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Berlin Tempelhof Airport

Berlin Tempelhof Airport (German: Flughafen Berlin-Tempelhof) (formerly IATA: THF, ICAO: EDDI) was one of the first airports in Berlin, Germany. Situated in the south-central Berlin borough of Tempelhof-Schöneberg, the airport ceased operating in 2008 amid controversy, leaving Tegel and Schönefeld as the two main airports serving the city for another twelve years until both were replaced by Berlin Brandenburg Airport in 2020.[3]

Berlin Tempelhof Airport

Flughafen Berlin-Tempelhof
Aerial view of the former Tempelhof Airport taken in 2016
Summary
Airport typeDefunct
OwnerInstitute for Federal Real Estate and the Federal State of Berlin[1]
OperatorBerlin Airports
ServesBerlin
LocationBerlin, Germany
Opened8 October 1923 (1923-10-08)
Closed30 October 2008 (2008-10-30)
Hub forDeutsche Luft Hansa (1926–1945)
American Overseas Airlines
(1948–1950)
Pan American World Airways
(1950–1975)
Air France (1950–1959)
British European Airways
(1951–1974)
Riddle Airlines (1960s)
Capitol Int'l Airways (1960s)
Saturn Airways (1964–1967)
Autair (1960s)
Overseas Aviation (early 1960s)
British Airways (1974–1975)
Tempelhof Airways (1981–1990)
Hamburg Airlines (1990–1997)
Conti-Flug (1990–1994)
Lufthansa CityLine (1990–1992)
Cirrus Airlines (2001–2008)
Elevation AMSL164 ft / 50 m
Coordinates52°28′25″N 013°24′06″E / 52.47361°N 13.40167°E / 52.47361; 13.40167
Websitethf-berlin.de
Map
THF
Location within Berlin
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
09L/27R 6,870 2,094 Asphalt (closed)
09R/27L 6,037 1,840 Asphalt (closed)
Source: German AIP at EUROCONTROL[2]

Tempelhof was designated as an airport by the Reich Ministry of Transport on 8 October 1923. The old terminal was originally constructed in 1927. In anticipation of increasing air traffic, the Nazi government began an enormous reconstruction in the mid-1930s. While it was occasionally cited as the world's oldest operating commercial airport, the title was disputed by several other airports, and is no longer an issue since its closure.

Tempelhof was one of Europe's three iconic pre-World War II airports, the others being London's now defunct Croydon Airport and the old Paris–Le Bourget Airport. It acquired a further iconic status as the centre of the Berlin Airlift of 1948–49. One of the airport's most distinctive features is its huge, canopy-style roof extending over the apron, able to accommodate most contemporary airliners in the 1950s, 1960s and early 1970s, protecting passengers from the elements. Tempelhof Airport's main building was once among the twenty largest buildings on earth, but it also formerly contained the world's smallest duty-free shop.[4]

Tempelhof Airport closed all operations on 30 October 2008, despite the efforts of some protesters to prevent the closure.[5] A non-binding referendum was held on 27 April 2008 against the impending closure but failed due to low voter turnout. The former airfield has subsequently been used as a recreational space known as Tempelhofer Feld.[6] In September 2015, it was announced that Tempelhof would also become an emergency refugee camp.[7]

Function edit

Tempelhof was often called the "City Airport". In its later years, it mostly had commuter flights to other parts of Germany and neighbouring countries; but it had in the past received long-haul, wide-bodied airliners, such as the Boeing 747,[8] the Lockheed L-1011 Tristar[9] and the Lockheed C-5A Galaxy.[10] The first of these three first appeared at Tempelhof on 18 September 1976, when Pan American World Airways (Pan Am) flew in Boeing 747SP Clipper Great Republic to participate in the static exhibition of contemporary military, non-combat and civil aircraft at the annual "Day of Open House" of the United States Air Force (USAF) at the airport.

The Galaxy had its first appearance at Tempelhof on 17 September 1971, when an aircraft of the USAF's 436th Military Airlift Wing flew in from Dover Air Force Base in Delaware, United States, to participate in that year's "Day of Open House" static exhibition. These events respectively marked the debut at Tempelhof of the largest aircraft in commercial airline service at the time and the then-largest aircraft overall.[11]

Tempelhof, compared to Brandenburg Airport and Tegel Airport, wasn't a particularly large airport. The layout of the airport was relatively simple - two parallel runways oriented east–west (09/27 L/R), with a single oval taxiway around the airport, with the main terminal on the north-western segment of the airport. The runways are not comparatively long, either - versus Brandenburg's 3600m and 4000m runways which can easily handle intercontinental airliners like the Boeing 747, Tempelhof has two runways at 2094m (09R/27L) and 1840m (09L/27R), which can, at most, handle Boeing 757 and Airbus A320-size aircraft.

Other possible uses for Tempelhof have been discussed, and many people are trying to keep the airport buildings preserved.[12] In September 2015, in the midst of the 2015 European migrant crisis, it was announced by the Berlin state government that Tempelhof would become an 'emergency refugee shelter', holding at least 1,200 people in two former hangars.[7]

 
Tempelhof Airport Berlin panorama (2019)

History edit

 
Adolf Hitler at Zentralflughafen Tempelhof-Berlin, 1932

The site of the airport was originally Knights Templar land in medieval Berlin, and from this beginning came the name Tempelhof. Later, the site was used as a parade field by the Prussian army from 1720 to the start of World War I. In 1909, French aviator Armand Zipfel made the first flight demonstration in Tempelhof, followed by Orville Wright later that same year.[13] Tempelhof was first officially designated as an airport on 8 October 1923. Deutsche Luft Hansa was founded in Tempelhof on 6 January 1926.

The old terminal, originally constructed in 1927, became the world's first with an underground railway. The station has since been renamed Paradestraße, because the rebuilding of the airport in the 1930s required the airport access to be moved to a major intersection with a station now called Platz der Luftbrücke after the Berlin Airlift.

As part of Albert Speer's plan for the reconstruction of Berlin during the Nazi era, Prof. Ernst Sagebiel was ordered to replace the old terminal with a new terminal building in 1934. The airport halls and the adjoining buildings, intended to become the gateway to Europe and a symbol of Hitler's "world capital" Germania, are still known as one of the largest built entities worldwide, and have been described by British architect Sir Norman Foster as "the mother of all airports". With its façades of shell limestone, the terminal building, built between 1936 and 1941, forms a 1.2-kilometre-long (0.75 mi) quadrant. Arriving passengers walked through customs controls to the reception hall. Tempelhof was served by the U6 U-Bahn line along Mehringdamm and up Friedrichstraße (Platz der Luftbrücke station).

Zentralflughafen Tempelhof-Berlin had the advantage of a central location just minutes from the Berlin city centre and quickly became one of the world's busiest airports. Tempelhof saw its greatest pre-war days during 1938–1939, when up to 52 foreign and 40 domestic flights arrived and departed daily from the old terminal while the new one was still under construction.

The new air terminal was designed as headquarters for Deutsche Luft Hansa (moved in 1938), the German national airline at that time. As a forerunner of today's modern airports, the building was designed with many unique features, including giant arc-shaped aircraft hangars. Although under construction for more than ten years, it was never finished because of World War II. For passengers and freight, the 1927-built terminal stayed in use until 24 April 1945.

The building complex was designed to resemble an eagle in flight with semicircular hangars forming the bird's spread wings. A 1.6-kilometre-long (1 mi) hangar roof was to have been laid in tiers to form a stadium for spectators at air and ground demonstrations. Norman Foster called Tempelhof "one of the really great buildings of the modern age".[14]

World War II edit

 
The airport in 1937, at the 1927-built terminal building

Fearing Allied bombing of airports, all German civil aviation was halted on 2 September 1939, but gradually restarted from 1 November.[15] However, the 1927-built terminal remained closed to all civil aviation, and all civilian aircraft movements to and from Berlin were transferred to an airfield in Rangsdorf until 7 March 1940, when the 1927 terminal was reopened and civil aviation continued until 24 April 1945.[15]

From January 1940 until early 1944, Weser Flugzeugbau assembled Junkers Ju 87 "Stuka" dive bombers; thereafter, it assembled Focke-Wulf Fw 190 fighter planes in the still unfurnished main hall and hangars 3 to 7 of the new terminal, which were supplied by a railway and trucks via a connecting tunnel.[16] Hangars 1 and 2 were not used to assemble aircraft as these were already used by Luft Hansa for its own planes. Aircraft parts were brought in from all over the city while complete aircraft engines were trucked to Tempelhof. Once the airframes were complete and the engines had been installed, the finished aircraft were flown out. The Luftwaffe did not use Tempelhof as a military airfield during World War II, except for occasional emergency landings by fighter aircraft.

On 21 April 1945, Deutsche Luft Hansa operated its last scheduled flights, and over the coming days laid on additional non-scheduled flights from Johannisthal Air Field which stopped over at Tempelhof to take on freight en route to Travemünde and Munich, where Luft Hansa had relocated its headquarters.[17] Two days later, on 23 April, the airline's last-ever flight to depart Tempelhof left for Madrid, but was later shot down over Southern Germany.[18]

Tempelhof's German commander, Oberst Rudolf Böttger, refused to carry out orders to blow up the base, choosing instead to kill himself. Soviet forces took Tempelhof in the Battle of Berlin on 28 and 29 April 1945 in the closing days of the war in Europe.[18] Soviet forces combed through the old and the new terminal searching for treasures, hidden places and documents, opening all rooms.

During their search, they blew up the fortified entrance to a three-level bomb shelter for celluloid films of the Hansa Luftbild GmbH, a Luft Hansa subsidiary specialising in aerial photography. The explosion immediately ignited the celluloid, turning the film shelter under the northern office wing of the new terminal into a furnace and making it impossible to enter for several weeks. The raging inferno led the Soviet commander to order the lower levels to be flooded with water. With no functioning water supply in war-torn Berlin, this was only possible because the new terminal, which had suffered only slight war damage, had its own electricity and groundwater utility with underground reservoirs under the northerly forecourt of the new terminal close to the film shelter.

On 8 May 1945, Western Allied and German signatories of the German Surrender in Berlin and their entourage landed at Tempelhof airport.[19] At the beginning of May, Weser Flugzeugbau opened a workshop in hangar 7 to repair streetcars.[19] In the following weeks, Berliners raided all unguarded parts of the opened buildings searching for food or anything else useful in bartering in the black market. In accordance with the Yalta agreements, Zentralflughafen Berlin-Tempelhof was turned over to the United States Army 2nd Armored Division on 2 July 1945 by the Soviet Union as part of the American occupation sector of Berlin. This agreement was later formalised by the August 1945 Potsdam Agreement, which formally divided Berlin into four occupation sectors.

The 852nd Engineer Aviation Battalion arrived at Tempelhof (Code Number R-95) on 10 July 1945 and conducted the original repairs in the new terminal. After the Allied Control Council had agreed upon West Berlin Air Corridors under control of the Berlin Air Safety Center, these opened in February 1946, enabling civil aviation at Tempelhof to restart.[20]

Berlin Airlift edit

 
USAF Douglas C-47 transport planes preparing to take off from Tempelhof during the Berlin Airlift, August 1948

On 20 June 1948, Soviet authorities, claiming technical difficulties, halted all traffic by land and by water into or out of the western-controlled sectors of Berlin. The only remaining access routes into the city were three 20 mi (32 km)-wide air corridors across the Soviet Zone of Occupation.[21] Faced with the choice of abandoning the city or attempting to supply its inhabitants with the necessities of life by air, the Western Powers chose the latter course.

 
Berlin Airlift Memorial on Platz der Luftbrücke in front of the airport, displaying the names of the 39 British and 31 American pilots who died during the operation, and symbolising the three air corridors

Operation Vittles, as the airlift was unofficially named, began on 26 June when USAF Douglas C-47 Skytrains carried 80 tons of food into Tempelhof, far less than the estimated 4,500 tons of food, coal and other essential supplies needed daily to maintain a minimum level of existence. But this force was soon augmented by United States Navy and Royal Air Force cargo aircraft, as well as British European Airways (BEA) and many of Britain's fledgling wholly privately owned, independent airlines.[22]

The last included Freddie Laker's Air Charter, Eagle Aviation[23] and Skyways. On 15 October 1948, to promote increased safety and cooperation between the separate US and British airlift efforts, the Allies created a unified command – the Combined Airlift Task Force under Maj. Gen. William H. Tunner, USAF – at Tempelhof. To facilitate the command and control, as well as the unloading of aircraft, the USAF 53d Troop Carrier Squadron was temporarily assigned to Tempelhof.

The grass runways usual in Germany until then could not cope with the great demand, and a subsequently built runway containing perforated steel matting[nb 1] began to crumble under the weight of the USAF's C-54 Skymasters.[24] Hence, American engineers built a new 6,000 ft (1,800 m) runway at Tempelhof between July and September 1948 and another between September and October 1948 to accommodate the expanding requirements of the airlift.[24] The old airport terminal of 1927 was demolished in 1948 in order to create additional space for unloading more planes. The last airlift transport touched down at Tempelhof on 30 September 1949.

Tempelhof also became famous as the location of Operation Little Vittles: the dropping of candy to children living near the airport. The original Candy Bomber, Gail Halvorsen noticed children lingering near the fence line of the airport and wanted to share something with them. He eventually started dropping candy by parachute just before landing. His efforts were expanded by other pilots and eventually became a part of legend in the city of Berlin.

Cold War edit

As the Cold War intensified in the late 1950s and 1960s, access problems to West Berlin, both by land and air, continued to cause tension. Throughout the Cold War years, Tempelhof was the main terminal for American military transport aircraft accessing West Berlin. In 1969 one of the pilots during the Berlin Airlift, and the original Candy Bomber, Gail Halvorsen, returned to Berlin as the commander of Tempelhof airbase.

With the fall of the Berlin Wall and the reunification of Germany, the presence of American forces in Berlin ended. The USAF 7350th Air Base Group at Tempelhof was inactivated in June 1993. In July 1994, with President Clinton in attendance, the British, French, and American air and land forces in Berlin were deactivated in a ceremony on the Four Ring Parade field at McNair Barracks. The Western Allies returned a united city of Berlin to the unified German government. The U.S. Army closed its Berlin Army Aviation Detachment at TCA in August 1994, ending a 49-year American military presence in Berlin.

U.S. Army Aviation edit

In 1951 the US Army stationed an aviation element of the 6. Infantry Brigade[dubious ]-(6th Infantry Regiment?) with three Hiller OH-23A Raven helicopters at Tempelhof. Over the years it became known as the Berlin Brigade Aviation Detachment (BBDE Avn.Det.). The Hiller OH-23A was soon replaced by Bell OH-13 Sioux. Further helicopters stationed over the years where Sikorsky H-19 Chikasaw (1958–1964), Sikorsky H-34 Choctaw (1962–1964), Bell UH-1B (1964–1971)and finally Bell UH-1H (May 1971– August 1994).[25]

Fixed wing aircraft stationed at Tempelhof were Cessna O-1 Bird Dog (1965–1975), De Havilland Canada U-6 Beaver (1968 – January 1980),[26] Cessna O-2A (1975–1979), Pilatus UV-20A Chiricahua (1979–1991), Beechcraft U-8D Seminole(1960s), Beechcraft U-21 (1970s–1986 and 1991–1994), as well as Beechcraft C-12C (1986–1991).

Postwar commercial use edit

 
DC 4 of Pan American World Airways in January 1954
 
A Pan Am Douglas DC-4 seen parked in front of a hangar at Berlin Tempelhof in January 1954
 
A Silver City Bristol 170 Freighter Mk 21 seen beyond the wing of an Avro York on the ramp at Berlin Tempelhof in January 1954
 
A British United Airways Vickers Viscount 700 seen landing at Berlin Tempelhof during 1962
 
A Caledonian Douglas DC-6B seen sharing the apron with two Pan Am DC-6Bs at Berlin Tempelhof in June 1964
 
A British United Airways ATL-98 Carvair seen parked on the apron with two Capitol International Lockheed Constellations and an Air France Breguet Deux-Ponts in the background at Berlin Tempelhof in August 1967
 
A Pan Am Boeing 747-100 seen landing at Berlin Tempelhof in June 1987

American Overseas Airlines (AOA), at the time the overseas division of American Airlines, inaugurated the first commercial air link serving Tempelhof after the war with a flight from New York via Shannon, Amsterdam and Frankfurt on 18 May 1946.[27][28] This was followed by AOA's inauguration of West Berlin's first dedicated domestic air link between Tempelhof and Frankfurt's Rhein-Main Airport on 1 March 1948.[29]

AOA was the only commercial operator at Tempelhof to maintain its full flying programme for the entire duration of the Berlin Blockade (26 June 1948 – 12 May 1949).[29]

Following the end of the Berlin Blockade, AOA launched additional dedicated scheduled services linking Tempelhof with Hamburg Fuhlsbüttel and Düsseldorf Lohausen from 6 March and 1 June 1950 respectively.[30]

On 25 September 1950, Pan Am acquired AOA from American Airlines. This merger resulted in Pan Am establishing a growing presence at Tempelhof.[27][31] (In addition to continuing AOA's original, multistop Berlin – New York route and dedicated internal German services connecting Berlin with Frankfurt, Hamburg and Düsseldorf, between 1955 and 1959, Pan Am commenced regular, year-round scheduled services to Cologne, Stuttgart, Hanover, Munich and Nuremberg from Tempelhof.[29]) Pan Am's initial equipment for its new Berlin operation were unpressurised, 60-seat Douglas DC-4s, widely available at the time due to the large number of war-surplus C-54 Skymasters.[22][29]

1950 was also the year Air France joined Pan Am at Tempelhof.[22][32] Air France resumed operations to Tempelhof following their cessation during the war years.[22][32][33]

This was furthermore the time Allied restrictions on the carriage of local civilians on commercial airline services from/to West Berlin were lifted. It entailed transferring responsibility for processing all commercial flights to West Berlin's city government, including the operation and maintenance of associated passenger, cargo and mail handling facilities. These changes gave a major boost to West Berlin's fledgeling post-war scheduled air services.[27]

On 8 July 1951, BEA transferred its operations from Gatow to Tempelhof, thus concentrating all West Berlin air services at Berlin's iconic city centre airport.[33][34] BEA's move to Tempelhof resulted in a significant increase in passenger numbers, as well as an increase in its Berlin-based fleet to six Douglas DC-3s.[27][35]

From then on, several of the new, wholly privately owned UK independent[nb 2] airlines and US supplemental carriers[nb 3] started regular air services to Tempelhof from the UK, the US and West Germany. These airlines initially carried members of the UK and US armed forces stationed in Berlin and their dependants as well as essential raw materials, finished goods manufactured in West Berlin and refugees from East Germany and Eastern Europe, who were still able to freely enter the city prior to the construction of the infamous Berlin Wall. This operation was also known as the Little Berlin Airlift.[36] One of these airlines, UK independent Dan-Air Services would subsequently play an important role in developing commercial air services from Tegel for a quarter century.[37][38]

During the early-to-mid-1950s, BEA leased in aircraft that were bigger than its Tempelhof-based fleet of DC-3/Pionair, Viking and Elizabethan piston-engined airliners from other operators to boost capacity, following a steady increase in the airline's passenger loads.[22][39][40] (This included an ex-Transair Vickers Viscount 700[41] belonging to its newly formed independent rival British United Airways, which was damaged beyond repair on 30 October 1961 at Frankfurt Rhein-Main Airport at the end of a passenger flight that had originated at Tempelhof.[42][43][44])

By 1954, a year that saw 671,555 passengers pass through the airport, Tempelhof had established itself as the third-busiest airport in Europe.[45] From 6 June of that year, Pan Am. began re-equipping its Tempelhof-based fleet with larger, pressurised Douglas DC-6B propliners.[11] Compared with the DC-4, the new type had 16 additional seats.[46]

In 1958, BEA began replacing its piston airliners with Vickers Viscount 701 turboprop aircraft, in a high-density 63-seat single class seating arrangement. Up to ten new, state-of-the-art Vickers Viscount 802s, which featured a more spacious 66-seat single-class seating arrangement, soon replaced the older series 701 aircraft.[35] The greater range and higher cruising speed of the 802 series enabled BEA to inaugurate a non-stop London Heathrow – Berlin Tempelhof service on 1 November 1965.[22][33][35] this was the only non-stop international scheduled air service from Tempelhof[nb 4]

On 19 November 1959, a Pan Am DC-4 became the first aircraft to operate a scheduled all-cargo service from West Berlin. This service linked Tempelhof with Rhein-Main Airport once-nightly, all year round.[47]

On 2 January 1960, Air France, which had served Düsseldorf, Frankfurt, Munich, Nuremberg and its main base at Paris Le Bourget/Orly during the previous decade with DC-4, Sud-Est Languedoc and Lockheed Constellation/Super Constellation piston-engined equipment, shifted its entire Berlin operation to Tegel because Tempelhof's runways were too short to permit the introduction of the Sud-Aviation Caravelle, their new short-haul jet, with a viable payload.[22][32][48][49] (Air France's Caravelle IIIs lacked thrust reversers that would have permitted them to land safely on Tempelhof's short runways with a full commercial payload.[50][51])

On 1 March 1960, Pan Am launched its second dedicated scheduled all-cargo flight from Berlin, linking Tempelhof with Hamburg Fuhlsbüttel.[52]

1960 was also the year Pan Am withdrew its last DC-4 from Tempelhof. As a result, all of the airline's Berlin routes were exclusively served with DC-6Bs as of 27 June of that year.[46] Although the DC-6B was a less advanced aircraft than either the Viscount or the Caravelle, it was more economical. By the early 1960s, Pan Am had a fleet of 15 DC-6Bs stationed at its Tempelhof base,[53][54] which were configured in a higher-density seating arrangement than competing airlines' aircraft. (Pan Am's DC-6Bs were originally configured in a 76-seat, all-economy layout. The subsequent introduction of subsidies for all scheduled internal German services from/to West Berlin resulted in steady network growth as well as service frequency and passenger load increases. To cope with the sharply higher traffic volumes, aircraft seat densities were increased twice – initially to 84 and subsequently 87 seats.[29]) This fleet eventually grew to 17 aircraft, which gave Pan Am the biggest aircraft fleet among the three main scheduled operators flying from West Berlin. It furthermore enabled it to compensate for the DC-6's lack of sophistication with higher frequencies than its competitors, thereby attaining a higher market share (60%) and capturing a greater share of the lucrative business travel market than its rivals. During that period, Pan Am moreover achieved an ultra short-haul load factor of 70% on its eight scheduled internal routes from Berlin, making the airline's Berlin routes the most profitable in its worldwide scheduled network.[33][55][56][57]

Following the completion of the Berlin Wall on 13 August 1961, the West German government introduced a route-specific subsidy of up to 20% for all internal German scheduled air services from and to West Berlin to help the airlines cope with the resulting falloff in traffic and maintain an economically viable operation on these lifeline routes.[22][49] These came into effect on 1 March 1962 for all tickets sold in Germany, including Berlin.[34][58][59] (To qualify for the subsidised rate under this system, the passenger was required to purchase a round-trip ticket for a scheduled internal German flight from/to West Berlin in Germany. Once he/she had checked-in at the airport, the airline collected a coupon attached to his/her ticket, which was subsequently handed in to the relevant German authorities for reimbursement.[48])

By the early 1960s, a number of UK independents and US supplementals began operating regular charter flights from Tempelhof. These carried both inbound tourists from the US, the UK and other countries as well as local outbound tourists to the emerging holiday resorts in the Mediterranean. London Gatwick-based UK independent Overseas Aviation (CI) was among the first airlines the Allied Air Attachés in Bonn[nb 5] licensed to operate a series of regular charter flights from West Berlin. It used Vikings and Argonauts on these services, which operated from Tempelhof under contract to the Berlin Senate and the city's Technical University as well as Berliner Flugring, a local package tour operator that began as a consortium of 70 West Berlin travel agents arranging IT flights to holiday resorts in Europe.[60][61][62][63]

By 1964, BEA operated up to 20,000 flights each year from and to Berlin. These represented approximately half of the airline's total yearly flights to/from Germany and generated profits of £1 million per year.[35] 1964 was also the year US supplemental Saturn Airways began operating a comprehensive inclusive tour (IT) charter flight programme from Tempelhof under contract to local package holiday consolidator Flug-Union Berlin,[nb 6] using Douglas DC-6A/Cs and DC-7Cs.[64][65][66][67] On 2 December of that year, a Boeing 727-100 became the first jet aircraft to land at Tempelhof. Boeing had leased the aircraft to Pan Am for a special flight from Frankfurt to Berlin to demonstrate to the airline the 727's ability to operate from Tempelhof's short runways. Pan Am indicated its intention to place an order for six 727s for its Berlin operation, as a result of the aircraft using only half the 5,900 ft (1,800 m) runway during landing.[53][68][69]

26 October 1965 marked British Aircraft Corporation's new One-Eleven jet's first arrival at Tempelhof when a British United 200 series operating a trooping flight under contract to the UK Ministry of Defence diverted from Gatow.[70][71]

22 January 1966 marked the first appearance of a British trijet at Tempelhof when Hawker Siddeley flew in its HS 121 Trident 1E[nb 7] demonstrator aircraft[nb 8] for evaluation by BEA.[11][72][73] A week later, on 29 January, BEA began evaluating the BAC One-Eleven's suitability for its Berlin operations, with the start of a series of test flights conducted on its behalf by BAC's 475 series demonstrator. This included a number of takeoffs and landings at Tempelhof to test the aircraft's short-field performance.[70][74]

On 18 March 1966, Pan Am became the first airline to commence regular, year-round jet operations from Tempelhof with the first examples of a brand-new fleet of an initial eight Boeing 727-100 series, one of the first jet aircraft with a short-field capability.[53][54][75][76][77] These aircraft were configured in a single class featuring 128 economy seats.[29][53][54][75]

Pan Am's move put BEA at a considerable competitive disadvantage, especially on the busy Berlin–Frankfurt route where the former out-competed the latter with both modern jet planes as well as a higher flight frequency.[78] BEA responded to Pan Am's competitive threat by increasing the Berlin-based fleet to 13 Viscounts by winter 1966/7 to enable it to offer higher frequencies.[79] This entailed re-configuring aircraft cabins in a lower-density seating arrangement, as a result of which the refurbished cabins featured only 53, Comet-type first-class seats in a four-abreast layout instead of 66, five-abreast economy seats. In addition, BEA sought to differentiate itself from its main competitor by providing a superior in-flight catering standard. (BEA's Silver Star service included complimentary hot meals on all flights whereas Pan Am merely offered free on-board snacks. Sections of the local press dubbed the contrasting strategies of the two main protagonists plying the internal German routes from Berlin – estimated to be worth £15–20 million in annual revenues – the Dinner oder Düsen? (Dinner or Jet?) battle.) Henceforth, the airline marketed these services as Super Silver Star.[22][27][30][33][80][81]

The introduction of Pan Am's 727s to the Berlin market represented a major step change because of the aircraft's ability to carry more passengers than any other contemporary aircraft type used by scheduled carriers in the short-haul Berlin market, and its ability to take off from and land on Tempelhof's short runways with a full commercial payload as only light fuel loads were required on the short internal German services. Compared with BEA, Pan Am's 727s carried 20% more passengers than the British carrier's Comet 4Bs[nb 9] and up to 2+12 times as many passengers as the latter's Viscounts.[nb 10][48]

Within two years of Pan Am's introduction of jet equipment on the bulk of its internal German services from/to West Berlin, its market share rose from 58% to 68%. Despite the huge increase in capacity over the DC-6B (128 vs. 87 seats), load factors dropped during the first year of operations only. (Pan Am's second year of jet operations from Tempelhof saw load factors steadying while the third saw a slight increase.[82]) The lower seat density in BEA's re-configured Viscounts combined with higher flight frequencies, superior catering and increased promotion proved insufficient to counter the appeal of Pan Am's new jets, which were laid out in a comparatively tight, 34 in (86 cm) pitch seating configuration. This resulted in BEA's market share declining from 38% at the beginning of this period to 27% at its end. On the other hand, BEA's reduced capacity in the domestic air travel market between West Berlin and West Germany enabled it to attain higher load factors than its competitors.[22][83][84]

From August 1968, BEA supplemented its Tempelhof-based Viscount fleet with de Havilland Comet 4B series jetliners.[22][70] Although these aircraft could operate from Tempelhof's short runways with a restricted payload, they were not suited to the airline's ultra short-haul operation from Berlin (average stage length: 230 mi (370 km)) given the high fuel consumption of the Comet, especially when operating at the mandatory 10,000 ft (3,000 m) altitude inside the Allied air corridors.[48][72][78][85][86][87] This measure was therefore only a stopgap until most of BEA's Berlin fleet was equipped with 97-seat, single-class BAC One-Eleven 500s.[nb 11][22] BEA's re-equipment of its Berlin fleet with brand-new One-Eleven 500 jets was central to the airline's competitive strategy to regain ground lost to Pan Am's 727s. The new One-Eleven 500, which BEA called the Super One-Eleven, operated its first scheduled service from Berlin on 1 September 1968.[22][33][70][86][87][88][89] It began replacing the airline's Berlin-based Viscounts from 17 November 1968.[90]

1968 was also the year all non-scheduled services, i.e. primarily the rapidly growing number of inclusive tour charter flights, were concentrated at Tegel to alleviate increasing congestion at Tempelhof and to make better use of Tegel, which was underutilised at the time.[62]

Air France, West Berlin's third scheduled carrier, which had suffered a continuous traffic decline ever since the transfer of Berlin operations to more distant Tegel at the beginning of 1960 due to Tempelhof's operational limitations that made it unsuitable for its Caravelles,[nb 12] was worst affected by the equipment changes at the latter airport during the mid-to-late 1960s. Over this period, the French airline's market share halved from 9% to less than 5% despite having withdrawn from Tegel–Düsseldorf in summer 1964[nb 13] and concentrated its limited resources on Tegel–Frankfurt and Tegel–Munich to maximise the competitive impact on the latter two routes. To reverse growing losses on its Berlin routes resulting from load factors as low as 30%, Air France decided to withdraw from the internal German market entirely and instead enter into a joint venture with BEA. This arrangement entailed the latter taking over the former's two remaining German domestic routes to Frankfurt and Munich and operating these with its own aircraft and flightdeck crews from Tempelhof. It also entailed repainting the fins of the BEA One-Eleven 500s in a neutral, dark-blue scheme featuring Super One-Eleven titles instead of BEA's "Speedjack" motif. The Air France-BEA joint venture became operational in spring 1969 and terminated in autumn 1972.[22][35][48][78][83][91][92][93][94][95][96]

Commercial air traffic from/to Berlin Tempelhof peaked in 1971 at just above 5+12 million passengers (out of a total of 6.12 million passengers for all West Berlin airports during that year[nb 14]). This represented more than 90% of West Berlin's commercial air traffic and made its iconic city centre airport Germany's second-largest.[nb 15] With 3+12 million passengers, Pan Am accounted for the bulk of this traffic[56] while almost all of the remaining 2 million accrued to BEA. 1971 was also the year the latter's last Berlin-based Viscount departed the city.[33][49][97][98]

 
Nord 262 of Tempelhof Airways, Airport Berlin Tempelhof, 1988
 
A BAe 146 of Brussels Airlines, Airport Tempelhof, 2004

East Germany's relaxation of border controls affecting all surface transport modes between West Berlin and West Germany across its territory from 1972 onwards resulted in a decline of scheduled internal German air traffic from/to West Berlin. This was further compounded by the economic downturn in the wake of the 1973 oil crisis. The resulting fare increases that were intended to recover the airlines' higher operating costs caused by steeply rising jet fuel prices led to a further drop in demand. This in turn resulted in a major contraction of Pan Am's and BEA's/British Airways's internal German operations, necessitating a reduction in both airlines' Berlin-based fleets and workforces in an attempt to contain growing losses these once profitable routes generated by the mid-1970s.[22][49][56][95]

On 1 September 1975, Pan Am and British Airways moved their entire Berlin operation to the newly built terminal at Tegel Airport. Following Pan Am's and British Airways's move to Tegel, commercial operations at Tempelhof ceased, resulting in exclusive use by the US military.

From 1978, Pan Am relocated its 727 flightdeck crew training from Miami International Airport to Berlin Tempelhof. This involved [re-]training all pilots and flight engineers who crewed the flight decks of the airline's 727 fleet, which at the time operated out of Miami to the Caribbean and Central America, as well as on the IGS routes from Berlin and intra-European feeder routes serving Frankfurt and Heathrow.[99][100] Another airline that used Tempelhof to train its flightdeck crews was US supplemental Modern Air Transport. While all Modern Air commercial flights from and to Berlin principally used Tegel to take advantage of that airport's longer runways and the fact that it was not in a built-up area making for easier approaches, the airline conducted its training for Berlin-based flight deck crews at Tempelhof between 1968 and 1974. The latter was also the US supplemental's (and other Tegel-based operators') designated diversion airport in bad weather in the Tegel area.[101][66]

Commercial operations restarted in 1981, when US-incorporated regional airline start-up Tempelhof Airways began a corporate shuttle between Tempelhof and Paderborn under contract to former German computer manufacturer Nixdorf whose main factories and offices were located in Paderborn and West Berlin respectively. Tempelhof Airways's initial equipment comprised Cessna Conquest and Piper Navajo executive aircraft. In 1985, the airline converted the Tempelhof–Paderborn corporate shuttle into a full-fledged scheduled service using a Nord 262 commuter turboprop.[102]

The end of the Cold War and German reunification opened Tempelhof for non-allied air traffic on 3 October 1990. US President Bill Clinton christened a new Boeing C-17 Globemaster III transport plane (serial number 96-0006) the Spirit of Berlin at Tempelhof on 12 May 1998, to commemorate the 49th anniversary of the end of the Berlin Blockade on 12 May 1949.

Towards the end, commercial use was mostly in the form of small commuter aircraft flying regionally. Plans had been in place to shut down Tempelhof and Tegel, and make the new Brandenburg Airport the sole commercial airport for Berlin.

Closing down air traffic edit

 

In 1996, the mayor of Berlin Eberhard Diepgen, Brandenburg minister-president Manfred Stolpe and the federal transport minister Wissmann established the so-called "Consensus resolution". The entire planning aimed at concentrating domestic and international air traffic in Berlin and Brandenburg at one airport: Berlin-Schönefeld International Airport.[103]

To ensure investment protection as well as to fend off opposition to Schönefeld International's expansion, it was mandated that first Tempelhof and then Tegel must be closed. On 4 December 2007, the Federal Administrative Court of Germany (Bundesverwaltungsgericht) made the final decision as court of last instance to close Tempelhof Airport.[104]

Referendum against closing edit

An initiative for a nonbinding referendum against the closure was held and failed, after the initial number of signatures required were collected.[105] According to the constitution of the state of Berlin, the number of supportive signatures that were required to be collected within four months in order to compel a referendum amounts to 7% of the population of Berlin entitled to vote – 169,784.[106] After the four-month period for the collection of signatures[107] 203,408 signatures had been lodged.[108]

The referendum was held on 27 April 2008.[109] All eligible voters received an information brochure along with their notification. A majority of the votes was necessary to support the referendum, but this had to be at least one quarter of all eligible Berlin voters.[110][111]

The initiative for keeping Tempelhof open was supported by the Interessengemeinschaft City-Airport Tempelhof (ICAT)[112] along with a couple of opposition parties in the Berlin city parliament: the Christian Democratic Union and the Free Democratic Party citing primarily the need for an inner-city airport for business and private flyers as well as nostalgic reasons.[103] Representatives from the ICAT suggested keeping the airport open up until Schönefeld Airport was to be completed in about 2012. The Berlin government insisted on the closure of the airport for legal, long-term economic, and environmental reasons,[110] in particular to ensure the expansion of Schönefeld International. Environmental groups and the Green party supported them in this.

Plans for the future would include for example a Berlin airlift museum in the old terminal building, commercial space for innovative businesses, new housing and industrial areas, sports facilities, and parks. Legally the decision in favour of closure at the end of October 2008 was irrevocable[113] and the referendum was nonbinding. A subsequent reopening would have faced high legal barriers; but some legal experts claimed there may be means to circumvent this.

The referendum of 27 April 2008 failed. Although 60.2% of the votes cast were for keeping the airport open, this was by only 21.7% of the eligible voters; short of the 25% required. Support had been highest in western districts of Berlin (up to 80%), but opposition (only 30% approval) and disinterest was prevalent in the eastern districts. Voter turnout of 36% was low.[114] Air traffic at Tempelhof Airport ceased for good on 30 October and the official licence expired in mid-December.

A "Goodbye Tempelhof" gala was held at Tempelhof airport for eight hundred invited guests in the last hours of 30 October. Meanwhile, protesters against the closing held a candle vigil in front on the Platz der Lufbrücke. The last commercial flight was a Cirrus Airlines Dornier 328 that departed at 22:17 towards Mannheim.[115] "Time to Say Goodbye" was sung to the spectators on the apron at the conclusion. At precisely four and a half minutes before midnight, the last two airplanes – a historical Junkers Ju 52 and an airlift "raisin bomber" Douglas DC-3 – took off in parallel, waved their wings, and flew off south-east to Schönefeld airport. The runway and air field lights were switched off at midnight.[5]

Three Antonov An-2 airplanes flying under VFR were left stranded at the airport, as weather conditions prevented them from taking off on 30 October. They were allowed to take off on 24 November 2008, making them the last aircraft to take off from the airport.[116]

Post-airport usage edit

 
An area of Tempelhof Airport in 2012, converted into open greenspace

ABB Formula E Berlin ePrix edit

The ABB Formula E used variations of the Tempelhof Airport Street Circuit for the Berlin ePrix in 2015 and from 2017 to 2023. There are plans hold it again on 23 October 2024.[117] In 2020 due to COVID-19, there were held 6 rounds on the circuit with rounds 1 and 2 going on the reverse layout and rounds 5 and 6 having the extended layout for the first time.

Public park edit

In August 2009, Berlin city officials announced that the Tempelhof outfields would be opened in May 2010 as a city park. The city planned to spend an estimated €60 million on developing the park from 2010 to 2017.[118] On the weekend of 8/9 May 2010, the outfield was festively opened as Berlin's largest public park named "Tempelhofer Feld". More than 200,000 Berliners visited the park to enjoy its wide open spaces for recreation ranging from biking and skating to baseball and flying kites.[119][120][121] The opening ceremonies were slightly marred by some protesters unhappy about the fence that closed off the park during the night.[122]

Entrance is free with park hours being from 6/7/7.30 a.m., depending on the season, until sunset. The grounds are maintained by Grün Berlin,[123] a company that also looks after several other gated parks in Berlin. About 80% of the former airfield is an important habitat for several redlisted birds, plants and insects.[124] Usage of the park is seasonally restricted to limit disturbance of Eurasian skylark breeding grounds.[125]

In 2013, the Senate of Berlin introduced a plan to open the outer zones of the Tempelhof fields for construction of apartment and commercial buildings, and a new Berlin Central and Regional Library.[126][127] An area of 230 hectares (2.3 km2) was to remain a park, but was planned to be landscaped with a rain water reservoir, a 60-meter artificial boulder, groves and other new features. Landscaping was supposed to begin in 2013 and be completed in time for Germany's world horticultural exhibition IGA that was to be hosted in the park in 2017.[128]

In a 2014 Referendum, Berlin's citizens decided to preserve the entire space of the park and prohibit any kind of development by law, thus putting an end to both construction and landscaping plans.[129][130]

Event location edit

Tempelhof has been used since its closing to host numerous fairs and events. The first major events included a fashion tradeshow in July[131][132] and the Berlin Festival 2009 concert in August.[133] Fairs were held in the hangar. In September 2010, Tempelhof hosted the Popkomm, the international world's music and entertainment business meeting place and was one of the most important locations of the first Berlin Music Week.

The place also hosted sports events. The Berlin Marathon fair, the main event preparation to runners, was held at Tempelhof every September. The FIA Formula E Championship raced on the airport runways in 2015, 2017, 2018, 2020, 2021, 2022 and 2023 - with the 2020 edition hosting 6 races in a nine-day period to complete the 2019/20 season.[134] The Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters executives were also discussing with government officials about hosting a round at Tempelhof.[135]

When Eurovision came to Germany, the airport would have been the site of the contest if Berlin was chosen as the host city. Later, Düsseldorf was chosen.

The defunct airport is intended to be known as "Berlin Creative District", similar to Meatpacking District, Manhattan or Brompton Design District in Brompton, London.[136] For instance, the former US Army officers' hotel will be altered to be a digital innovation center for startups and creative businesses, while a new visitor center was due to open in 2019.[137][138]

In 2022, Tempelhof was used as the site for the festival Tempelhof Sounds, a three-day music event consisting of mainly alternative, indie and rock music. There were over 30,000 visitors on each day of the festival. Shortly after the festival concluded, it was confirmed that the event would return in 2023.[139][better source needed]

Former airlines and destinations edit

 
Scandinavian Airlines McDonnell Douglas MD-87 at Berlin Tempelhof Airport in April 1995

Most airlines moved to Tegel or Schönefeld in the years before Tempelhof closed down. When it was actually closed down in 2008 there were only scheduled flights from Brussels Airlines and Cirrus Airlines still operating from there.

Berlin Tempelhof also was an important base for air taxi services with the following operators flying from/to there: AAF Aviona Air, Air Service Berlin (scheduled sightseeing flights using a historic "raisin bomber" Douglas DC-3),[nb 16] AIRSHIP Air Service, Bizair Fluggesellschaft, Business Air Charter, Heli Unionair, Jet Club Deutschland Chartermanagement, Private Wings, Rotorflug, TAG Aviation and Windrose Air.

Statistics edit

Annual passenger traffic at THF airport. See Wikidata query.

Accidents and incidents edit

On 12 June 1897, in one of the earliest recorded aircraft accidents, Friedrich Hermann Wölfert and his mechanic Robert Knabe were killed when Wölfert's lighter than air craft Deutschland caught fire at 200 m (670 ft) and crashed at Tempelhof Field.

On 29 April 1952, an Air France Douglas C-54A (registration F-BELI) operating a scheduled service from Frankfurt Rhein-Main Airport to Berlin Tempelhof came under sustained attack from two Soviet MiG-15 fighters while passing through one of the Allied air corridors over East Germany. Although the attack had severely damaged the plane, necessitating the shutdown of engines number three and four, the pilot in command of the aircraft managed to carry out a safe emergency landing at Tempelhof Airport.

A subsequent inspection of the aircraft's damage at Tempelhof revealed that it had been hit by 89 shots fired from the Soviet MiGs during the preceding air attack. There were no fatalities among the 17 occupants (six crew, 11 passengers) despite the severity of the attack. The Soviet military authorities defended this attack on an unarmed civilian aircraft by claiming the Air France plane was outside the air corridor at the time of attack.[140]

On 19 January 1953, a Silver City Airways Bristol 170 Freighter Mark 21 (registration: G-AICM) operating a non-scheduled cargo flight from West Berlin crash-landed near Tempelhof Airport as a result of fuel starvation when bad weather at the destination forced it to return to Berlin. Although the accident damaged the aircraft beyond repair, both pilots survived.[141]

In 1978, LOT Polish Airlines flight 165 was hijacked and forced to land at Tempelhof. The US military authorities who were in charge of Tempelhof during the Cold War era arrested the East German hijacker on arrival. Following the hijacker's arrest, the US authorities returned the aircraft, its crew and those passengers who wished to resume their journey to Poland.[142]

In 1981, a LOT Polish Airlines Antonov AN-24 operating an internal scheduled service from Katowice to Gdańsk was hijacked en route and forced to land at Tempelhof. Jerzy Dygas, the hijacker, was on military service while taking over the aircraft. He was armed with a grenade and a single-shot pistol. The US military authorities arrested the hijacker on arrival and handed him over to the local police. At that time, he was expected to be sentenced to a five-and-a-half years prison term under West German law. Following the hijacker's arrest, the US authorities released the aircraft, its crew and all 50 passengers to resume their flight to Gdańsk.[143]

 
The former 27L runway where the Socata TB 10 Tobago had landed in 2010[144] (aerial view, 2022)

On 26 June 2010, a private Socata TB 10 Tobago had to perform an emergency landing on the now closed Tempelhof Airport due to engine failure. It was on a sightseeing flight and the pilot was looking for a free space to land safely. The aircraft was occupied by the pilot and three passengers and had taken off from Tegel Airport. Upon consultation with air traffic control in Schönefeld, it was agreed to land on a Tempelhof runway. No one was injured during the emergency landing as the visitors of the now Tempelhofer Park scurried aside to make room for the TB 10, which came to a halt after a very short distance.[145] Four days later, the Socata TB 10 Tobago was transported – with wings removed – by lorry back to Tegel airport. The Senate of Berlin now intends to prohibit sightseeing flights over Berlin by single-engine planes for safety reasons.[144] It has been reported that the pilot had forgotten to switch over to the second fuel tank.[146]

See also edit

Notes and citations edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ also known as Pierced Steel Matting (PSP)
  2. ^ independent from government-owned corporations
  3. ^ holders of supplemental air carrier certificates authorised to operate non-scheduled passenger and cargo services to supplement the scheduled operations of air carriers ( airlines holding these certificates are also known as "nonskeds" in the USA)
  4. ^ until 1973, the launch of daily, non-stop Berlin Tempelhof – Amsterdam Schiphol flights by Pan Am
  5. ^ in the Cold War era the American, British and French embassies in West Germany's capital Bonn each had a military attaché attached, who was dealing with commercial aviation matters in West Berlin;the three Allied Air Attachés jointly exercised sole responsibility for commercial aviation in West Berlin on behalf of the governments of the United States, the United Kingdom and France during this period
  6. ^ at the time, Flug-Union acted as a West Berlin consolidator for the big West German tour companies Neckermann (then part of the eponymous department store chain) and Touristik Union International (TUI), the travel arm of the Federal German Railway; it subsequently became a tour opeartor in its own right, when it launched its first dedicated package tour flight programme with Laker Airways from Tegel Airport in August 1968
  7. ^ an improved version of the original Trident 1C BEA already operated, which lacked a short-field capability that would have made it suitable for the airline's Tempelhof operation
  8. ^ the first production aircraft for Pakistan International Airlines (PIA), with the aircraft's Pakistani registration AP-ATK and PIA titles being both temporarily replaced with British registration G-ATNA and BEA titles to comply with contemporary Allied access restrictions on air transport in West Berlin
  9. ^ from August 1968
  10. ^ Silver Star configuration
  11. ^ the temporary use of Comet 4Bs on BEA's Berlin routes enabled Viscount crews to undergo conversion training on the One-Eleven
  12. ^ from a peak of 11% of all West Berlin scheduled air traffic prior to the move from Tempelhof
  13. ^ Air France had already discontinued Berlin–Nuremberg services prior to its move to Tegel
  14. ^ Tempelhof: 5,560,000; Tegel: 560,000
  15. ^ after Frankfurt, in terms of passengers handled per annum
  16. ^ operated from Berlin-Schönefeld Airport starting November 2008

Citations edit

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  87. ^ "One-Eleven 500 into service" Flight International, 7 November 1968, p. 744/5
  88. ^ "Bespoke for BEA", One-Eleven 500 into service, Flight International, 7 November 1968, p. 746
  89. ^ . British Airways. Archived from the original on 1 July 2012.
  90. ^ "1968 – 2176 – Flight Archive". flightglobal.com. Retrieved 16 October 2015.
  91. ^ "1969 – 2064 – Flight Archive". flightglobal.com. Retrieved 16 October 2015.
  92. ^ "1972 – 1329 – Flight Archive". flightglobal.com. Retrieved 16 October 2015.
  93. ^ Berlin Airport Company, November 1972 Monthly Timetable Booklet for Berlin Tempelhof and Berlin Tegel Airports, Berlin Airport Company, West Berlin, 1972
  94. ^ a b "1974 – 1106 – Flight Archive". flightglobal.com. Retrieved 16 October 2015.
  95. ^ "1989 – 2395 – Flight Archive". flightglobal.com. Retrieved 16 October 2015.
  96. ^ . flightglobal.com. Archived from the original on 1 February 2014. Retrieved 16 October 2015.
  97. ^ Berlin Airport Company, November 1971 Monthly Timetable Booklet for Berlin Tempelhof and Berlin Tegel Airports, Berlin Airport Company, West Berlin, 1971
  98. ^ Berlin Airport Company – Summary of 1978 Annual Report, February 1979 Monthly Timetable Booklet for Berlin Tegel Airport, Berlin Airport Company, West Berlin, 1979 (in German)
  99. ^ Dix, Barry, Fly Past: Happy landings, Skyport Heathrow.co.uk, 14 April 2011 23 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  100. ^ Airways (Proctor, J., Archive, Modern Air Transport), Vol. 24, No. 03, Iss. 255, p. 65, Airways International Inc., Miami, May 2017
  101. ^ "berlin – tempelhof – 1988 – 0850 – Flight Archive". flightglobal.com. Retrieved 16 October 2015.
  102. ^ a b Official public information brochure of the pros and cons of the referendum 27 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine (in German).
  103. ^ Grünes Licht für Schließung des Flughafens Berlin-Tempelhof. Press release of the Federal Administrative Court of Germany, 4 December 2007 (available at www.bundesverwaltungsgericht.de)
  104. ^ Official public announcement of the call for support 27 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine (in German)
  105. ^ Official page of the State of Berlin: see Article 63 (1), second sentence of the Berlin constitution (in German); with regard to the figures, see the official referendum schedule, at the end of the page(in German).
  106. ^ Official referendum schedule, at A. 6 (in German).
  107. ^ Official information on the number of signatures lodged.
  108. ^ Official referendum schedule, at B. 2 (in German).
  109. ^ a b Official public information brochure of the pros and cons of the referendum 27 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine (in German)
  110. ^ Official press release on the referendum (in German)
  111. ^ . tempelhof-retten.de. Archived from the original on 10 October 2018. Retrieved 16 October 2015.
  112. ^ BBI Press release: Berlin Airports welcome BBI decision by the Federal Constitutional Court on BBI 14 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  113. ^ Official results of the referendum published by the municipal election supervisor 30 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  114. ^ Klaus Kurpjuweit and Jan Oberländer, "Ende der Legende", Der Tagesspiegel 31 October 2008 (in German)
  115. ^ "Abflug in die Geschichtsbücher", Tagesspiegel 25 November 2008 (in German)
  116. ^ "Search results for Berlin ePrix". Federation Internationale de l'Automobile. Retrieved 21 December 2023.
  117. ^ "Tempelhof to become enormous city park". thelocal.de. Retrieved 16 October 2015.
  118. ^ Article and photos "Riesiger Andrang auf dem Flugfeld Tempelhof" Berliner Morgenpost, 10 May 2010 (in German)
  119. ^ "Flughafen Tempelhof: Die neue Rollbahn" flughafentempelhof.com, 9 May 2010 (in German)
  120. ^ "Tempelhof Kiteflyers Meeting 2010 am 9. Mai 2010" 19 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Flying Blog, May 2010, in German and English
  121. ^ "Whistles for Wowereit at Tempelhof park opening", The Local, 8 May 2009
  122. ^ Grün Berlin's Tempelhofer Feld Project 30 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  123. ^ "Ein Lebensraum für Flora und Fauna" 3 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  124. ^ "Feldlerchen-Rekord auf Tempelhofer Feld: Sperrungen ab April" [Record number of skylarks at Tempelhofer Feld: Protected zones in effect starting April]. www.sueddeutsche.de (in German). 27 March 2019. Retrieved 26 August 2021.
  125. ^ "Senator Müller stellte den Masterplan Tempelhofer Freiheit vor" [Senator Müller presented „Masterplan Tempelhofer Freiheit“ (March 2013)]. www.stadtentwicklung.berlin.de (in German). Senatsverwaltung für Stadtentwicklung und Wohnen Berlin. Retrieved 25 August 2021.
  126. ^ "Natur und Wohnungen sind keine Gegensätze" [Nature and apartments aren't opposites]. www.tagesspiegel.de (in German). 25 August 2013. Retrieved 25 August 2021.
  127. ^ "Parklandschaft in Tempelhof geplant" [Landscaped park planned in Tempelhof]. www.tagesspiegel.de (in German). 15 April 2011. Retrieved 25 August 2021.
  128. ^ "100 Prozent Freiheit - und jetzt?" [100 % freedom - what now?]. www.tagesspiegel.de (in German). 26 May 2013. Retrieved 25 August 2021.
  129. ^ "Gesetz zum Erhalt des Tempelhofer Feldes vom 14. Juni 2014" [Law for the preservation of the Tempelhof fields, dated Jun 14 2014]. gesetze.berlin.de (in German). Retrieved 25 August 2021.
  130. ^ Bread & Butter Berlin Airport Berlin-Tempelhof 6 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  131. ^ "Berlin Fashion Week: Glamour, Gowns and Garter Belts". Der Spiegel. 2 July 2009. Retrieved 16 October 2015.
  132. ^ "Berlin Festival – 29. – 31. Mai 2015". berlinfestival.com. Retrieved 16 October 2015.
  133. ^ The Red Bull Air Race World Championship by Red Bull, featuring aerial obstacle courses which pilots have to navigate under high velocity forces, was held at the airport in 2006.Berlin completes Formula E calendar – Autosport, 11 July 2013
  134. ^ Tempelhof-Pläne doch noch nicht vom Tisch? – Motorsport Total, 17 June 2013
  135. ^ "Berlin's Old Airport Will Soon Host Vibrant Art Scene". architecturaldigest.com. 16 October 2018.
  136. ^ "Berlin's Tempelhof Airport is now a creative district". art-critique.com. 12 November 2018.
  137. ^ "The rebirth of Berlin's Tempelhof Airport". Independent. 18 April 2019.
  138. ^ "Tempelhof Sounds will also take place in 2023 - World News | TakeToNews". 13 June 2022. Retrieved 17 August 2022.
  139. ^ Harro Ranter (29 April 1952). "ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C-54A-DO (DC-4) F-BELI Berlin". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 16 October 2015.
  140. ^ Harro Ranter (19 January 1953). "ASN Aircraft accident Bristol 170 Freighter 21 G-AICM Berlin-Tempelhof". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 16 October 2015.
  141. ^ "aer lingus – 1978 – 1978 – Flight Archive". flightglobal.com. Retrieved 16 October 2015.
  142. ^ "1981 – 2799 – Flight Archive". flightglobal.com. Retrieved 16 October 2015.
  143. ^ a b "Tempelhof-Maschine hat Flugfeld verlassen", Berliner Morgenpost 1 July 2010 (in German) "Tempelhof plane has left airfield" with pictures
  144. ^ Jörn Hasselmann, Pilot: "Ich hatte Befürchtungen, dass ich nicht bis Tempelhof komme", Tagesspiegel 26 June 2010 (in German)("I feared, I wouldn't reach Tempelhof")
  145. ^ Notlandung: Pilot hatte Tankschalter vergessen, Berliner Morgenpost 2 July 2010, at Die Wahrheit über Berlin-Tempelhof (in German) "Pilot forgot tank switch"

References edit

  • Berlin Airport Company (Berliner Flughafen Gesellschaft [BFG]) – Monthly Timetable Booklet for Berlin Tempelhof and Berlin Tegel Airports, several issues, 1965–1975 (in German). West Berlin, Germany: Berlin Airport Company.
  • "Flight International". Flight International. Sutton, UK: Reed Business Information. ISSN 0015-3710. (various backdated issues relating to commercial air transport at Berlin Tempelhof during the Allied period from 1950 until 1990)
  • Simons, Graham M. (1993). The Spirit of Dan-Air. Peterborough, UK: GMS Enterprises. ISBN 1-870384-20-2.
  • Aircraft Illustrated Airport Profile – Berlin-Tempelhof [pp.28–35], Vol. 42, No. 1, January 2009. Hersham, UK: Ian Allan Publishing. (Aircraft Illustrated online) ISSN 0002-2675
  • Schmitz, Frank. Flughafen Tempelhof: Berlins Tor zur Welt. Berlin: be.bra, 1997. ISBN 3-930863-32-4 (in German)
  • Gabi Dolff-Bonekämper: "Berlin-Tempelhof". In: Berlin-Tempelhof, Liverpool-Speke, Paris-Le Bourget. Années 30 Architecture des aéroports, Airport Architecture of the Thirties, Flughafenarchitektur der dreißiger Jahre. Éditions du patrimoine, Paris 2000, ISBN 2-85822-328-9, pp. 32–61.
  • Bob Hawkins (Hrsg.): Historic Airports. Proceedings of the International "L'Europe de l'Air" Conferences on Aviation Architecture Liverpool (1999), Berlin (2000), Paris (2001). English Heritage, London 2005, ISBN 1-873592-83-3.
  • Heeb, Christine. , Master of Arts thesis in World Heritage Studies, Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus, 2007 (pdf)
  • Matthias Heisig: Flughafen Berlin-Tempelhof. Die amerikanische Geschichte | Tempelhof Central Airport. The American Story | Aéroport de Berlin-Tempelhof. L'histoire américaine. Edited for the AlliiertenMuseum by Gundula Bavendamm and Florian Weiß, Berlin 2014 (trilingual).

External links edit

  Media related to Berlin-Tempelhof Airport at Wikimedia Commons

  • Official website of the Tempelhofer Freiheit park
  • local public transportation map (PDF)
  • ICAT – Initiative for keeping Tempelhof open 10 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine (in German)
  • (in German)
  • BIFT – Initiative for Tempelhof's closure
  • History of the airport Tempelhof A representation of the historical development from 1870 until this day. (in German)
  • Pictures from a guided tour through the airport
  • Ein kleiner Verein der sich mit den Fahrzeugen der Alliierten beschaftigt
  • Der Zentralflughafen Vom Tempelhofer Feld zum Zentralflughafen Berlin-Tempelhof. (in German)
  • picture archive from 1960
  • Bonjour Deutschland – Luftverkehr unter Nachbarn: 1926–2006 (in German)
  • Berlin Tempelhof Airport race results at Racing-Reference

berlin, tempelhof, airport, german, flughafen, berlin, tempelhof, formerly, iata, icao, eddi, first, airports, berlin, germany, situated, south, central, berlin, borough, tempelhof, schöneberg, airport, ceased, operating, 2008, amid, controversy, leaving, tege. Berlin Tempelhof Airport German Flughafen Berlin Tempelhof formerly IATA THF ICAO EDDI was one of the first airports in Berlin Germany Situated in the south central Berlin borough of Tempelhof Schoneberg the airport ceased operating in 2008 amid controversy leaving Tegel and Schonefeld as the two main airports serving the city for another twelve years until both were replaced by Berlin Brandenburg Airport in 2020 3 Berlin Tempelhof AirportFlughafen Berlin TempelhofAerial view of the former Tempelhof Airport taken in 2016IATA THFICAO EDDISummaryAirport typeDefunctOwnerInstitute for Federal Real Estate and the Federal State of Berlin 1 OperatorBerlin AirportsServesBerlinLocationBerlin GermanyOpened8 October 1923 1923 10 08 Closed30 October 2008 2008 10 30 Hub forDeutsche Luft Hansa 1926 1945 American Overseas Airlines 1948 1950 Pan American World Airways 1950 1975 Air France 1950 1959 British European Airways 1951 1974 Riddle Airlines 1960s Capitol Int l Airways 1960s Saturn Airways 1964 1967 Autair 1960s Overseas Aviation early 1960s British Airways 1974 1975 Tempelhof Airways 1981 1990 Hamburg Airlines 1990 1997 Conti Flug 1990 1994 Lufthansa CityLine 1990 1992 Cirrus Airlines 2001 2008 Elevation AMSL164 ft 50 mCoordinates52 28 25 N 013 24 06 E 52 47361 N 13 40167 E 52 47361 13 40167Websitethf berlin deMapTHFLocation within BerlinRunwaysDirection Length Surfaceft m09L 27R 6 870 2 094 Asphalt closed 09R 27L 6 037 1 840 Asphalt closed Source German AIP at EUROCONTROL 2 Tempelhof was designated as an airport by the Reich Ministry of Transport on 8 October 1923 The old terminal was originally constructed in 1927 In anticipation of increasing air traffic the Nazi government began an enormous reconstruction in the mid 1930s While it was occasionally cited as the world s oldest operating commercial airport the title was disputed by several other airports and is no longer an issue since its closure Tempelhof was one of Europe s three iconic pre World War II airports the others being London s now defunct Croydon Airport and the old Paris Le Bourget Airport It acquired a further iconic status as the centre of the Berlin Airlift of 1948 49 One of the airport s most distinctive features is its huge canopy style roof extending over the apron able to accommodate most contemporary airliners in the 1950s 1960s and early 1970s protecting passengers from the elements Tempelhof Airport s main building was once among the twenty largest buildings on earth but it also formerly contained the world s smallest duty free shop 4 Tempelhof Airport closed all operations on 30 October 2008 despite the efforts of some protesters to prevent the closure 5 A non binding referendum was held on 27 April 2008 against the impending closure but failed due to low voter turnout The former airfield has subsequently been used as a recreational space known as Tempelhofer Feld 6 In September 2015 it was announced that Tempelhof would also become an emergency refugee camp 7 Contents 1 Function 2 History 2 1 World War II 2 2 Berlin Airlift 2 3 Cold War 2 4 U S Army Aviation 2 5 Postwar commercial use 2 6 Closing down air traffic 2 7 Referendum against closing 2 8 Post airport usage 2 8 1 ABB Formula E Berlin ePrix 2 8 2 Public park 2 8 3 Event location 3 Former airlines and destinations 4 Statistics 5 Accidents and incidents 6 See also 7 Notes and citations 7 1 Notes 7 2 Citations 8 References 9 External linksFunction editTempelhof was often called the City Airport In its later years it mostly had commuter flights to other parts of Germany and neighbouring countries but it had in the past received long haul wide bodied airliners such as the Boeing 747 8 the Lockheed L 1011 Tristar 9 and the Lockheed C 5A Galaxy 10 The first of these three first appeared at Tempelhof on 18 September 1976 when Pan American World Airways Pan Am flew in Boeing 747SP Clipper Great Republic to participate in the static exhibition of contemporary military non combat and civil aircraft at the annual Day of Open House of the United States Air Force USAF at the airport The Galaxy had its first appearance at Tempelhof on 17 September 1971 when an aircraft of the USAF s 436th Military Airlift Wing flew in from Dover Air Force Base in Delaware United States to participate in that year s Day of Open House static exhibition These events respectively marked the debut at Tempelhof of the largest aircraft in commercial airline service at the time and the then largest aircraft overall 11 Tempelhof compared to Brandenburg Airport and Tegel Airport wasn t a particularly large airport The layout of the airport was relatively simple two parallel runways oriented east west 09 27 L R with a single oval taxiway around the airport with the main terminal on the north western segment of the airport The runways are not comparatively long either versus Brandenburg s 3600m and 4000m runways which can easily handle intercontinental airliners like the Boeing 747 Tempelhof has two runways at 2094m 09R 27L and 1840m 09L 27R which can at most handle Boeing 757 and Airbus A320 size aircraft Other possible uses for Tempelhof have been discussed and many people are trying to keep the airport buildings preserved 12 In September 2015 in the midst of the 2015 European migrant crisis it was announced by the Berlin state government that Tempelhof would become an emergency refugee shelter holding at least 1 200 people in two former hangars 7 nbsp Tempelhof Airport Berlin panorama 2019 History edit nbsp Adolf Hitler at Zentralflughafen Tempelhof Berlin 1932The site of the airport was originally Knights Templar land in medieval Berlin and from this beginning came the name Tempelhof Later the site was used as a parade field by the Prussian army from 1720 to the start of World War I In 1909 French aviator Armand Zipfel made the first flight demonstration in Tempelhof followed by Orville Wright later that same year 13 Tempelhof was first officially designated as an airport on 8 October 1923 Deutsche Luft Hansa was founded in Tempelhof on 6 January 1926 The old terminal originally constructed in 1927 became the world s first with an underground railway The station has since been renamed Paradestrasse because the rebuilding of the airport in the 1930s required the airport access to be moved to a major intersection with a station now called Platz der Luftbrucke after the Berlin Airlift As part of Albert Speer s plan for the reconstruction of Berlin during the Nazi era Prof Ernst Sagebiel was ordered to replace the old terminal with a new terminal building in 1934 The airport halls and the adjoining buildings intended to become the gateway to Europe and a symbol of Hitler s world capital Germania are still known as one of the largest built entities worldwide and have been described by British architect Sir Norman Foster as the mother of all airports With its facades of shell limestone the terminal building built between 1936 and 1941 forms a 1 2 kilometre long 0 75 mi quadrant Arriving passengers walked through customs controls to the reception hall Tempelhof was served by the U6 U Bahn line along Mehringdamm and up Friedrichstrasse Platz der Luftbrucke station Zentralflughafen Tempelhof Berlin had the advantage of a central location just minutes from the Berlin city centre and quickly became one of the world s busiest airports Tempelhof saw its greatest pre war days during 1938 1939 when up to 52 foreign and 40 domestic flights arrived and departed daily from the old terminal while the new one was still under construction The new air terminal was designed as headquarters for Deutsche Luft Hansa moved in 1938 the German national airline at that time As a forerunner of today s modern airports the building was designed with many unique features including giant arc shaped aircraft hangars Although under construction for more than ten years it was never finished because of World War II For passengers and freight the 1927 built terminal stayed in use until 24 April 1945 The building complex was designed to resemble an eagle in flight with semicircular hangars forming the bird s spread wings A 1 6 kilometre long 1 mi hangar roof was to have been laid in tiers to form a stadium for spectators at air and ground demonstrations Norman Foster called Tempelhof one of the really great buildings of the modern age 14 World War II edit nbsp The airport in 1937 at the 1927 built terminal buildingFearing Allied bombing of airports all German civil aviation was halted on 2 September 1939 but gradually restarted from 1 November 15 However the 1927 built terminal remained closed to all civil aviation and all civilian aircraft movements to and from Berlin were transferred to an airfield in Rangsdorf until 7 March 1940 when the 1927 terminal was reopened and civil aviation continued until 24 April 1945 15 From January 1940 until early 1944 Weser Flugzeugbau assembled Junkers Ju 87 Stuka dive bombers thereafter it assembled Focke Wulf Fw 190 fighter planes in the still unfurnished main hall and hangars 3 to 7 of the new terminal which were supplied by a railway and trucks via a connecting tunnel 16 Hangars 1 and 2 were not used to assemble aircraft as these were already used by Luft Hansa for its own planes Aircraft parts were brought in from all over the city while complete aircraft engines were trucked to Tempelhof Once the airframes were complete and the engines had been installed the finished aircraft were flown out The Luftwaffe did not use Tempelhof as a military airfield during World War II except for occasional emergency landings by fighter aircraft On 21 April 1945 Deutsche Luft Hansa operated its last scheduled flights and over the coming days laid on additional non scheduled flights from Johannisthal Air Field which stopped over at Tempelhof to take on freight en route to Travemunde and Munich where Luft Hansa had relocated its headquarters 17 Two days later on 23 April the airline s last ever flight to depart Tempelhof left for Madrid but was later shot down over Southern Germany 18 Tempelhof s German commander Oberst Rudolf Bottger refused to carry out orders to blow up the base choosing instead to kill himself Soviet forces took Tempelhof in the Battle of Berlin on 28 and 29 April 1945 in the closing days of the war in Europe 18 Soviet forces combed through the old and the new terminal searching for treasures hidden places and documents opening all rooms During their search they blew up the fortified entrance to a three level bomb shelter for celluloid films of the Hansa Luftbild GmbH a Luft Hansa subsidiary specialising in aerial photography The explosion immediately ignited the celluloid turning the film shelter under the northern office wing of the new terminal into a furnace and making it impossible to enter for several weeks The raging inferno led the Soviet commander to order the lower levels to be flooded with water With no functioning water supply in war torn Berlin this was only possible because the new terminal which had suffered only slight war damage had its own electricity and groundwater utility with underground reservoirs under the northerly forecourt of the new terminal close to the film shelter On 8 May 1945 Western Allied and German signatories of the German Surrender in Berlin and their entourage landed at Tempelhof airport 19 At the beginning of May Weser Flugzeugbau opened a workshop in hangar 7 to repair streetcars 19 In the following weeks Berliners raided all unguarded parts of the opened buildings searching for food or anything else useful in bartering in the black market In accordance with the Yalta agreements Zentralflughafen Berlin Tempelhof was turned over to the United States Army 2nd Armored Division on 2 July 1945 by the Soviet Union as part of the American occupation sector of Berlin This agreement was later formalised by the August 1945 Potsdam Agreement which formally divided Berlin into four occupation sectors The 852nd Engineer Aviation Battalion arrived at Tempelhof Code Number R 95 on 10 July 1945 and conducted the original repairs in the new terminal After the Allied Control Council had agreed upon West Berlin Air Corridors under control of the Berlin Air Safety Center these opened in February 1946 enabling civil aviation at Tempelhof to restart 20 Berlin Airlift edit Main article Berlin Blockade nbsp USAF Douglas C 47 transport planes preparing to take off from Tempelhof during the Berlin Airlift August 1948On 20 June 1948 Soviet authorities claiming technical difficulties halted all traffic by land and by water into or out of the western controlled sectors of Berlin The only remaining access routes into the city were three 20 mi 32 km wide air corridors across the Soviet Zone of Occupation 21 Faced with the choice of abandoning the city or attempting to supply its inhabitants with the necessities of life by air the Western Powers chose the latter course nbsp Berlin Airlift Memorial on Platz der Luftbrucke in front of the airport displaying the names of the 39 British and 31 American pilots who died during the operation and symbolising the three air corridorsOperation Vittles as the airlift was unofficially named began on 26 June when USAF Douglas C 47 Skytrains carried 80 tons of food into Tempelhof far less than the estimated 4 500 tons of food coal and other essential supplies needed daily to maintain a minimum level of existence But this force was soon augmented by United States Navy and Royal Air Force cargo aircraft as well as British European Airways BEA and many of Britain s fledgling wholly privately owned independent airlines 22 The last included Freddie Laker s Air Charter Eagle Aviation 23 and Skyways On 15 October 1948 to promote increased safety and cooperation between the separate US and British airlift efforts the Allies created a unified command the Combined Airlift Task Force under Maj Gen William H Tunner USAF at Tempelhof To facilitate the command and control as well as the unloading of aircraft the USAF 53d Troop Carrier Squadron was temporarily assigned to Tempelhof The grass runways usual in Germany until then could not cope with the great demand and a subsequently built runway containing perforated steel matting nb 1 began to crumble under the weight of the USAF s C 54 Skymasters 24 Hence American engineers built a new 6 000 ft 1 800 m runway at Tempelhof between July and September 1948 and another between September and October 1948 to accommodate the expanding requirements of the airlift 24 The old airport terminal of 1927 was demolished in 1948 in order to create additional space for unloading more planes The last airlift transport touched down at Tempelhof on 30 September 1949 Tempelhof also became famous as the location of Operation Little Vittles the dropping of candy to children living near the airport The original Candy Bomber Gail Halvorsen noticed children lingering near the fence line of the airport and wanted to share something with them He eventually started dropping candy by parachute just before landing His efforts were expanded by other pilots and eventually became a part of legend in the city of Berlin Cold War edit Main article West Berlin This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message As the Cold War intensified in the late 1950s and 1960s access problems to West Berlin both by land and air continued to cause tension Throughout the Cold War years Tempelhof was the main terminal for American military transport aircraft accessing West Berlin In 1969 one of the pilots during the Berlin Airlift and the original Candy Bomber Gail Halvorsen returned to Berlin as the commander of Tempelhof airbase With the fall of the Berlin Wall and the reunification of Germany the presence of American forces in Berlin ended The USAF 7350th Air Base Group at Tempelhof was inactivated in June 1993 In July 1994 with President Clinton in attendance the British French and American air and land forces in Berlin were deactivated in a ceremony on the Four Ring Parade field at McNair Barracks The Western Allies returned a united city of Berlin to the unified German government The U S Army closed its Berlin Army Aviation Detachment at TCA in August 1994 ending a 49 year American military presence in Berlin U S Army Aviation edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 1951 the US Army stationed an aviation element of the 6 Infantry Brigade dubious discuss 6th Infantry Regiment with three Hiller OH 23A Raven helicopters at Tempelhof Over the years it became known as the Berlin Brigade Aviation Detachment BBDE Avn Det The Hiller OH 23A was soon replaced by Bell OH 13 Sioux Further helicopters stationed over the years where Sikorsky H 19 Chikasaw 1958 1964 Sikorsky H 34 Choctaw 1962 1964 Bell UH 1B 1964 1971 and finally Bell UH 1H May 1971 August 1994 25 Fixed wing aircraft stationed at Tempelhof were Cessna O 1 Bird Dog 1965 1975 De Havilland Canada U 6 Beaver 1968 January 1980 26 Cessna O 2A 1975 1979 Pilatus UV 20A Chiricahua 1979 1991 Beechcraft U 8D Seminole 1960s Beechcraft U 21 1970s 1986 and 1991 1994 as well as Beechcraft C 12C 1986 1991 Postwar commercial use edit This article may be too long to read and navigate comfortably Please consider splitting content into sub articles condensing it or adding subheadings Please discuss this issue on the article s talk page October 2022 nbsp DC 4 of Pan American World Airways in January 1954 nbsp A Pan Am Douglas DC 4 seen parked in front of a hangar at Berlin Tempelhof in January 1954 nbsp A Silver City Bristol 170 Freighter Mk 21 seen beyond the wing of an Avro York on the ramp at Berlin Tempelhof in January 1954 nbsp A British United Airways Vickers Viscount 700 seen landing at Berlin Tempelhof during 1962 nbsp A Caledonian Douglas DC 6B seen sharing the apron with two Pan Am DC 6Bs at Berlin Tempelhof in June 1964 nbsp A British United Airways ATL 98 Carvair seen parked on the apron with two Capitol International Lockheed Constellations and an Air France Breguet Deux Ponts in the background at Berlin Tempelhof in August 1967 nbsp A Pan Am Boeing 747 100 seen landing at Berlin Tempelhof in June 1987American Overseas Airlines AOA at the time the overseas division of American Airlines inaugurated the first commercial air link serving Tempelhof after the war with a flight from New York via Shannon Amsterdam and Frankfurt on 18 May 1946 27 28 This was followed by AOA s inauguration of West Berlin s first dedicated domestic air link between Tempelhof and Frankfurt s Rhein Main Airport on 1 March 1948 29 AOA was the only commercial operator at Tempelhof to maintain its full flying programme for the entire duration of the Berlin Blockade 26 June 1948 12 May 1949 29 Following the end of the Berlin Blockade AOA launched additional dedicated scheduled services linking Tempelhof with Hamburg Fuhlsbuttel and Dusseldorf Lohausen from 6 March and 1 June 1950 respectively 30 On 25 September 1950 Pan Am acquired AOA from American Airlines This merger resulted in Pan Am establishing a growing presence at Tempelhof 27 31 In addition to continuing AOA s original multistop Berlin New York route and dedicated internal German services connecting Berlin with Frankfurt Hamburg and Dusseldorf between 1955 and 1959 Pan Am commenced regular year round scheduled services to Cologne Stuttgart Hanover Munich and Nuremberg from Tempelhof 29 Pan Am s initial equipment for its new Berlin operation were unpressurised 60 seat Douglas DC 4s widely available at the time due to the large number of war surplus C 54 Skymasters 22 29 1950 was also the year Air France joined Pan Am at Tempelhof 22 32 Air France resumed operations to Tempelhof following their cessation during the war years 22 32 33 This was furthermore the time Allied restrictions on the carriage of local civilians on commercial airline services from to West Berlin were lifted It entailed transferring responsibility for processing all commercial flights to West Berlin s city government including the operation and maintenance of associated passenger cargo and mail handling facilities These changes gave a major boost to West Berlin s fledgeling post war scheduled air services 27 On 8 July 1951 BEA transferred its operations from Gatow to Tempelhof thus concentrating all West Berlin air services at Berlin s iconic city centre airport 33 34 BEA s move to Tempelhof resulted in a significant increase in passenger numbers as well as an increase in its Berlin based fleet to six Douglas DC 3s 27 35 From then on several of the new wholly privately owned UK independent nb 2 airlines and US supplemental carriers nb 3 started regular air services to Tempelhof from the UK the US and West Germany These airlines initially carried members of the UK and US armed forces stationed in Berlin and their dependants as well as essential raw materials finished goods manufactured in West Berlin and refugees from East Germany and Eastern Europe who were still able to freely enter the city prior to the construction of the infamous Berlin Wall This operation was also known as the Little Berlin Airlift 36 One of these airlines UK independent Dan Air Services would subsequently play an important role in developing commercial air services from Tegel for a quarter century 37 38 During the early to mid 1950s BEA leased in aircraft that were bigger than its Tempelhof based fleet of DC 3 Pionair Viking and Elizabethan piston engined airliners from other operators to boost capacity following a steady increase in the airline s passenger loads 22 39 40 This included an ex Transair Vickers Viscount 700 41 belonging to its newly formed independent rival British United Airways which was damaged beyond repair on 30 October 1961 at Frankfurt Rhein Main Airport at the end of a passenger flight that had originated at Tempelhof 42 43 44 By 1954 a year that saw 671 555 passengers pass through the airport Tempelhof had established itself as the third busiest airport in Europe 45 From 6 June of that year Pan Am began re equipping its Tempelhof based fleet with larger pressurised Douglas DC 6B propliners 11 Compared with the DC 4 the new type had 16 additional seats 46 In 1958 BEA began replacing its piston airliners with Vickers Viscount 701 turboprop aircraft in a high density 63 seat single class seating arrangement Up to ten new state of the art Vickers Viscount 802s which featured a more spacious 66 seat single class seating arrangement soon replaced the older series 701 aircraft 35 The greater range and higher cruising speed of the 802 series enabled BEA to inaugurate a non stop London Heathrow Berlin Tempelhof service on 1 November 1965 22 33 35 this was the only non stop international scheduled air service from Tempelhof nb 4 On 19 November 1959 a Pan Am DC 4 became the first aircraft to operate a scheduled all cargo service from West Berlin This service linked Tempelhof with Rhein Main Airport once nightly all year round 47 On 2 January 1960 Air France which had served Dusseldorf Frankfurt Munich Nuremberg and its main base at Paris Le Bourget Orly during the previous decade with DC 4 Sud Est Languedoc and Lockheed Constellation Super Constellation piston engined equipment shifted its entire Berlin operation to Tegel because Tempelhof s runways were too short to permit the introduction of the Sud Aviation Caravelle their new short haul jet with a viable payload 22 32 48 49 Air France s Caravelle IIIs lacked thrust reversers that would have permitted them to land safely on Tempelhof s short runways with a full commercial payload 50 51 On 1 March 1960 Pan Am launched its second dedicated scheduled all cargo flight from Berlin linking Tempelhof with Hamburg Fuhlsbuttel 52 1960 was also the year Pan Am withdrew its last DC 4 from Tempelhof As a result all of the airline s Berlin routes were exclusively served with DC 6Bs as of 27 June of that year 46 Although the DC 6B was a less advanced aircraft than either the Viscount or the Caravelle it was more economical By the early 1960s Pan Am had a fleet of 15 DC 6Bs stationed at its Tempelhof base 53 54 which were configured in a higher density seating arrangement than competing airlines aircraft Pan Am s DC 6Bs were originally configured in a 76 seat all economy layout The subsequent introduction of subsidies for all scheduled internal German services from to West Berlin resulted in steady network growth as well as service frequency and passenger load increases To cope with the sharply higher traffic volumes aircraft seat densities were increased twice initially to 84 and subsequently 87 seats 29 This fleet eventually grew to 17 aircraft which gave Pan Am the biggest aircraft fleet among the three main scheduled operators flying from West Berlin It furthermore enabled it to compensate for the DC 6 s lack of sophistication with higher frequencies than its competitors thereby attaining a higher market share 60 and capturing a greater share of the lucrative business travel market than its rivals During that period Pan Am moreover achieved an ultra short haul load factor of 70 on its eight scheduled internal routes from Berlin making the airline s Berlin routes the most profitable in its worldwide scheduled network 33 55 56 57 Following the completion of the Berlin Wall on 13 August 1961 the West German government introduced a route specific subsidy of up to 20 for all internal German scheduled air services from and to West Berlin to help the airlines cope with the resulting falloff in traffic and maintain an economically viable operation on these lifeline routes 22 49 These came into effect on 1 March 1962 for all tickets sold in Germany including Berlin 34 58 59 To qualify for the subsidised rate under this system the passenger was required to purchase a round trip ticket for a scheduled internal German flight from to West Berlin in Germany Once he she had checked in at the airport the airline collected a coupon attached to his her ticket which was subsequently handed in to the relevant German authorities for reimbursement 48 By the early 1960s a number of UK independents and US supplementals began operating regular charter flights from Tempelhof These carried both inbound tourists from the US the UK and other countries as well as local outbound tourists to the emerging holiday resorts in the Mediterranean London Gatwick based UK independent Overseas Aviation CI was among the first airlines the Allied Air Attaches in Bonn nb 5 licensed to operate a series of regular charter flights from West Berlin It used Vikings and Argonauts on these services which operated from Tempelhof under contract to the Berlin Senate and the city s Technical University as well as Berliner Flugring a local package tour operator that began as a consortium of 70 West Berlin travel agents arranging IT flights to holiday resorts in Europe 60 61 62 63 By 1964 BEA operated up to 20 000 flights each year from and to Berlin These represented approximately half of the airline s total yearly flights to from Germany and generated profits of 1 million per year 35 1964 was also the year US supplemental Saturn Airways began operating a comprehensive inclusive tour IT charter flight programme from Tempelhof under contract to local package holiday consolidator Flug Union Berlin nb 6 using Douglas DC 6A Cs and DC 7Cs 64 65 66 67 On 2 December of that year a Boeing 727 100 became the first jet aircraft to land at Tempelhof Boeing had leased the aircraft to Pan Am for a special flight from Frankfurt to Berlin to demonstrate to the airline the 727 s ability to operate from Tempelhof s short runways Pan Am indicated its intention to place an order for six 727s for its Berlin operation as a result of the aircraft using only half the 5 900 ft 1 800 m runway during landing 53 68 69 26 October 1965 marked British Aircraft Corporation s new One Eleven jet s first arrival at Tempelhof when a British United 200 series operating a trooping flight under contract to the UK Ministry of Defence diverted from Gatow 70 71 22 January 1966 marked the first appearance of a British trijet at Tempelhof when Hawker Siddeley flew in its HS 121 Trident 1E nb 7 demonstrator aircraft nb 8 for evaluation by BEA 11 72 73 A week later on 29 January BEA began evaluating the BAC One Eleven s suitability for its Berlin operations with the start of a series of test flights conducted on its behalf by BAC s 475 series demonstrator This included a number of takeoffs and landings at Tempelhof to test the aircraft s short field performance 70 74 On 18 March 1966 Pan Am became the first airline to commence regular year round jet operations from Tempelhof with the first examples of a brand new fleet of an initial eight Boeing 727 100 series one of the first jet aircraft with a short field capability 53 54 75 76 77 These aircraft were configured in a single class featuring 128 economy seats 29 53 54 75 Pan Am s move put BEA at a considerable competitive disadvantage especially on the busy Berlin Frankfurt route where the former out competed the latter with both modern jet planes as well as a higher flight frequency 78 BEA responded to Pan Am s competitive threat by increasing the Berlin based fleet to 13 Viscounts by winter 1966 7 to enable it to offer higher frequencies 79 This entailed re configuring aircraft cabins in a lower density seating arrangement as a result of which the refurbished cabins featured only 53 Comet type first class seats in a four abreast layout instead of 66 five abreast economy seats In addition BEA sought to differentiate itself from its main competitor by providing a superior in flight catering standard BEA s Silver Star service included complimentary hot meals on all flights whereas Pan Am merely offered free on board snacks Sections of the local press dubbed the contrasting strategies of the two main protagonists plying the internal German routes from Berlin estimated to be worth 15 20 million in annual revenues the Dinner oder Dusen Dinner or Jet battle Henceforth the airline marketed these services as Super Silver Star 22 27 30 33 80 81 The introduction of Pan Am s 727s to the Berlin market represented a major step change because of the aircraft s ability to carry more passengers than any other contemporary aircraft type used by scheduled carriers in the short haul Berlin market and its ability to take off from and land on Tempelhof s short runways with a full commercial payload as only light fuel loads were required on the short internal German services Compared with BEA Pan Am s 727s carried 20 more passengers than the British carrier s Comet 4Bs nb 9 and up to 2 1 2 times as many passengers as the latter s Viscounts nb 10 48 Within two years of Pan Am s introduction of jet equipment on the bulk of its internal German services from to West Berlin its market share rose from 58 to 68 Despite the huge increase in capacity over the DC 6B 128 vs 87 seats load factors dropped during the first year of operations only Pan Am s second year of jet operations from Tempelhof saw load factors steadying while the third saw a slight increase 82 The lower seat density in BEA s re configured Viscounts combined with higher flight frequencies superior catering and increased promotion proved insufficient to counter the appeal of Pan Am s new jets which were laid out in a comparatively tight 34 in 86 cm pitch seating configuration This resulted in BEA s market share declining from 38 at the beginning of this period to 27 at its end On the other hand BEA s reduced capacity in the domestic air travel market between West Berlin and West Germany enabled it to attain higher load factors than its competitors 22 83 84 From August 1968 BEA supplemented its Tempelhof based Viscount fleet with de Havilland Comet 4B series jetliners 22 70 Although these aircraft could operate from Tempelhof s short runways with a restricted payload they were not suited to the airline s ultra short haul operation from Berlin average stage length 230 mi 370 km given the high fuel consumption of the Comet especially when operating at the mandatory 10 000 ft 3 000 m altitude inside the Allied air corridors 48 72 78 85 86 87 This measure was therefore only a stopgap until most of BEA s Berlin fleet was equipped with 97 seat single class BAC One Eleven 500s nb 11 22 BEA s re equipment of its Berlin fleet with brand new One Eleven 500 jets was central to the airline s competitive strategy to regain ground lost to Pan Am s 727s The new One Eleven 500 which BEA called the Super One Eleven operated its first scheduled service from Berlin on 1 September 1968 22 33 70 86 87 88 89 It began replacing the airline s Berlin based Viscounts from 17 November 1968 90 1968 was also the year all non scheduled services i e primarily the rapidly growing number of inclusive tour charter flights were concentrated at Tegel to alleviate increasing congestion at Tempelhof and to make better use of Tegel which was underutilised at the time 62 Air France West Berlin s third scheduled carrier which had suffered a continuous traffic decline ever since the transfer of Berlin operations to more distant Tegel at the beginning of 1960 due to Tempelhof s operational limitations that made it unsuitable for its Caravelles nb 12 was worst affected by the equipment changes at the latter airport during the mid to late 1960s Over this period the French airline s market share halved from 9 to less than 5 despite having withdrawn from Tegel Dusseldorf in summer 1964 nb 13 and concentrated its limited resources on Tegel Frankfurt and Tegel Munich to maximise the competitive impact on the latter two routes To reverse growing losses on its Berlin routes resulting from load factors as low as 30 Air France decided to withdraw from the internal German market entirely and instead enter into a joint venture with BEA This arrangement entailed the latter taking over the former s two remaining German domestic routes to Frankfurt and Munich and operating these with its own aircraft and flightdeck crews from Tempelhof It also entailed repainting the fins of the BEA One Eleven 500s in a neutral dark blue scheme featuring Super One Eleven titles instead of BEA s Speedjack motif The Air France BEA joint venture became operational in spring 1969 and terminated in autumn 1972 22 35 48 78 83 91 92 93 94 95 96 Commercial air traffic from to Berlin Tempelhof peaked in 1971 at just above 5 1 2 million passengers out of a total of 6 12 million passengers for all West Berlin airports during that year nb 14 This represented more than 90 of West Berlin s commercial air traffic and made its iconic city centre airport Germany s second largest nb 15 With 3 1 2 million passengers Pan Am accounted for the bulk of this traffic 56 while almost all of the remaining 2 million accrued to BEA 1971 was also the year the latter s last Berlin based Viscount departed the city 33 49 97 98 nbsp Nord 262 of Tempelhof Airways Airport Berlin Tempelhof 1988 nbsp A BAe 146 of Brussels Airlines Airport Tempelhof 2004East Germany s relaxation of border controls affecting all surface transport modes between West Berlin and West Germany across its territory from 1972 onwards resulted in a decline of scheduled internal German air traffic from to West Berlin This was further compounded by the economic downturn in the wake of the 1973 oil crisis The resulting fare increases that were intended to recover the airlines higher operating costs caused by steeply rising jet fuel prices led to a further drop in demand This in turn resulted in a major contraction of Pan Am s and BEA s British Airways s internal German operations necessitating a reduction in both airlines Berlin based fleets and workforces in an attempt to contain growing losses these once profitable routes generated by the mid 1970s 22 49 56 95 On 1 September 1975 Pan Am and British Airways moved their entire Berlin operation to the newly built terminal at Tegel Airport Following Pan Am s and British Airways s move to Tegel commercial operations at Tempelhof ceased resulting in exclusive use by the US military From 1978 Pan Am relocated its 727 flightdeck crew training from Miami International Airport to Berlin Tempelhof This involved re training all pilots and flight engineers who crewed the flight decks of the airline s 727 fleet which at the time operated out of Miami to the Caribbean and Central America as well as on the IGS routes from Berlin and intra European feeder routes serving Frankfurt and Heathrow 99 100 Another airline that used Tempelhof to train its flightdeck crews was US supplemental Modern Air Transport While all Modern Air commercial flights from and to Berlin principally used Tegel to take advantage of that airport s longer runways and the fact that it was not in a built up area making for easier approaches the airline conducted its training for Berlin based flight deck crews at Tempelhof between 1968 and 1974 The latter was also the US supplemental s and other Tegel based operators designated diversion airport in bad weather in the Tegel area 101 66 Commercial operations restarted in 1981 when US incorporated regional airline start up Tempelhof Airways began a corporate shuttle between Tempelhof and Paderborn under contract to former German computer manufacturer Nixdorf whose main factories and offices were located in Paderborn and West Berlin respectively Tempelhof Airways s initial equipment comprised Cessna Conquest and Piper Navajo executive aircraft In 1985 the airline converted the Tempelhof Paderborn corporate shuttle into a full fledged scheduled service using a Nord 262 commuter turboprop 102 The end of the Cold War and German reunification opened Tempelhof for non allied air traffic on 3 October 1990 US President Bill Clinton christened a new Boeing C 17 Globemaster III transport plane serial number 96 0006 the Spirit of Berlin at Tempelhof on 12 May 1998 to commemorate the 49th anniversary of the end of the Berlin Blockade on 12 May 1949 Towards the end commercial use was mostly in the form of small commuter aircraft flying regionally Plans had been in place to shut down Tempelhof and Tegel and make the new Brandenburg Airport the sole commercial airport for Berlin Closing down air traffic edit nbsp In 1996 the mayor of Berlin Eberhard Diepgen Brandenburg minister president Manfred Stolpe and the federal transport minister Wissmann established the so called Consensus resolution The entire planning aimed at concentrating domestic and international air traffic in Berlin and Brandenburg at one airport Berlin Schonefeld International Airport 103 To ensure investment protection as well as to fend off opposition to Schonefeld International s expansion it was mandated that first Tempelhof and then Tegel must be closed On 4 December 2007 the Federal Administrative Court of Germany Bundesverwaltungsgericht made the final decision as court of last instance to close Tempelhof Airport 104 Referendum against closing edit An initiative for a nonbinding referendum against the closure was held and failed after the initial number of signatures required were collected 105 According to the constitution of the state of Berlin the number of supportive signatures that were required to be collected within four months in order to compel a referendum amounts to 7 of the population of Berlin entitled to vote 169 784 106 After the four month period for the collection of signatures 107 203 408 signatures had been lodged 108 The referendum was held on 27 April 2008 109 All eligible voters received an information brochure along with their notification A majority of the votes was necessary to support the referendum but this had to be at least one quarter of all eligible Berlin voters 110 111 The initiative for keeping Tempelhof open was supported by the Interessengemeinschaft City Airport Tempelhof ICAT 112 along with a couple of opposition parties in the Berlin city parliament the Christian Democratic Union and the Free Democratic Party citing primarily the need for an inner city airport for business and private flyers as well as nostalgic reasons 103 Representatives from the ICAT suggested keeping the airport open up until Schonefeld Airport was to be completed in about 2012 The Berlin government insisted on the closure of the airport for legal long term economic and environmental reasons 110 in particular to ensure the expansion of Schonefeld International Environmental groups and the Green party supported them in this Plans for the future would include for example a Berlin airlift museum in the old terminal building commercial space for innovative businesses new housing and industrial areas sports facilities and parks Legally the decision in favour of closure at the end of October 2008 was irrevocable 113 and the referendum was nonbinding A subsequent reopening would have faced high legal barriers but some legal experts claimed there may be means to circumvent this The referendum of 27 April 2008 failed Although 60 2 of the votes cast were for keeping the airport open this was by only 21 7 of the eligible voters short of the 25 required Support had been highest in western districts of Berlin up to 80 but opposition only 30 approval and disinterest was prevalent in the eastern districts Voter turnout of 36 was low 114 Air traffic at Tempelhof Airport ceased for good on 30 October and the official licence expired in mid December A Goodbye Tempelhof gala was held at Tempelhof airport for eight hundred invited guests in the last hours of 30 October Meanwhile protesters against the closing held a candle vigil in front on the Platz der Lufbrucke The last commercial flight was a Cirrus Airlines Dornier 328 that departed at 22 17 towards Mannheim 115 Time to Say Goodbye was sung to the spectators on the apron at the conclusion At precisely four and a half minutes before midnight the last two airplanes a historical Junkers Ju 52 and an airlift raisin bomber Douglas DC 3 took off in parallel waved their wings and flew off south east to Schonefeld airport The runway and air field lights were switched off at midnight 5 Three Antonov An 2 airplanes flying under VFR were left stranded at the airport as weather conditions prevented them from taking off on 30 October They were allowed to take off on 24 November 2008 making them the last aircraft to take off from the airport 116 Post airport usage edit nbsp An area of Tempelhof Airport in 2012 converted into open greenspaceABB Formula E Berlin ePrix edit The ABB Formula E used variations of the Tempelhof Airport Street Circuit for the Berlin ePrix in 2015 and from 2017 to 2023 There are plans hold it again on 23 October 2024 update 117 In 2020 due to COVID 19 there were held 6 rounds on the circuit with rounds 1 and 2 going on the reverse layout and rounds 5 and 6 having the extended layout for the first time Public park edit Main article Tempelhofer Feld In August 2009 Berlin city officials announced that the Tempelhof outfields would be opened in May 2010 as a city park The city planned to spend an estimated 60 million on developing the park from 2010 to 2017 118 On the weekend of 8 9 May 2010 the outfield was festively opened as Berlin s largest public park named Tempelhofer Feld More than 200 000 Berliners visited the park to enjoy its wide open spaces for recreation ranging from biking and skating to baseball and flying kites 119 120 121 The opening ceremonies were slightly marred by some protesters unhappy about the fence that closed off the park during the night 122 Entrance is free with park hours being from 6 7 7 30 a m depending on the season until sunset The grounds are maintained by Grun Berlin 123 a company that also looks after several other gated parks in Berlin About 80 of the former airfield is an important habitat for several redlisted birds plants and insects 124 Usage of the park is seasonally restricted to limit disturbance of Eurasian skylark breeding grounds 125 In 2013 the Senate of Berlin introduced a plan to open the outer zones of the Tempelhof fields for construction of apartment and commercial buildings and a new Berlin Central and Regional Library 126 127 An area of 230 hectares 2 3 km2 was to remain a park but was planned to be landscaped with a rain water reservoir a 60 meter artificial boulder groves and other new features Landscaping was supposed to begin in 2013 and be completed in time for Germany s world horticultural exhibition IGA that was to be hosted in the park in 2017 128 In a 2014 Referendum Berlin s citizens decided to preserve the entire space of the park and prohibit any kind of development by law thus putting an end to both construction and landscaping plans 129 130 Event location edit Tempelhof has been used since its closing to host numerous fairs and events The first major events included a fashion tradeshow in July 131 132 and the Berlin Festival 2009 concert in August 133 Fairs were held in the hangar In September 2010 Tempelhof hosted the Popkomm the international world s music and entertainment business meeting place and was one of the most important locations of the first Berlin Music Week The place also hosted sports events The Berlin Marathon fair the main event preparation to runners was held at Tempelhof every September The FIA Formula E Championship raced on the airport runways in 2015 2017 2018 2020 2021 2022 and 2023 with the 2020 edition hosting 6 races in a nine day period to complete the 2019 20 season 134 The Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters executives were also discussing with government officials about hosting a round at Tempelhof 135 When Eurovision came to Germany the airport would have been the site of the contest if Berlin was chosen as the host city Later Dusseldorf was chosen The defunct airport is intended to be known as Berlin Creative District similar to Meatpacking District Manhattan or Brompton Design District in Brompton London 136 For instance the former US Army officers hotel will be altered to be a digital innovation center for startups and creative businesses while a new visitor center was due to open in 2019 137 138 In 2022 Tempelhof was used as the site for the festival Tempelhof Sounds a three day music event consisting of mainly alternative indie and rock music There were over 30 000 visitors on each day of the festival Shortly after the festival concluded it was confirmed that the event would return in 2023 139 better source needed Former airlines and destinations edit nbsp Scandinavian Airlines McDonnell Douglas MD 87 at Berlin Tempelhof Airport in April 1995Most airlines moved to Tegel or Schonefeld in the years before Tempelhof closed down When it was actually closed down in 2008 there were only scheduled flights from Brussels Airlines and Cirrus Airlines still operating from there Berlin Tempelhof also was an important base for air taxi services with the following operators flying from to there AAF Aviona Air Air Service Berlin scheduled sightseeing flights using a historic raisin bomber Douglas DC 3 nb 16 AIRSHIP Air Service Bizair Fluggesellschaft Business Air Charter Heli Unionair Jet Club Deutschland Chartermanagement Private Wings Rotorflug TAG Aviation and Windrose Air Statistics editGraphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Annual passenger traffic at THF airport See Wikidata query Accidents and incidents editOn 12 June 1897 in one of the earliest recorded aircraft accidents Friedrich Hermann Wolfert and his mechanic Robert Knabe were killed when Wolfert s lighter than air craft Deutschland caught fire at 200 m 670 ft and crashed at Tempelhof Field On 29 April 1952 an Air France Douglas C 54A registration F BELI operating a scheduled service from Frankfurt Rhein Main Airport to Berlin Tempelhof came under sustained attack from two Soviet MiG 15 fighters while passing through one of the Allied air corridors over East Germany Although the attack had severely damaged the plane necessitating the shutdown of engines number three and four the pilot in command of the aircraft managed to carry out a safe emergency landing at Tempelhof Airport A subsequent inspection of the aircraft s damage at Tempelhof revealed that it had been hit by 89 shots fired from the Soviet MiGs during the preceding air attack There were no fatalities among the 17 occupants six crew 11 passengers despite the severity of the attack The Soviet military authorities defended this attack on an unarmed civilian aircraft by claiming the Air France plane was outside the air corridor at the time of attack 140 On 19 January 1953 a Silver City Airways Bristol 170 Freighter Mark 21 registration G AICM operating a non scheduled cargo flight from West Berlin crash landed near Tempelhof Airport as a result of fuel starvation when bad weather at the destination forced it to return to Berlin Although the accident damaged the aircraft beyond repair both pilots survived 141 In 1978 LOT Polish Airlines flight 165 was hijacked and forced to land at Tempelhof The US military authorities who were in charge of Tempelhof during the Cold War era arrested the East German hijacker on arrival Following the hijacker s arrest the US authorities returned the aircraft its crew and those passengers who wished to resume their journey to Poland 142 In 1981 a LOT Polish Airlines Antonov AN 24 operating an internal scheduled service from Katowice to Gdansk was hijacked en route and forced to land at Tempelhof Jerzy Dygas the hijacker was on military service while taking over the aircraft He was armed with a grenade and a single shot pistol The US military authorities arrested the hijacker on arrival and handed him over to the local police At that time he was expected to be sentenced to a five and a half years prison term under West German law Following the hijacker s arrest the US authorities released the aircraft its crew and all 50 passengers to resume their flight to Gdansk 143 nbsp The former 27L runway where the Socata TB 10 Tobago had landed in 2010 144 aerial view 2022 On 26 June 2010 a private Socata TB 10 Tobago had to perform an emergency landing on the now closed Tempelhof Airport due to engine failure It was on a sightseeing flight and the pilot was looking for a free space to land safely The aircraft was occupied by the pilot and three passengers and had taken off from Tegel Airport Upon consultation with air traffic control in Schonefeld it was agreed to land on a Tempelhof runway No one was injured during the emergency landing as the visitors of the now Tempelhofer Park scurried aside to make room for the TB 10 which came to a halt after a very short distance 145 Four days later the Socata TB 10 Tobago was transported with wings removed by lorry back to Tegel airport The Senate of Berlin now intends to prohibit sightseeing flights over Berlin by single engine planes for safety reasons 144 It has been reported that the pilot had forgotten to switch over to the second fuel tank 146 See also editTempelhofer Feld Nazi architecture Berlin Brandenburg Airport Berlin ePrix Tempelhof Airport Street CircuitNotes and citations editNotes edit also known as Pierced Steel Matting PSP independent from government owned corporations holders of supplemental air carrier certificates authorised to operate non scheduled passenger and cargo services to supplement the scheduled operations of air carriers airlines holding these certificates are also known as nonskeds in the USA until 1973 the launch of daily non stop Berlin Tempelhof Amsterdam Schiphol flights by Pan Am in the Cold War era the American British and French embassies in West Germany s capital Bonn each had a military attache attached who was dealing with commercial aviation matters in West Berlin the three Allied Air Attaches jointly exercised sole responsibility for commercial aviation in West Berlin on behalf of the governments of the United States the United Kingdom and France during this period at the time Flug Union acted as a West Berlin consolidator for the big West German tour companies Neckermann then part of the eponymous department store chain and Touristik Union International TUI the travel arm of the Federal German Railway it subsequently became a tour opeartor in its own right when it launched its first dedicated package tour flight programme with Laker Airways from Tegel Airport in August 1968 an improved version of the original Trident 1C BEA already operated which lacked a short field capability that would have made it suitable for the airline s Tempelhof operation the first production aircraft for Pakistan International Airlines PIA with the aircraft s Pakistani registration AP ATK and PIA titles being both temporarily replaced with British registration G ATNA and BEA titles to comply with contemporary Allied access restrictions on air transport in West Berlin from August 1968 Silver Star configuration the temporary use of Comet 4Bs on BEA s Berlin routes enabled Viscount crews to undergo conversion training on the One Eleven from a peak of 11 of all West Berlin scheduled air traffic prior to the move from Tempelhof Air France had already discontinued Berlin Nuremberg services prior to its move to Tegel Tempelhof 5 560 000 Tegel 560 000 after Frankfurt in terms of passengers handled per annum operated from Berlin Schonefeld Airport starting November 2008 Citations edit Institute for Federal Real Estate September 2008 Page 9 EAD Basic Error Page eurocontrol int Retrieved 16 October 2015 Matthies Bernd 29 September 2020 TXL Schliessung am 8 November Der letzte Flug von Tegel geht mit Air France nach Paris Closure on November 8th The last flight from Tegel is with Air France to Paris Der Tagesspiegel in German Retrieved 2 November 2020 Airports International June 1975 a b Kulish Nicholas 30 October 2008 Crowds Bid Farewell to Airport That Saved Berlin The New York Times Retrieved 20 June 2017 Fahey Ciaran 5 March 2015 How Berliners refused to give Tempelhof airport over to developers The Guardian Retrieved 1 May 2016 a b Akkoc Raziye 14 September 2015 Refugee crisis Europe s borders unravelling as Austria and Slovakia impose frontier controls live www telegraph co uk Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 14 September 2015 Photos Boeing 747 121 Aircraft Pictures Airliners net airliners net Retrieved 16 October 2015 Photos Lockheed L 1011 385 1 TriStar 1 Aircraft Pictures Airliners net airliners net Retrieved 16 October 2015 Photos Lockheed C 5A Galaxy L 500 Aircraft Pictures Airliners net airliners net Retrieved 16 October 2015 a b c Cold War Times PDF vol 9 February 2009 p 7 archived from the original PDF on 16 September 2012 retrieved 10 February 2012 Take a Tour Through the Mother of All Airports March 2014 U S Centennial of Flight Commission centennialofflight gov Archived from the original on 26 November 2005 Retrieved 20 June 2017 Lange Alexandra 5 June 2015 Seven Leading Architects Defend the World s Most Hated Buildings The New York Times Magazine Retrieved 8 June 2015 a b Laurenz Demps and Carl Ludwig Paeschke Flughafen Tempelhof Die Geschichte einer Legende Berlin Ullstein 1998 p 68 ISBN 3 550 06973 1 Laurenz Demps and Carl Ludwig Paeschke Flughafen Tempelhof Die Geschichte einer Legende Berlin Ullstein 1998 pp 69seqq ISBN 3 550 06973 1 Laurenz Demps and Carl Ludwig Paeschke Flughafen Tempelhof Die Geschichte einer Legende Berlin Ullstein 1998 pp 78seq ISBN 3 550 06973 1 a b Laurenz Demps and Carl Ludwig Paeschke Flughafen Tempelhof Die Geschichte einer Legende Berlin Ullstein 1998 p 79 ISBN 3 550 06973 1 a b Laurenz Demps and Carl Ludwig Paeschke Flughafen Tempelhof Die Geschichte einer Legende Berlin Ullstein 1998 p 80 ISBN 3 550 06973 1 Laurenz Demps and Carl Ludwig Paeschke Flughafen Tempelhof Die Geschichte einer Legende Berlin Ullstein 1998 p 83 ISBN 3 550 06973 1 1972 2018 Flight Archive flightglobal com Retrieved 16 October 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o air france 1972 2017 Flight Archive flightglobal com Retrieved 16 October 2015 Home of Eagle G AJBL britisheagle net Retrieved 16 October 2015 a b Laurenz Demps and Carl Ludwig Paeschke Flughafen Tempelhof Die Geschichte einer Legende Berlin Ullstein 1998 p 88 ISBN 3 550 06973 1 http www theberlinobserver com archive 1971V27 V27 N19 may14 pdf 7CPage 3 Last two U 6s retired PDF Berlin Observer 15 February 1980 p 3 Retrieved 10 June 2019 a b c d e Berlin Airport Company Airline Portrait Pan Am January 1975 Monthly Timetable Booklet for Berlin Tempelhof and Berlin Tegel Airports Berlin Airport Company West Berlin 1975 Aircraft Illustrated Airport Profile Berlin Tempelhof Vol 42 No 1 p 32 Ian Allan Publishing Hersham January 2009 a b c d e f Aeroplane Pan Am and the IGS Vol 116 No 2972 pp 4 8 Temple Press London 2 October 1968 a b Aeroplane Pan Am and the IGS Vol 116 No 2972 p 4 Temple Press London 2 October 1968 Aviation News Pan American World Airways Part 2 Vol 73 No 11 p 48 Key Publishing Stamford November 2011 a b c Berlin Airport Company Airline Portrait Air France March 1975 Monthly Timetable Booklet for Berlin Tempelhof and Berlin Tegel Airports Berlin Airport Company West Berlin 1975 a b c d e f g Berlin Airport Company Airline Portrait British Airways February 1975 Monthly Timetable Booklet for Berlin Tempelhof and Berlin Tegel Airports Berlin Airport Company West Berlin 1975 a b Aircraft Illustrated Airport Profile Berlin Tempelhof Vol 42 No 1 p 33 Ian Allan Publishing Hersham January 2009 a b c d e Classic Aircraft Gone but not forgotten BEA Internal German Services Berlin bound Vol 45 No 6 p 51 Ian Allan Publishing Hersham June 2012 The Spirit of Dan Air Simons G M GMS Enterprises Peterborough 1993 p 11 The Spirit of Dan Air Simons G M GMS Enterprises Peterborough 1993 pp 9 11 1973 1488 Flight Archive flightglobal com Retrieved 16 October 2015 Aeroplane Letters B E A s Berlin services Vol 104 No 2649 p 7 Temple Press London 26 July 1962 Aeroplane World Transport Affairs B E A leases B O A C DC 7Cs for Berlin flights Vol 104 No 2669 p 11 Temple Press London 13 December 1962 Photos Vickers 736 Viscount Aircraft Pictures Airliners net airliners net Retrieved 16 October 2015 Airliner World BUA British United Airways A Step back in Time Key Publishing Stamford UK July 2010 pp 64 68 Harro Ranter 30 October 1961 ASN Aircraft accident Vickers 736 Viscount G AODH Frankfurt International Airport FRA aviation safety net Retrieved 16 October 2015 1961 1644 Flight Archive flightglobal com Retrieved 16 October 2015 Airliner Classics Reflections of Tempelhof Commercial Flights Return Key Publishing Stamford UK November 2011 p 79 a b Aeroplane Pan Am and the IGS Vol 116 No 2972 pp 4 5 8 Temple Press London 2 October 1968 Aeroplane Pan Am and the IGS Vol 116 No 2972 pp 6 8 Temple Press London 2 October 1968 a b c d e Aeroplane Pan Am and the IGS Vol 116 No 2972 p 5 Temple Press London 2 October 1968 a b c d 1988 1039 Flight Archive flightglobal com Retrieved 16 October 2015 caravelle air france 1967 2276 Flight Archive flightglobal com Retrieved 16 October 2015 Photos Sud SE 210 Caravelle III Aircraft Pictures Airliners net airliners net Retrieved 16 October 2015 Aeroplane Pan Am and the IGS Vol 116 No 2972 p 8 Temple Press London 2 October 1968 a b c d Aeroplane Tempelhof trials prelude to Pan Am 727 order Vol 108 No 2773 p 11 Temple Press London 10 December 1964 a b c Aeroplane Order Book continued Pan Am 727s to serve Tempelhof Vol 109 No 2788 p 14 Temple Press London 25 March 1965 West Germany Hot Route in the Cold War Time 3 July 1964 Archived from the original on 2 April 2008 Retrieved 16 October 2015 a b c 1973 1982 Flight Archive flightglobal com Retrieved 16 October 2015 Aircraft Illustrated Airport Profile Berlin Tempelhof Vol 42 No 1 p 30 Ian Allan Publishing Hersham January 2009 Aeroplane Pan Am and the IGS Vol 116 No 2972 pp 5 8 Temple Press London 2 October 1968 west berlin british airways west german 1982 2275 Flight Archive flightglobal com Retrieved 16 October 2015 overseas aviation boac 1961 1167 Flight Archive flightglobal com Retrieved 16 October 2015 overseas aviation manchester 1961 0472 Flight Archive flightglobal com Retrieved 16 October 2015 a b Berlin Airport Company April 1968 Monthly Timetable Booklet for Berlin Tempelhof and Berlin Tegel Airports Berlin Airport Company West Berlin 1968 in German Beyer Morten 8 October 2009 Flying Higher Trafford Publishing p 189 ISBN 9781425166526 OCLC 609999436 Aviation News Saturn Airways Vol 74 No 3 p 49 Key Publishing Stamford March 2012 Detour via Schonefeld translated article title Aviation translated section title Der Spiegel vol 29 1971 12 July 1971 p 41 in German a b Beyer Morton S 1 Flying Higher General Acceptance Corp Buys Modern Air 2009 p 189 Photos Douglas DC 7C Seven Seas Aircraft Pictures Airliners net airliners net Retrieved 16 October 2015 1964 3067 Flight Archive flightglobal com Retrieved 16 October 2015 Aeroplane The Battle of Berlin Vol 111 No 2842 p 15 Temple Press London 7 April 1966 a b c d Special Feature 7 bac1 11jet co uk Retrieved 16 October 2015 Aeroplane Late News Commercial BAC One Elevens are to take over trooping flights between the UK and Germany Vol 110 No 2815 p 34 Temple Press London 30 September 1965 a b Classic Airliner The Hawker Siddeley Trident German internal services p 38 Key Publishing Stamford 2014 Classic Airliner The Hawker Siddeley Trident photographic captions p 40 Key Publishing Stamford 2014 Aeroplane BEA Berlin services new jet needed Vol 111 No 2834 p 15 Temple Press London 10 February 1966 a b Aeroplane Commercial continued Pan Am 727s take over in Berlin Vol 111 No 2853 p 11 Temple Press London 23 June 1966 Aeroplane Pan Am and the IGS Vol 116 No 2972 pp 4 5 6 8 Temple Press London 2 October 1968 Aircraft Illustrated Airport Profile Berlin Tempelhof Vol 42 No 1 p 34 Ian Allan Publishing Hersham January 2009 a b c 1968 2530 Flight Archive flightglobal com Retrieved 16 October 2015 Aeroplane Supplement BEA s 20th anniversary BEA German internals Vol 112 No 2858 p 42 Temple Press London 28 July 1966 Aeroplane The Battle of Berlin Vol 111 No 2842 pp 16 7 Temple Press London 7 April 1966 Aeroplane The Battle for Berlin Round One a draw Vol 112 No 2878 p 4 Temple Press London 15 December 1966 Aeroplane Pan Am and the IGS Vol 116 No 2972 p 6 Temple Press London 2 October 1968 a b Aeroplane The Battle of Berlin Vol 111 No 2842 p 16 Temple Press London 7 April 1966 Aeroplane Pan Am and the IGS Vol 116 No 2972 pp 5 6 Temple Press London 2 October 1968 BEA in Berlin Flight International 10 August 1972 p 181 a b 1968 2540 Flight Archive flightglobal com Retrieved 16 October 2015 a b En route with BEA One Eleven 500 into service Flight International 7 November 1968 p 749 One Eleven 500 into service Flight International 7 November 1968 p 744 5 Bespoke for BEA One Eleven 500 into service Flight International 7 November 1968 p 746 History amp heritage Explore our past 1960 1969 17 November 1968 British Airways Archived from the original on 1 July 2012 1968 2176 Flight Archive flightglobal com Retrieved 16 October 2015 1969 2064 Flight Archive flightglobal com Retrieved 16 October 2015 1972 1329 Flight Archive flightglobal com Retrieved 16 October 2015 Berlin Airport Company November 1972 Monthly Timetable Booklet for Berlin Tempelhof and Berlin Tegel Airports Berlin Airport Company West Berlin 1972 a b 1974 1106 Flight Archive flightglobal com Retrieved 16 October 2015 1989 2395 Flight Archive flightglobal com Retrieved 16 October 2015 1971 1220 Flight Archive flightglobal com Archived from the original on 1 February 2014 Retrieved 16 October 2015 Berlin Airport Company November 1971 Monthly Timetable Booklet for Berlin Tempelhof and Berlin Tegel Airports Berlin Airport Company West Berlin 1971 Berlin Airport Company Summary of 1978 Annual Report February 1979 Monthly Timetable Booklet for Berlin Tegel Airport Berlin Airport Company West Berlin 1979 in German Dix Barry Fly Past Happy landings Skyport Heathrow co uk 14 April 2011 Archived 23 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine Airways Proctor J Archive Modern Air Transport Vol 24 No 03 Iss 255 p 65 Airways International Inc Miami May 2017 berlin tempelhof 1988 0850 Flight Archive flightglobal com Retrieved 16 October 2015 a b Official public information brochure of the pros and cons of the referendum Archived 27 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine in German Grunes Licht fur Schliessung des Flughafens Berlin Tempelhof Press release of the Federal Administrative Court of Germany 4 December 2007 available at www bundesverwaltungsgericht de Official public announcement of the call for support Archived 27 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine in German Official page of the State of Berlin see Article 63 1 second sentence of the Berlin constitution in German with regard to the figures see the official referendum schedule at the end of the page in German Official referendum schedule at A 6 in German Official information on the number of signatures lodged Official referendum schedule at B 2 in German a b Official public information brochure of the pros and cons of the referendum Archived 27 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine in German Official press release on the referendum in German berlin tempelhof tempelhof retten de Archived from the original on 10 October 2018 Retrieved 16 October 2015 BBI Press release Berlin Airports welcome BBI decision by the Federal Constitutional Court on BBI Archived 14 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine Official results of the referendum published by the municipal election supervisor Archived 30 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine Klaus Kurpjuweit and Jan Oberlander Ende der Legende Der Tagesspiegel 31 October 2008 in German Abflug in die Geschichtsbucher Tagesspiegel 25 November 2008 in German Search results for Berlin ePrix Federation Internationale de l Automobile Retrieved 21 December 2023 Tempelhof to become enormous city park thelocal de Retrieved 16 October 2015 Article and photos Riesiger Andrang auf dem Flugfeld Tempelhof Berliner Morgenpost 10 May 2010 in German Flughafen Tempelhof Die neue Rollbahn flughafentempelhof com 9 May 2010 in German Tempelhof Kiteflyers Meeting 2010 am 9 Mai 2010 Archived 19 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Flying Blog May 2010 in German and English Whistles for Wowereit at Tempelhof park opening The Local 8 May 2009 Grun Berlin s Tempelhofer Feld Project Archived 30 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine Ein Lebensraum fur Flora und Fauna Archived 3 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine Feldlerchen Rekord auf Tempelhofer Feld Sperrungen ab April Record number of skylarks at Tempelhofer Feld Protected zones in effect starting April www sueddeutsche de in German 27 March 2019 Retrieved 26 August 2021 Senator Muller stellte den Masterplan Tempelhofer Freiheit vor Senator Muller presented Masterplan Tempelhofer Freiheit March 2013 www stadtentwicklung berlin de in German Senatsverwaltung fur Stadtentwicklung und Wohnen Berlin Retrieved 25 August 2021 Natur und Wohnungen sind keine Gegensatze Nature and apartments aren t opposites www tagesspiegel de in German 25 August 2013 Retrieved 25 August 2021 Parklandschaft in Tempelhof geplant Landscaped park planned in Tempelhof www tagesspiegel de in German 15 April 2011 Retrieved 25 August 2021 100 Prozent Freiheit und jetzt 100 freedom what now www tagesspiegel de in German 26 May 2013 Retrieved 25 August 2021 Gesetz zum Erhalt des Tempelhofer Feldes vom 14 Juni 2014 Law for the preservation of the Tempelhof fields dated Jun 14 2014 gesetze berlin de in German Retrieved 25 August 2021 Bread amp Butter Berlin Airport Berlin Tempelhof Archived 6 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine Berlin Fashion Week Glamour Gowns and Garter Belts Der Spiegel 2 July 2009 Retrieved 16 October 2015 Berlin Festival 29 31 Mai 2015 berlinfestival com Retrieved 16 October 2015 The Red Bull Air Race World Championship by Red Bull featuring aerial obstacle courses which pilots have to navigate under high velocity forces was held at the airport in 2006 Berlin completes Formula E calendar Autosport 11 July 2013 Tempelhof Plane doch noch nicht vom Tisch Motorsport Total 17 June 2013 Berlin s Old Airport Will Soon Host Vibrant Art Scene architecturaldigest com 16 October 2018 Berlin s Tempelhof Airport is now a creative district art critique com 12 November 2018 The rebirth of Berlin s Tempelhof Airport Independent 18 April 2019 Tempelhof Sounds will also take place in 2023 World News TakeToNews 13 June 2022 Retrieved 17 August 2022 Harro Ranter 29 April 1952 ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C 54A DO DC 4 F BELI Berlin aviation safety net Retrieved 16 October 2015 Harro Ranter 19 January 1953 ASN Aircraft accident Bristol 170 Freighter 21 G AICM Berlin Tempelhof aviation safety net Retrieved 16 October 2015 aer lingus 1978 1978 Flight Archive flightglobal com Retrieved 16 October 2015 1981 2799 Flight Archive flightglobal com Retrieved 16 October 2015 a b Tempelhof Maschine hat Flugfeld verlassen Berliner Morgenpost 1 July 2010 in German Tempelhof plane has left airfield with pictures Jorn Hasselmann Pilot Ich hatte Befurchtungen dass ich nicht bis Tempelhof komme Tagesspiegel 26 June 2010 in German I feared I wouldn t reach Tempelhof Notlandung Pilot hatte Tankschalter vergessen Berliner Morgenpost 2 July 2010 at Die Wahrheit uber Berlin Tempelhof in German Pilot forgot tank switch References editBerlin Airport Company Berliner Flughafen Gesellschaft BFG Monthly Timetable Booklet for Berlin Tempelhof and Berlin Tegel Airports several issues 1965 1975 in German West Berlin Germany Berlin Airport Company Flight International Flight International Sutton UK Reed Business Information ISSN 0015 3710 various backdated issues relating to commercial air transport at Berlin Tempelhof during the Allied period from 1950 until 1990 Simons Graham M 1993 The Spirit of Dan Air Peterborough UK GMS Enterprises ISBN 1 870384 20 2 Aircraft Illustrated Airport Profile Berlin Tempelhof pp 28 35 Vol 42 No 1 January 2009 Hersham UK Ian Allan Publishing Aircraft Illustrated online ISSN 0002 2675 Schmitz Frank Flughafen Tempelhof Berlins Tor zur Welt Berlin be bra 1997 ISBN 3 930863 32 4 in German Gabi Dolff Bonekamper Berlin Tempelhof In Berlin Tempelhof Liverpool Speke Paris Le Bourget Annees 30 Architecture des aeroports Airport Architecture of the Thirties Flughafenarchitektur der dreissiger Jahre Editions du patrimoine Paris 2000 ISBN 2 85822 328 9 pp 32 61 Bob Hawkins Hrsg Historic Airports Proceedings of the International L Europe de l Air Conferences on Aviation Architecture Liverpool 1999 Berlin 2000 Paris 2001 English Heritage London 2005 ISBN 1 873592 83 3 Heeb Christine A multifaceted monument the complex heritage of Tempelhof Central Airport Master of Arts thesis in World Heritage Studies Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus 2007 pdf Matthias Heisig Flughafen Berlin Tempelhof Die amerikanische Geschichte Tempelhof Central Airport The American Story Aeroport de Berlin Tempelhof L histoire americaine Edited for the AlliiertenMuseum by Gundula Bavendamm and Florian Weiss Berlin 2014 trilingual External links edit nbsp Media related to Berlin Tempelhof Airport at Wikimedia Commons Official website of the Tempelhofer Freiheit park local public transportation map PDF ICAT Initiative for keeping Tempelhof open Archived 10 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine in German Official Berlin site for closing Tempelhof and future plans in German BIFT Initiative for Tempelhof s closure Berlin Candy Bomber History of the airport Tempelhof A representation of the historical development from 1870 until this day in German Pictures from a guided tour through the airport National Museum Of The USAF Berlin Airlift Factsheet Ein kleiner Verein der sich mit den Fahrzeugen der Alliierten beschaftigt Der Zentralflughafen Vom Tempelhofer Feld zum Zentralflughafen Berlin Tempelhof in German An era ends with closing of Berlin Airport Spiegel Online Report of Christina Hebel on NRC Handelsblad picture archive from 1960 Bonjour Deutschland Luftverkehr unter Nachbarn 1926 2006 in German Berlin Tempelhof Airport race results at Racing ReferencePortals nbsp Germany nbsp Aviation nbsp World War II Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Berlin Tempelhof Airport amp oldid 1195060981, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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