is, therefore, less of an issue at Schönefeld. This is the main reason that the airport will be transformed into Berlin-Brandenburg International Airport by 2011.[citation needed] In 2008, the airport served 6.6 million passengers. Schönefeld Airport is a major base for easyJet and Germanwings.
[edit] History
Construction of Interflug's new maintenance hangar (1961). Berlin-Schönefeld airport was opened on 15 October 1934 to accommodate the Henschel aircraft plant (MLG). By the end of the Second World War, over 14,000 aircraft had been built. On 22 April 1945, the airport was occupied by Soviet troops, and the aircraft construction facilities were either dismantled or blown up. By late 1947, the airport's rail link had been repaired and agricultural machinery was built and repaired on the site. In 1946, the Soviet Air Forces moved from Johannisthal Air Field to Schönefeld, including Aeroflot. In 1947, the Soviet Military Administration in Germany approved the construction of a civilian airport at the site in SMAD (instruction NR. 93). Following World War II, Tempelhof Airport was used as a United States Air Force base, while the Soviet Air Force relocated to Schönefeld during 1946. Tempelhof was returned to civil administration in 1951, followed by Schönefeld in 1954 and Tegel in 1960. Tegel and Schönefeld served the civilian populations of West Berlin and East Berlin, respectively. Between 1947 and 1990, Schönefeld airport was renamed on several occasions and became the main airport of the GDR Zentralflughafen. A stipulation of the Four Power Agreement following World War II was a total ban on German carriers' participation in air transport to Berlin, where access was restricted to US, British, French and Soviet airlines. Since Berlin-Schönefeld airport was located outside of the city boundaries of Berlin, this restriction did not apply. Thus, German aircraft of the GDR air carrier Deutsche Lufthansa (officially Deutsche Lufthansa GmbH der DDR), later renamed Interflug, could use Schönefeld airport but not Berlin-Tegel or Tempelhof airports. In the wake of German reunification, Berlin's Tegel and Tempelhof airports could again be served by all German airlines. Map of the planned Berlin-Brandenburg International Airport and existing airport Schönefeld. Following German reunification in 1990, operating three separate airports became increasingly prohibitive, leading the Berlin City Council to pursue a single airport that would be more efficient and would decrease the amount of aircraft noise especially from Tegel and Tempelhof, the two centrally located airports within the city. In addition, the cumulative capacity of Berlin's three airports was 15.5 million in late 2003, a measure that would only be needed after 2010, according to current prognoses. Both Tempelhof and Tegel are surrounded by urban development and cannot expand. A single new airport would increase the capacity to at least 30 million initially, which would be expanded to 50 million before 2030. This would enable Berlin to accommodate a number of flights similar in magnitude to that of airports serving other European capitals, like London's Heathrow or Paris' Charles De Gaulle. The new Berlin-Brandenburg International Airport (BBI) is currently under construction immediately south of Schönefeld Airport and is scheduled for completion in 2011. After a 10-year administrative court battle, on 16 March 2006 the Federal Administrative Court in Leipzig gave the go-ahead for the project by ruling in favour of Berlin against challenges by residents and municipalities near the future airport. As Schönefeld is located in Brandenburg, the Bundesland (federal state) surrounding Berlin, the name reflects the fact that the new airport will serve both. BBI will incorporate the south runway of Schönefeld as a common feature. However most of the old airport, including the terminal and apron areas, is intended to undergo a complete urban redevelopment after the new airport opens. [edit] Public transport
[edit] Airlines and destinationsSchönefeld International Airport has four terminals (A, B, C, D). As the airport is small compared to other major airports, these terminals might be regarded as "halls" or "boarding areas", but they are officially referred to as "terminals", nevertheless. The terminals are connected and are within short walking distances.
[edit] Terminal A
[edit] Terminal B
[edit] Terminal D
[edit] Cargo airlines [1]
[edit] Accidents
[edit] References[edit] External links
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