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Munich Airport

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Munich "Franz Josef Strauss" Airport
Flughafen München-Franz Josef Strauß

IATA: MUCICAO: EDDM
Summary
Airport type Public
Owner/Operator Flughafen München GmbH
Serves Munich, Germany
Location near Freising
Coordinates 48°21′17″N 11°47′15″E / 48.35472°N 11.7875°E / 48.35472; 11.7875Coordinates: 48°21′17″N 11°47′15″E / 48.35472°N 11.7875°E / 48.35472; 11.7875
Website http://www.munich-airport.de/EN
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
08R/26L 13,123 4,000 Concrete
08L/26R 13,123 4,000 Concrete
09/271 13,123 4,000 Concrete (planned)
Helipads
Number Length Surface
ft m
H 98 30 Concrete
1 working title; subject to final designation to be received from Deutsche Flugsicherung.[1]

Munich "Franz Josef Strauss" Airport (IATA: MUCICAO: EDDM) (German: Flughafen München-Franz Josef Strauß), is located 28 km (17 mi) northeast of Munich, Germany, and is a hub for Lufthansa and Star Alliance partner airlines. It lies in direct proximity to the old city of Freising and is named in memory of politician Franz Josef Strauss. The airport is located on the territory of three different municipalities: Oberding (location of the terminals; district of Erding), Hallbergmoos and Marzling (district of Freising).

Munich Airport is the second busiest airport in Germany in terms of passenger traffic (34.73 million in 2008), behind Frankfurt International Airport, and the 27th busiest airport in the world. In 2009, it was named the 2nd "Best Airport in Europe" and fifth-best in the world by Skytrax, the air transport research company.[2]

Contents

[edit] History

The airport commenced operation on 17 May 1992, when operations moved from the former site at Munich-Riem, which was closed down shortly before midnight on the day before. When its construction was started in 1980 a village named Franzheim had to be demolished, its 500 inhabitants having been resettled in other places in the area.

As Lufthansa's home base at Frankfurt Airport is heavily saturated with traffic and has capacity limits, cities with large frequencies are served through Munich Franz Josef Strauss airport as well as Frankfurt International. The airport was named after Franz Josef Strauß, who played an important role in German politics. Among other Strauß was a long-time First Minister (Governor) of Bavaria (the state where the airport is located). Under his government, the airport was planned. Strauß, having been a private pilot himself, was said to have a particular interest in the aviation industry and infrastructure.

Naming the airport by its full name is quite uncommon, even the airport authority is only named "Flughafen München Gesellschaft". In the Munich area, most people prefer the term "Flughafen München" (Munich Airport), sometimes "Flughafen München II" or simply MUC. The company operating the airport brands it as "M - Flughafen München".

In June 2003, Terminal 2 was finished, housing Star Alliance partners exclusively.

Due to the rapid increase in traffic, a third runway is now being planned. As always with such a project, there is considerable opposition from the nearby residents, and lawsuits against the runway have already been announced.

Munich Airport

[edit] Terminals and Facilities

Map of Munich Airport

Most of the airport's facilities are located in the area between the two runways. The approach road and railway divide the west part into a southern half, which contains cargo and maintenance facilities, and a northern half, which contains mostly administrative buildings, a holiday long-term parking lot and the Visitors' Centre. It is followed by the west apron and Terminal 1, then the Munich Airport Center (MAC), Terminal 2 and the east apron.

[edit] Terminal 1

Terminal 1, Module B

Terminal 1 is the older terminal and commenced operation when the airport was opened on 17 May 1992. It has a total capacity of 25 m passengers per annum and is subdivided into five Modules designated with capital letters A, B, C, D and E. Modules A through D provide all facilities necessary to handle departures and arrivals, including landside drive-by lanes and parking, whereas module E is only equipped to handle arrivals. This design essentially makes each module a self-contained sub-terminal of its own, which is small and comfortable despite the total size of the terminal. Hall F is separate, located near Terminal 2 and handles flights with increased security requirements, i.e. those to Israel. Further, checkin for some flights departing from Terminal 1 is located in the the Central Area Z (German: Zentralbereich).

The 1,081 m pier features 21 jet bridges, two of which have been rebuilt into waiting halls for bus transfers. There are further 60 waiting positions on the apron, some of which are equipped with specially-designed apron jet bridges (German: Vorfeldfluggastbrücken), to which passengers are brought by bus. This unique concept allows passengers to board with full protection from the weather but without the high investments required for full satellite terminals connected through a passenger transport system.

Terminal 1 currently handles all flights from airlines that are not members of Star Alliance. However, due to lack of capacity at Terminal 2, Lufthansa subsidiary Germanwings and affiliate Condor moved back to Terminal 1, Module D. Further, Hall F handles flights to Israel from all airlines.

[edit] Terminal 2

Terminal 2, check-in area

Terminal 2 commenced operation on 29 June 2003. As Terminal 1, it has a design capacity of 25 m passengers per annum. However, having been designed as a hub terminal for Lufthansa and Star Alliance members, it is not divided into modules. Instead, all facilities are arranged around a central Plaza.

However, due to security regulations imposed by the European Union, the terminal is currently being equipped with facilities to handle passengers from countries considered insecure, i.e. not implementing the same regulations. This requires the construction of a new level as, unlike other airports, the terminal does not have separate areas for arriving and departing passengers.

The pier, which is 980 m long, is equipped with 24 jet bridges. As the total number of waiting positions of 75 on the East Apron is not always sufficient, Terminal 2 sometimes also uses waiting positions on the West Apron, to which passengers are carried by airside buses.

Terminal 2 has two main departure level, 04 and 05 and additional Bus gates on the lower level 03. Gates on level 05 (H) are designated Non-Schengen Gates. The leftmost gates are behind an additional security checkpoint for departures to the USA most of the day. The lower level 04 (G) contains mostly Schengen gates, and a small number of Gates for EU Non-Schengen destiation on the right-most side. The same split is used for the bus gates on level 03, also designated G. The terminal is operated by Terminal-2-Betriebsgesellschaft (German for Terminal 2 Operating Company), which is owned by Flughafen München GmbH (60 %) and Lufthansa (40 %). This makes Terminal 2 the first terminal in Germany which is co-operated by an airline.

There is a baggage sorting hall on the apron, which is planned to be extended into a satellite terminal for Terminal 2.

[edit] Munich Airport Centre (MAC)

Munich Airport Centre

The Munich Airport Centre (MAC) is a shopping, business and recreation area that connects the two terminals. The older Central Area (German: Zentralbereich), which was originally built as part of Terminal 1, hosts an underground shopping mall and the S-Bahn station. The newer MAC Forum built with Terminal 2 is a large outdoor area with a tent-like, partly transparent roof. Next to it is the airport hotel managed by Kempinski.

[edit] Visitor Viewing Facilities

The airport authorities have set out to cater for visitors and sight-seers by creating a 'Visitors Park' which includes a 'Visitors Hill' from which a good view can be obtained of the westerly aircraft apron and Terminal 1. This is served by a railway station named 'Besucherpark'. The view from the hill is shown in the above image. There are three historic aircraft on display in the park, a Super Constellation, a Douglas DC-3 and a Junkers Ju 52/3m. There is also a visitors viewing terrace on the roof of Terminal 2 that gives a view of the easterly aircraft apron.

[edit] Access

[edit] Railway

Munich Airport S-Bahn service
exSTRrg exSTRlg
KSBHFxa exSTR
Munich Airport
CONTg SHST exSTR
Besucherpark
S+BHF STR exSTR
Freising
LUECKE STR KSBHFxa
Erding
ABZrg ABZrf S+BHF
Markt Schwaben
S+BHF LUECKE LUECKE
Neufahrn
LUECKE ABZrg STRrf
LUECKE S+BHF
Munich East
LUECKE LUECKE
LUECKE SHST
Marienplatz City Centre
LUECKE SHST
Karlsplatz (Stachus)
LUECKE S+BHF
Munich Central
LUECKE LUECKE
LUECKE SBHF
Laim
STRlf ABZrf
S+BHF
Munich Pasing
CONTf

Munich Airport is connected to the city by Munich suburban railway lines S1 and S8. The ride takes approximately 45 minutes.

Munich Airport Station is located in a tunnel beneath the central area. A second station, Besucherpark (German: Visitors' Park) connects the cargo and maintenance areas, long-term parking, administrative buildings and the name-giving Visitors' Park.

A second tunnel beneath the terminals is currently unused. Originally, there were plans to use it for inter-city railway, then for a Transrapid maglev train making the trip to Munich Central Station in 10 minutes. However, this project was cancelled in March 2008 due to cost escalation.[3]

[edit] Bus

MVV bus lines connect the airport to the nearby city of Freising as well as Erding and Markt Schwaben.

Lufthansa Airport Bus provides an alternative to the S-Bahn, stopping at Nordfriedhof subway station and Munich Central Station.

[edit] Road

Motorways around Munich

Munich Airport is accessible via nearby Motorway A 92, which connects to Motorway A 9 and Munich's ring motorway A 99

Bavarian State Road St. 2584 connects A 92's exit 6 (Flughafen München) - an incomplete interchange that can only be used by traffic to and from the west - to the terminals. Access from the east is possible via exit 8 (Freising Ost) and Bavarian State Road St. 2580, which connects to St. 2584 in the east of the airport.

[edit] Future plans

[edit] Third runway

A third runway would increase the number of landing slots available per hour from 90 to 120. It would run in parallel to the existing runways and be located to the northeast of the current north runway, significantly extending the total area occupied by the airport.

According to Flughafen München GmbH (FMG), the airport's operator, the current two-runway system is already operating at full capacity during peak hours, request for slots from airlines already had to be denied. Further increase in air traffic is expected as Munich is to become a second major hub in Germany after Frankfurt.

In August 2007, the airport operator applied for a planning permission from the government of Upper Bavaria. As more than 60,000 objections have been filed during public display of the plans, the procedures are expected not to conclude before 2010.

While according to IACO Regulations (Annex XIV) the new runway would have to be named 08L/26R (renaming the existing north runway to 08C/26C), it is currently assigned the working title 09/27 in all plans.

[edit] Terminal 2 extension

An extension to Terminal 2 would see the baggage sorting hall on the east apron be upgraded into a satellite terminal allowing 17 m additional passengers to be handled per year.

While Terminal 1 still has plenty of capacity left - in 2007, it only handled about 9 m passengers - the extension to Terminal 2 is required by Lufthansa and its Star Alliance partners to allow easy transfers within a single terminal. When Terminal 2 and its east apron were built, preparations for a satellite terminal have already been made. Besides the baggage transport tunnel, there are three more tunnels beneath Terminal 2's apron that can receive a people mover and extensions to the current S-Bahn rail tunnel and unused inter-city rail tunnel respectively. The preparations also allow construction of a second satellite or an independent third terminal further to the east.

[edit] Airlines and destinations

[edit] Terminal 1

Airlines Destinations Terminal/Check-in
Aer Lingus Belfast-International, Cork, Dublin, London-Gatwick T1 D
Aeroflot Moscow-Sheremetyevo T1 C
Air Berlin Alicante, Antalya [seasonal], Bangkok [begins 4 November], Berlin-Tegel,Cancún, Cape Town [begins 9 October], Cologne/Bonn, Djerba, Düsseldorf, Faro, Funchal, Hamburg, Hanover, Hurghada, Kavala [seasonal], Karpathos [seasonal], Lamezia Terme, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Malé, Miami [begins 30 October], Mombasa [seasonal], Monastir [seasonal], Moscow-Domodedovo, Münster/Osnabrück, Palma de Mallorca, Phuket, Puerto Plata, Preveza [seasonal], Punta Cana, Sharm el-Sheikh, Tenerife-South, Thessaloniki [seasonal], Varadero, Westerland/Sylt [seasonal], Windhoek, Zakynthos [seasonal] T1 A
Air France Paris-Charles de Gaulle T1 D
Air France operated by Brit Air Lyon T1 D
Air France operated by Régional Paris-Charles de Gaulle T1 D
Air Transat Calgary [seasonal], Toronto-Pearson [seasonal], Vancouver [seasonal] T1 Z
AirBaltic Riga T1 C
Alitalia operated by Air One Rome-Fiumicino T1 D
Arkia Israel Airlines Tel Aviv T1 F
British Airways London-Heathrow T1 B
Carpatair Timişoara T1 C
Condor Agadir, Antalya, Dalaman, Fuerteventura, Funchal, Hamburg [seasonal], Hurghada, Ibiza, Jerez de la Frontera, Lanzarote, Larnaca, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Leipzig/Halle [seasonal], Málaga, Marsa Alam, Palma de Mallorca, Santa Cruz de la Palma, Sharm el-Sheikh, Taba, Tenerife-South T1 B
Czech Airlines Prague T1 C
Delta Air Lines Atlanta T1 B
EasyJet Edinburgh, London-Gatwick, London-Stansted, Manchester [begins 6 November] T1 D
El Al Tel Aviv T1 F
Emirates Dubai T1 C
Estonian Air Tallinn T1 D
Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi T1 C
Eurocypria Airlines Larnaca, Paphos T1 C
Finnair Helsinki T1 D
Germanwings Berlin-Schönefeld, Cologne/Bonn, Dortmund T1 D
Hamburg International Ankara, Antalya, Pristina, Simferopol T1 B
Iberia Airlines Madrid T1 D
Icelandair Reykjavik-Keflavik [seasonal] T1 D
InterSky Elba [seasonal] T1 D
KLM Amsterdam T1 D
KLM operated by KLM Cityhopper Amsterdam T1 D
MyAir Brindisi T1 D
Niki Vienna T1 A
Norwegian Air Shuttle Oslo-Gardermoen T1 D
Olympic Airlines Athens T1 D
Oman Air Muscat [begins 29 September] T1 C
Ostfriesische Lufttransport Heringsdorf, Rostock/Laage T1 D
Pegasus Airlines Antalya, Istanbul-Sabiha Gökçen, Izmir T1 C
Polet Airlines Voronezh T1 C
Rossiya St Petersburg T1 C
Royal Jordanian Amman T1 B
S7 Airlines Moscow-Domodedovo T1 C
Sky Airlines Antalya T1 C
Sun d'Or International Airlines Tel Aviv T1 F
SunExpress Antalya, Istanbul-Sabiha Gökçen, Izmir T1 C
TAROM Bucharest-Otopeni, Sibiu T1 C
Transaero St Petersburg T1 C
TUIfly Agadir, Antalya [seasonal], Araxos [seasonal], Bari, Boa Vista, Cagliari, Cairo, Catania, Corfu [seasonal], Dalaman [seasonal], Dubrovnik [seasonal], Faro [seasonal], Fuerteventura, Funchal [seasonal], Heraklion [seasonal], Hurghada, Jerez de la Frontera [seasonal], Kos [seasonal], Lanzarote, Larnaca [seasonal], Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Luxor, Marsa Alam, Minorca [seasonal], Naples [seasonal], Olbia, Palermo, Palma de Mallorca, Paphos [seasonal], Rhodes [seasonal], Rimini [seasonal], Sal, Sharm el-Sheikh, Tenerife-South, Thessaloniki T1 Z
TUIfly Tel Aviv T1 F
Tunisair Djerba, Monastir, Tunis T1 B
Ural Airlines Yekaterinburg T1 C
UTair Aviation Tyumen T1 C

[edit] Terminal 2 - Star Alliance Partners

Airlines Destinations Terminal/Check-in
Adria Airways Ljubljana T2 (level 4)
Aegean Airlines Athens, Thessaloniki T2 (level 3)
Air Canada Toronto-Pearson T2 (level 4)
Air China Beijing-Capital T2 (level 3)
Air Malta Catania, Malta T2 (level 3)
Austrian Airlines Vienna T2 (level 4)
Austrian Airlines operated by Tyrolean Airways Vienna T2 (level 4)
Brussels Airlines Brussels T2 (level 3)
Cimber Air Billund, Norrkoping T2 (level 4)
Cirrus Airlines Erfurt T2 (level 4)
Croatia Airlines Split, Zagreb T2 (level 4)
EgyptAir Cairo T2 (level 3)
LOT Polish Airlines Gdansk, Katowice, Warsaw T2 (level 4)
LOT operated by Eurolot Poznan, Wroclaw T2 (level 4)
Lufthansa Ankara, Athens, Barcelona, Beijing-Capital, Belgrade, Berlin-Tegel, Bilbao, Birmingham, Boston, Bremen, Brussels, Bucharest-Otopeni, Budapest, Busan, Catania, Charlotte, Chicago-O'Hare, Cologne/Bonn, Copenhagen, Delhi, Düsseldorf, Dubai, Frankfurt, Hamburg, Hanover, Helsinki, Hong Kong, Istanbul-Atatürk, Izmir, Kiev-Boryspil, Larnaca, Lisbon, London-Heathrow, Los Angeles, Madrid, Málaga, Manchester, Montréal [seasonal], Moscow-Domodedovo, Mumbai [ends 13 July], Münster/Osnabrück, Naples, New York-JFK, Newark, Nice, Oslo-Gardermoen, Palma de Mallorca, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Rome-Fiumicino, St Petersburg, San Francisco, São Paulo-Guarulhos, Seoul-Incheon, Shanghai-Pudong, Shenyang, Singapore, Sofia, Stockholm-Arlanda, Tbilisi, Tel Aviv [summer only], Tokyo-Narita, Vienna, Warsaw, Washington-Dulles [ends 23 October], Zürich T2 (level 4)
Lufthansa operated by PrivatAir New York-JFK [ends 13 July], Mumbai [begins 15 July], Tel Aviv [begins 25 October; seasonal] T2 (level 4)
Lufthansa Regional operated by Air Dolomiti Ancona, Bologna, Florence, Genoa, Klagenfurt, Linz, Milan-Malpensa, Pisa, Prague, Rimini, Trieste, Turin, Venice-Marco Polo, Verona, Wroclaw T2 (level 4)
Lufthansa Regional operated by Augsburg Airways Bern, Graz, Linz, Paderborn/Lippstadt, Poznan, Prague, Stuttgart, Wroclaw, Zagreb T2 (level 4)
Lufthansa Regional operated by Contact Air Nuremberg, Stuttgart T2 (level 4)
Lufthansa Regional operated by Lufthansa CityLine Amsterdam, Basel/Mulhouse, Belgrade, Bilbao, Birmingham, Bremen, Bucharest-Otopeni, Budapest, Cluj-Napoca, Cologne/Bonn, Copenhagen, Donetsk, Dresden, Dubrovnik, Düsseldorf, Gdansk, Geneva, Gothenburg-Landvetter, Hanover, Krakow, Leipzig/Halle, London-City, Lyons, Lvov, Manchester, Marseilles, Milan-Malpensa, Münster/Osnabrück, Naples, Nice, Olbia, Oslo, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Sarajevo, Sibiu, Sofia, Split, Stockholm-Arlanda, Timişoara, Tirana, Toulouse, Vienna, Warsaw, Westerland/Sylt, Zagreb, Zürich T2 (level 4)
Luxair Luxembourg, Saarbrücken T2 (level 4)
Qatar Airways Doha T2 (level 3)
Scandinavian Airlines System Copenhagen, Stockholm-Arlanda T2 (level 4)
South African Airways Johannesburg T2 (level 4)
Spanair Barcelona, Bilbao, Valencia T2 (level 4)
Swiss International Air Lines Zürich T2 (level 4)
TAP Portugal Lisbon T2 (level 4)
Thai Airways International Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi T2 (level 3)
Turkish Airlines Ankara, Istanbul-Atatürk T2 (level 3)
United Airlines Chicago-O'Hare, Washington-Dulles T2 (level 4)
US Airways Philadelphia T2 (level 3)

[edit] Cargo airlines

Airlines Destinations
BAE Systems Warton
British Airways World Cargo operated by Global Supply Systems Bahrain, Delhi, Hong Kong, London-Stansted
DHL operated by European Air Transport Leipzig/Halle
FedEx Express Frankfurt, Tel Aviv
Star Air (Maersk Air) Athens, Cologne/Bonn
TNT Airways Brussels, Geneva, Katowice, Liège, Ljubljana, Ostrava
West Air Sweden Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Stuttgart

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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