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Frankfurt Airport

Frankfurt Airport (IATA: FRA, ICAO: EDDF; German: Flughafen Frankfurt Main [ˈfluːkhaːfn̩ ˈfʁaŋkfʊʁt ˈmaɪn], also known as Rhein-Main-Flughafen) is a major international airport located in Frankfurt, the fifth-largest city of Germany and one of the world's leading financial centres. It is operated by Fraport and serves as the main hub for Lufthansa, including Lufthansa CityLine and Lufthansa Cargo as well as Condor and AeroLogic. The airport covers an area of 2,300 hectares (5,683 acres) of land[4] and features two passenger terminals with capacity for approximately 65 million passengers per year; four runways; and extensive logistics and maintenance facilities.

Frankfurt Airport

Flughafen Frankfurt Main
Summary
Airport typePublic
Owner/OperatorFraport
ServesFrankfurt Rhine-Main
LocationNear Kelsterbach, Frankfurt am Main, Hesse
Opened8 July 1936; 86 years ago (1936-07-08)
Hub for
Focus city for
Elevation AMSL364 ft / 111 m
Coordinates50°02′00″N 008°34′14″E / 50.03333°N 8.57056°E / 50.03333; 8.57056Coordinates: 50°02′00″N 008°34′14″E / 50.03333°N 8.57056°E / 50.03333; 8.57056
Websitefrankfurt-airport.com
Maps
FRA
Location within Germany
FRA
FRA (Europe)
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
07L/25RA 2,800 9,240 Concrete
07C/25C 4,000 13,123 Asphalt
07R/25L 4,000 13,123 Asphalt
18B 4,000 13,123 Concrete
Statistics (2020)
Passengers18,770,99
Cargo (t)1,952,628
Aircraft movements212,334
Economic impact (2016)$22.3 billion[1]
Sources:[2]
A: ^ used for landings only
B:^ used for take-offs in one direction only[3]

Frankfurt Airport is the busiest airport by passenger traffic in Germany as well as the 4th busiest in Europe after London–Heathrow, Paris–Charles de Gaulle and Amsterdam Airport Schiphol. The airport is also the 13th busiest worldwide by total number of passengers in 2016,[5] with 60.786 million passengers using the airport in 2016. In 2017, Frankfurt Airport handled 64.5 million passengers and nearly 70 million in 2018. It also had a freight throughput of 2.076 million metric tonnes in 2015 and is the busiest airport in Europe by cargo traffic. As of summer 2017, Frankfurt Airport serves more than 300 destinations in 5 continents, making it the airport with the most direct routes in the world.[6][7]

The southern side of the airport ground was home to the Rhein-Main Air Base, which was a major air base for the United States from 1947 until 2005, when the air base was closed and the property was acquired by Fraport (now occupied by Terminal 3). The airport celebrated its 80th anniversary in July 2016.[8]

Location

Frankfurt Airport lies 12 km (7.5 mi) southwest of central Frankfurt,[9] near the Autobahn intersection Frankfurter Kreuz, where two of the most heavily used motorways in Europe (A3 and A5) meet. The airport grounds, which form a city district of Frankfurt named Frankfurt-Flughafen, are surrounded by the Frankfurt City Forest. The southern portion of the airport grounds extend partially into the cities of Rüsselsheim am Main and Mörfelden-Walldorf, and a western portion of the grounds lie within the city of Kelsterbach.

The airport is centrally located in the Frankfurt/Rhine-Main region, Germany's third-largest metropolitan region, which itself has a central location in the densely populated region of the west-central European megalopolis. Thereby, along with a strong rail and motorway connection, the airport serves as a major transport node for the greater region, less than two hours by ground to Cologne, the Ruhr Area, and Stuttgart.

History

First airport

On 16 November 1909, the world's first airline was founded in Frankfurt am Main: The Deutsche Luftschiffahrts-Aktiengesellschaft (DELAG). DELAG then built the first airport in Frankfurt, called Airship Base at Rebstock, which was located in Bockenheim in the western part of the city and was primarily used for airships in the beginning. It opened in 1912 and was extended after World War I, but in 1924, an expert's report already questioned the possibility of further expansions at this location.

With the foundation of Deutsche Luft Hansa in 1926, a rapid boom of civilian air travel started, and soon the airship base became too small to handle the demand. Plans for a new and larger airport located in the Frankfurt City Forest south-west of Schwanheim were approved in 1930 but were not realized due to the Great Depression. After the Machtergreifung in 1933, the government revived the plans and started the construction of the new airport.

Second airport

 
Frankfurt Airport in 1936, with one Ju 86, two Ju 52/3ms and one Fw 200 of Deutsche Lufthansa

A two-storey station building with a six-storey tower originated in 1935 on the northern part of the airport, as well as other operating and outbuildings for maintenance and storage of aircraft. The approximately 100 hectares runway received a grass cover.

The official opening of the new Flug- und Luftschiffhafen Rhein-Main took place on 8 July 1936. The first plane that landed was a Ju 52/3m. Six days later, on 14 July 1936, LZ 127 Graf Zeppelin landed at the airport. In 1936, 800 tons of cargo and 58,000 passengers were transported, and in 1937 these figures increased to 70,000 passengers and 966 tons of cargo. In the coming years, the new airport was the home base for the two largest German airships, LZ 127 Graf Zeppelin and LZ 129 Hindenburg. In 1938, Frankfurt was a central distribution point for the transport of airmail to North America.

On 6 May 1937, the Hindenburg, flying from Frankfurt to New York, exploded shortly before it was scheduled to dock at Lakehurst. 36 people died. The accident marked the end of scheduled airship traffic and the end of the airship era.

World War II

After the beginning of World War II in 1939, all foreign airlines left the airport, and control of air traffic was transferred to the Luftwaffe.

The airships were dismantled and their huge hangars demolished on 6 May 1940 during conversion of the base to military use. Luftwaffe engineers subsequently extended the single runway, and erected hangars and other facilities for German military aircraft.

On 9 May 1940, the first bombers took off to attack France. From August to November 1944, a concentration camp was established in Walldorf, close to the airport site, where Jewish female prisoners were forced to work for the airport. The Allies of World War II destroyed the runway system with airstrikes in 1944, and the Wehrmacht blew up buildings and fuel depots in 1945, shortly before the US Army took control of the airport on 25 March 1945. After the German Instrument of Surrender, the war in Europe ended and the US Army started to build a new temporary runway at Frankfurt Airport. The southern part of the airport ground was occupied to build the Rhein-Main Air Base as an Air Force Base for the United States Air Forces in Europe.

Berlin Airlift

 
Rhein-Main Air Base during the Berlin Airlift

In 1948, the Soviet Union blocked the Western Allies' rail and road access to the sectors of West Berlin under Allied control. Their aim was to force the western powers to allow the Soviet zone to start supplying Berlin with food and fuel, thereby giving the Soviets practical control over the entire city. In response, the Western Allies organised the Berlin Airlift to carry supplies via air to the people in West Berlin. The airports in Frankfurt, Hamburg and Hannover were the primary bases for Allied aircraft. The heavy use of these so-called "Raisin Bombers" caused damage to the runway in Frankfurt and forced the US Army to build a second parallel runway. The airlift ended in September 1949 after the Soviet Union ended their blockade.

Growth of the airport

 
Civil air traffic at Frankfurt Airport in 1951
 
An Iran Air Boeing 707–320B at Frankfurt Airport in 1970

In 1951, restrictions for German air travellers were lifted and civil air traffic started to grow again. In 1952, Frankfurt Airport handled more than 400,000 passengers; a year later it was more than half a million. About 100 to 120 aeroplanes took off from and landed in Frankfurt daily. In 1955, Lufthansa resumed flights to and from Frankfurt and in the same year the Federal Republic of Germany gained its air sovereignty back from the Allies. In 1957, the northern runway was extended, first to 3,000 m (9,843 ft) and then to 3,900 m (12,795 ft), to make it compatible with jet aircraft.

The airport did not emerge as a major international airline hub until 1958 when a new passenger terminal called Empfangsanlage Ost (Terminal East, literally "Arrival Facility East") opened in the north-east corner of the airport site. Only four years later it was clear that the terminal was already too small for the demand. In 1961, Frankfurt already had 2.2 million passengers and 81,000 take-offs and landings, making it the second busiest airport in Europe behind Heathrow Airport, London.

In 1962, it was decided to build an even larger terminal with a capacity of 30 million passengers per year. Work on this terminal began in 1965. The southern runway was extended to 3,750 m (12,303 ft) in 1964. In 1970, a new hangar was inaugurated; this accommodated six jet aircraft and was the world's largest hangar at the time.

The new main terminal

The new terminal, called Terminal Mitte (Central Terminal, today known as Terminal 1) is divided into three concourses (A, B and C) with 56 gates and an electric baggage handling system. Everything opened to the public on 14 March 1972. It was assumed that the terminal capacity would be sufficient for the next 30 years. Along with the new terminal a railway station (Frankfurt Airport station) was opened, the first airport railway station in the Federal Republic of Germany. A few days later the old Empfangsanlage Ost was closed.

The third runway

Planning for a third runway (called Startbahn 18 West) began in 1973. This project spawned massive protests by residents and environmentalists. The main points of conflict were increasing noise and pollution and the cutting down of protected trees in the Frankfurt City Forest. While the protests and related lawsuits were unsuccessful in preventing construction, the Startbahn West protests were one of the major crystallisation points for the German environmental movement of the 1980s. The protests even continued after the runway had been opened in 1984 and in 1987 two police officers were killed by a gunman. This incident ended the Startbahn West protests for good. Because of its orientation in the north–south direction, in contrast to the other east–west runways, the use of the third runway is limited. The Startbahn West can only be used for takeoffs to the south to avoid interference with air traffic on the other runways. Owing to this restriction the runway must be partially or fully closed when northward winds are too strong.

Terminal 2 and the second railway station

 
The apron of Terminal 2

In 1990, work on a new terminal (Terminal 2) began because it was anticipated that Terminal Mitte would reach its capacity limit sooner than expected. The new terminal, divided into concourses D and E, was built to the east of the existing terminal where once the Empfangsanlage Ost had been. With its opening in 1994, Frankfurt Airport increased its terminal capacity to 54 million passengers per year. Along with the terminal opening, a people mover system called Sky Line was established to provide a fast connection between Terminal 2 and Terminal Mitte (now renamed Terminal 1).

In 1999 a second railway station, primarily for InterCityExpress long-distance trains (called Frankfurt Airport long-distance station), opened near Terminal 1 as part of the new Cologne–Frankfurt high-speed rail line. At the same time local and regional rail services were based at the existing underground station, now renamed Frankfurt Airport regional station.

Closure of the Rhein-Main Air Base

On 30 December 2005, the Rhein-Main Air Base in the southern part of the airport ground was closed and the US Air Force moved to Ramstein Air Base. The property was handed back to Fraport which allows the airport to use it to build a new passenger terminal. The property of the housing area for the soldiers, called Gateway Gardens, which was located north-east of the airport site, was given back to the city of Frankfurt in the same year and will be developed as a business district in the following years.

The Airbus A380 and The Squaire

From 2005 to 2007, a large Airbus A380 maintenance facility was built at Frankfurt Airport because Lufthansa wanted to station their future A380 aircraft fleet there. Both terminals also underwent major renovations in order to handle the A380, including the installation of a third boarding bridge at several gates. Lufthansa's first Airbus A380 went into operation in June 2010 and was named Frankfurt am Main.

 
Aerial view of the central airport buildings including The Squaire in the back

In 2011, a large office building called The Squaire (a blend of square and air) opened at Frankfurt Airport. It was built on top of the Airport long-distance station and is considered the largest office building in Germany with 140,000 m2 (1,500,000 sq ft) floor area. Main tenants are KPMG and two Hilton Hotels.

Since 2012, the people mover "The Squaire Metro" connects the Squaire with the nine-storey parking structure. On a length of about 300 metres the so-called MiniMetro system with its two cabins can carry up to 1,300 passengers per hour.[10] The constructor of the system was the Italian manufacturer Leitner.

The fourth runway

Plans to build a fourth runway at Frankfurt Airport were underway in 1997, but owing to violent conflicts with the concept Fraport let residents' groups and environmentalists participate in the process to find a mutually acceptable solution. In 2000, a task force presented their conclusion which generally approved a new runway, but of shorter length (only 2.8 kilometres compared to the other three 4-kilometre-long runways), which would serve as a landing-only runway for smaller aircraft. Additional requirements included improved noise protection arrangements and a strict ban on night flights between 11 pm and 5 am across the whole airport. In 2001, Fraport applied for approval to build the new runway, with three possible options. The conclusion was that a runway north-west of the airport site would have the least impact on local residents and the surrounding environment. The plans were approved by the Hessian government in December 2007, but the requested ban on night flights was lifted because it was argued that an international airport like Frankfurt would need night flights, especially for worldwide freight transport. Construction of the new 2,800 m (9,186 ft) long Runway Northwest in the Kelsterbach Forest began in early 2009.

In 2012, the website Airport Watch reports weekly protests have been occurring at the airport since the opening of a fourth runway a year previously.[11]

Developments since 2011

The new runway officially went into operation on 20 October 2011, with an aircraft carrying Chancellor Angela Merkel, performing the first landing on 21 October. The centre line separation from the existing north runway is about 1,400 m (4,593 ft). This allows simultaneous instrument landing system (ILS) operations on these two runways, which has not been possible on the other parallel runways, which do not meet the 3,500 feet (1,100 m) minimum separation for ILS operations.[12] This allowed the airport to increase its capacity from 83 to 126 aircraft movements per hour.[13][14]

On 11 October 2011, the Hessian Administration Court ruled that night flights between 11pm and 5am (the so-called Mediationsnacht) are no longer allowed at Frankfurt Airport after the inauguration of the new runway, and therefore overrode the approval from the Hessian government from 2007 which allowed 17 scheduled flights per night. On 4 April 2012, the German Administrative Court confirmed the decision of the Hessian Administration Court, banning night flights between 11pm and 5am.[15]

To handle the predicted passenger amount of about 90 million in 2020, a new terminal section adjacent to Terminal 1 for an additional six million passengers opened on 10 October 2012. It is called Flugsteig A-Plus and exclusively used by Lufthansa mainly for their long-haul flights. Flugsteig A-Plus features eight parking positions that are able to handle four Airbus A380s or seven Boeing 747-8/747-400 at once.[16]

In November 2016, Ryanair announced the opening of a new base at Frankfurt Airport with four routes to Spain and Portugal. This move by Ryanair was heavily blasted, especially by Lufthansa, as Ryanair was granted high discounts and incentives regarding the airport's fees.[17] On 28 February 2017, Ryanair announced its winter programme for Frankfurt which will see a further 20 new routes being added.

2011 shooting

Albanian citizen, Arid Uka, a 21 year old at the time, targeted a United States Air Force bus parked outside the terminal building that was supposed to transport fifteen U.S. airmen to Ramstein Air Base.[18] He reportedly walked up to a waiting airman, asked him for a cigarette, and wanted to know whether the airmen were bound for Afghanistan.[19] When the airman said yes, according to German prosecutor Rainer Griesbaum, Uka waited for the airman to turn away and then shot him in the back of the head, killing him. Shouting "Allahu Akbar!"[20][21] the attacker then entered the bus, shooting and killing the driver, and continued to fire three shots at two other airmen, wounding them.[19] When he pointed his pistol at the head of another airman and pulled the trigger, the weapon jammed. Uka fled, but was pursued by the civilian airport employee Lamar Joseph Conner and Staff Sergeant Trevor Donald Brewer and shortly afterwards overpowered by two German police officers.[22] He was subsequently arrested.[19] Conner and Brewer later received the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany in a ceremony on 16 January 2012. Federal Interior Minister Hans-Peter Friedrich presented the decoration, citing their "exemplary courage and action which helped the Federal Police arrest the suspect". Uka was sentenced to Life and will be deported.

COVID-19 pandemic

Portions of the airport were closed in early 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Northwest Runway and Runway 18 West were closed on March 23 and re-purposed for parking unused aircraft. Terminal 2 was also closed, and all passenger operations were concentrated in Terminal 1. The Northwest Runway re-opened in July to handle summer tourist demand, while Runway 18 West remained closed.[23] With almost no passenger traffic in the spring months, Frankfurt's total passenger volume in 2020 fell to 18.8 million, the lowest figure recorded since 1984.[24]

Facilities

 
Terminal 1
 
Check-in concourse in Terminal 1
 
Terminal 2
 
Landside main hall of Terminal 2
 
Lufthansa First Class Terminal

Terminals

Frankfurt Airport has two large main passenger terminals (1 and 2) and a much smaller dedicated First Class Terminal which is operated and exclusively used by Lufthansa. As is the case at London–Heathrow, Tokyo–Narita, Toronto–Pearson and Chicago–O'Hare's future Global Terminal, terminal operations are grouped for airlines and airline alliances rather than into domestic and international routes.

Terminal 1

Terminal 1 is the older and larger one of the two passenger terminals. The landside is 420 metres long. It has been enlarged several times and is divided into concourses A, B, C and Z and has a capacity of approximately 50 million passengers per year. Terminal 1 is functionally divided into three levels, the departures level on the upper floor with check-in counters, the arrivals level with baggage claim areas on the ground floor and, underneath, a distribution floor with access to the regional station and underground and multilevel parking. Departures and arrivals levels each have separate street approaches. A bus station is located at arrivals level. Terminal 1 has a total of 103 gates, which include 54 gates equipped with jetways (25 in Concourse A, 18 in Concourse B, 11 in Concourse C). Concourse Z sits on top of Concourse A sharing the same jet bridges between both concourses. Flights to non-Schengen destinations depart from the Z gates and Schengen flights depart from the A gates.

Pier A was extended by 500 metres in 2000, and a link between Terminal 1 and Terminal 2, as well as the Hall C extension opened in 2008.[25]

On 10 October 2012, an 800-metre-long westward expansion of Terminal 1 called Pier A-Plus went into operation. It provides more stands for wide-body aircraft like the Airbus A380.[26]

Terminal 1 is primarily used by Lufthansa, its associated companies (Brussels Airlines, Eurowings, Swiss International Air Lines and Austrian Airlines) and its Star Alliance partners (e.g. Aegean Airlines, Air Canada, Air China, Air India, All Nippon Airways, Asiana Airlines, Croatia Airlines, Egyptair, Ethiopian Airlines, LOT Polish Airlines, Scandinavian Airlines, Singapore Airlines, South African Airways, TAP Air Portugal, Thai Airways International, Turkish Airlines and United Airlines).

Some airlines that are not part of the Lufthansa Group or Star Alliance also use Terminal 1. They include Air Malta, Bulgaria Air, Iran Air, Oman Air and Tunisair among others.

SkyTeam member airline Middle East Airlines uses Terminal 1 (Concourses B and C).

Terminal 2

Terminal 2, which has a capacity of 15 million passengers a year, was opened in 1994 and is divided into concourses D and E. A continuous concourse between Terminal 1C and 2D provides direct, but non-public access between the two terminals. It has eight gates with jetways and 34 apron stands, a total of 42 gates and is able to handle wide-body aircraft such as the Airbus A380.

Terminal 2 is primarily used by airlines of the oneworld (e.g. American Airlines, British Airways, Cathay Pacific, Finnair, Iberia, Japan Airlines, Qatar Airways, Royal Air Maroc, Royal Jordanian and S7 Airlines (suspended)) and SkyTeam alliances (e.g. Aeroflot (currently suspended), Air France, China Airlines, China Eastern Airlines, Czech Airlines, Delta Air Lines, KLM, Korean Air, Saudia, TAROM and Vietnam Airlines; SkyTeam member Middle East Airlines operates out of Terminal 1, in concourses B and C).

Terminal 2 is also used by airlines that do not belong to any of the three major airline alliances, including Air Moldova, Air Serbia, China Southern Airlines, Emirates, Kuwait Airways, LATAM Airlines, and Somon Air, among others.

Fraport announced in late 2022 that Terminal 2 will be closed for refurbishment in 2026 until at least 2029. All tennants are to be relocated into the then fully completed Terminal 3.[27]

Terminal overview

Terminal Concourse Schengen gates Non-Schengen gates Location
1 1A A1-A42, A50-A69 Terminal 1, western concourse, lower departure level
1Z Z11-Z25, Z50-Z69 Terminal 1, western concourse, upper departure level
1B B1-B19
(inner area)
B20-B63
(outer area)
Terminal 1, central concourse
1C C1 C2-C20 Terminal 1, eastern concourse
2 2D D21-D44
(lower departure level)
D1-D20/D50-D54
(upper departure level)
Terminal 2, western concourse
2E E21-E26
(lower departure level)
E2-E13
(upper departure level)
Terminal 2, eastern concourse

SkyLine

Passengers and visitors can change terminals with the people mover system SkyLine which has three stops in Terminal 1 (at gates AZ, B and C) as well as one in Terminal 2 for all gates. Some stops can only be used by passengers in or outside the Schengen zone which is achieved by separated cars and station entrances. The travel time between the terminals is 2 minutes with trains arriving every 2–3 minutes during the day. Each train has two cars, one airside (outside the Schengen area) and one landside (within the Schengen area). Most stations have a platform on each side of the train, so landside passengers can only step out onto the landside platform, and airside passengers can only step out onto the airside platform. Additionally there is regular bus service between the terminals.

Runways

Frankfurt Airport has four runways of which three are arranged parallel in east–west direction and one in north–south direction. In 2010 three runways (Runways North, South and West) handled 464,432 aircraft movements, which equated to 83 movements per hour. With the start of operation of the Northwest Runway in October 2011 the airport was predicted to be able to handle 126 movements per hour. It is predicted that aircraft movements will increase up to 700,000 in the year 2020. By using the fourth runway, Frankfurt Airport is able for the first time to handle simultaneous parallel landings, because the distance between the north and the north-west runways is 1,400 m (4,593 ft). Simultaneous parallel landings were not possible with the north and south runway pairing, because the separation distance did not meet the safety standards.[citation needed]

Direction
(Name)
Length × Width
in m (ft)
Surface Orientation Start of operation Use
07C/25C (Runway North) 4000 × 60 (13,123 × 197) Asphalt East-west 1936 Take-offs (landings allowed)
07R/25L (Runway South) 4000 × 45 (13,123 × 148) Asphalt East-west 1949 Take-offs and landings
18 (Runway West) 4000 × 45 (13,123 × 148) Concrete North-south 1984 Take-offs in southbound direction only
07L/25R (Runway Northwest) 2800 × 45 (9,240 × 148) Concrete East-west 2011 Landings only (not allowed for Airbus A380, Boeing 747, MD-11)

During normal operation the two outer parallel runways (07L/25R and 07R/25L) are used for landings and the central parallel runway (07C/25C) and the Runway West (18) for take-offs. The three parallel runways have two markings because they can be operated in two directions while the Runway West can only be used in one direction.

Future expansions

 
Airport map with planned and already constructed expansions

Terminal 3 (under construction)

In 2009, the German government decided to create third terminals for both Frankfurt Airport and Munich Airport in order to handle expected passenger flows of 90 million in Frankfurt by 2020 and 50 million in Munich by 2017. The new terminal is scheduled to be built by Fraport, south of the existing terminals on the grounds of the former Rhein-Main Air Base. The new Terminal 3 is to accommodate up to 25 million passengers and will feature 75 new aircraft positions when completely constructed. An extension of the SkyLine people mover system is planned to connect the new terminal to Terminals 1 and 2 and the airport train stations.

In August 2014, the city of Frankfurt granted building permission for the first phase of Terminal 3.[28] The groundbreaking for the new terminal took place on 5 October 2015. Its first phase, consisting of the main building and two of the planned four piers (concourses 3H and 3J), is planned to open by 2026 and will be able to handle 15 million additional passengers per year. Total costs are estimated at 3 billion euros.[29]

In 2017, Frankfurt Airport first indicated that the second-phase construction of the easternmost pier (concourse 3G) could be moved forward so that low-cost carriers can use this pier from 2021.[30] After approval by municipal authorities in 2018,[31] the piers will be constructed and used according to the following timetable:[32] Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Fraport postponed the opening of the new terminal to 2026 in March 2021.[33]

Concourse 3G (easternmost pier):

  • Construction of first twelve bus gates, reachable via shuttle buses from terminals 1/2, in use by 2021
  • Construction of additional twelve bus gates by 2023/2024
  • Construction of passenger jet bridges by 2025/2026

Check-in area, concourses 3H and 3J (central piers): Construction by 2023 including transport systems for visitors, passengers and luggage to the other terminals

  • Concourse 3H is planned for Schengen flights
  • Concourse 3J is planned for non-Schengen flights[34]

Concourse 3K (westernmost pier): Possible third-phase expansion depending on development of passenger numbers

Passenger Transport System

A new passenger transport system is planned for the connection of the new terminal 3 and the existing terminals 1 and 2. It will use a track which is separate from the existing SkyLine people mover but will allow for interchanges between them. It is scheduled to have four stops in the final stage near the airport's two railway stations, at Terminals 1C and 2DE as well as the new Terminal 3.[35]

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

Lufthansa and their Star Alliance partners account for the majority of all traffic at Frankfurt Airport.[36] The following airlines offer year-round and seasonal scheduled and charter flights at Frankfurt Airport:[37]

AirlinesDestinations
Aegean Airlines Athens, Thessaloniki
Seasonal: Heraklion,[38] Rhodes
Aer Lingus Dublin
Air Algérie Algiers
Seasonal: Oran
Air Astana Astana, Oral
Air Cairo Seasonal: Hurghada, Marsa Alam (begins 26 March 2023)[39]
Air Canada Calgary, Montreal–Trudeau, Toronto–Pearson
Seasonal: Vancouver
Air China Beijing–Capital, Changchun,[40] Chengdu–Shuangliu, Shanghai–Pudong, Shenzhen
Air Dolomiti[41] Florence, Innsbruck,[42] Kalmar, Linz, Milan–Linate,[43] Milan–Malpensa,[43] Turin, Verona
Air Europa Madrid
Air France Paris–Charles de Gaulle
Air India Delhi
Air Malta Malta
Air Moldova Chişinău
Air Serbia Belgrade
airBaltic Riga
All Nippon Airways Tokyo–Haneda
American Airlines Charlotte,[44] Dallas/Fort Worth
AnadoluJet Ankara, Istanbul–Sabiha Gökçen
Seasonal: Antalya[45]
Asiana Airlines Seoul–Incheon
Austrian Airlines Vienna
Azores Airlines Ponta Delgada
Bamboo Airways Hanoi,[46] Ho Chi Minh City[47]
British Airways London–City, London–Heathrow
Brussels Airlines Brussels
Bulgaria Air Sofia
Cathay Pacific Hong Kong
China Airlines Taipei–Taoyuan
China Eastern Airlines Hangzhou, Shanghai–Pudong[48]
China Southern Airlines Guangzhou
Condor[49] Cancún, Fuerteventura, Funchal, Giza (begins 30 March 2023),[50] Gran Canaria, Havana, Hefei,[51] Holguín, Hurghada, Jinan, Lanzarote, Los Angeles,[52][53] Mauritius, Montego Bay, New York–JFK,[52][53] Puerto Plata, Punta Cana, Santo Domingo–Las Américas, Seattle/Tacoma, Tbilisi,[54] Tenerife–South, Toronto–Pearson,[53] Varadero, Yerevan
Seasonal: Akureyri (begins 13 May 2023),[55] Alicante,[56] Anchorage, Antalya (resumes 12 May 2023),[57] Baltimore, Barbados, Boston,[52] Cape Town,[58] Chania, Corfu, Dubrovnik,[59] Edmonton (begins 26 May 2023),[60] Egilsstaðir (begins 16 May 2023),[61] Fairbanks, Faro,[56] Grenada, Halifax, Heraklion, Ibiza, Jerez de la Frontera, Johannesburg–O. R. Tambo,[62] Kalamata, Kavala, Kos, La Palma, Lamezia Terme, Larnaca,[63] Las Vegas, Mahé, Málaga, Malé, Minneapolis/St. Paul, Mombasa, Nice, Olbia, Palma de Mallorca, Phoenix–Sky Harbor, Portland (OR), Preveza/Lefkada, Rijeka,[58] Samos, San Francisco,[52] Santorini, Split, Tobago, Vancouver, Whitehorse, Zakynthos, Zanzibar
Seasonal charter: Abu Dhabi[64]
Corendon Airlines Seasonal: Antalya,[65] İzmir,[65] Kayseri[65]
Croatia Airlines Dubrovnik, Split, Zagreb
Seasonal: Pula, Zadar
Delta Air Lines Atlanta, Detroit,[66] New York–JFK[67]
EgyptAir Cairo
El Al Tel Aviv
Emirates Dubai–International
Ethiopian Airlines Addis Ababa
Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi
European Air Charter Seasonal charter: Burgas,[68] Varna[69]
Eurowings Pristina
Eurowings Discover Fort Myers, Fuerteventura, Funchal,[70] Gran Canaria, Hurghada, Lanzarote, Marrakesh, Marsa Alam, Panama City–Tocumen, Orlando,[71] Philadelphia,[71] Tampa,[72] Tenerife–South, Windhoek–Hosea Kutako[73]
Seasonal: Agadir (begins 29 March 2023),[74][75] Anchorage,[70] Antalya, Barbados, Bari,[70] Bodrum,[76] Calgary, Cancún,[70] Chania,[76] Corfu,[76] Djerba,[76] Dubrovnik (begins 26 March 2023),[77] Halifax, Heraklion,[76] Ibiza (begins 26 March 2023),[77] Jerez de la Frontera, Kavala,[76] Kos,[76] Lamezia Terme,[70] Las Vegas, Mauritius, Menorca (begins 28 April 2023),[77] Mombasa, Monastir (begins 22 May 2023),[78] Montpellier (begins 23 June 2023),[78] Mykonos (begins 5 May 2023),[77] Nelspruit,[79] Palma de Mallorca, Porto Santo,[76] Preveza/Lefkada (begins 20 June 2023),[80] Punta Cana, Rhodes, Santorini (begins 1 April 2023),[77] Salt Lake City, Skiathos (begins 2 May 2023),[80] Toronto–Pearson,[81] Vancouver (ends 25 March 2023),[82] Varna,[76] Victoria Falls,[83] Zanzibar, Zakynthos (begins 3 May 2023)[80]
Seasonal charter: La Romana[84]
Finnair Helsinki
Gulf Air Bahrain
HiSky Chișinău
Iberia Madrid
Icelandair Reykjavík–Keflavík
Iran Air Tehran–Imam Khomeini
Iraqi Airways Baghdad, Sulaymaniyah
ITA Airways Milan–Linate, Rome–Fiumicino (suspended)[85]
Japan Airlines Tokyo–Narita
KLM Amsterdam
Korean Air Seoul–Incheon
Kuwait Airways Kuwait City
LATAM Brasil São Paulo–Guarulhos
LILLIAIR Klagenfurt (begins 23 April 2023)[86]
LOT Polish Airlines Warsaw–Chopin
Lufthansa Abuja, Addis Ababa, Agadir, Algiers, Alicante, Almaty, Amman–Queen Alia, Amsterdam, Astana, Athens, Atlanta, Austin, Bahrain, Baku, Bangalore, Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi, Barcelona, Bari, Basel/Mulhouse, Beijing–Capital, Beirut, Belfast–City (begins 23 April 2023),[87] Belgrade, Bergen, Berlin, Bilbao, Billund, Birmingham, Bogotá, Bologna, Bordeaux, Boston, Bremen, Bristol, Brussels, Bucharest, Budapest, Buenos Aires–Ezeiza, Cairo, Cancún, Cape Town, Casablanca, Catania, Chennai, Chicago–O'Hare, Chișinău, Cluj-Napoca, Copenhagen, Dallas/Fort Worth, Dammam, Delhi, Denver, Detroit, Dresden, Dubai–International, Dublin, Düsseldorf, Edinburgh, Erbil, Faro, Friedrichshafen, Funchal, Gdańsk, Geneva, Glasgow, Gothenburg, Graz, Hamburg, Hanover, Helsinki, Hong Kong, Houston–Intercontinental, Istanbul, Johannesburg–O. R. Tambo, Katowice, Kraków, Kuwait City, Kyiv–Boryspil (suspended), Lagos, Larnaca, Lisbon, Liverpool,[88] Ljubljana, London–City, London–Gatwick (resumes 23 April 2023),[89] London–Heathrow, Los Angeles, Luanda, Luxembourg, Lviv, Lyon, Madrid, Malabo, Málaga, Malé, Malta, Manchester, Marseille, Mexico City, Miami, Milan–Linate, Milan–Malpensa, Mombasa, Moscow–Domodedovo (suspended),[90] Mumbai, Munich, Münster/Osnabrück, Muscat, Nagoya–Centrair, Nairobi–Jomo Kenyatta, Nanjing, Nantes, Naples, Newark, Newcastle upon Tyne, New York–JFK, Nice, Nuremberg, Orlando (resumes 29 October 2023),[71] Oslo, Palermo, Palma de Mallorca, Pamplona, Paris–Charles de Gaulle, Philadelphia, Port Harcourt, Porto, Poznań, Prague, Qingdao, Rennes,[91] Reykjavík–Keflavík, Riga, Riyadh, Rome–Fiumicino, Rzeszów, Saint Petersburg (suspended),[90] Salzburg, San Francisco, San José de Costa Rica–Juan Santamaría, São Paulo–Guarulhos, Sarajevo, Seattle/Tacoma, Seoul–Incheon, Seville, Skopje (begins 23 April 2023),[92] Shanghai–Pudong, Shenyang, Singapore, Sofia, St. Louis,[91] Stavanger,[93] Stockholm–Arlanda, Strasbourg, Stuttgart, Sylt, Tallinn, Tehran–Imam Khomeini, Tel Aviv, Thessaloniki, Timișoara, Tirana, Tokyo–Haneda, Toronto–Pearson,[81] Toulouse, Trieste, Tunis, Turin, Valencia, Vancouver (resumes 26 March 2023),[94] Venice, Vienna, Vilnius, Warsaw–Chopin, Washington–Dulles, Wrocław, Yerevan, Zagreb, Zanzibar, Zürich
Seasonal: Asturias (begins 23 April 2023),[95] Bastia, Biarritz (begins 29 April 2023),[95] Cagliari, Chania, Cork, Dubrovnik, Heraklion, Heringsdorf, Ibiza, Ivalo, Kos, Kuusamo, Mauritius, Menorca, Montreal–Trudeau, Mykonos, Olbia, Paphos, Ponta Delgada, Pula, Rijeka, Rhodes, Santiago de Compostela, Santorini, Split, Tivat, Tromsø, Zadar
MIAT Mongolian Airlines Ulaanbaatar
Middle East Airlines Beirut
Nouvelair Seasonal: Djerba, Monastir
Oman Air Muscat
Pegasus Airlines Ankara, Antalya, Istanbul–Sabiha Gökçen
Seasonal: İzmir (begins 1 April 2023)[96]
Qatar Airways Doha
Royal Air Maroc Casablanca, Nador
Royal Jordanian Amman–Queen Alia
Saudia Jeddah, Riyadh
Seasonal: Medina[citation needed]
Scandinavian Airlines Copenhagen, Oslo, Stockholm–Arlanda
Singapore Airlines New York–JFK, Singapore
SriLankan Airlines Colombo–Bandaranaike
SunExpressAdana, Ankara, Antalya, Dalaman, Gazipaşa, İzmir
Seasonal: Diyarbakır, Malatya, Ordu–Giresun, Samsun
Swiss International Air Lines Geneva, Zürich
TAP Air Portugal Lisbon
TAROM Bucharest
Thai Airways International Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi
TUI fly Deutschland Boa Vista, Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria, Hurghada, Lanzarote, Marsa Alam, Sal, Tenerife–South
Seasonal: Corfu, Dalaman, Faro, Funchal, Heraklion, Jerez de la Frontera, Kos, Larnaca, Menorca, Palma de Mallorca, Patras, Rhodes
Tunisair Djerba, Monastir, Tunis
Turkish Airlines Istanbul
Seasonal: Adana, Ankara, Antalya, Elazığ, Gaziantep, Hatay,[97] İzmir, Kayseri, Ordu–Giresun
Turkmenistan Airlines Ashgabat
Ukraine International Airlines Kyiv–Boryspil (suspended)
United Airlines Chicago–O'Hare, Denver, Houston–Intercontinental, Newark, San Francisco, Washington–Dulles
Uzbekistan Airways Tashkent
Vietnam Airlines Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City
Vistara Delhi

Cargo

AirlinesDestinations
Aerologic[98] Bahrain, Singapore
Air Canada Cargo[99] Toronto–Pearson
Air China Cargo[100] Beijing–Capital, Shanghai–Pudong
AirBridgeCargo[101] Chicago–O'Hare, Krasnoyarsk, Milan–Malpensa
ANA Cargo[102] Tokyo–Narita
Asiana Cargo[103] Almaty, London-Stansted, Seoul–Incheon
Cathay Pacific Cargo[104] Hong Kong
China Airlines Cargo[105] Taipei–Taoyuan
China Cargo Airlines[106] Shanghai–Pudong
China Southern Cargo[107] Guangzhou
Eleron Airlines[108] Lviv[citation needed]
Emirates SkyCargo[109] Dubai–Al Maktoum, Dubai–International, Maastricht/Aachen, Mexico City
Etihad Cargo[110] Abu Dhabi
FedEx Express[111] Memphis, Paris–Charles de Gaulle
Korean Air Cargo[112] Seoul–Incheon, Tel Aviv, Vienna
LATAM Cargo Brasil[113] São Paulo–Guarulhos
LATAM Cargo Chile[113] Campinas–Viracopos
Lufthansa Cargo[114] Aguadilla, Almaty, Amsterdam, Atlanta, Bahrain, Bangalore, Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi, Beijing–Capital, Birmingham,[115] Bogotá, Boston, Buenos Aires, Cairo, Campinas, Chennai, Chicago–O'Hare, Chongqing, Cologne/Bonn, Curitiba, Dakar–Senghor, Dallas/Fort Worth, Delhi, Dhaka, Dublin,[116] Guangzhou, Hong Kong, Houston, Hyderabad, Istanbul, Jakarta–Soekarno–Hatta, Jeddah, Johannesburg–O. R. Tambo, Katowice,[117] Kaunas, London-Heathrow,[115] Los Angeles, Manaus, Mexico City, Miami, Moscow–Sheremetyevo, Mumbai, Nairobi, New York–JFK, Novosibirsk, Osaka–Kansai, Quito, Rio de Janeiro–Galeão, Riyadh, Seoul–Incheon, Shanghai–Pudong, Shannon, Sharjah, Shenyang, Shenzhen, Tehran–Imam Khomeini, Tel Aviv, Tokyo–Narita, Toronto–Pearson
Qatar Airways Cargo[118] Doha
Royal Air Maroc Cargo[119] Casablanca
Saudia Cargo[120] Dammam, Riyadh
SF Airlines[121] Wuhan
Turkish Cargo[122] Istanbul

Other facilities

CargoCity

Frankfurt Airport is the second-largest multimodal transport airport in Europe and has several logistics facilities. These facilities are grouped at two areas at the airport ground: In the north (CargoCity Nord) and in the south (CargoCity Süd). In 2010 it was the second-busiest airport by cargo traffic in Europe after Paris–Charles de Gaulle Airport, handling 2,231,348 metric tonnes of loaded and unloaded freight.[citation needed] CargoCity is the name of the two large main areas featuring most of the airport's freight handling facilities:

Airport City

The airport ground and the surrounding area of Frankfurt Airport offer a large variety of on-airport businesses as well as airport-related businesses, including office space, hotels, shopping areas, conference rooms and car parks. The development of an airport city has significantly accelerated in recent years.

Frankfurt Airport Centres

 
Frankfurt Airport Centre 1

The Frankfurt Airport Centre 1 (FAC 1) near Terminal 1 offers office and conference facilities, the newer FAC 2 is located within Terminal 2 and offers office space for airlines.

Airport City Mall

The Airport City Mall is located on the landside of Terminal 1, departure hall B. It offers national and international retailers and label stores, a supermarket and several restaurants.

The Squaire

 
The Squaire

The Squaire is an office building with a total floor area of 140,000 m2 (1,506,900 sq ft). It is directly connected to Terminal 1 through a connecting corridor for pedestrians. The accounting firm KPMG, Lufthansa and two Hilton Hotels (Hilton Garden Inn Frankfurt Airport [123] with 334 rooms and Hilton Frankfurt Airport with 249 rooms) occupy space in The Squaire.

Main Airport Centre

The Main Airport Centre, named after the Main river, is an office building with ten floors and about 51,000 m2 (549,000 sq ft) of office space. It is located at the edge of the Frankfurt City Forest near Terminal 2.

Sheraton Hotel & Conference Centre

Sheraton Hotels and Resorts offers 1,008 guest rooms adjacent to Terminal 1 and a conference centre for up to 200 delegates.

Gateway Gardens

Gateway Gardens is a former housing area for the US Air Force personnel based at the Rhein-Main Air Base, close to Terminal 2. Like the air base, the housing area was closed in 2005. Since then the area is being developed into a business location for airport-related companies. Lufthansa moved its airline catering subsidiary LSG Sky Chefs to Gateway Gardens, Condor and SunExpress are headquartered here. DB Schenker, the logistics company of Deutsche Bahn, have built a 66 m (217 ft) high-rise building.

In December 2019, local trains were re-routed to run via Gateway Gardens station. The new stop for S-Bahn trains is located between Frankfurt Airport Regional Station and Frankfurt-Stadion station. The journey time will increase by 4 minutes but Deutsche Bahn have stated that they will use new trains (ET423) which will be faster and have more capacity.[124]

Further users

 
Lufthansa Aviation Centre
  • Fraport's facilities are on the property of Frankfurt Airport.[125] Its head office building is by Gate 3.[126] The newly constructed[127] headquarters were inaugurated there in 2012.[128] The Fraport Driving School (Fraport Fahrschule) is in Building 501 of CargoCity South (CargoCity Süd).[129][130]
  • Lufthansa's main building, where the board of directors is seated, is called Lufthansa Aviation Centre (LAC).[131] Lufthansa operates the Lufthansa Aviation Center (LAC), Building 366 at Frankfurt Airport.[132][133] Several company departments, including Corporate Communications,[134] Investor Relations,[135] and Media Relations,[136] are based at the LAC. Lufthansa also uses several other buildings in the area, including the Lufthansa Flight Training Center for flight training operations and the Lufthansa Basis BG2[137] as a central base and for crew briefing. As of 2011 Lufthansa Cargo has been headquartered in Building 451 of the Frankfurt Airport area.[138] As of 2012 Lufthansa Cargo is located at Gate 25 in the CargoCity Nord area, Lufthansa Technik is located at Gate 23 and in the CargoCity Süd area.[139]
  • Star Alliance, an airline alliance, has its headquarters at the Frankfurt Airport Centre 1 (FAC 1) adjacent to Terminal 1.[140]
  • Airmail Centre Frankfurt, a joint venture of Lufthansa Cargo, Fraport, and Deutsche Post for airmail transport, has its head office in Building 189, between Terminals 1 and 2.[141]
  • Aero Lloyd previously had its head office in Building 182.[142][143]

Statistics

Annual traffic

Annual passenger traffic at FRA airport. See Wikidata query.
Annual Passenger Traffic[144]
Year Passengers % Change
2000 49,360,620  
2001 48,559,980   -1.6%
2002 48,450,356   -0.2%
2003 48,351,664   -0.2%
2004 51,098,271   5.6%
2005 52,219,412   2.2%
2006 52,810,683   1.1%
2007 54,161,856   2.5%
2008 53,467,450   -1.3%
2009 50,932,840   -4.3%
2010 53,009,221   4%
2011 56,436,255   6.4%
2012 57,520,001   2%
2013 58,036,948   1%
2014 59,570,000   2.6%
2015 61,032,022   2.4%
2016 60,792,308   -0.4%
2017 64,500,386   6.1%
2018 69,514,414   7.8%
2019 70,560,987   1.5%
2020 18,768,601   -73.4%
2021 24,814,921   32.2%

Route statistics

Busiest routes at Frankfurt Airport (2020)[145]
Rank Destination Departing passengers Operating airlines
1 Berlin 290,133 Lufthansa
2 Hamburg 205,584 Lufthansa
3 London–Heathrow 194,661 British Airways, Lufthansa
4 Munich 173,532 Lufthansa
5 Vienna 158,685 Austrian Airlines, Lufthansa
6 Dubai–International 155,056 Emirates, Lufthansa
7 Madrid 147,790 Air Europa, Iberia, Lufthansa
8 Lisbon 140,438 Lufthansa, TAP Air Portugal
9 Istanbul 136,752 Lufthansa, Onur Air, Turkish Airlines
10 Stockholm–Arlanda 132,013 Lufthansa, Scandinavian Airlines
Busiest domestic routes at Frankfurt Airport (2020)[145]
Rank Destination Departing passengers Operating airlines
1 Berlin 290,133 Lufthansa
2 Hamburg 205,584 Lufthansa
3 Munich 173,532 Lufthansa
4 Hannover 44,805 Lufthansa
5 Bremen 41,421 Lufthansa
Busiest European routes at Frankfurt Airport (2020)[145]
Rank Destination Departing passengers Operating airlines
1 London–Heathrow 194,661 British Airways, Lufthansa
2 Vienna 158,685 Austrian Airlines, Lufthansa
3 Madrid 147,790 Air Europa, Iberia, Lufthansa
4 Lisbon 140,438 Lufthansa, TAP Air Portugal
5 Istanbul 136,752 Lufthansa, Onur Air, Turkish Airlines
Busiest intercontinental routes at Frankfurt Airport (2020)[145]
Rank Destination Departing passengers Operating airlines
1 Dubai–International 155,056 Emirates, Lufthansa
2 Toronto–Pearson 116,845 Air Canada, Condor, Lufthansa
3 São Paulo–Guarulhos 111,924 LATAM Brasil, Lufthansa
4 Washington–Dulles 91,284 Lufthansa, United Airlines
5 Chicago–O'Hare 89,246 Lufthansa, United Airlines
6 Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi 87,021 Lufthansa, Thai Airways International
7 Doha 83,036 Qatar Airways
8 Newark 78,046 Lufthansa, United Airlines
9 Cairo 73,632 EgyptAir, Lufthansa
10 Seoul–Incheon 73,110 Asiana Airlines, Korean Air, Lufthansa

Ground transport

Frankfurt Airport can easily be accessed by car, taxi, train or bus as it features an extensive transport network. There are two railway stations at the airport: one for suburban/regional trains and one for long-distance trains.

Rail

Regional station

 
Regional station

Frankfurt Airport regional station (Frankfurt Flughafen Regionalbahnhof) at Terminal 1, concourse B, provides access to the S-Bahn commuter rail lines S8 and S9. Each of these lines have trains departing every 15 minutes during daytime to Hanau Central Station eastwards via Frankfurt Central Station and Offenbach East Station or Wiesbaden Central Station westwards via Rüsselsheim or Mainz Central Station (line S8) or Mainz-Kastel Station (line S9).

The journey time to Frankfurt Central Station is 10–12 minutes.[146]

Regional Express (RE) trains to Saarbrücken, Koblenz or Würzburg call at this station. These trains provide less frequent but additional connections between Frankfurt Airport and the Central Station.[146]

Long-distance station

 
Long-distance station

Frankfurt Airport long-distance station (Frankfurt Flughafen Fernbahnhof) was opened in 1999. The station is squeezed in between the motorway A 3 and the four-lane Bundesstraße B43, linked to Terminal 1 by a connecting corridor for pedestrians that bridges the Autobahn. It is the end point of the newly built Cologne–Frankfurt high-speed rail line, which links southern Germany to the Rhine-Ruhr metropolitan area, the Netherlands and Belgium via Cologne at speeds up to 300 km/h (190 mph). About 10 trains per hour depart in all directions.[146]

Deutsche Bahn operates the AIRail Service in conjunction with Lufthansa, American Airlines and Emirates. The service operates to the central stations of Bonn, Cologne, Düsseldorf, Freiburg, Karlsruhe, Leipzig, Hamburg, Hannover, Mannheim, Munich, Nuremberg, Stuttgart and to Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe.[147]

Car

Frankfurt Airport is located in the Frankfurt City Forest and directly connected to an Autobahn intersection called Frankfurter Kreuz where the A3 and A5 meet. It takes a 10–15 minutes by car or taxi to get to Frankfurt Central Station or the centre of the city.[148]

Passengers driving their own cars can park in multilevel parking garages (mostly underground) along the terminals. A long term holiday parking lot is located south of the runways and connected by shuttle bus to the terminals.

Bicycle

Terminal 1 and Terminal 2 can be reached by bicycle because one of the roads that run north of the airport passing the terminals can legally be used by bicycle. The airport authority has confirmed that the newly built terminal 3 will also be reachable by bicycle.

Bus and coaches

Various transport companies provide bus services to the airport from the surrounding areas as well as by coach to long-distance destinations.[149]

Previously All Nippon Airways operated a bus service to Düsseldorf exclusively for ANA customers; that way Düsseldorf passengers would be transported to Frankfurt Airport to board their ANA flights.[150] In 2014 ANA established a separate flight from Tokyo to Düsseldorf,[151] causing the bus services to end.[152]

Ground transport statistics

In 2006, 29.5% of the 12,299,192 passengers whose air travel originated in Frankfurt came by private car, 27.9% came by rail, 20.4% by taxi, 11.1% parked their car at the airport for the duration of their trip, 5.3% came by bus, and 4.6% arrived with a rental car.[153]

Incidents and accidents

  • On 4 January 1938, a Deutsche Lufthansa Junkers Ju-52 crashed in a snowstorm on approach to FRA due to icing. All three crew and three passengers were killed.[154]
  • On 29 September 1938, a Luftwaffe Junkers Ju-52 crashed due to a preliminary ground contact caused by a wrong estimation of height. One occupant of the four on board were killed.[155]
  • On 22 March 1952, a KLM Royal Dutch Airlines Douglas DC-6 on a return flight from Johannesburg to Amsterdam crashed 7 km NE of FRA into a forest. Nine crew and 36 passengers of the 47 total on board perished.[156]
  • On 14 October 1953, a Sabena Convair CV-240 crashed near Kelstenbach shortly after takeoff following loss of engine power 1 km N of FRA. All four crew and 40 passengers died.[157]
  • On 21 January 1967, an Air Ferry Douglas C-54, a cargo flight, struck trees some 2700 metres short of the runway while on a night-time instrument landing system approach. Both occupants were killed.[158]
  • On 24 November 1972, an Air Canada McDonnell Douglas DC-8 bound for Montreal, Canada was hijacked on the ground at FRA and a hijacker demanded a release of prisoners. The plane was stormed and the hijacker arrested. One person died.[159]
  • On 22 May 1983, during an air show at Rhein-Main Air Base, a Canadian RCAF Lockheed F-104 Starfighter crashed into a nearby road, hitting a car and killing all passengers, a vicar's family of five. The pilot was able to eject.
  • On 19 June 1985, a bomb cloaked in a canvas bag was detonated approx at 14:42 in the afternoon in Hall B of the Rhein Main Frankfurt Airport, decimating that section of the airport. The blast resulted in three deaths and 32 injuries, of which four were considered serious.[160]
  • In May 1999, a violent illegal immigrant was being deported by police, from Frankfurt to Cairo. He was restrained before the flight took off and when an officer attempted to talk to him later, he found that he was no longer alive.[161][162]
  • In September 2007, German authorities arrested three suspected terrorists for plotting a "massive" terror attack, which posed "an imminent threat" to Frankfurt Airport and the US Air Force base in Ramstein.[163]
  • On 2 March 2011, a gunman opened fire on a bus carrying US Air Force personnel at Frankfurt Airport, killing two and wounding two others.[164]
  • On 11 June 2018, Lufthansa Flight 426, an Airbus A340, preparing for a flight to Philadelphia International Airport sustained damage on pushback from the gate, the tow tug caught fire and the aircraft sustained damage to the nose and cockpit section. Ten airport staff, consisting of ground crew and emergency responders, suffered minor injuries as a result of smoke inhalation. The aircraft was written off.[165]

In media

Frankfurt Airport is featured in the Discovery Channel series X-Ray Mega Airport (also known as Inside Frankfurt Airport).[166]

Jinder Mahal pinned R-Truth at the Frankfurt Airport for the 24/7 Championship. This title change was shown on WWE.com and WWE's official social media accounts.[167]

See also

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External links

  •   Frankfurt Airport travel guide from Wikivoyage
  •   Media related to Frankfurt Airport at Wikimedia Commons
  • Official website
  • Current weather for EDDF at NOAA/NWS
  • Accident history for FRA at Aviation Safety Network

frankfurt, airport, other, uses, disambiguation, iata, icao, eddf, german, flughafen, frankfurt, main, ˈfluːkhaːfn, ˈfʁaŋkfʊʁt, ˈmaɪn, also, known, rhein, main, flughafen, major, international, airport, located, frankfurt, fifth, largest, city, germany, world,. For other uses see Frankfurt Airport disambiguation Frankfurt Airport IATA FRA ICAO EDDF German Flughafen Frankfurt Main ˈfluːkhaːfn ˈfʁaŋkfʊʁt ˈmaɪn also known as Rhein Main Flughafen is a major international airport located in Frankfurt the fifth largest city of Germany and one of the world s leading financial centres It is operated by Fraport and serves as the main hub for Lufthansa including Lufthansa CityLine and Lufthansa Cargo as well as Condor and AeroLogic The airport covers an area of 2 300 hectares 5 683 acres of land 4 and features two passenger terminals with capacity for approximately 65 million passengers per year four runways and extensive logistics and maintenance facilities Frankfurt AirportFlughafen Frankfurt MainIATA FRAICAO EDDFWMO 10637SummaryAirport typePublicOwner OperatorFraportServesFrankfurt Rhine MainLocationNear Kelsterbach Frankfurt am Main HesseOpened8 July 1936 86 years ago 1936 07 08 Hub forAeroLogicLufthansaLufthansa CityLineLufthansa CargoFocus city forCondorEurowingsEurowings DiscoverTUI fly DeutschlandElevation AMSL364 ft 111 mCoordinates50 02 00 N 008 34 14 E 50 03333 N 8 57056 E 50 03333 8 57056 Coordinates 50 02 00 N 008 34 14 E 50 03333 N 8 57056 E 50 03333 8 57056Websitefrankfurt airport comMapsFRALocation within GermanyShow map of GermanyFRAFRA Europe Show map of EuropeRunwaysDirection Length Surfacem ft07L 25RA 2 800 9 240 Concrete07C 25C 4 000 13 123 Asphalt07R 25L 4 000 13 123 Asphalt18B 4 000 13 123 ConcreteStatistics 2020 Passengers18 770 99Cargo t 1 952 628Aircraft movements212 334Economic impact 2016 22 3 billion 1 Sources 2 A used for landings onlyB used for take offs in one direction only 3 Frankfurt Airport is the busiest airport by passenger traffic in Germany as well as the 4th busiest in Europe after London Heathrow Paris Charles de Gaulle and Amsterdam Airport Schiphol The airport is also the 13th busiest worldwide by total number of passengers in 2016 5 with 60 786 million passengers using the airport in 2016 In 2017 Frankfurt Airport handled 64 5 million passengers and nearly 70 million in 2018 It also had a freight throughput of 2 076 million metric tonnes in 2015 and is the busiest airport in Europe by cargo traffic As of summer 2017 Frankfurt Airport serves more than 300 destinations in 5 continents making it the airport with the most direct routes in the world 6 7 The southern side of the airport ground was home to the Rhein Main Air Base which was a major air base for the United States from 1947 until 2005 when the air base was closed and the property was acquired by Fraport now occupied by Terminal 3 The airport celebrated its 80th anniversary in July 2016 8 Contents 1 Location 2 History 2 1 First airport 2 2 Second airport 2 2 1 World War II 2 2 2 Berlin Airlift 2 2 3 Growth of the airport 2 2 4 The new main terminal 2 2 5 The third runway 2 2 6 Terminal 2 and the second railway station 2 2 7 Closure of the Rhein Main Air Base 2 2 8 The Airbus A380 and The Squaire 2 2 9 The fourth runway 2 2 10 Developments since 2011 2 2 11 2011 shooting 2 2 12 COVID 19 pandemic 3 Facilities 3 1 Terminals 3 1 1 Terminal 1 3 1 2 Terminal 2 3 1 3 Terminal overview 3 2 SkyLine 3 3 Runways 3 4 Future expansions 3 4 1 Terminal 3 under construction 3 4 2 Passenger Transport System 4 Airlines and destinations 4 1 Passenger 4 2 Cargo 5 Other facilities 5 1 CargoCity 5 2 Airport City 5 2 1 Frankfurt Airport Centres 5 2 2 Airport City Mall 5 2 3 The Squaire 5 2 4 Main Airport Centre 5 2 5 Sheraton Hotel amp Conference Centre 5 2 6 Gateway Gardens 5 3 Further users 6 Statistics 6 1 Annual traffic 6 2 Route statistics 7 Ground transport 7 1 Rail 7 1 1 Regional station 7 1 2 Long distance station 7 2 Car 7 3 Bicycle 7 4 Bus and coaches 7 5 Ground transport statistics 8 Incidents and accidents 9 In media 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksLocation EditFrankfurt Airport lies 12 km 7 5 mi southwest of central Frankfurt 9 near the Autobahn intersection Frankfurter Kreuz where two of the most heavily used motorways in Europe A3 and A5 meet The airport grounds which form a city district of Frankfurt named Frankfurt Flughafen are surrounded by the Frankfurt City Forest The southern portion of the airport grounds extend partially into the cities of Russelsheim am Main and Morfelden Walldorf and a western portion of the grounds lie within the city of Kelsterbach The airport is centrally located in the Frankfurt Rhine Main region Germany s third largest metropolitan region which itself has a central location in the densely populated region of the west central European megalopolis Thereby along with a strong rail and motorway connection the airport serves as a major transport node for the greater region less than two hours by ground to Cologne the Ruhr Area and Stuttgart History EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message First airport Edit On 16 November 1909 the world s first airline was founded in Frankfurt am Main The Deutsche Luftschiffahrts Aktiengesellschaft DELAG DELAG then built the first airport in Frankfurt called Airship Base at Rebstock which was located in Bockenheim in the western part of the city and was primarily used for airships in the beginning It opened in 1912 and was extended after World War I but in 1924 an expert s report already questioned the possibility of further expansions at this location With the foundation of Deutsche Luft Hansa in 1926 a rapid boom of civilian air travel started and soon the airship base became too small to handle the demand Plans for a new and larger airport located in the Frankfurt City Forest south west of Schwanheim were approved in 1930 but were not realized due to the Great Depression After the Machtergreifung in 1933 the government revived the plans and started the construction of the new airport Second airport Edit Frankfurt Airport in 1936 with one Ju 86 two Ju 52 3ms and one Fw 200 of Deutsche Lufthansa A two storey station building with a six storey tower originated in 1935 on the northern part of the airport as well as other operating and outbuildings for maintenance and storage of aircraft The approximately 100 hectares runway received a grass cover The official opening of the new Flug und Luftschiffhafen Rhein Main took place on 8 July 1936 The first plane that landed was a Ju 52 3m Six days later on 14 July 1936 LZ 127 Graf Zeppelinlanded at the airport In 1936 800 tons of cargo and 58 000 passengers were transported and in 1937 these figures increased to 70 000 passengers and 966 tons of cargo In the coming years the new airport was the home base for the two largest German airships LZ 127 Graf Zeppelinand LZ 129 Hindenburg In 1938 Frankfurt was a central distribution point for the transport of airmail to North America On 6 May 1937 the Hindenburg flying from Frankfurt to New York exploded shortly before it was scheduled to dock at Lakehurst 36 people died The accident marked the end of scheduled airship traffic and the end of the airship era World War II Edit After the beginning of World War II in 1939 all foreign airlines left the airport and control of air traffic was transferred to the Luftwaffe The airships were dismantled and their huge hangars demolished on 6 May 1940 during conversion of the base to military use Luftwaffe engineers subsequently extended the single runway and erected hangars and other facilities for German military aircraft On 9 May 1940 the first bombers took off to attack France From August to November 1944 a concentration camp was established in Walldorf close to the airport site where Jewish female prisoners were forced to work for the airport The Allies of World War II destroyed the runway system with airstrikes in 1944 and the Wehrmacht blew up buildings and fuel depots in 1945 shortly before the US Army took control of the airport on 25 March 1945 After the German Instrument of Surrender the war in Europe ended and the US Army started to build a new temporary runway at Frankfurt Airport The southern part of the airport ground was occupied to build the Rhein Main Air Base as an Air Force Base for the United States Air Forces in Europe Berlin Airlift Edit Rhein Main Air Base during the Berlin Airlift In 1948 the Soviet Union blocked the Western Allies rail and road access to the sectors of West Berlin under Allied control Their aim was to force the western powers to allow the Soviet zone to start supplying Berlin with food and fuel thereby giving the Soviets practical control over the entire city In response the Western Allies organised the Berlin Airlift to carry supplies via air to the people in West Berlin The airports in Frankfurt Hamburg and Hannover were the primary bases for Allied aircraft The heavy use of these so called Raisin Bombers caused damage to the runway in Frankfurt and forced the US Army to build a second parallel runway The airlift ended in September 1949 after the Soviet Union ended their blockade Growth of the airport Edit Civil air traffic at Frankfurt Airport in 1951 An Iran Air Boeing 707 320B at Frankfurt Airport in 1970 In 1951 restrictions for German air travellers were lifted and civil air traffic started to grow again In 1952 Frankfurt Airport handled more than 400 000 passengers a year later it was more than half a million About 100 to 120 aeroplanes took off from and landed in Frankfurt daily In 1955 Lufthansa resumed flights to and from Frankfurt and in the same year the Federal Republic of Germany gained its air sovereignty back from the Allies In 1957 the northern runway was extended first to 3 000 m 9 843 ft and then to 3 900 m 12 795 ft to make it compatible with jet aircraft The airport did not emerge as a major international airline hub until 1958 when a new passenger terminal called Empfangsanlage Ost Terminal East literally Arrival Facility East opened in the north east corner of the airport site Only four years later it was clear that the terminal was already too small for the demand In 1961 Frankfurt already had 2 2 million passengers and 81 000 take offs and landings making it the second busiest airport in Europe behind Heathrow Airport London In 1962 it was decided to build an even larger terminal with a capacity of 30 million passengers per year Work on this terminal began in 1965 The southern runway was extended to 3 750 m 12 303 ft in 1964 In 1970 a new hangar was inaugurated this accommodated six jet aircraft and was the world s largest hangar at the time The new main terminal Edit The new terminal called Terminal Mitte Central Terminal today known as Terminal 1 is divided into three concourses A B and C with 56 gates and an electric baggage handling system Everything opened to the public on 14 March 1972 It was assumed that the terminal capacity would be sufficient for the next 30 years Along with the new terminal a railway station Frankfurt Airport station was opened the first airport railway station in the Federal Republic of Germany A few days later the old Empfangsanlage Ost was closed The third runway Edit Planning for a third runway called Startbahn 18 West began in 1973 This project spawned massive protests by residents and environmentalists The main points of conflict were increasing noise and pollution and the cutting down of protected trees in the Frankfurt City Forest While the protests and related lawsuits were unsuccessful in preventing construction the Startbahn West protests were one of the major crystallisation points for the German environmental movement of the 1980s The protests even continued after the runway had been opened in 1984 and in 1987 two police officers were killed by a gunman This incident ended the Startbahn West protests for good Because of its orientation in the north south direction in contrast to the other east west runways the use of the third runway is limited The Startbahn West can only be used for takeoffs to the south to avoid interference with air traffic on the other runways Owing to this restriction the runway must be partially or fully closed when northward winds are too strong Terminal 2 and the second railway station Edit The apron of Terminal 2 In 1990 work on a new terminal Terminal 2 began because it was anticipated that Terminal Mitte would reach its capacity limit sooner than expected The new terminal divided into concourses D and E was built to the east of the existing terminal where once the Empfangsanlage Ost had been With its opening in 1994 Frankfurt Airport increased its terminal capacity to 54 million passengers per year Along with the terminal opening a people mover system called Sky Line was established to provide a fast connection between Terminal 2 and Terminal Mitte now renamed Terminal 1 In 1999 a second railway station primarily for InterCityExpress long distance trains called Frankfurt Airport long distance station opened near Terminal 1 as part of the new Cologne Frankfurt high speed rail line At the same time local and regional rail services were based at the existing underground station now renamed Frankfurt Airport regional station Closure of the Rhein Main Air Base Edit On 30 December 2005 the Rhein Main Air Base in the southern part of the airport ground was closed and the US Air Force moved to Ramstein Air Base The property was handed back to Fraport which allows the airport to use it to build a new passenger terminal The property of the housing area for the soldiers called Gateway Gardens which was located north east of the airport site was given back to the city of Frankfurt in the same year and will be developed as a business district in the following years The Airbus A380 and The Squaire Edit From 2005 to 2007 a large Airbus A380 maintenance facility was built at Frankfurt Airport because Lufthansa wanted to station their future A380 aircraft fleet there Both terminals also underwent major renovations in order to handle the A380 including the installation of a third boarding bridge at several gates Lufthansa s first Airbus A380 went into operation in June 2010 and was named Frankfurt am Main Aerial view of the central airport buildings including The Squaire in the back In 2011 a large office building called The Squaire a blend of square and air opened at Frankfurt Airport It was built on top of the Airport long distance station and is considered the largest office building in Germany with 140 000 m2 1 500 000 sq ft floor area Main tenants are KPMG and two Hilton Hotels Since 2012 the people mover The Squaire Metro connects the Squaire with the nine storey parking structure On a length of about 300 metres the so called MiniMetro system with its two cabins can carry up to 1 300 passengers per hour 10 The constructor of the system was the Italian manufacturer Leitner The fourth runway Edit Plans to build a fourth runway at Frankfurt Airport were underway in 1997 but owing to violent conflicts with the concept Fraport let residents groups and environmentalists participate in the process to find a mutually acceptable solution In 2000 a task force presented their conclusion which generally approved a new runway but of shorter length only 2 8 kilometres compared to the other three 4 kilometre long runways which would serve as a landing only runway for smaller aircraft Additional requirements included improved noise protection arrangements and a strict ban on night flights between 11 pm and 5 am across the whole airport In 2001 Fraport applied for approval to build the new runway with three possible options The conclusion was that a runway north west of the airport site would have the least impact on local residents and the surrounding environment The plans were approved by the Hessian government in December 2007 but the requested ban on night flights was lifted because it was argued that an international airport like Frankfurt would need night flights especially for worldwide freight transport Construction of the new 2 800 m 9 186 ft long Runway Northwest in the Kelsterbach Forest began in early 2009 In 2012 the website Airport Watch reports weekly protests have been occurring at the airport since the opening of a fourth runway a year previously 11 Developments since 2011 Edit The new runway officially went into operation on 20 October 2011 with an aircraft carrying Chancellor Angela Merkel performing the first landing on 21 October The centre line separation from the existing north runway is about 1 400 m 4 593 ft This allows simultaneous instrument landing system ILS operations on these two runways which has not been possible on the other parallel runways which do not meet the 3 500 feet 1 100 m minimum separation for ILS operations 12 This allowed the airport to increase its capacity from 83 to 126 aircraft movements per hour 13 14 On 11 October 2011 the Hessian Administration Court ruled that night flights between 11pm and 5am the so called Mediationsnacht are no longer allowed at Frankfurt Airport after the inauguration of the new runway and therefore overrode the approval from the Hessian government from 2007 which allowed 17 scheduled flights per night On 4 April 2012 the German Administrative Court confirmed the decision of the Hessian Administration Court banning night flights between 11pm and 5am 15 To handle the predicted passenger amount of about 90 million in 2020 a new terminal section adjacent to Terminal 1 for an additional six million passengers opened on 10 October 2012 It is called Flugsteig A Plus and exclusively used by Lufthansa mainly for their long haul flights Flugsteig A Plus features eight parking positions that are able to handle four Airbus A380s or seven Boeing 747 8 747 400 at once 16 In November 2016 Ryanair announced the opening of a new base at Frankfurt Airport with four routes to Spain and Portugal This move by Ryanair was heavily blasted especially by Lufthansa as Ryanair was granted high discounts and incentives regarding the airport s fees 17 On 28 February 2017 Ryanair announced its winter programme for Frankfurt which will see a further 20 new routes being added 2011 shooting Edit Albanian citizen Arid Uka a 21 year old at the time targeted a United States Air Force bus parked outside the terminal building that was supposed to transport fifteen U S airmen to Ramstein Air Base 18 He reportedly walked up to a waiting airman asked him for a cigarette and wanted to know whether the airmen were bound for Afghanistan 19 When the airman said yes according to German prosecutor Rainer Griesbaum Uka waited for the airman to turn away and then shot him in the back of the head killing him Shouting Allahu Akbar 20 21 the attacker then entered the bus shooting and killing the driver and continued to fire three shots at two other airmen wounding them 19 When he pointed his pistol at the head of another airman and pulled the trigger the weapon jammed Uka fled but was pursued by the civilian airport employee Lamar Joseph Conner and Staff Sergeant Trevor Donald Brewer and shortly afterwards overpowered by two German police officers 22 He was subsequently arrested 19 Conner and Brewer later received the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany in a ceremony on 16 January 2012 Federal Interior Minister Hans Peter Friedrich presented the decoration citing their exemplary courage and action which helped the Federal Police arrest the suspect Uka was sentenced to Life and will be deported COVID 19 pandemic Edit Portions of the airport were closed in early 2020 due to the COVID 19 pandemic The Northwest Runway and Runway 18 West were closed on March 23 and re purposed for parking unused aircraft Terminal 2 was also closed and all passenger operations were concentrated in Terminal 1 The Northwest Runway re opened in July to handle summer tourist demand while Runway 18 West remained closed 23 With almost no passenger traffic in the spring months Frankfurt s total passenger volume in 2020 fell to 18 8 million the lowest figure recorded since 1984 24 Facilities Edit Terminal 1 Check in concourse in Terminal 1 Terminal 2 Landside main hall of Terminal 2 Lufthansa First Class Terminal Terminals Edit Frankfurt Airport has two large main passenger terminals 1 and 2 and a much smaller dedicated First Class Terminal which is operated and exclusively used by Lufthansa As is the case at London Heathrow Tokyo Narita Toronto Pearson and Chicago O Hare s future Global Terminal terminal operations are grouped for airlines and airline alliances rather than into domestic and international routes Terminal 1 Edit Terminal 1 is the older and larger one of the two passenger terminals The landside is 420 metres long It has been enlarged several times and is divided into concourses A B C and Z and has a capacity of approximately 50 million passengers per year Terminal 1 is functionally divided into three levels the departures level on the upper floor with check in counters the arrivals level with baggage claim areas on the ground floor and underneath a distribution floor with access to the regional station and underground and multilevel parking Departures and arrivals levels each have separate street approaches A bus station is located at arrivals level Terminal 1 has a total of 103 gates which include 54 gates equipped with jetways 25 in Concourse A 18 in Concourse B 11 in Concourse C Concourse Z sits on top of Concourse A sharing the same jet bridges between both concourses Flights to non Schengen destinations depart from the Z gates and Schengen flights depart from the A gates Pier A was extended by 500 metres in 2000 and a link between Terminal 1 and Terminal 2 as well as the Hall C extension opened in 2008 25 On 10 October 2012 an 800 metre long westward expansion of Terminal 1 called Pier A Plus went into operation It provides more stands for wide body aircraft like the Airbus A380 26 Terminal 1 is primarily used by Lufthansa its associated companies Brussels Airlines Eurowings Swiss International Air Lines and Austrian Airlines and its Star Alliance partners e g Aegean Airlines Air Canada Air China Air India All Nippon Airways Asiana Airlines Croatia Airlines Egyptair Ethiopian Airlines LOT Polish Airlines Scandinavian Airlines Singapore Airlines South African Airways TAP Air Portugal Thai Airways International Turkish Airlines and United Airlines Some airlines that are not part of the Lufthansa Group or Star Alliance also use Terminal 1 They include Air Malta Bulgaria Air Iran Air Oman Air and Tunisair among others SkyTeam member airline Middle East Airlines uses Terminal 1 Concourses B and C Terminal 2 Edit Terminal 2 which has a capacity of 15 million passengers a year was opened in 1994 and is divided into concourses D and E A continuous concourse between Terminal 1C and 2D provides direct but non public access between the two terminals It has eight gates with jetways and 34 apron stands a total of 42 gates and is able to handle wide body aircraft such as the Airbus A380 Terminal 2 is primarily used by airlines of the oneworld e g American Airlines British Airways Cathay Pacific Finnair Iberia Japan Airlines Qatar Airways Royal Air Maroc Royal Jordanian and S7 Airlines suspended and SkyTeam alliances e g Aeroflot currently suspended Air France China Airlines China Eastern Airlines Czech Airlines Delta Air Lines KLM Korean Air Saudia TAROM and Vietnam Airlines SkyTeam member Middle East Airlines operates out of Terminal 1 in concourses B and C Terminal 2 is also used by airlines that do not belong to any of the three major airline alliances including Air Moldova Air Serbia China Southern Airlines Emirates Kuwait Airways LATAM Airlines and Somon Air among others Fraport announced in late 2022 that Terminal 2 will be closed for refurbishment in 2026 until at least 2029 All tennants are to be relocated into the then fully completed Terminal 3 27 Terminal overview Edit Terminal Concourse Schengen gates Non Schengen gates Location1 1A A1 A42 A50 A69 Terminal 1 western concourse lower departure level1Z Z11 Z25 Z50 Z69 Terminal 1 western concourse upper departure level1B B1 B19 inner area B20 B63 outer area Terminal 1 central concourse1C C1 C2 C20 Terminal 1 eastern concourse2 2D D21 D44 lower departure level D1 D20 D50 D54 upper departure level Terminal 2 western concourse2E E21 E26 lower departure level E2 E13 upper departure level Terminal 2 eastern concourseSkyLine Edit Passengers and visitors can change terminals with the people mover system SkyLine which has three stops in Terminal 1 at gates AZ B and C as well as one in Terminal 2 for all gates Some stops can only be used by passengers in or outside the Schengen zone which is achieved by separated cars and station entrances The travel time between the terminals is 2 minutes with trains arriving every 2 3 minutes during the day Each train has two cars one airside outside the Schengen area and one landside within the Schengen area Most stations have a platform on each side of the train so landside passengers can only step out onto the landside platform and airside passengers can only step out onto the airside platform Additionally there is regular bus service between the terminals Runways Edit Frankfurt Airport has four runways of which three are arranged parallel in east west direction and one in north south direction In 2010 three runways Runways North South and West handled 464 432 aircraft movements which equated to 83 movements per hour With the start of operation of the Northwest Runway in October 2011 the airport was predicted to be able to handle 126 movements per hour It is predicted that aircraft movements will increase up to 700 000 in the year 2020 By using the fourth runway Frankfurt Airport is able for the first time to handle simultaneous parallel landings because the distance between the north and the north west runways is 1 400 m 4 593 ft Simultaneous parallel landings were not possible with the north and south runway pairing because the separation distance did not meet the safety standards citation needed Direction Name Length Widthin m ft Surface Orientation Start of operation Use07C 25C Runway North 4000 60 13 123 197 Asphalt East west 1936 Take offs landings allowed 07R 25L Runway South 4000 45 13 123 148 Asphalt East west 1949 Take offs and landings18 Runway West 4000 45 13 123 148 Concrete North south 1984 Take offs in southbound direction only07L 25R Runway Northwest 2800 45 9 240 148 Concrete East west 2011 Landings only not allowed for Airbus A380 Boeing 747 MD 11 During normal operation the two outer parallel runways 07L 25R and 07R 25L are used for landings and the central parallel runway 07C 25C and the Runway West 18 for take offs The three parallel runways have two markings because they can be operated in two directions while the Runway West can only be used in one direction Future expansions Edit Airport map with planned and already constructed expansions Terminal 3 under construction Edit In 2009 the German government decided to create third terminals for both Frankfurt Airport and Munich Airport in order to handle expected passenger flows of 90 million in Frankfurt by 2020 and 50 million in Munich by 2017 The new terminal is scheduled to be built by Fraport south of the existing terminals on the grounds of the former Rhein Main Air Base The new Terminal 3 is to accommodate up to 25 million passengers and will feature 75 new aircraft positions when completely constructed An extension of the SkyLine people mover system is planned to connect the new terminal to Terminals 1 and 2 and the airport train stations In August 2014 the city of Frankfurt granted building permission for the first phase of Terminal 3 28 The groundbreaking for the new terminal took place on 5 October 2015 Its first phase consisting of the main building and two of the planned four piers concourses 3H and 3J is planned to open by 2026 and will be able to handle 15 million additional passengers per year Total costs are estimated at 3 billion euros 29 In 2017 Frankfurt Airport first indicated that the second phase construction of the easternmost pier concourse 3G could be moved forward so that low cost carriers can use this pier from 2021 30 After approval by municipal authorities in 2018 31 the piers will be constructed and used according to the following timetable 32 Due to the COVID 19 pandemic Fraport postponed the opening of the new terminal to 2026 in March 2021 33 Concourse 3G easternmost pier Construction of first twelve bus gates reachable via shuttle buses from terminals 1 2 in use by 2021 Construction of additional twelve bus gates by 2023 2024 Construction of passenger jet bridges by 2025 2026Check in area concourses 3H and 3J central piers Construction by 2023 including transport systems for visitors passengers and luggage to the other terminals Concourse 3H is planned for Schengen flights Concourse 3J is planned for non Schengen flights 34 Concourse 3K westernmost pier Possible third phase expansion depending on development of passenger numbers Passenger Transport System Edit A new passenger transport system is planned for the connection of the new terminal 3 and the existing terminals 1 and 2 It will use a track which is separate from the existing SkyLine people mover but will allow for interchanges between them It is scheduled to have four stops in the final stage near the airport s two railway stations at Terminals 1C and 2DE as well as the new Terminal 3 35 Airlines and destinations EditPassenger Edit Lufthansa and their Star Alliance partners account for the majority of all traffic at Frankfurt Airport 36 The following airlines offer year round and seasonal scheduled and charter flights at Frankfurt Airport 37 AirlinesDestinationsAegean AirlinesAthens Thessaloniki Seasonal Heraklion 38 RhodesAer LingusDublinAir AlgerieAlgiers Seasonal OranAir AstanaAstana OralAir CairoSeasonal Hurghada Marsa Alam begins 26 March 2023 39 Air CanadaCalgary Montreal Trudeau Toronto Pearson Seasonal VancouverAir ChinaBeijing Capital Changchun 40 Chengdu Shuangliu Shanghai Pudong ShenzhenAir Dolomiti 41 Florence Innsbruck 42 Kalmar Linz Milan Linate 43 Milan Malpensa 43 Turin VeronaAir EuropaMadridAir FranceParis Charles de GaulleAir IndiaDelhiAir MaltaMaltaAir MoldovaChisinăuAir SerbiaBelgradeairBalticRigaAll Nippon AirwaysTokyo HanedaAmerican AirlinesCharlotte 44 Dallas Fort WorthAnadoluJetAnkara Istanbul Sabiha Gokcen Seasonal Antalya 45 Asiana AirlinesSeoul IncheonAustrian AirlinesViennaAzores AirlinesPonta DelgadaBamboo AirwaysHanoi 46 Ho Chi Minh City 47 British AirwaysLondon City London HeathrowBrussels AirlinesBrusselsBulgaria AirSofiaCathay PacificHong KongChina AirlinesTaipei TaoyuanChina Eastern AirlinesHangzhou Shanghai Pudong 48 China Southern AirlinesGuangzhouCondor 49 Cancun Fuerteventura Funchal Giza begins 30 March 2023 50 Gran Canaria Havana Hefei 51 Holguin Hurghada Jinan Lanzarote Los Angeles 52 53 Mauritius Montego Bay New York JFK 52 53 Puerto Plata Punta Cana Santo Domingo Las Americas Seattle Tacoma Tbilisi 54 Tenerife South Toronto Pearson 53 Varadero Yerevan Seasonal Akureyri begins 13 May 2023 55 Alicante 56 Anchorage Antalya resumes 12 May 2023 57 Baltimore Barbados Boston 52 Cape Town 58 Chania Corfu Dubrovnik 59 Edmonton begins 26 May 2023 60 Egilsstadir begins 16 May 2023 61 Fairbanks Faro 56 Grenada Halifax Heraklion Ibiza Jerez de la Frontera Johannesburg O R Tambo 62 Kalamata Kavala Kos La Palma Lamezia Terme Larnaca 63 Las Vegas Mahe Malaga Male Minneapolis St Paul Mombasa Nice Olbia Palma de Mallorca Phoenix Sky Harbor Portland OR Preveza Lefkada Rijeka 58 Samos San Francisco 52 Santorini Split Tobago Vancouver Whitehorse Zakynthos Zanzibar Seasonal charter Abu Dhabi 64 Corendon AirlinesSeasonal Antalya 65 Izmir 65 Kayseri 65 Croatia AirlinesDubrovnik Split ZagrebSeasonal Pula ZadarDelta Air LinesAtlanta Detroit 66 New York JFK 67 EgyptAirCairoEl AlTel AvivEmiratesDubai InternationalEthiopian AirlinesAddis AbabaEtihad AirwaysAbu DhabiEuropean Air CharterSeasonal charter Burgas 68 Varna 69 EurowingsPristinaEurowings DiscoverFort Myers Fuerteventura Funchal 70 Gran Canaria Hurghada Lanzarote Marrakesh Marsa Alam Panama City Tocumen Orlando 71 Philadelphia 71 Tampa 72 Tenerife South Windhoek Hosea Kutako 73 Seasonal Agadir begins 29 March 2023 74 75 Anchorage 70 Antalya Barbados Bari 70 Bodrum 76 Calgary Cancun 70 Chania 76 Corfu 76 Djerba 76 Dubrovnik begins 26 March 2023 77 Halifax Heraklion 76 Ibiza begins 26 March 2023 77 Jerez de la Frontera Kavala 76 Kos 76 Lamezia Terme 70 Las Vegas Mauritius Menorca begins 28 April 2023 77 Mombasa Monastir begins 22 May 2023 78 Montpellier begins 23 June 2023 78 Mykonos begins 5 May 2023 77 Nelspruit 79 Palma de Mallorca Porto Santo 76 Preveza Lefkada begins 20 June 2023 80 Punta Cana Rhodes Santorini begins 1 April 2023 77 Salt Lake City Skiathos begins 2 May 2023 80 Toronto Pearson 81 Vancouver ends 25 March 2023 82 Varna 76 Victoria Falls 83 Zanzibar Zakynthos begins 3 May 2023 80 Seasonal charter La Romana 84 FinnairHelsinkiGulf AirBahrainHiSkyChișinăuIberiaMadridIcelandairReykjavik KeflavikIran AirTehran Imam KhomeiniIraqi AirwaysBaghdad SulaymaniyahITA AirwaysMilan Linate Rome Fiumicino suspended 85 Japan AirlinesTokyo NaritaKLMAmsterdamKorean AirSeoul IncheonKuwait AirwaysKuwait CityLATAM BrasilSao Paulo GuarulhosLILLIAIRKlagenfurt begins 23 April 2023 86 LOT Polish AirlinesWarsaw ChopinLufthansaAbuja Addis Ababa Agadir Algiers Alicante Almaty Amman Queen Alia Amsterdam Astana Athens Atlanta Austin Bahrain Baku Bangalore Bangkok Suvarnabhumi Barcelona Bari Basel Mulhouse Beijing Capital Beirut Belfast City begins 23 April 2023 87 Belgrade Bergen Berlin Bilbao Billund Birmingham Bogota Bologna Bordeaux Boston Bremen Bristol Brussels Bucharest Budapest Buenos Aires Ezeiza Cairo Cancun Cape Town Casablanca Catania Chennai Chicago O Hare Chișinău Cluj Napoca Copenhagen Dallas Fort Worth Dammam Delhi Denver Detroit Dresden Dubai International Dublin Dusseldorf Edinburgh Erbil Faro Friedrichshafen Funchal Gdansk Geneva Glasgow Gothenburg Graz Hamburg Hanover Helsinki Hong Kong Houston Intercontinental Istanbul Johannesburg O R Tambo Katowice Krakow Kuwait City Kyiv Boryspil suspended Lagos Larnaca Lisbon Liverpool 88 Ljubljana London City London Gatwick resumes 23 April 2023 89 London Heathrow Los Angeles Luanda Luxembourg Lviv Lyon Madrid Malabo Malaga Male Malta Manchester Marseille Mexico City Miami Milan Linate Milan Malpensa Mombasa Moscow Domodedovo suspended 90 Mumbai Munich Munster Osnabruck Muscat Nagoya Centrair Nairobi Jomo Kenyatta Nanjing Nantes Naples Newark Newcastle upon Tyne New York JFK Nice Nuremberg Orlando resumes 29 October 2023 71 Oslo Palermo Palma de Mallorca Pamplona Paris Charles de Gaulle Philadelphia Port Harcourt Porto Poznan Prague Qingdao Rennes 91 Reykjavik Keflavik Riga Riyadh Rome Fiumicino Rzeszow Saint Petersburg suspended 90 Salzburg San Francisco San Jose de Costa Rica Juan Santamaria Sao Paulo Guarulhos Sarajevo Seattle Tacoma Seoul Incheon Seville Skopje begins 23 April 2023 92 Shanghai Pudong Shenyang Singapore Sofia St Louis 91 Stavanger 93 Stockholm Arlanda Strasbourg Stuttgart Sylt Tallinn Tehran Imam Khomeini Tel Aviv Thessaloniki Timișoara Tirana Tokyo Haneda Toronto Pearson 81 Toulouse Trieste Tunis Turin Valencia Vancouver resumes 26 March 2023 94 Venice Vienna Vilnius Warsaw Chopin Washington Dulles Wroclaw Yerevan Zagreb Zanzibar Zurich Seasonal Asturias begins 23 April 2023 95 Bastia Biarritz begins 29 April 2023 95 Cagliari Chania Cork Dubrovnik Heraklion Heringsdorf Ibiza Ivalo Kos Kuusamo Mauritius Menorca Montreal Trudeau Mykonos Olbia Paphos Ponta Delgada Pula Rijeka Rhodes Santiago de Compostela Santorini Split Tivat Tromso ZadarMIAT Mongolian AirlinesUlaanbaatarMiddle East AirlinesBeirutNouvelairSeasonal Djerba MonastirOman AirMuscatPegasus AirlinesAnkara Antalya Istanbul Sabiha Gokcen Seasonal Izmir begins 1 April 2023 96 Qatar AirwaysDohaRoyal Air MarocCasablanca NadorRoyal JordanianAmman Queen AliaSaudiaJeddah RiyadhSeasonal Medina citation needed Scandinavian AirlinesCopenhagen Oslo Stockholm ArlandaSingapore AirlinesNew York JFK SingaporeSriLankan AirlinesColombo BandaranaikeSunExpressAdana Ankara Antalya Dalaman Gazipasa Izmir Seasonal Diyarbakir Malatya Ordu Giresun SamsunSwiss International Air LinesGeneva ZurichTAP Air PortugalLisbonTAROMBucharestThai Airways InternationalBangkok SuvarnabhumiTUI fly DeutschlandBoa Vista Fuerteventura Gran Canaria Hurghada Lanzarote Marsa Alam Sal Tenerife South Seasonal Corfu Dalaman Faro Funchal Heraklion Jerez de la Frontera Kos Larnaca Menorca Palma de Mallorca Patras RhodesTunisairDjerba Monastir TunisTurkish AirlinesIstanbul Seasonal Adana Ankara Antalya Elazig Gaziantep Hatay 97 Izmir Kayseri Ordu GiresunTurkmenistan AirlinesAshgabatUkraine International AirlinesKyiv Boryspil suspended United AirlinesChicago O Hare Denver Houston Intercontinental Newark San Francisco Washington DullesUzbekistan AirwaysTashkentVietnam AirlinesHanoi Ho Chi Minh CityVistaraDelhi Cargo Edit AirlinesDestinationsAerologic 98 Bahrain SingaporeAir Canada Cargo 99 Toronto PearsonAir China Cargo 100 Beijing Capital Shanghai PudongAirBridgeCargo 101 Chicago O Hare Krasnoyarsk Milan MalpensaANA Cargo 102 Tokyo NaritaAsiana Cargo 103 Almaty London Stansted Seoul IncheonCathay Pacific Cargo 104 Hong KongChina Airlines Cargo 105 Taipei TaoyuanChina Cargo Airlines 106 Shanghai PudongChina Southern Cargo 107 GuangzhouEleron Airlines 108 Lviv citation needed Emirates SkyCargo 109 Dubai Al Maktoum Dubai International Maastricht Aachen Mexico CityEtihad Cargo 110 Abu DhabiFedEx Express 111 Memphis Paris Charles de GaulleKorean Air Cargo 112 Seoul Incheon Tel Aviv ViennaLATAM Cargo Brasil 113 Sao Paulo GuarulhosLATAM Cargo Chile 113 Campinas ViracoposLufthansa Cargo 114 Aguadilla Almaty Amsterdam Atlanta Bahrain Bangalore Bangkok Suvarnabhumi Beijing Capital Birmingham 115 Bogota Boston Buenos Aires Cairo Campinas Chennai Chicago O Hare Chongqing Cologne Bonn Curitiba Dakar Senghor Dallas Fort Worth Delhi Dhaka Dublin 116 Guangzhou Hong Kong Houston Hyderabad Istanbul Jakarta Soekarno Hatta Jeddah Johannesburg O R Tambo Katowice 117 Kaunas London Heathrow 115 Los Angeles Manaus Mexico City Miami Moscow Sheremetyevo Mumbai Nairobi New York JFK Novosibirsk Osaka Kansai Quito Rio de Janeiro Galeao Riyadh Seoul Incheon Shanghai Pudong Shannon Sharjah Shenyang Shenzhen Tehran Imam Khomeini Tel Aviv Tokyo Narita Toronto PearsonQatar Airways Cargo 118 DohaRoyal Air Maroc Cargo 119 CasablancaSaudia Cargo 120 Dammam RiyadhSF Airlines 121 WuhanTurkish Cargo 122 IstanbulOther facilities EditCargoCity Edit Frankfurt Airport is the second largest multimodal transport airport in Europe and has several logistics facilities These facilities are grouped at two areas at the airport ground In the north CargoCity Nord and in the south CargoCity Sud In 2010 it was the second busiest airport by cargo traffic in Europe after Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport handling 2 231 348 metric tonnes of loaded and unloaded freight citation needed CargoCity is the name of the two large main areas featuring most of the airport s freight handling facilities The 98 hectare large CargoCity Sud South is home to a cargo centre for dispatch service providers and freight forwarding businesses Several transport companies like DHL Global Forwarding Air China LUG Aircargo Handling Emirates Japan Airlines Korean Air Cargolux Airlines Aegean Airlines Delta Air Lines Siberian Airlines South African Airways Uzbekistan Airways and Fraport Cargo Services are based here CargoCity Nord North is the headquarters of Lufthansa Cargo Additional facilities here are a Perishables Centre for fresh produced goods and the Frankfurt Animal Lounge for the transport of living animals Airport City Edit The airport ground and the surrounding area of Frankfurt Airport offer a large variety of on airport businesses as well as airport related businesses including office space hotels shopping areas conference rooms and car parks The development of an airport city has significantly accelerated in recent years Frankfurt Airport Centres Edit Frankfurt Airport Centre 1 The Frankfurt Airport Centre 1 FAC 1 near Terminal 1 offers office and conference facilities the newer FAC 2 is located within Terminal 2 and offers office space for airlines Airport City Mall Edit The Airport City Mall is located on the landside of Terminal 1 departure hall B It offers national and international retailers and label stores a supermarket and several restaurants The Squaire Edit Main article The Squaire The Squaire The Squaire is an office building with a total floor area of 140 000 m2 1 506 900 sq ft It is directly connected to Terminal 1 through a connecting corridor for pedestrians The accounting firm KPMG Lufthansa and two Hilton Hotels Hilton Garden Inn Frankfurt Airport 123 with 334 rooms and Hilton Frankfurt Airport with 249 rooms occupy space in The Squaire Main Airport Centre Edit The Main Airport Centre named after the Main river is an office building with ten floors and about 51 000 m2 549 000 sq ft of office space It is located at the edge of the Frankfurt City Forest near Terminal 2 Sheraton Hotel amp Conference Centre Edit Sheraton Hotels and Resorts offers 1 008 guest rooms adjacent to Terminal 1 and a conference centre for up to 200 delegates Gateway Gardens Edit Gateway Gardens is a former housing area for the US Air Force personnel based at the Rhein Main Air Base close to Terminal 2 Like the air base the housing area was closed in 2005 Since then the area is being developed into a business location for airport related companies Lufthansa moved its airline catering subsidiary LSG Sky Chefs to Gateway Gardens Condor and SunExpress are headquartered here DB Schenker the logistics company of Deutsche Bahn have built a 66 m 217 ft high rise building In December 2019 local trains were re routed to run via Gateway Gardens station The new stop for S Bahn trains is located between Frankfurt Airport Regional Station and Frankfurt Stadion station The journey time will increase by 4 minutes but Deutsche Bahn have stated that they will use new trains ET423 which will be faster and have more capacity 124 Further users Edit Lufthansa Aviation Centre Fraport s facilities are on the property of Frankfurt Airport 125 Its head office building is by Gate 3 126 The newly constructed 127 headquarters were inaugurated there in 2012 128 The Fraport Driving School Fraport Fahrschule is in Building 501 of CargoCity South CargoCity Sud 129 130 Lufthansa s main building where the board of directors is seated is called Lufthansa Aviation Centre LAC 131 Lufthansa operates the Lufthansa Aviation Center LAC Building 366 at Frankfurt Airport 132 133 Several company departments including Corporate Communications 134 Investor Relations 135 and Media Relations 136 are based at the LAC Lufthansa also uses several other buildings in the area including the Lufthansa Flight Training Center for flight training operations and the Lufthansa Basis BG2 137 as a central base and for crew briefing As of 2011 Lufthansa Cargo has been headquartered in Building 451 of the Frankfurt Airport area 138 As of 2012 Lufthansa Cargo is located at Gate 25 in the CargoCity Nord area Lufthansa Technik is located at Gate 23 and in the CargoCity Sud area 139 Star Alliance an airline alliance has its headquarters at the Frankfurt Airport Centre 1 FAC 1 adjacent to Terminal 1 140 Airmail Centre Frankfurt a joint venture of Lufthansa Cargo Fraport and Deutsche Post for airmail transport has its head office in Building 189 between Terminals 1 and 2 141 Aero Lloyd previously had its head office in Building 182 142 143 Statistics EditAnnual traffic Edit Annual passenger traffic at FRA airport See Wikidata query Annual Passenger Traffic 144 Year Passengers Change2000 49 360 620 2001 48 559 980 1 6 2002 48 450 356 0 2 2003 48 351 664 0 2 2004 51 098 271 5 6 2005 52 219 412 2 2 2006 52 810 683 1 1 2007 54 161 856 2 5 2008 53 467 450 1 3 2009 50 932 840 4 3 2010 53 009 221 4 2011 56 436 255 6 4 2012 57 520 001 2 2013 58 036 948 1 2014 59 570 000 2 6 2015 61 032 022 2 4 2016 60 792 308 0 4 2017 64 500 386 6 1 2018 69 514 414 7 8 2019 70 560 987 1 5 2020 18 768 601 73 4 2021 24 814 921 32 2 Route statistics Edit Busiest routes at Frankfurt Airport 2020 145 Rank Destination Departing passengers Operating airlines1 Berlin 290 133 Lufthansa2 Hamburg 205 584 Lufthansa3 London Heathrow 194 661 British Airways Lufthansa4 Munich 173 532 Lufthansa5 Vienna 158 685 Austrian Airlines Lufthansa6 Dubai International 155 056 Emirates Lufthansa7 Madrid 147 790 Air Europa Iberia Lufthansa8 Lisbon 140 438 Lufthansa TAP Air Portugal9 Istanbul 136 752 Lufthansa Onur Air Turkish Airlines10 Stockholm Arlanda 132 013 Lufthansa Scandinavian AirlinesBusiest domestic routes at Frankfurt Airport 2020 145 Rank Destination Departing passengers Operating airlines1 Berlin 290 133 Lufthansa2 Hamburg 205 584 Lufthansa3 Munich 173 532 Lufthansa4 Hannover 44 805 Lufthansa5 Bremen 41 421 LufthansaBusiest European routes at Frankfurt Airport 2020 145 Rank Destination Departing passengers Operating airlines1 London Heathrow 194 661 British Airways Lufthansa2 Vienna 158 685 Austrian Airlines Lufthansa3 Madrid 147 790 Air Europa Iberia Lufthansa4 Lisbon 140 438 Lufthansa TAP Air Portugal5 Istanbul 136 752 Lufthansa Onur Air Turkish AirlinesBusiest intercontinental routes at Frankfurt Airport 2020 145 Rank Destination Departing passengers Operating airlines1 Dubai International 155 056 Emirates Lufthansa2 Toronto Pearson 116 845 Air Canada Condor Lufthansa3 Sao Paulo Guarulhos 111 924 LATAM Brasil Lufthansa4 Washington Dulles 91 284 Lufthansa United Airlines5 Chicago O Hare 89 246 Lufthansa United Airlines6 Bangkok Suvarnabhumi 87 021 Lufthansa Thai Airways International7 Doha 83 036 Qatar Airways8 Newark 78 046 Lufthansa United Airlines9 Cairo 73 632 EgyptAir Lufthansa10 Seoul Incheon 73 110 Asiana Airlines Korean Air LufthansaGround transport EditFrankfurt Airport can easily be accessed by car taxi train or bus as it features an extensive transport network There are two railway stations at the airport one for suburban regional trains and one for long distance trains Rail Edit Regional station Edit Regional station Main article Frankfurt Airport regional station Frankfurt Airport regional station Frankfurt Flughafen Regionalbahnhof at Terminal 1 concourse B provides access to the S Bahn commuter rail lines S8 and S9 Each of these lines have trains departing every 15 minutes during daytime to Hanau Central Station eastwards via Frankfurt Central Station and Offenbach East Station or Wiesbaden Central Station westwards via Russelsheim or Mainz Central Station line S8 or Mainz Kastel Station line S9 The journey time to Frankfurt Central Station is 10 12 minutes 146 Regional Express RE trains to Saarbrucken Koblenz or Wurzburg call at this station These trains provide less frequent but additional connections between Frankfurt Airport and the Central Station 146 Long distance station Edit Long distance station Main article Frankfurt Airport long distance station Frankfurt Airport long distance station Frankfurt Flughafen Fernbahnhof was opened in 1999 The station is squeezed in between the motorway A 3 and the four lane Bundesstrasse B43 linked to Terminal 1 by a connecting corridor for pedestrians that bridges the Autobahn It is the end point of the newly built Cologne Frankfurt high speed rail line which links southern Germany to the Rhine Ruhr metropolitan area the Netherlands and Belgium via Cologne at speeds up to 300 km h 190 mph About 10 trains per hour depart in all directions 146 Deutsche Bahn operates the AIRail Service in conjunction with Lufthansa American Airlines and Emirates The service operates to the central stations of Bonn Cologne Dusseldorf Freiburg Karlsruhe Leipzig Hamburg Hannover Mannheim Munich Nuremberg Stuttgart and to Kassel Wilhelmshohe 147 Car Edit Frankfurt Airport is located in the Frankfurt City Forest and directly connected to an Autobahn intersection called Frankfurter Kreuz where the A3 and A5 meet It takes a 10 15 minutes by car or taxi to get to Frankfurt Central Station or the centre of the city 148 Passengers driving their own cars can park in multilevel parking garages mostly underground along the terminals A long term holiday parking lot is located south of the runways and connected by shuttle bus to the terminals Bicycle Edit Terminal 1 and Terminal 2 can be reached by bicycle because one of the roads that run north of the airport passing the terminals can legally be used by bicycle The airport authority has confirmed that the newly built terminal 3 will also be reachable by bicycle Bus and coaches Edit Various transport companies provide bus services to the airport from the surrounding areas as well as by coach to long distance destinations 149 Previously All Nippon Airways operated a bus service to Dusseldorf exclusively for ANA customers that way Dusseldorf passengers would be transported to Frankfurt Airport to board their ANA flights 150 In 2014 ANA established a separate flight from Tokyo to Dusseldorf 151 causing the bus services to end 152 Ground transport statistics Edit In 2006 29 5 of the 12 299 192 passengers whose air travel originated in Frankfurt came by private car 27 9 came by rail 20 4 by taxi 11 1 parked their car at the airport for the duration of their trip 5 3 came by bus and 4 6 arrived with a rental car 153 Incidents and accidents EditOn 4 January 1938 a Deutsche Lufthansa Junkers Ju 52 crashed in a snowstorm on approach to FRA due to icing All three crew and three passengers were killed 154 On 29 September 1938 a Luftwaffe Junkers Ju 52 crashed due to a preliminary ground contact caused by a wrong estimation of height One occupant of the four on board were killed 155 On 22 March 1952 a KLM Royal Dutch Airlines Douglas DC 6 on a return flight from Johannesburg to Amsterdam crashed 7 km NE of FRA into a forest Nine crew and 36 passengers of the 47 total on board perished 156 On 14 October 1953 a Sabena Convair CV 240 crashed near Kelstenbach shortly after takeoff following loss of engine power 1 km N of FRA All four crew and 40 passengers died 157 On 21 January 1967 an Air Ferry Douglas C 54 a cargo flight struck trees some 2700 metres short of the runway while on a night time instrument landing system approach Both occupants were killed 158 On 24 November 1972 an Air Canada McDonnell Douglas DC 8 bound for Montreal Canada was hijacked on the ground at FRA and a hijacker demanded a release of prisoners The plane was stormed and the hijacker arrested One person died 159 On 22 May 1983 during an air show at Rhein Main Air Base a Canadian RCAF Lockheed F 104 Starfighter crashed into a nearby road hitting a car and killing all passengers a vicar s family of five The pilot was able to eject On 19 June 1985 a bomb cloaked in a canvas bag was detonated approx at 14 42 in the afternoon in Hall B of the Rhein Main Frankfurt Airport decimating that section of the airport The blast resulted in three deaths and 32 injuries of which four were considered serious 160 In May 1999 a violent illegal immigrant was being deported by police from Frankfurt to Cairo He was restrained before the flight took off and when an officer attempted to talk to him later he found that he was no longer alive 161 162 In September 2007 German authorities arrested three suspected terrorists for plotting a massive terror attack which posed an imminent threat to Frankfurt Airport and the US Air Force base in Ramstein 163 On 2 March 2011 a gunman opened fire on a bus carrying US Air Force personnel at Frankfurt Airport killing two and wounding two others 164 On 11 June 2018 Lufthansa Flight 426 an Airbus A340 preparing for a flight to Philadelphia International Airport sustained damage on pushback from the gate the tow tug caught fire and the aircraft sustained damage to the nose and cockpit section Ten airport staff consisting of ground crew and emergency responders suffered minor injuries as a result of smoke inhalation The aircraft was written off 165 In media EditFrankfurt Airport is featured in the Discovery Channel series X Ray Mega Airport also known as Inside Frankfurt Airport 166 Jinder Mahal pinned R Truth at the Frankfurt Airport for the 24 7 Championship This title change was shown on WWE com and WWE s official social media accounts 167 See also EditHorst Julius Freiherr Treusch von Buttlar Brandenfels Deutsche Zeppelin Reederei List of airports in Germany List of busiest airports by cargo traffic List of busiest airports by international passenger traffic List of the busiest airports in Germany Transport in GermanyReferences Edit Frankfurt airport Economic and social impact Ecquants Retrieved 7 September 2013 Traffic figures Fraport Retrieved 19 January 2012 Figures Fraport de 13 January 2012 Archived from the original on 24 May 2011 Retrieved 19 January 2012 Frankfurt Airport Facts and Figures at FRA www frankfurt airport com Archived from the original on 1 October 2018 Retrieved 7 August 2018 Year to date Archived from the original on 2 April 2016 Retrieved 2 June 2015 aero de Frankfurt offers the most destinations 20 February 2017 Flights from Frankfurt FRA FlightConnections www flightconnections com Retrieved 23 September 2019 Frankfurt Airport celebrates 80th anniversary www internationalairportreview com Retrieved 12 May 2017 EAD Basic Ead eurocontrol int Retrieved 19 January 2012 MiniMetro www leitner ropeways com Airport Watch 2012 A sea of protest against airport expansion across Europe as a new breed of campaigner emerges Accessed October 2019 Airport Expansion www fraport com Archived from the original on 20 April 2006 Rahn Cornelius 5 August 2010 Air Berlin Urged to Switch Focus to FRA London Bloomberg Retrieved 19 January 2012 Fraport AG Expansion projects Press release Frankfurt Fraport AG Retrieved 2 June 2015 Urteil im Fluglarm Prozess Keine Nachtfluge mehr am Flughafen Frankfurt Frankfurter Rundschau in German Retrieved 4 April 2012 Fraport AG Airport Services World Wide Fraport AG Flugsteig A Plus www fraport de Retrieved 2 June 2015 Ryanair fordert Lufthansa in Frankfurt heraus 2 November 2016 Pidd Helen 3 March 2011 Frankfurt airport shooting may have Islamist link say police The Guardian London Retrieved 6 March 2011 a b c Frankfurt airport shooting Jammed gun saved lives BBC News 4 March 2011 Retrieved 6 March 2011 Sundby Alex 3 March 2011 Source Air Force shooter shouted Allahu akbar CBS News Archived from the original on 3 November 2012 Retrieved 14 September 2021 Orr Bob 3 March 2011 Killer of U S airmen is radical Muslim German official says KRTV TV CBS News Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Federal Minister Friedrich presents two Americans with Cross of the Order of Merit Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Frankfurt Airport Northwest Runway Back in Operation from July 8 www fraport com 25 June 2020 Retrieved 25 February 2021 Fraport Traffic Figures 2020 Passenger Numbers Fall to Historic Low Due to the Covid 19 Pandemic www fraport com Retrieved 25 February 2021 2012 Facts and Figures on Frankfurt Airport PDF Fraport p 4 Archived from the original PDF on 12 December 2014 Retrieved 10 July 2014 Fraport AG en Fraport com 31 May 2013 Archived from the original on 23 January 2013 Retrieved 21 June 2013 handelsblatt com German 15 November 2022 Friederike Tinnappel Flughafen Frankfurt Terminal 3 darf gebaut werden Retrieved 2 June 2015 aero de Frankfurt beginnt mit Bauarbeiten fur Terminal 3 Frankfurt starts construction of Terminal 3 German 5 October 2015 Flugsteig G Concourse G Fraport Retrieved 28 November 2018 Was bisher geschah What has happened up to now Fraport Retrieved 22 August 2019 FAQ Fraport Retrieved 22 August 2019 Fraport Fiscal Year 2020 Revenue and Profit Severely Impacted by Covid 19 Pandemic Extensive Countermeasures Implemented fraport 26 March 2021 Retrieved 27 April 2021 Building the Future Fraport AG Retrieved 19 February 2018 In acht Minuten zu Terminal 3 To terminal 3 in eight minutes Fraport AG Retrieved 24 February 2018 Fraport Visual Fact Book Full Year 2011 PDF Fraport AG Archived from the original PDF on 16 May 2012 Retrieved 24 June 2012 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Frankfurt Airport Arrivals Fraport AG Archived from the original on 12 May 2015 Retrieved 2 June 2015 Aegean flight schedule AIR CAIRO NS23 NETWORK ADDITIONS 13OCT22 aeroroutes com 14 October 2022 Air China commences Changchun Frankfurt service CAPA Informa Markets 1 October 2021 Our Flight Destinations Air Dolomiti Lufthansa Group Retrieved 1 March 2021 Gruber Jan 17 December 2021 Ab Mai 2022 Air Dolomiti ubernimmt Innsbruck Frankfurt Aviation Direct in German Retrieved 17 December 2021 a b Air Dolomiti NW22 Operation Changes New Frankfurt Milan Service https www bizjournals com charlotte news 2022 04 20 american airlines pausing european route at clt html bare URL Fly with Most Affordable and Cheap Ticket Opportunities AnadoluJet AnadoluJet Casey David Bamboo Airways Expands International Footprint Routes Informa Markets Retrieved 22 January 2022 Casey David Bamboo Eyes Further Long Haul Expansion Routes Informa Markets Retrieved 1 June 2022 China Eastern NW22 International Regional Operations 16OCT22 Aeroroutes 19 October 2022 Retrieved 19 October 2022 Flugplan in German Condor Condor Airlines begins Giza Sphinx Airport from summer 2023 CONDOR ADDS FRANKFURT HEFEI SERVICE FROM MID DEC 2022 a b c d Summer 2022 with Condor nonstop to 16 destinations in North America Condor 14 February 2022 a b c New destination in Condor s winter flight schedule Johannesburg South Africa Condor 22 February 2022 From summer 2022 Condor flies for the first time to Tbilisi in Georgia Condor 16 February 2022 Condor Launches Iceland Service from May 2023 a b Sena Gaston 22 April 2022 Condor will have flights to Alicante and Faro Aviacionline Retrieved 24 April 2022 Condor resumes Antalya service from May 2023 3 November 2022 a b Timetable Condor Retrieved 2 February 2022 Timetable Condor Retrieved 2 February 2022 CONDOR LAUNCHES EDMONTON SERVICE FROM LATE MAY 2023 Aeroroutes 22 July 2022 Retrieved 23 July 2022 Akureyri und Egilsstadir Condor startet Fluge in den Norden und Osten Islands 13 July 2022 Casey David Condor Adds New South Africa Route Routesonline Retrieved 22 February 2022 Timetable Condor Retrieved 2 February 2022 Condor Schedules Abu Dhabi Regular Charters in NW22 a b c Corendon Airlines NW22 scheduled service adjustment 20OCT22 aeroroutes com 20 October 2022 Polito Sebastian 19 March 2022 Delta to resume flights between Detroit and Frankfurt Aviacionline Delta delivers more destinations and premium in flight experiences to Europe next summer Press release Delta Air Lines https flug idealo de flugroute Burgas BOJ Frankfurt FRA https www fluege de reisen lastminute Bulgarien Varna 957172 a b c d e Drum Bruce 24 July 2021 Eurowings Discover launches operations a b c Eurowings Discover to Maintain Orlando Philadelphia Service in NS23 Cridlin Jay Tampa airport resuming European flights via Lufthansa s Eurowings Discover The Tampa Bay Times Retrieved 1 November 2021 Eurowings Discover more flights to Windhoek 28 March 2022 Eurowings Discover 2022 23 Short Haul Expansion Update 03APR22 Eurowings Discover NW22 Intercontinental Network Changes 28SEP22 a b c d e f g h i Umstellung des touristischen Kurz und Mittelstreckenangebots auf Eurowings Discover PDF Lufthansa Experts Report in German Cologne Lufthansa Group a b c d e EUROWINGS DISCOVER NS23 SHORT HAUL NETWORK ADDITIONS 11DEC22 Aeroroutes 12 December 2022 Retrieved 12 December 2022 a b Eurowings Discover adds further two new routes to summer 2023 schedule Direct flights Frankfurt to Kruger Park Southern amp East African Tourism Update 11 February 2022 a b c Eurowings Eurowings Discover NS22 Short Haul Network Adjustment 12JUN22 a b LUFTHANSA PLANS TO MOVE NW22 FRANKFURT CANADA SERVICE TO EUROWINGS DISCOVER AeroRoutes 28 September 2022 Retrieved 28 September 2022 Lufthansa to Move Selected US Routes to Eurowings Discover in NW22 Staff writers Luxury airline Eurowings begins servicing Vic Falls route The Sunday Mail Eurowings Discover Adds Martinique Charters in NW22 ITA AIRWAYS NW22 SUSPENDED ROUTES SUMMARY 18OCT22 aeroroutes com 18 October 2022 LILIAIR OUTLINES PLANNED OPERATION FROM APRIL 2023 Lufthansa lands in Northern Ireland with flights from Frankfurt to Belfast City McDonough Tony 14 December 2021 Lufthansa Liverpool route offers global access Liverpool Business News https www lufthansagroup com en newsroom releases lufthansa 5200 connections more to 205 destinations in summer 2023 html a b Martinez Garbuno Daniel 26 February 2022 KLM And Lufthansa Stop Flights To Russia Simple Flying London a b Lufthansa Book now for the summer Press release Cologne Lufthansa Group 14 December 2021 Lufthansa to launch Skopje flights EX YU Aviation News 14 December 2022 Retrieved 14 December 2022 Lufthansa gjenapner populaer flyrute fra Sola Stavanger Aftenbladet in Norwegian Lufthansa to Move Selected US Routes to Eurowings Discover in NW22 a b Lufthansa Offering 5 200 weekly flights to 205 destinations in summer 2023 Pegasus Plans New Izmir Germany Scheduled Routes in NS23 Turkish Airlines NS22 European Network Expansion Update 08APR22 FREIGHT DEPARTURES 11 June 2022 Air Canada Cargo expands domestic and transatlantic freighter network 31 March 2022 airchinacargo com Flight Schedule Search retrieved 4 July 2020 airbridgecargo com Our network retrieved 4 July 2020 TIMES The STAT TRADE 28 October 2020 All Nippon Airways launches scheduled freighter flights to Frankfurt asianacargo com Schedules retrieved 27 April 2022 cathaypacificcargo com Check Flight Schedule retrieved 4 July 2020 cargo china airlines com Schedule Display retrieved 4 July 2020 China Cargo Airlines begins cargo flights between Shanghai Pudong and Frankfurt ajot com China Southern begins Guangzhou Frankfurt freighter service Air Cargo World News Archived 2013 08 28 at the Wayback Machine Aircargoworld com 2013 07 25 Retrieved on 2013 08 16 Schedule ELERON aviation company aileron com ua skychain emirates com View Schedule permanent dead link retrieved 4 July 2020 arabianaerospace com Etihad Cargo introduces new freighter network 21 September 2018 airlineroutemaps com FedEx retrieved 4 July 2020 cargo korenair com Schedule Search retrieved 4 July 2020 a b latamcargo com Route offering retrieved 4 July 2020 lufthansa cargo com Routes amp Schedules retrieved 4 July 2020 a b Lufthansa Cargo adds Birmingham freighter service in Oct 2022 AeroRoutes 30 August 2022 Retrieved 30 August 2022 Lufthansa To Start Airbus A321 Cargo Operations On March 15th Simple Flying 23 February 2022 Pasazer com Lufthansa Cargo otwiera w Katowice Airport baze do obslugi frachtu Pasazer com qrcargo com retrieved 12 September 2019 cargo royalairmaroc com Our destinations retrieved 4 July 2020 saudiacargo com Network retrieved 4 July 2020 SF Airlines launches Wuhan Frankfurt air cargo route SHINE turkishcargo com Flight Schedule retrieved 9 February 2022 https www hilton com en hotels fraapgi hilton garden inn frankfurt airport Official Website Vorteile S Bahn Gateway Gardens www s bahn gatewaygardens de How to find us Fraport Retrieved on 28 May 2011 Offering of 22 700 000 Ordinary Bearer Shares of Fraport AG Frankfurt Airport Services Worldwide Archived 25 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Fraport H 4 Retrieved on 28 May 2011 REGISTERED AND HEAD OFFICE OF THE COMPANY Fraport AG Frankfurt Airport Services Worldwide Flughafen Tor 3 60547 Frankfurt am Main Germany Quality breeds Success Archived 25 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Fraport Retrieved on 28 May 2011 Connecting Sustainably Report 2010 Archived 25 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Fraport 35 Retrieved on 28 May 2011 Fraport Driving School How to find us Archived 25 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Fraport Retrieved on 28 May 2011 Fraport Fahrschule So finden Sie uns Archived 21 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Fraport Retrieved on 28 May 2011 Lufthansa Aviation Center Archived from the original on 16 December 2013 Retrieved 16 December 2013 How to get there Archived 1 November 2006 at the Wayback Machine Lufthansa Aviation Center Retrieved on 28 May 2011 Imprint Archived 21 January 2013 at the Wayback Machine Lufthansa Aviation Center Retrieved on 15 November 2012 Gebaude 366 Airportring 60546 Frankfurt Main Service Contact Person Archived 20 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Lufthansa Retrieved on 15 February 2010 Contacts Investor Relations Archived 14 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Lufthansa Retrieved on 14 February 2010 Media Relations Archived 20 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Lufthansa Retrieved on 14 February 2010 Lufthansa Basis BG2 feest com de Retrieved 2 June 2015 Imprint Archived 28 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Lufthansa Cargo Retrieved on 28 May 2011 Lufthansa Cargo AG Flughafenbereich West Tor 25 Gebaude 451 D 60546 Frankfurt am Main Contract sheet PDF www lufthansa technik com Legal Star Alliance Archived from the original on 17 October 2015 Retrieved 12 May 2013 Star Alliance Retrieved on 12 December 2013 Star Alliance Services GmbH Frankfurt Airport Centre Main Lobby 60546 Frankfurt Main Airmail Center Frankfurt GmbH ACF Archived 25 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Fraport Retrieved on 28 May 2011 Contact Airmail Center Frankfurt GmbH Flughafen Frankfurt Tor 3 Gebaude 189 Postfach 750164 60549 Frankfurt am Main Germany World Airline Directory Flight International 16 May 1981 1391 Luftverkehrs KG Gebaude 182 Flughafen 6 000 Frankfurt West Germany Direct PDF Link Archive World airline directory Flight International 26 July 1980 p 262 Direct PDF link Archive Flughafen Frankfurt Rheim Main West Germany Traffic Figures Archived from the original on 17 October 2019 Retrieved 16 January 2020 a b c d Air passenger transport between the main airports of Germany and their main partner airports routes data Eurostat Retrieved 24 November 2021 a b c Fraport AG Frankfurt Airport Bus amp Bahn Retrieved 2 June 2015 Fraport AG Frankfurt Airport Frankfurt Airport AIRail Service Retrieved 2 June 2015 Fraport AG Frankfurt Airport Auto Retrieved 2 June 2015 Fraport AG Frankfurt Airport Frankfurt Airport Bushaltestellen Retrieved 2 June 2015 ANA Shuttle Bus Archive All Nippon Airways Retrieved on 29 October 2016 ANA kommt taglich nach Dusseldorf Flug Revue 18 December 2013 Retrieved 27 September 2016 Yokoso All Nippon Airways ANA to Offer Daily Connection between Dusseldorf and Tokyo Starting March 30 Archived 25 August 2018 at the Wayback Machine Press release from ANA at the website of convention bureau DUSSELDORF Retrieved on 26 October 2016 Statistical data prepared by Fraport department MVG MF based on polls conducted in the departure lounges every four days Accident description for D ABOR at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 23 August 2021 Accident description for D AMOK at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 23 August 2021 Accident description for PH TPJ at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 23 August 2021 Accident description for OO AWG at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 23 August 2021 Accident description for G ASOG at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 23 August 2021 Accident description at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 23 August 2021 Times Wire Service 19 June 1985 Frankfurt Airport Ripped by Bomb 3 Killed 32 Hurt Explosive Put in Trash Can by Ticket Counters Los Angeles Times Retrieved 1 May 2013 Frankfurt airport shuts out asylum activists TheGuardian com 30 July 2001 Germany halts air expulsions TheGuardian com 31 May 1999 The Latest News from the UK and Around the World Sky News Frankfurt Airport shooting Two US servicemen dead BBC News 2 March 2011 Retrieved 2 March 2011 Accident description for D AIFA at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 23 August 2021 White Peter 2 December 2014 Discovery jets to Frankfurt airport Broadcastnow co uk Archived from the original on 15 July 2015 Retrieved 15 July 2015 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine WWE 6 June 2019 R Truth loses the 24 7 Title on the airport tarmac retrieved 12 June 2019External links Edit Frankfurt Airport travel guide from Wikivoyage Media related to Frankfurt Airport at Wikimedia Commons Official website Current weather for EDDF at NOAA NWS Accident history for FRA at Aviation Safety NetworkPortals Germany Aviation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frankfurt Airport amp oldid 1132595309, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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