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Munich Airport

Munich Airport (German: Flughafen München, IATA: MUC, ICAO: EDDM), also named Munich Franz Josef Strauss Airport, is an international airport serving Munich and Upper Bavaria. To the German Aeronautical Information Publication, it is known as Muenchen Airport.[4] It is the second-busiest airport in Germany in terms of passenger traffic after Frankfurt Airport, and the ninth-busiest airport in Europe, handling 47.9 million passengers in 2019.[5] It is the world's 15th-busiest airport in terms of international passenger traffic,[6] and was the 38th-busiest airport worldwide in 2018.[7][8][needs update] It serves as hub for Lufthansa including its subsidiaries Lufthansa CityLine, Air Dolomiti and Eurowings as well as a base for Condor and TUI fly Deutschland.

Munich Airport

Flughafen München
Summary
Airport typePublic
Owner/OperatorFlughafen München GmbH
ServesMunich Metropolitan Region
LocationErding and Freising districts, Bavaria
Opened17 May 1992; 31 years ago (1992-05-17)
Hub for
Focus city for
Elevation AMSL1,487 ft / 453 m
Coordinates48°21′14″N 011°47′10″E / 48.35389°N 11.78611°E / 48.35389; 11.78611
Websitemunich-airport.de
Map
MUC
location within Bavaria
MUC
MUC (Germany)
MUC
MUC (Europe)
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
08R/26L 4,000 13,123 Concrete
08L/26R 4,000 13,123 Concrete
Helipads
Number Length Surface
m ft
H 30 98 Concrete
Statistics (2022)
Passengers31,642,738 +153,28%
Aircraft movements00,285,028 0+86,2%
Cargo (metric tons)00,274,789 0-29,7%
Sources: Statistics at ADV.,[2]
AIP at German air traffic control.[3]

The airport is located 28.5 km (17.7 mi) northeast of Munich, near the town of Freising. It is named after former Bavarian minister-president Franz Josef Strauss. It has two passenger terminals with an additional midfield terminal, two runways as well as extensive cargo and maintenance facilities and is fully equipped to handle wide-body aircraft including the Airbus A380.

History edit

Development edit

 
An Air Toulouse Sud Aviation Caravelle at Munich Airport in 1993 with the construction site of today's Hilton Munich Airport in the background
 
Aerial view of Terminal 1 in 2001, when Terminal 2 was not yet operational

Munich's previous airport, Munich-Riem Airport, was operational from 1939 to 1992. Initial plans for an expansion of the airport date back to the year 1954. With rising passenger numbers and a growing number of inhabitants in its proximity, plans were made to completely move the airport to another site. The Bavarian government took the decision to build a new airport in the area called "Erdinger Moos" on 5 August 1969. When construction started on 3 November 1980, the small village of Franzheim disappeared and its approximately 400 inhabitants were resettled. The airport is located on the territory of four different municipalities: Oberding (location of the terminals; district of Erding), Hallbergmoos, Freising, and Marzling in the district of Freising.

The new Munich airport commenced operations on 17 May 1992, and all flights to and from Munich were moved to the new site overnight. Munich-Riem closed on 16 May 1992 shortly before midnight.

The airport is named after Franz Josef Strauss, who played a prominent, albeit sometimes controversial, role in West German politics from the 1950s until his death in 1988. Amongst other positions, Strauss was a long-time Minister-President (Governor) of the state of Bavaria. Strauss, a private pilot himself, initiated the new airport project and was particularly interested in attracting the aviation industry to Bavaria. He is regarded as one of the fathers of the Airbus project and served as initial chairman of the Airbus supervisory board.[9]

Flughafen München GmbH, which owns and operates Munich Airport, is a limited liability company consisting of three shareholders: the State of Bavaria (51%), the Federal Republic of Germany (26%) and the City of Munich (23%). The logo of Munich Airport consists of the letter "M" with the slogan "Living ideas – Connecting lives". Munich Airport is usually referred to as "Flughafen München" or simply "MUC", its IATA code. During construction, the airport was referred to as "Flughafen München II".

Operations edit

As their home base at Frankfurt Airport suffered from capacity limits back then, Lufthansa established a second hub, offering several short- and long-haul connections through Munich in addition to Frankfurt. While Lufthansa serves more European destinations from Munich Airport than from Frankfurt Airport, Frankfurt has many more intercontinental routes.

Between 1995 and 2006, passenger numbers doubled from under 15 million per annum to over 30 million,[10] despite the impact of the 11 September attacks in 2001 and 2002. In 1996 the airport overtook Düsseldorf as Germany's second-busiest airport and currently handles almost twice as many passengers as the country's third-busiest airport.

In June 2003, construction of Terminal 2 was completed, and it was inaugurated as an exclusive facility for Lufthansa and its Star Alliance partners.

In November 2013, the airport introduced its first new corporate design since its inauguration. The large letter 'M' remains in a new font type, and a dash has been added which changes between several colors. There are also animated color-changing versions of the 'M'-sign placed throughout the airport area, for example on the main entrance road and on the new Terminal 2 satellite.[11]

In June 2015, Condor announced it intends to establish a long-haul base at Munich Airport from the 2016 summer season. Condor has already based short- and mid-haul operations at the airport, and resumed long-haul flights in winter 2013 after a six-year absence.[12] In November 2015, Transavia announced their intention to establish their first German base at Munich Airport, which will consist of four aircraft serving 18 new routes by spring 2016.[13] As of June 2015, the biggest foreign carrier in Munich in terms of passenger numbers is Air Dolomiti.[14]

More than 40 million passengers passed through the airport in 2015, a record at the time.[15]

In December 2016, Lufthansa's low-cost subsidiary Eurowings announced that it would establish a major base at Munich Airport from March 2017, with 32 new routes.[16] These new base operations were carried out by Air Berlin on a new wet-lease contract with Eurowings.[17] In February 2017, Transavia announced the closure of their entire base at Munich Airport by October 2017 after only a year of service due to a change in their business strategy and negative economic outlook.[18]

Munich Airport's dynamic growth continued in 2018 with new traffic records and an all-time high of 46.2 million passengers. The airport also saw a strong surge in take-offs and landings, with 413,000 movements, an increase of 2.2% in 2018. With 266 destinations, Munich Airport increased its global network and is among the leading air transportation hubs in Europe.[19]

In February 2021, Lufthansa announced it would take over most of Eurowings's routes in Munich, with the exception of few domestic services and flights to Palma de Mallorca and Pristina.[20]

Terminals and facilities edit

The airport covers 3,892 acres (1,575 ha) of land area.[21] Most of the airport's facilities are located in the area between the two runways. The approach road and railway divide the west part into a southern half, which contains cargo and maintenance facilities, and a northern half, which contains mostly administrative buildings and service facilities, a holiday long-term parking lot and the visitors' centre. It is followed by the west apron and Terminal 1, then the Munich Airport Center (MAC), Terminal 2 and the east apron. Munich Airport has two passenger terminals, and shuffled 20–25 million people through each terminal in 2014.[22]

 
Map of Munich Airport (including planned expansion)

Terminal 1 edit

 
View of the main apron in front of Terminal 1 prior to the start of the construction of its new pier expansion
 
Check-in area at Terminal 1B
 
Boarding gate area at Terminal 1D

Terminal 1 is the older terminal and commenced operation when the airport was opened on 17 May 1992. It has a total capacity of 25 million passengers per year and is subdivided into five modules designated A, B, C, D and E. Modules A through D provide all facilities necessary to handle departures and arrivals, including individual landside driveways and parking, whereas module E is equipped to handle arrivals only. This design essentially makes each module a self-contained sub-terminal of its own. Modules A and D are used for flights within the Schengen-area, while modules B and C handle those to destinations outside it. Hall F is separate, located near Terminal 2, and handles flights with increased security requirements, i.e. those to Israel. Furthermore, the check-in counters for some flights departing from Terminal 1 are located in the central area Z (German: Zentralbereich) where most of the shopping and restaurant facilities of this Terminal as well as the airport's suburban railway station are also located.

The 1,081-metre (3,547-foot) pier features 21 jet bridges, two of which have been rebuilt into waiting halls for bus transfers. One gate position has been equipped with three jet bridges to handle the Airbus A380 which is regularly used by Emirates. There are further 60 aircraft stands on the apron, some of which are equipped with specially designed apron jet bridges (German: Vorfeldfluggastbrücken), to which passengers are brought by bus. This unique concept allows passengers to board with full protection from the weather but without the high investment required for full satellite terminals connected through a passenger transport system.

Terminal 1 currently handles all airlines that are not members or partners of the Star Alliance with the exception of Turkish Airlines. However, owing to lack of capacity at Terminal 2, Lufthansa's subsidiary Germanwings and former affiliate Condor both moved back to Terminal 1 in 2007.[23][24] Germanwings however moved back to Terminal 2 in late 2015. Some of the major users at Terminal 1 are Condor, Eurowings, Emirates, Qatar Airways, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, easyJet and TUI fly Deutschland amongst several others.

Terminal 1 extension edit

As of December 2015, a major redesign of Terminal 1 including a capacity increase and an extension of the central terminal building to the west for centralised security and shopping facilities was under preparation.[25] In November 2016, a major €400m extension and refurbishment for Terminal 1 was announced. Terminal areas A and B will be entirely redesigned with the addition of a 320-metre-long (1,050 ft) pier stretching out on the apron. The new facilities will provide capacity for 6 million additional passengers, will be able to handle 12 aircraft including two Airbus A380s at once, and were originally due to open by 2022.[26] However, due to the sharp decrease in passenger traffic in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic and a simultaneous sharp cost increase for the new terminal annex, the building's shell will be finished by 2022 with a new estimated opening of 2025.[27]

Terminal 2 edit

 
Check-in area at Terminal 2; the notable hanging sculpture advertising BMW has since been removed.
 
Boarding gate area at Terminal 2

Terminal 2 commenced operation on 29 June 2003. It has a design capacity of 25 million passengers per year and is exclusively used by Lufthansa and all other Star Alliance members serving Munich except Turkish Airlines. Star Alliance partners Air Malta and Luxair also use Terminal 2. Etihad Airways has shifted to terminal 1 effective from 1 June 2023.

Having been designed as a hub terminal, it is not divided into modules like Terminal 1. Instead, all facilities are arranged around a central Plaza. Owing to security regulations imposed by the European Union, the terminal has been equipped with facilities to handle passengers from countries considered insecure, i.e. not implementing the same regulations. This required the construction of a new level as, unlike other airports, the terminal does not have separate areas for arriving and departing passengers. The new level 06 opened on 15 January 2009.

The pier, which is 980 m (3,220 ft) long, is equipped with 24 jet bridges. As the total number of 75 aircraft stands on the east apron is not always sufficient, Terminal 2 sometimes also uses parking positions on the west apron, to which passengers are carried by airside buses. Terminal 2 is able to handle the Airbus A380 as well, however, prior to the opening of the Terminal 2 satellite building, there were no designated stands or additional jet bridges for it. Lufthansa flies the A380 into the satellite building.[28]

Terminal 2 has two main departure levels, 04 and 05 and additional bus gates on the lower level 03. Gates on level 05 (H) are designated non-Schengen gates. Until the new transfer level 06 opened, the northernmost gates were behind an additional security checkpoint for departures to the USA most of the day. The lower level 04 (G) contains Schengen gates. The bus gates on level 03 are also designated G and are also used for Schengen flights. Level 03 is smaller than the main levels and consists of two separate parts which can be reached from two points on level 04. One area of these gates is designated to Air Dolomiti.

The terminal is operated by Terminal-2-Betriebsgesellschaft (German for Terminal 2 Operating Company), which is owned by Flughafen München GmbH (60%) and Lufthansa (40%). This makes Terminal 2 the first terminal in Germany which is co-operated by an airline.

Terminal 2 Satellite edit

 
A February 2016 photograph of Terminal 2 Satellite building still under construction

Terminal 2 was projected to reach its full capacity of handling 27.5 million passengers a year by 2013. Lufthansa and Star Alliance partners stipulated the expansion of Terminal 2 without constructing the separate facilities for luggage claim, arrival and departure levels, etc. This was to ensure the easy access for the passengers who appreciate the convenience of central plaza for checking in their luggage, going through the security screening, and such as well as transferring from one plane to other within Lufthansa and Star Alliance partner networks inside Terminal 2.[29][30] After the completion of Terminal 2 in 2003, the preparations for a new satellite terminal already had been made.

The project cost is 650 million Euro with Munich Airport contributing 60% and Lufthansa 40% toward the project.[31] The expansion would handle additional 11 million passengers per year. The construction was approved in 2010 and started in 2012. At end of 2015, the construction was completed, and the teams of volunteers performed the trial runs in January 2016 as to identify any potential issues and to streamline the movements between Terminal 2 and Terminal 2 Satellite. The satellite terminal was inaugurated on 22 April 2016 and commenced its operations on 26 April 2016.[32][33][34][35]

The new satellite building is 609 metres (1,998 ft) long with 125,000 square metres (1,345,500 sq ft) of floor space with 52 additional gates and 27 parking positions, 11 of which are able to handle wide-body aircraft, including Airbus A380. The building has separate access facilities for Schengen and Non-Schengen passengers on two main levels (K Level for Schengen and L for Non-Schengen destinations). The J section is for bus transportation between the terminal and aircraft parked at aprons. 44 new passport control stations and 24 security lanes for transfer passengers are installed in the terminal. Five new Lufthansa lounges along with new restaurants and shops are set up throughout the terminal. However, the satellite terminal is airside-only facility: the check-in, luggage claim, departure and arrival passenger meet points are still done at Terminal 2. The passenger transportation between Terminal 2 and Terminal 2 Satellite is served by fully automated people mover by Bombardier Transportation that operates in the tunnels.[36][37] The satellite terminal celebrated its one millionth passenger in July 2016, less than three months after its opening.[38]

A future expansion of the satellite building into a 'T' shape has been planned along with a possible third terminal to the east.[39] Lufthansa and Flughafen München GmbH (Munich Airport operator) signed a letter of intent on 16 December 2019 to expand Terminal 2 Satellite.[40] The expansion will build a new terminal extending from the centre of Terminal 2 Satellite building at right angle toward the east. The Memorandum of Understanding from Flughafen München GmbH stipulates that both parties reach the goal of becoming a CO2-neutral by 2030, utilising highly fuel-efficient aircraft. No further detail about number of gates along with construction and completion dates is given yet.

Munich Airport Center edit

 
Munich Airport Center (MAC) during the annual Christmas market

The Munich Airport Center (MAC) is a shopping, business, and recreation area that connects the terminals. The older Central Area (German: Zentralbereich), which was originally built as part of Terminal 1, hosts a shopping mall and the S-Bahn station. The newer MAC Forum built with Terminal 2 is a large outdoor area with a partly transparent tent-like roof. Next to it is the airport hotel managed by Hilton Hotels & Resorts which was designed by the world-famous architect Helmut Jahn and landscape architecture firm PWP Landscape Architecture in 1994.

The Munich Airport Center has a supermarket where one can shop from 5:30 a.m. to midnight every day, including Sundays,[41] as it is exempt from the Bavarian law governing retail hours of operation (German: Ladenschlussgesetz).[42]

Runways edit

The airport has two parallel runways and one concrete helipad. The two concrete runways (08R/26L and 26R/08L) are each 4,000 metres (13,120 ft) long and 60 metres (200 ft) wide.[43]

Parking areas edit

 
Parking garage in front of Terminal 1

Currently, there are five parking garages and six underground parking areas, amounting together to a total of 30,000 parking spaces[44] of which approximately 16,500 are under a roof. The parking garage P20 at Terminal 2, with 6,400 parking spaces on eleven levels (including four that are underground) since its commissioning in 2003 was the largest parking garage in Germany until the car park at the new Allianz Arena was opened in 2005.[45] A parking guidance system was installed in the parking garages, which detects whether a parking space is occupied and newly arriving vehicles are shown where the empty parking spaces are located.

Apart from the usual parking facilities, the Munich Airport offers, at additional cost, special parking spaces with additional benefits. This includes valet parking, in which the vehicle is picked up by an airport employee upon flight departure and parked, and the Park, Sleep & Fly option, in which a night at the Hilton hotel is included. Also there is an option for oversized parking spaces, the so-called XXL parking, and secure parking. Lastly, there is a special separate parking level in the P20 parking garage, where the parked cars are guarded. In addition, special services can be booked, such as interior/exterior cleaning and fuelling.

To make shopping in the public areas more attractive for local residents of the airport area, there are special offers where visitors can park up to three hours for free in the P20 parking garage.[46] Short-term parking can be found east of the central area, where visitors can park for free for a maximum of thirty minutes. During the holiday periods other cheaper options are provided in the P8 parking garage.

Visitor viewing facilities edit

 
Visitors Park at Munich Airport

The airport authorities have set out to cater for visitors and sightseers by creating a 'Visitors Park' which includes a 'Visitors Hill', from which a good view of the westerly aircraft apron and Terminal 1 can be obtained, as well as a restaurant and a shop for aircraft models and other collectors' items. This location is served by a railway station named 'Besucherpark'. The view from the hill is shown in the above widescreen image of the Terminal 1 apron. Three historic aircraft are on display in the park, a Super Constellation, a Douglas DC-3, and a Junkers Ju 52/3m.

There is also a visitors' viewing terrace on the roof of Terminal 2 that features a wide, glassed balcony with seating areas and gives a view of the easterly aircraft apron. All visitors can access the terrace from the landside. The entrance fee was abolished in September 2013. There are two additional smaller Visitor Hills on the north end of the north runway and at the center of the south runway.

Airlines and destinations edit

Passenger edit

The following airlines offer regular scheduled and charter flights at Munich Airport:[47]

AirlinesDestinations
Aegean Airlines Athens, Thessaloniki
Seasonal: Heraklion, Kalamata
Aer Lingus Dublin
Seasonal: Cork[48]
airBaltic Riga, Tallinn, Tampere,[49] Vilnius[50]
Air Cairo Hurghada[51]
Seasonal: Marsa Alam,[52] Sharm El Sheikh[53]
Air Canada Toronto–Pearson
Air China Beijing–Capital,[54] Shanghai–Pudong[55]
Air Dolomiti[56] Bari, Bologna, Cluj-Napoca, Florence, Genoa, Kraków,[57] Milan–Linate, Milan–Malpensa, Olbia, Turin, Venice, Verona
Seasonal: Brindisi
Air Europa Madrid
Air France Paris–Charles de Gaulle
Air Malta Malta (ends 30 March 2024)[58]
Air Montenegro Seasonal: Podgorica (begins 2 June 2024)[59]
Albawings Pristina[60]
All Nippon Airways Tokyo–Haneda[61][62]
American Airlines Charlotte
AnadoluJet Ankara, Antalya, Istanbul–Sabiha Gökçen
Austrian Airlines Vienna
BeOnd Malé[63][64]
British Airways London–Heathrow
Brussels Airlines Brussels[65]
Condor[66][67] Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria, Hurghada, Lanzarote, La Palma, Palma de Mallorca, Tenerife–South
Seasonal: Agadir,[68] Alicante, Antalya,[69] Chania, Corfu, Faro,[69] Funchal, Heraklion, Ibiza, Jerez de la Frontera, Kalamata, Karpathos, Kavala, Kefalonia, Kos, Lamezia Terme, Málaga,[69] Mykonos, Olbia, Preveza/Lefkada, Rhodes, Samos, Santorini, Skiathos, Split, Sulaimaniyah, Volos, Zakynthos
Charter: Pristina[70]
Corendon Airlines Seasonal: Antalya,[71] Hurghada,[72] İzmir
Croatia Airlines Osijek,[73] Split, Zadar,[74] Zagreb
Seasonal: Brač,[75] Dubrovnik, Rijeka
Delta Air Lines Atlanta
Seasonal: Detroit, New York–JFK (begins 9 April 2024)[76]
Discover Airlines[77][78] Gran Canaria, Lanzarote,[79] Marrakesh,[78] Tenerife–South
Seasonal: Bodrum,[78] Chania,[78] Corfu, Djerba (begins 1 May 2024),[80] Fuerteventura,[78] Funchal,[78] Heraklion, Hurghada, Ibiza,[81] Jerez de la Frontera, Kalamata (begins 18 May 2024),[80] Kefalonia (begins 3 May 2024),[80] Kos, Marsa Alam,[82] Menorca (begins 6 April 2024),[80] Monastir (begins 3 May 2024),[80] Mykonos, Palma de Mallorca,[81] Preveza/Lefkada,[83] Rhodes,[78] Samos,[78] Santorini, Varna (begins 3 May 2024),[80] Zakynthos[78]
easyJet Edinburgh, London–Gatwick, Manchester, Milan–Malpensa, Naples[84]
Egyptair Cairo
El Al Tel Aviv
Emirates Dubai–International
Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi
European Air Charter Seasonal charter: Burgas[85]
EVA Air Taipei–Taoyuan[86]
Eurowings[87] Cologne/Bonn, Dortmund, Düsseldorf, Hamburg, Palma de Mallorca, Pristina
Finnair Helsinki
FlyErbil[88] Erbil
FlyOne Chișinău[89]
Freebird Airlines[90] Seasonal: Antalya
Georgian Airways Tbilisi[91]
Iberia Madrid
Icelandair Reykjavik–Keflavík
Iraqi Airways Baghdad, Erbil
Israir Seasonal: Tel Aviv
ITA Airways Rome–Fiumicino
Jazeera Airways Seasonal: Kuwait[92]
KLM Amsterdam
KM Malta Airlines Malta (begins 31 March 2024)[58]
Kuwait Airways Kuwait
Leav Aviation Seasonal: Arvidsjaur[93]
LOT Polish Airlines Warsaw–Chopin
Lufthansa Alicante, Amsterdam, Ancona, Athens, Bangalore,[94] Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi, Barcelona, Basel/Mulhouse,[95] Beijing–Capital,[96] Belgrade, Berlin, Bilbao, Billund,[97] Birmingham, Bordeaux,[98] Boston, Bremen, Brussels, Bucharest–Otopeni, Budapest, Cairo, Catania, Charlotte, Chicago–O'Hare, Cologne/Bonn, Copenhagen, Debrecen, Delhi, Denver, Dresden, Dubai–International, Dublin, Düsseldorf, Edinburgh, Faro, Frankfurt, Funchal, Gdańsk, Geneva, Gothenburg, Graz, Hamburg, Hanover, Helsinki, Hong Kong (resumes 31 March 2024),[99] Johannesburg–O. R. Tambo (begins 3 June 2024),[99] Katowice, Kraków, Larnaca, Leipzig/Halle, Lisbon, Ljubljana, London–Heathrow, Los Angeles, Luxembourg, Lyon, Madrid, Málaga, Manchester, Marrakesh,[100] Marseille, Mexico City, Milan–Malpensa, Montréal–Trudeau, Mumbai, Münster/Osnabrück, Nantes (resumes 28 April 2024),[101] Naples, Newark, New York–JFK, Nice, Osaka–Kansai, Oslo, Oulu,[102][101] Paderborn/Lippstadt, Palermo, Palma de Mallorca, Paris–Charles de Gaulle, [101] Porto, Poznań, Prague, Rome–Fiumicino, Rzeszów,[98] San Diego,[103] San Francisco, Seattle/Tacoma (begins 30 May 2024),[104] Seoul–Incheon, Shanghai–Pudong,[96] Sibiu, Singapore, Sofia, Stockholm–Arlanda, Stuttgart, Sylt, Tallinn, Tbilisi, Tel Aviv, Thessaloniki, Timișoara, Tirana, Tokyo–Haneda, Toulouse, Trondheim (begins 28 April 2024),[105] Tunis, Turin, Valencia, Vienna, Warsaw–Chopin, Washington–Dulles, Wrocław, Zagreb, Zürich
Seasonal: Asturias,[98] Bastia, Bergen,[97] Biarritz, Bodrum, Cape Town, Cagliari, Corfu, Dubrovnik, Fuerteventura, Glasgow, Gran Canaria, Heraklion, Hurghada, Ibiza, Jerez de la Frontera, Jersey, Kalamata,[97] Kittilä, Lanzarote, London–Stansted,[106] Malta, Marsa Alam, Menorca,[97] Miami, Mykonos, Olbia, Pisa, Preveza/Lefkada,[83] Pula, Reykjavik–Keflavík, Rhodes, Rijeka, Rimini, Santorini, Seville, Split, Tenerife–South, Tivat, Toronto–Pearson, Tromsø, Vancouver, Varna, Zadar, Zakynthos[107]
Luxair Luxembourg
Marabu Gran Canaria, Hurghada,[108] Lanzarote, La Palma,[108] Palma de Mallorca, Tenerife–South
Seasonal: Chania, Corfu, Faro, Fuerteventura, Heraklion, Karpathos, Kefalonia, Kos, Lamezia Terme, Málaga, Olbia, Preveza/Lefkada, Rhodes, Split, Volos, Zakynthos
Nesma Airlines Charter: Hurghada[109]
Norwegian Air Shuttle Copenhagen, Oslo
Seasonal: Alicante (resumes 1 April 2024),[110] Málaga (resumes 31 March 2024),[110] Stockholm–Arlanda
Nouvelair Djerba,[111] Monastir
Seasonal: Tunis[112]
Oman Air Muscat
Pegasus Airlines Istanbul–Sabiha Gökçen
Seasonal: Antalya, İzmir[113]
Qatar Airways Doha
Royal Jordanian Amman–Queen Alia
SalamAir Muscat[114]
Saudia Jeddah, Riyadh
Scandinavian Airlines Copenhagen, Oslo, Stockholm–Arlanda
Singapore Airlines Singapore
Sky Alps Seasonal: Mostar (begins 2 May 2024)[115]
Sky Express Athens[116]
SmartLynx Airlines Seasonal charter: Ras Al Khaimah[117]
Somon Air Dushanbe[118][119]
Southwind Airlines Seasonal: Antalya[120]
SunExpress Ankara, Antalya, İzmir
Seasonal: Adana, Bodrum, Dalaman, Gaziantep,[121] Kayseri, Samsun[121]
Swiss International Air Lines Zürich
TAP Air Portugal Lisbon
Thai Airways International[122] Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi
Travelcoup Seasonal: Ibiza,[123] Palma de Mallorca,[123] Zürich[123]
TUI fly Deutschland Boa Vista, Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria, Hurghada, Lanzarote, Palma de Mallorca, Sal, Tenerife–South
Seasonal: Corfu, Dalaman, Djerba, Heraklion, Jerez de la Frontera, Kos, Marsa Alam, Menorca, Patras, Rhodes
Tunisair Djerba, Monastir, Tunis
Turkish Airlines Istanbul
Seasonal: Adana, Ankara, Antalya, Bodrum, Dalaman, Gaziantep,[124] İzmir, Kayseri, Ordu/Giresun, Samsun, Trabzon[124]
United Airlines Chicago–O'Hare, Denver, Houston–Intercontinental, Newark, San Francisco, Washington–Dulles
Uzbekistan Airways Tashkent[125]
Vueling[126] Barcelona, Palma de Mallorca
Seasonal: Alicante, Málaga
Widerøe Bergen[127]

Cargo edit

Statistics edit

Annual traffic edit

 
Historic planes on display at the Visitors Park of Munich Airport
 
Maintenance facility of Lufthansa Technik at Munich Airport
 
Control tower at Munich Airport
 
Lufthansa maintains its secondary hub at Munich Airport's Terminal 2.
 
Flughafen München GmbH headquarters on the airport's grounds
Annual passenger traffic at MUC airport. See Wikidata query.
Annual Passenger Traffic
Year Passengers % Change
2000 23,125,872  
2001 23,646,900   2%
2002 23,163,720   -2%
2003 24,193,304   4.4%
2004 26,814,505   11%
2005 28,619,427   6.7%
2006 30,757,978   7.4%
2007 33,959,422   10.4%
2008 34,530,593   1.6%
2009 32,681,067   -5.3%
2010 34,721,605   6%
2011 37,763,701   8.7%
2012 38,360,604   1.5%
2013 38,672,644   1%
2014 39,700,515   2.6%
2015 40,998,553   3.2%
2016 42,277,920   3.1%
2017 44,546,263   5.3%
2018 46,253,623   3.8%
2019 47,959,885   3.6%
2020 11,120,224   76.8%
2021 12,496,432   12.4%
Source: Munich Airport[137][138][139]

Busiest routes edit

Busiest domestic routes from MUC (2020)[140]
Rank Airport Departing passengers Operating airlines
1 Hamburg 271,704 Eurowings, Lufthansa
2 Berlin–Tegel 219,586 Lufthansa
3 Düsseldorf 215,028 Eurowings, Lufthansa
4 Frankfurt 170,653 Lufthansa
5 Cologne/Bonn 117,261 Eurowings, Lufthansa
Busiest international European routes from MUC (2020)[140]
Rank Airport All passengers Operating airlines
1 London–Heathrow 156,903 British Airways, Lufthansa
2 Amsterdam 129,741 Eurowings, KLM, Lufthansa, Transavia
3 Paris–Charles de Gaulle 119,506 Air France, Lufthansa
4 Madrid 102,736 Air Europa, Iberia, Lufthansa
5 Athens 97,928 Aegean, Lufthansa
6 Rome–Fiumicino 93,632 Alitalia, Lufthansa
7 Barcelona 88,487 Lufthansa, Vueling
8 Stockholm–Arlanda 76,405 Lufthansa, Norwegian, Scandinavian Airlines
9 Copenhagen 72,981 Lufthansa, Norwegian, Scandinavian Airlines
10 Lisbon 72,946 Lufthansa, TAP
Busiest intercontinental routes from MUC (2020)[140]
Rank Airport Departing passengers Operating airlines
1 Dubai–International 76,353 Emirates, Lufthansa
2 Doha 48,104 Qatar Airways
3 Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi 39,402 Lufthansa, Thai Airways
4 Abu Dhabi 37,895 Etihad
5 Newark 37,813 Lufthansa, United Airlines

Other facilities edit

  • Lufthansa maintains a Flight Operations Center at the airport for crews based here at its secondary hub.[141] In 2014, its subsidiary Lufthansa CityLine relocated their administration offices from Cologne to the grounds of Munich Airport.[142] Additionally, there is a large Lufthansa Technik maintenance facility which can handle up to six Boeing 747s at once.[143]
  • There are two hotels directly on the airports grounds, the Hilton Munich Airport (which was the Kempinski Hotel Airport Munich until 31 December 2014)[144] near Terminal 2 and a Novotel at the long-term parking area[145] with several more in the nearby villages.
  • German car manufacturer Audi established a large training facility for its retailers on the grounds of the airport in 2010.[146] Designated areas near the apron are used for drive training.
  • The defunct German airline DBA, originally Deutsche BA, had its head office on the grounds of the airport and in Hallbergmoos.[147][148]
  • The helicopter operations division of the Bavarian State police is based here.[149]

Environment edit

 
Munich Airport from the International Space Station, circa 2010

Since November 2005, the Munich Airport has a certified environmental management system according to DIN ISO 14001 and EMAS.

Munich Airport was involved in the Air Transport Initiative for Germany, which was also attended by Fraport, Deutsche Flugsicherung and Lufthansa. It developed a so-called "four-pillar strategy" with an overall concept designed to improve environmental protection; these four pillars include:

"Reduction of CO2 emissions through technological progress and innovation, particularly in the field of engine development; a more efficient infrastructure with a needs-based adaptation of airport capacity with concentration on the avoidance of, for example, polluting queues; operational measures such as the optimization of soil processes; economic incentives"
—Perspectives. Environmental Statement 2008 Munich Airport GmbH[150]

Landscape edit

From the beginning, the state-administered parts of nature conservation aspects were considered in the planning of the airport. At the opening of the airport, 70% of the grounds were planted; today there are 925 of the 1,575 hectares which remained planted, only 60%.[151] The prevalent Erdinger Moos area with its many intersecting small streams, and woodland series was taking into consideration in the planning by the landscape architect. At the same time, consideration was taken in making the airport unattractive to birds, in order to prevent bird strikes. An additional 230-acre green belt was placed around the airport as a compensation area, in which the overall compensation areas extend over 600 acres.[152] Even with the focus on the environment, environmental groups criticize the enormous land consumption of the airport and each additional expansion project. Also, they believe that the compensation areas are not sufficient enough in order to compensate for the damage caused by the airport (see below).[153]

Water edit

The construction in the Erdinger Moos area had a large impact on the water budget of the region, since the groundwater levels in the marshy landscape had to be greatly reduced by creating drainage ditches. Existing watercourses, such as small streams, were not interrupted, but redirected so that they now run either around or underneath the property, limiting the effects of groundwater reduction to only the areas in which the airport is located.

The wastewater from the airport and the collected rain water are both returned to the natural water cycle. In order to accomplish this, 100 km of sewer lines were laid, and seven pumping stations, a water treatment plant and four rainwater sedimentation tanks were built and put into operation. The already rough cleansed water is then sent to a purification plant. For the necessary winter de-icing of the airport, used deicing chemicals such as glycol are collected together with the contaminated melted water, and then either purified or reused. The cleaning is done in the degradation system area, where soil bacteria decompose the glycol into harmless components of water and carbon dioxide.[154]

Noise edit

General

To reduce noise from thrust reversal during aircraft landings, the runways were built to a length of 4,000 meters, however the noise reduction is offset by increased taxiing times. To reduce noise pollution, a hall for engine testing was built. After 11 p.m. engine tests may be carried out only with the approval of air traffic control. To motivate airlines to use low-noise aircraft, the airport charges are calculated according to the level of noise pollution.[155] There are 16 stationary noise measuring points at the airport.[156]

Night flight regulations

At Munich airport there is no strict ban on night flights, but a ban on flights arriving and departing between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m.. The only exemptions are flights from mail services and DFS survey flights. From midnight until 5am only those flights that operate in the interest of the public are generally possible, this includes so-called emergency flights: police and rescue helicopter missions or medical emergencies. Also, aircraft movements for security reasons such as for precautionary landings are allowed at all times. Flights with special permission from the Bavarian Ministry for Economic Affairs, Infrastructure, Transport and Technology are also feasible at this time.

From 10 p.m. to midnight and 5 a.m. to 6 a.m. flights are possible through the so-called bonus list. Exceptions are delayed flights or premature landings if these aircraft are at least noise-admitted according to ICAO Chapter 3. In addition to both the bonus list and noise requirements they must fulfill further conditions, this includes that the airline must have a maintenance base at the airport, the maximum number of 28 scheduled flights per night (charter and scheduled services) must not be exceeded, the aircraft is not louder than 75 db (A) or it is an education or training flight.[157]

This rule applies until the total annual volume is exhausted in air traffic movements by these regulations. More flights of this type are then no longer allowed. The number of night flights increased from 1999 to 2007 from 42 to 60 flights average per night.[150]

Residents have been protesting for years against aircraft noise, in particular against the noise pollution at night. The Government of Upper Bavaria approved the night flight regulations currently in force in 2001.

Energy edit

Cogeneration plant

Most of Munich airport's electricity and heat is generated by its own cogeneration plant (CHP), which is located south of the northern runway to the west of the airport. CHP has nine so-called cogeneration modules, seven run on diesel fuel, the other two on gasoline. The electrical generating capacity is 18.5 megawatts. The cogeneration modules run smoothly all year long; this creates surplus heat at certain times which is stored in heat storage to be used later. In summer, the heat generated is used for the operation of the absorption refrigerating machine. The total gross utilization rate is 78 percent (diesel) and 83 percent (gasoline). The cogeneration modules are an obligation, from the Renewable Energy Sources Act, so that Munich Airport can generate electricity from renewable energy sources, using biogas.[150] The airport also has a connection to the district heating network of the Zolling power plant.

Photovoltaic system

There is a photovoltaic system on the roof of the central hall of terminal 2. It is a joint project of BP Solar, German BP, Bundesdeutscher Arbeitskreis für Umweltbewusstes Management, Lufthansa, Munich Airport and others. In operation since 10 July 2003, it generates an average of 445,000 kilowatt hours per year, equivalent to the consumption of 155 households.[158] The power comes from 2,856 modules of silicon cells, covering a total area of 3,594 square metres. It is expected to save 12,000 tons of carbon dioxide emissions over its 30-year lifetime.[150] €2.65 million EUR were invested in the plant. The plant produces direct current, which after conversion to alternating current is initiated immediately in the power system. In Terminal 2, the energy currently generated is displayed on an overhead screen, which also displays other information.

Biofuel gas station

A biofuel gas station supplying rapeseed oil fuels, ethanol fuel and biomethane has been established, making it possible for the operating companies to convert their vehicle fleets to biofuels; the station can also be used by external companies operating at the airport.[150]

Bird sanctuary edit

Despite measures to prevent bird strikes, the northern part of Erdinger Moos is still an important habitat for birds, especially for grassland birds such as northern lapwing, Eurasian curlew or rare winter visitors such as the hen harrier. This led automatically to the area being reported under the European Birds Directive as a bird sanctuary.

The fencing of the airport and the large meadows inside the fence attract open meadow birds. This leads to constant conflicts and the deaths, even of rare birds as a result of airplane accidents (vortices) and safety measures to avoid bird strikes. The planned third runway 3,440,000 square metres in the bird sanctuary will be laid with concrete, eliminating 8,000,000 square metres of living space. This would represent substantial interference with the bird sanctuary.[159]

Safety edit

Police edit

 
Eurocopter EC135, the police helicopter squad of Bavaria at Munich Airport

For the safety of passengers and flight operations, four[160] inspections by the Federal Police, departments of the Bavarian State Police (Police Inspection Munich Airport, PP Oberbayern Nord) and the security department of Flughafen München GmbH are responsible. The airport police station is located in Nordallee 6, and the police officers working there have an adapted qualification to the specific field of application, for example, they are also trained in the case of an aircraft hijacking. Bavaria's police helicopter squad is also based at the Munich Airport, where five of the Eurocopter EC135 helicopters are stationed. A move of the unit to Schleißheim Airport is planned for 2020.

In addition, one of the world's two chambers for explosive goods (the second one is located at Kuala Lumpur International Airport) is located on the airport grounds. In this chamber explosive substances can be defused.[citation needed]

Fire department edit

 
Fire engine at Munich Airport

The airport has its own fire department with 32 fire engines distributed over two fire stations, which are located near the runways. They are positioned in a way that the emergency vehicles can reach every point of the apron, taxiway and runway in a maximum of three minutes, as long as no adverse weather conditions prevail. Should larger missions occur, the fire departments of the surrounding municipalities can be called in, which can provide up to 36 vehicles and about 216 men; in exchange, the airport fire department helps in large fires in the region. Most recently, this happened when a BMW plant in Eching went up in flames.

Statistics of the Fire Department
Year Missions* Fires Technical assistance False alarms
2013 3997 104 1754 2139
2012 3613 107 1717 1789
2011 3582 118 1831 1633
2010 3946 128 2070 1748
2009 3254 118 1599 1537
2008 2999 107 1389 1503
2007 2651 116 1328 1207
2006 3011 123 1052 1209
2005 2095 127 1103 1116
2004 2704 119 950 1103

* The sum of the missions also includes other missions such as guided tours.

Ambulance service edit

Emergency medical care is provided by a rescue guard on Nordallee operated by the Malteser Hilfsdienst under a public service contract. A rescue vehicle is ready for use around the clock, which is also used outside the airport area for normal emergencies. If necessary, other rescue workers from the region or supraregional are used, the deployment coordination is carried out by the integrated control center which is also responsible for the area of the airport.

On the premises of the airport is an emergency physician from the medical center that arrives on the emergency site, when required, in a separate vehicle according to the rendezvous procedure.

Ground transportation edit

Road edit

Munich Airport is accessible via nearby Motorway A 92, which connects to motorway A9 (towards Nuremberg) and Munich's ring motorway A99. Bavarian State Road St. 2584 connects A 92's exit 6 (Flughafen München)—an incomplete interchange that can only be used by traffic to and from the west—to the terminals. Access from the east is possible via exit 8 (Freising Ost) and Bavarian State Road St. 2580, which connects to St. 2584 in the east of the airport.

The north-southbound so-called "Flughafentangente Ost" ( literally: airport tangential road east) between A92 and A94 was finally opened in 2010 [161] with a single lane in each direction. Originally, it was planned to be opened as expressway quiet simultaneously with the new Airport. Gradually, the accident prone road shall be selectively upgraded from 2021 on to two alternating lanes per direction.[162]

It can be reached by bicycle on national highway 301 ("B301") and an airport road branching from this highway into the airport area.

Suburban railway edit

 
A S-Bahn train leaving the tunnel beneath the apron of Terminal 1

There are two railway stations on the grounds of Munich Airport: Munich Airport Terminal station is located in a tunnel directly beneath the central area between both passenger terminals. A second station called Besucherpark (German for Visitors' Park) is located in the area that contains the cargo and maintenance areas, long-term parking, administrative buildings and the Visitors' Park from which the station gets its name.

The airport is connected to the city by Munich suburban railway (S-Bahn) lines   and  . The ride takes approximately 45 minutes to the Marienplatz station in the city centre.   runs from the airport through the northwestern suburbs and reaches the city centre from the west (HauptbahnhofMarienplatzMünchen Ost), while   comes in from the eastern suburbs passing the stations from the opposite direction. The S-Bahn from the airport to the city runs approximately 20 hours a day with a short break between 1:30 a.m. and 4 a.m.[163]

Furthermore, a scheduled regional bus service  635 connects the airport within 20 minutes to the Freising railway station, providing access to regional trains towards Munich as well as to Nuremberg, Regensburg and Prague.

A second tunnel beneath the terminals is currently unused. Originally, there were plans to use it for intercity railway, then for a Transrapid maglev train making the trip to München Hauptbahnhof in 10 minutes. However, this project was cancelled in March 2008 due to cost escalation. Discussions regarding a faster connection between Munich city centre and the airport have fruitlessly taken place for several years, as the journey time of 40–60 minutes faces ongoing criticism.[164] Even a rudimentary express suburban railway service is not in sight.[165]

Regional railway services edit

As of September 2015, construction works to connect the airport with regional railway services of Deutsche Bahn to and from the north-east had started.[166] This project, called Neufahrner Kurve (Neufahrn curve after the nearby town of Neufahrn bei Freising), saw the existing southwest-bound S-Bahn tracks being expanded with a curve leading to the north, connecting them with the already existing tracks of the Munich-Regensburg line. This new connection enabled hourly regional express train services from Regensburg via Landshut directly to the airport without the need to use a connecting bus coming from the north or to go to Munich city center at first and then backtracking to the airport. The entire project was completed in November 2018.[167] On 9 December 2018, the new hourly service, Flughafenexpress (airport express) between Regensburg and Munich Airport commenced.

Bus edit

MVV regional bus lines connect the airport to the nearby city of Freising as well as Erding and Markt Schwaben. Lufthansa Airport Bus provides an alternative to the S-Bahn, stopping at Nordfriedhof U-Bahn station and Munich Central Station.

INVG proposes a direct express coach service between the airport and Ingolstadt; during the summer season an hourly service is offered whereas a less frequent timetable-based service is proposed during the remainder of the year. Stops served at the airport are terminal 2 and the centrally located Airport Center. In Ingoldstadt the service serves Ingolstadt Nord station, which allows connection to regional rail services including to and from Nuremberg.

Future edit

Improvements in public transport edit

At the beginning of the 1990s, the Deutsche Bundesbahn considered four options for a better railway connection to the airport. At an estimated cost of between 500 million and 2 billion Deutsche Mark, each option would have allowed the airport to be integrated into the ICE network.[168] However, the idea was rejected and instead emphasis was put on a better connection of the airport to regional transportation as well as to Munich main station.

Airport Express (S-Bahn) edit

After the cancellation of Transrapid proposal, several alternative proposals had been put forward that would utilise the current railway system with minor technical upgrades.

One proposal called "Humpel-Express" would utilise the most of current Munich-Regensburg railway and S1 lines with very limited stops along the route.[169] The "Humpel-Express" would travel at 200 kilometres per hour (120 mph) and depart the Central Station and Munich Airport at 15-minute interval. The biggest issue was frequent level crossing closures at Fasanerie and Feldmoching (total of 39 minutes for every hour), causing the severe traffic congestions. Additionally, the construction of new line between Moosach and Munich Airport would cut through several towns and neighbourhoods, which the residents vehemently opposed. The new line also required the construction of new viaduct over the federal highway B471, increasing the cost further. The opposition from the resident and unwillingness to allot additional funding killed the proposal.[170]

With the Second S-Bahn Tunnel under construction, the proposed Airport Express service will peruse second S-Bahn tunnel upon completion with one stop, instead of four, at Marienhof between Hauptbahnhof and Ostbahnhof. This would reduce the travel time between Hauptbahnhof and Munich Airport to 30 minutes. Additionally, Deutsche Bahn has proposed the underground four-track S-Bahn tunnel from Leuchtenbergring to Halbergmoos S-Bahn stations. This would eliminate the need to slow down before passing through the intervening stations and the need to close the level crossings frequently. If the four-track extension is approved and constructed, the travel time would be reduced further to 15–18 minutes.[171]

Subway edit

Through the extension of different subway lines to the intersection with one of the two airport suburban railways, the travel time to the airport from different parts of the north of Munich can be considerably reduced. This was realized for the suburbs of Milbertshofen-Am Hart and Feldmoching-Hasenbergl with the subway line   to the   station Feldmoching in 1996 and the construction of the airport connector near Neufahrn in 1998. In 2010, the travel time to the airport from Moosach, Schwabing West and Neuhausen-Nymphenburg districts was shortened by connecting the subway line   to the   station Moosach. The extension of the   from Garching to Neufahrn is currently being examined.[172]

Erdinger ring connections edit

 
Map of the Erdinger Ring connections with a drawn Walpertskirchener connection and Neufahrn Link
 
Construction work for the Neufahrn Link

The Erdinger Ring connection is to extend the S-Bahn (S2) from Erding in the direction of the airport and connect to neighboring Freising through a connecting curve, the Neufahrn Link. It will fulfill the demand of a rail connection between Eastern Bavaria, including the neighboring airport commuter cities Moosburg and Landshut, to the airport, realized with its own regional railway line. A faster connection from the airport to the inner city is not achieved by the Erdinger ring connection, however a direct connection between the airport and the Munich Messe would be. For this, the S2 would also make a short route north of Messe München and have a stop north of the exhibition center. Already before the opening of the airport there were plans for a regional station at the airport. To this, a railway connection from Mühldorf am Inn is to be made between Erding and Dorfen with the help of the Erdinger ring connection as well as a short new construction single-track called Walpertskirchner Spange. The actual planning phase for this also began, as in the case of the Erdinger ring connection, in August 2006. On 29 August 2013, the Bavarian Administrative Court rejected the complaints against the plan approval decision of the Neufahrn Link of October 2012 and therefore freed the way for a direct rail connection of the Munich airport from Regensburg, Landshut, Moosburg and Freising. The Neufahrner Kurve is to connect the railway line Landshut-Munich from Neufahr with the railway connection line Neufahr-Flughafen Munich, approximately 2.5 kilometres long, two-track and electrified section of the line. In the construction and financing agreement, signed by rail and free-trade in April 2013, it was agreed that the Neufahrn Link will be built and put into operation by the end of 2018. On 9 December 2018, the new train service to Regensburg and Landshut has commenced.[173]

Third runway edit

It has been proposed to build a third runway in the airport. It would likely run in parallel to the existing runways and be located to the north-east of the current north runway, significantly extending the total area occupied by the airport.

Justification edit

According to the airport, the growth of air traffic in Munich from 1997 to 2006 was an average of 7% per year, and the airport's capacity was already exhausted. Since new airlines in Munich no longer received the desired slots, a traffic-spoiling effect occurred.[174] An air traffic forecast of Intraplan Consult GmbH estimated 58.2 million passengers for 2025, provided the airport has a tight-fitting growth.[175][176] According to Flughafen München GmbH (FMG), the airport's operator, the current two-runway system is already operating at full capacity during peak hours, and requests for additional slots from airlines have been denied. Further increase in air traffic is expected as Munich is to become a second major hub in Germany after Frankfurt.

In order to cope with the potential traffic in Munich, the operator plans to expand today's capacity from 90 movements per hour to 120 movements per hour by constructing a third runway.[177] The shareholders of Flughafen München GmbH (FMG) stated that the construction of a third runway was necessary for the Munich region and for Bavaria as a whole, for reasons of transport and economic policy. Various associations and institutions from economics and politics reacted in favor of the plan approval decision issued by the government of Oberbayern for the construction of a third runway at Munich Airport.[178]

Counterarguments edit

The project for the construction of a third runway is particularly contentious in the directly affected airport region of the districts of Freising and Erding, but also in other nearby counties.[179][180] Above all, they question the growth projections presented by FMG, and one district calls for the use of larger aircraft in order to meet demand.[181]

The opponents of the expansion project joined forces to form the action alliance aufgeMUCkt (over 80 groups, including citizens' initiatives, ecclesiastical groups and environmental organizations), supported by, among others, the BUND in Bavaria,[182] that organized many demonstrations.[183][184] The Catholic Church, which is the owner of some of the affected sites, also announced resistance to the construction.[185] Since the plan approval decision of 26 July 2011, more protests have taken place. On 29 October 2011, a large demonstration with around 7,000 participants[186] took place in Munich in Marienplatz directly in front of the Old Town Hall.

Progress edit

In August 2007, the airport operator applied for planning permission from the government of Upper Bavaria. More than 60,000 objections have been filed during public display of the plans. The objections and lawsuits against the third runway were later overturned by the Bavarian Administrative Court, allowing for construction plans to proceed.

On 26 July 2011, the government of Upper Bavaria issued the zoning approval for the construction of a third runway. With this decision, the zoning authority, after the intensive examination and consideration of all ramifications, expressly approved the need presented by Flughafen München GmbH and the plans submitted for the third runway. Also tied to the approval by the government of Upper Bavaria is the prompt completion of the construction project. However, the airport operator has chosen to follow the advice of Bavaria's Higher Administrative Court and not to proceed until the principal proceedings concerning the project have reached a conclusion. The decision is currently being reviewed by the court. The building permit associated with the zoning will continue to be valid for up to 15 years.

While according to ICAO Regulations (Annex XIV) the new runway would have to be named 08L/26R (renaming the existing north runway to 08C/26C), it is currently assigned the working title 09/27 in all plans.[187]

In 2015, the airport received approval from Germany's Federal Administrative Court to build a third runway, dismissing all complaints and appeals, and confirming the 2014 decision of Bavaria's Higher Administrative Court to grant approval. The plans include a new 4,000-metre (13,000 ft) runway northeast of the existing airport and a new satellite building at Terminal 2, the latter of which did open in April 2016. However, construction of the new runway may yet be delayed as the project has to have unanimous approval by the airport's three shareholders: Bavaria, Federal Republic of Germany and the City of Munich. The latter has opposed the plan since a 2012 referendum.[188]

In September 2020, the Bavarian government stopped all progression regarding the third runway until at least 2028 due to the massive decrease of traffic in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.[189]

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External links edit

  Media related to Munich Airport at Wikimedia Commons
  Munich Airport travel guide from Wikivoyage

munich, airport, german, flughafen, münchen, iata, icao, eddm, also, named, munich, franz, josef, strauss, airport, international, airport, serving, munich, upper, bavaria, german, aeronautical, information, publication, known, muenchen, airport, second, busie. Munich Airport German Flughafen Munchen IATA MUC ICAO EDDM also named Munich Franz Josef Strauss Airport is an international airport serving Munich and Upper Bavaria To the German Aeronautical Information Publication it is known as Muenchen Airport 4 It is the second busiest airport in Germany in terms of passenger traffic after Frankfurt Airport and the ninth busiest airport in Europe handling 47 9 million passengers in 2019 5 It is the world s 15th busiest airport in terms of international passenger traffic 6 and was the 38th busiest airport worldwide in 2018 7 8 needs update It serves as hub for Lufthansa including its subsidiaries Lufthansa CityLine Air Dolomiti and Eurowings as well as a base for Condor and TUI fly Deutschland Munich AirportFlughafen MunchenIATA MUCICAO EDDMWMO 10870SummaryAirport typePublicOwner OperatorFlughafen Munchen GmbHServesMunich Metropolitan RegionLocationErding and Freising districts BavariaOpened17 May 1992 31 years ago 1992 05 17 Hub forDiscover Airlines 1 LufthansaFocus city forAir DolomitiCondorEurowingsTUI fly DeutschlandElevation AMSL1 487 ft 453 mCoordinates48 21 14 N 011 47 10 E 48 35389 N 11 78611 E 48 35389 11 78611Websitemunich airport deMapMUClocation within BavariaShow map of BavariaMUCMUC Germany Show map of GermanyMUCMUC Europe Show map of EuropeRunwaysDirection Length Surfacem ft08R 26L 4 000 13 123 Concrete08L 26R 4 000 13 123 ConcreteHelipadsNumber Length Surfacem ftH 30 98 ConcreteStatistics 2022 Passengers31 642 738 153 28 Aircraft movements00 285 028 0 86 2 Cargo metric tons 00 274 789 0 29 7 Sources Statistics at ADV 2 AIP at German air traffic control 3 The airport is located 28 5 km 17 7 mi northeast of Munich near the town of Freising It is named after former Bavarian minister president Franz Josef Strauss It has two passenger terminals with an additional midfield terminal two runways as well as extensive cargo and maintenance facilities and is fully equipped to handle wide body aircraft including the Airbus A380 Contents 1 History 1 1 Development 1 2 Operations 2 Terminals and facilities 2 1 Terminal 1 2 1 1 Terminal 1 extension 2 2 Terminal 2 2 3 Terminal 2 Satellite 2 4 Munich Airport Center 2 5 Runways 2 6 Parking areas 2 7 Visitor viewing facilities 3 Airlines and destinations 3 1 Passenger 3 2 Cargo 4 Statistics 4 1 Annual traffic 4 2 Busiest routes 5 Other facilities 6 Environment 6 1 Landscape 6 2 Water 6 3 Noise 6 4 Energy 6 5 Bird sanctuary 7 Safety 7 1 Police 7 2 Fire department 7 3 Ambulance service 8 Ground transportation 8 1 Road 8 2 Suburban railway 8 2 1 Regional railway services 8 3 Bus 9 Future 9 1 Improvements in public transport 9 1 1 Airport Express S Bahn 9 1 2 Subway 9 1 3 Erdinger ring connections 9 2 Third runway 9 2 1 Justification 9 2 2 Counterarguments 9 2 3 Progress 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksHistory editDevelopment edit nbsp An Air Toulouse Sud Aviation Caravelle at Munich Airport in 1993 with the construction site of today s Hilton Munich Airport in the background nbsp Aerial view of Terminal 1 in 2001 when Terminal 2 was not yet operationalMunich s previous airport Munich Riem Airport was operational from 1939 to 1992 Initial plans for an expansion of the airport date back to the year 1954 With rising passenger numbers and a growing number of inhabitants in its proximity plans were made to completely move the airport to another site The Bavarian government took the decision to build a new airport in the area called Erdinger Moos on 5 August 1969 When construction started on 3 November 1980 the small village of Franzheim disappeared and its approximately 400 inhabitants were resettled The airport is located on the territory of four different municipalities Oberding location of the terminals district of Erding Hallbergmoos Freising and Marzling in the district of Freising The new Munich airport commenced operations on 17 May 1992 and all flights to and from Munich were moved to the new site overnight Munich Riem closed on 16 May 1992 shortly before midnight The airport is named after Franz Josef Strauss who played a prominent albeit sometimes controversial role in West German politics from the 1950s until his death in 1988 Amongst other positions Strauss was a long time Minister President Governor of the state of Bavaria Strauss a private pilot himself initiated the new airport project and was particularly interested in attracting the aviation industry to Bavaria He is regarded as one of the fathers of the Airbus project and served as initial chairman of the Airbus supervisory board 9 Flughafen Munchen GmbH which owns and operates Munich Airport is a limited liability company consisting of three shareholders the State of Bavaria 51 the Federal Republic of Germany 26 and the City of Munich 23 The logo of Munich Airport consists of the letter M with the slogan Living ideas Connecting lives Munich Airport is usually referred to as Flughafen Munchen or simply MUC its IATA code During construction the airport was referred to as Flughafen Munchen II Operations edit As their home base at Frankfurt Airport suffered from capacity limits back then Lufthansa established a second hub offering several short and long haul connections through Munich in addition to Frankfurt While Lufthansa serves more European destinations from Munich Airport than from Frankfurt Airport Frankfurt has many more intercontinental routes Between 1995 and 2006 passenger numbers doubled from under 15 million per annum to over 30 million 10 despite the impact of the 11 September attacks in 2001 and 2002 In 1996 the airport overtook Dusseldorf as Germany s second busiest airport and currently handles almost twice as many passengers as the country s third busiest airport In June 2003 construction of Terminal 2 was completed and it was inaugurated as an exclusive facility for Lufthansa and its Star Alliance partners In November 2013 the airport introduced its first new corporate design since its inauguration The large letter M remains in a new font type and a dash has been added which changes between several colors There are also animated color changing versions of the M sign placed throughout the airport area for example on the main entrance road and on the new Terminal 2 satellite 11 In June 2015 Condor announced it intends to establish a long haul base at Munich Airport from the 2016 summer season Condor has already based short and mid haul operations at the airport and resumed long haul flights in winter 2013 after a six year absence 12 In November 2015 Transavia announced their intention to establish their first German base at Munich Airport which will consist of four aircraft serving 18 new routes by spring 2016 13 As of June 2015 the biggest foreign carrier in Munich in terms of passenger numbers is Air Dolomiti 14 More than 40 million passengers passed through the airport in 2015 a record at the time 15 In December 2016 Lufthansa s low cost subsidiary Eurowings announced that it would establish a major base at Munich Airport from March 2017 with 32 new routes 16 These new base operations were carried out by Air Berlin on a new wet lease contract with Eurowings 17 In February 2017 Transavia announced the closure of their entire base at Munich Airport by October 2017 after only a year of service due to a change in their business strategy and negative economic outlook 18 Munich Airport s dynamic growth continued in 2018 with new traffic records and an all time high of 46 2 million passengers The airport also saw a strong surge in take offs and landings with 413 000 movements an increase of 2 2 in 2018 With 266 destinations Munich Airport increased its global network and is among the leading air transportation hubs in Europe 19 In February 2021 Lufthansa announced it would take over most of Eurowings s routes in Munich with the exception of few domestic services and flights to Palma de Mallorca and Pristina 20 Terminals and facilities editThe airport covers 3 892 acres 1 575 ha of land area 21 Most of the airport s facilities are located in the area between the two runways The approach road and railway divide the west part into a southern half which contains cargo and maintenance facilities and a northern half which contains mostly administrative buildings and service facilities a holiday long term parking lot and the visitors centre It is followed by the west apron and Terminal 1 then the Munich Airport Center MAC Terminal 2 and the east apron Munich Airport has two passenger terminals and shuffled 20 25 million people through each terminal in 2014 22 nbsp Map of Munich Airport including planned expansion Terminal 1 edit nbsp View of the main apron in front of Terminal 1 prior to the start of the construction of its new pier expansion nbsp Check in area at Terminal 1B nbsp Boarding gate area at Terminal 1DTerminal 1 is the older terminal and commenced operation when the airport was opened on 17 May 1992 It has a total capacity of 25 million passengers per year and is subdivided into five modules designated A B C D and E Modules A through D provide all facilities necessary to handle departures and arrivals including individual landside driveways and parking whereas module E is equipped to handle arrivals only This design essentially makes each module a self contained sub terminal of its own Modules A and D are used for flights within the Schengen area while modules B and C handle those to destinations outside it Hall F is separate located near Terminal 2 and handles flights with increased security requirements i e those to Israel Furthermore the check in counters for some flights departing from Terminal 1 are located in the central area Z German Zentralbereich where most of the shopping and restaurant facilities of this Terminal as well as the airport s suburban railway station are also located The 1 081 metre 3 547 foot pier features 21 jet bridges two of which have been rebuilt into waiting halls for bus transfers One gate position has been equipped with three jet bridges to handle the Airbus A380 which is regularly used by Emirates There are further 60 aircraft stands on the apron some of which are equipped with specially designed apron jet bridges German Vorfeldfluggastbrucken to which passengers are brought by bus This unique concept allows passengers to board with full protection from the weather but without the high investment required for full satellite terminals connected through a passenger transport system Terminal 1 currently handles all airlines that are not members or partners of the Star Alliance with the exception of Turkish Airlines However owing to lack of capacity at Terminal 2 Lufthansa s subsidiary Germanwings and former affiliate Condor both moved back to Terminal 1 in 2007 23 24 Germanwings however moved back to Terminal 2 in late 2015 Some of the major users at Terminal 1 are Condor Eurowings Emirates Qatar Airways American Airlines Delta Air Lines easyJet and TUI fly Deutschland amongst several others Terminal 1 extension edit As of December 2015 a major redesign of Terminal 1 including a capacity increase and an extension of the central terminal building to the west for centralised security and shopping facilities was under preparation 25 In November 2016 a major 400m extension and refurbishment for Terminal 1 was announced Terminal areas A and B will be entirely redesigned with the addition of a 320 metre long 1 050 ft pier stretching out on the apron The new facilities will provide capacity for 6 million additional passengers will be able to handle 12 aircraft including two Airbus A380s at once and were originally due to open by 2022 26 However due to the sharp decrease in passenger traffic in the wake of the COVID 19 pandemic and a simultaneous sharp cost increase for the new terminal annex the building s shell will be finished by 2022 with a new estimated opening of 2025 27 Terminal 2 edit nbsp Check in area at Terminal 2 the notable hanging sculpture advertising BMW has since been removed nbsp Boarding gate area at Terminal 2Terminal 2 commenced operation on 29 June 2003 It has a design capacity of 25 million passengers per year and is exclusively used by Lufthansa and all other Star Alliance members serving Munich except Turkish Airlines Star Alliance partners Air Malta and Luxair also use Terminal 2 Etihad Airways has shifted to terminal 1 effective from 1 June 2023 Having been designed as a hub terminal it is not divided into modules like Terminal 1 Instead all facilities are arranged around a central Plaza Owing to security regulations imposed by the European Union the terminal has been equipped with facilities to handle passengers from countries considered insecure i e not implementing the same regulations This required the construction of a new level as unlike other airports the terminal does not have separate areas for arriving and departing passengers The new level 06 opened on 15 January 2009 The pier which is 980 m 3 220 ft long is equipped with 24 jet bridges As the total number of 75 aircraft stands on the east apron is not always sufficient Terminal 2 sometimes also uses parking positions on the west apron to which passengers are carried by airside buses Terminal 2 is able to handle the Airbus A380 as well however prior to the opening of the Terminal 2 satellite building there were no designated stands or additional jet bridges for it Lufthansa flies the A380 into the satellite building 28 Terminal 2 has two main departure levels 04 and 05 and additional bus gates on the lower level 03 Gates on level 05 H are designated non Schengen gates Until the new transfer level 06 opened the northernmost gates were behind an additional security checkpoint for departures to the USA most of the day The lower level 04 G contains Schengen gates The bus gates on level 03 are also designated G and are also used for Schengen flights Level 03 is smaller than the main levels and consists of two separate parts which can be reached from two points on level 04 One area of these gates is designated to Air Dolomiti The terminal is operated by Terminal 2 Betriebsgesellschaft German for Terminal 2 Operating Company which is owned by Flughafen Munchen GmbH 60 and Lufthansa 40 This makes Terminal 2 the first terminal in Germany which is co operated by an airline Terminal 2 Satellite edit nbsp A February 2016 photograph of Terminal 2 Satellite building still under constructionTerminal 2 was projected to reach its full capacity of handling 27 5 million passengers a year by 2013 Lufthansa and Star Alliance partners stipulated the expansion of Terminal 2 without constructing the separate facilities for luggage claim arrival and departure levels etc This was to ensure the easy access for the passengers who appreciate the convenience of central plaza for checking in their luggage going through the security screening and such as well as transferring from one plane to other within Lufthansa and Star Alliance partner networks inside Terminal 2 29 30 After the completion of Terminal 2 in 2003 the preparations for a new satellite terminal already had been made The project cost is 650 million Euro with Munich Airport contributing 60 and Lufthansa 40 toward the project 31 The expansion would handle additional 11 million passengers per year The construction was approved in 2010 and started in 2012 At end of 2015 the construction was completed and the teams of volunteers performed the trial runs in January 2016 as to identify any potential issues and to streamline the movements between Terminal 2 and Terminal 2 Satellite The satellite terminal was inaugurated on 22 April 2016 and commenced its operations on 26 April 2016 32 33 34 35 The new satellite building is 609 metres 1 998 ft long with 125 000 square metres 1 345 500 sq ft of floor space with 52 additional gates and 27 parking positions 11 of which are able to handle wide body aircraft including Airbus A380 The building has separate access facilities for Schengen and Non Schengen passengers on two main levels K Level for Schengen and L for Non Schengen destinations The J section is for bus transportation between the terminal and aircraft parked at aprons 44 new passport control stations and 24 security lanes for transfer passengers are installed in the terminal Five new Lufthansa lounges along with new restaurants and shops are set up throughout the terminal However the satellite terminal is airside only facility the check in luggage claim departure and arrival passenger meet points are still done at Terminal 2 The passenger transportation between Terminal 2 and Terminal 2 Satellite is served by fully automated people mover by Bombardier Transportation that operates in the tunnels 36 37 The satellite terminal celebrated its one millionth passenger in July 2016 less than three months after its opening 38 A future expansion of the satellite building into a T shape has been planned along with a possible third terminal to the east 39 Lufthansa and Flughafen Munchen GmbH Munich Airport operator signed a letter of intent on 16 December 2019 to expand Terminal 2 Satellite 40 The expansion will build a new terminal extending from the centre of Terminal 2 Satellite building at right angle toward the east The Memorandum of Understanding from Flughafen Munchen GmbH stipulates that both parties reach the goal of becoming a CO2 neutral by 2030 utilising highly fuel efficient aircraft No further detail about number of gates along with construction and completion dates is given yet Munich Airport Center edit nbsp Munich Airport Center MAC during the annual Christmas marketThe Munich Airport Center MAC is a shopping business and recreation area that connects the terminals The older Central Area German Zentralbereich which was originally built as part of Terminal 1 hosts a shopping mall and the S Bahn station The newer MAC Forum built with Terminal 2 is a large outdoor area with a partly transparent tent like roof Next to it is the airport hotel managed by Hilton Hotels amp Resorts which was designed by the world famous architect Helmut Jahn and landscape architecture firm PWP Landscape Architecture in 1994 The Munich Airport Center has a supermarket where one can shop from 5 30 a m to midnight every day including Sundays 41 as it is exempt from the Bavarian law governing retail hours of operation German Ladenschlussgesetz 42 Runways edit The airport has two parallel runways and one concrete helipad The two concrete runways 08R 26L and 26R 08L are each 4 000 metres 13 120 ft long and 60 metres 200 ft wide 43 Parking areas edit nbsp Parking garage in front of Terminal 1Currently there are five parking garages and six underground parking areas amounting together to a total of 30 000 parking spaces 44 of which approximately 16 500 are under a roof The parking garage P20 at Terminal 2 with 6 400 parking spaces on eleven levels including four that are underground since its commissioning in 2003 was the largest parking garage in Germany until the car park at the new Allianz Arena was opened in 2005 45 A parking guidance system was installed in the parking garages which detects whether a parking space is occupied and newly arriving vehicles are shown where the empty parking spaces are located Apart from the usual parking facilities the Munich Airport offers at additional cost special parking spaces with additional benefits This includes valet parking in which the vehicle is picked up by an airport employee upon flight departure and parked and the Park Sleep amp Fly option in which a night at the Hilton hotel is included Also there is an option for oversized parking spaces the so called XXL parking and secure parking Lastly there is a special separate parking level in the P20 parking garage where the parked cars are guarded In addition special services can be booked such as interior exterior cleaning and fuelling To make shopping in the public areas more attractive for local residents of the airport area there are special offers where visitors can park up to three hours for free in the P20 parking garage 46 Short term parking can be found east of the central area where visitors can park for free for a maximum of thirty minutes During the holiday periods other cheaper options are provided in the P8 parking garage Visitor viewing facilities edit nbsp Visitors Park at Munich AirportThe airport authorities have set out to cater for visitors and sightseers by creating a Visitors Park which includes a Visitors Hill from which a good view of the westerly aircraft apron and Terminal 1 can be obtained as well as a restaurant and a shop for aircraft models and other collectors items This location is served by a railway station named Besucherpark The view from the hill is shown in the above widescreen image of the Terminal 1 apron Three historic aircraft are on display in the park a Super Constellation a Douglas DC 3 and a Junkers Ju 52 3m There is also a visitors viewing terrace on the roof of Terminal 2 that features a wide glassed balcony with seating areas and gives a view of the easterly aircraft apron All visitors can access the terrace from the landside The entrance fee was abolished in September 2013 There are two additional smaller Visitor Hills on the north end of the north runway and at the center of the south runway Airlines and destinations editPassenger edit The following airlines offer regular scheduled and charter flights at Munich Airport 47 AirlinesDestinationsAegean AirlinesAthens Thessaloniki Seasonal Heraklion KalamataAer LingusDublin Seasonal Cork 48 airBalticRiga Tallinn Tampere 49 Vilnius 50 Air CairoHurghada 51 Seasonal Marsa Alam 52 Sharm El Sheikh 53 Air CanadaToronto PearsonAir ChinaBeijing Capital 54 Shanghai Pudong 55 Air Dolomiti 56 Bari Bologna Cluj Napoca Florence Genoa Krakow 57 Milan Linate Milan Malpensa Olbia Turin Venice Verona Seasonal BrindisiAir EuropaMadridAir FranceParis Charles de GaulleAir MaltaMalta ends 30 March 2024 58 Air MontenegroSeasonal Podgorica begins 2 June 2024 59 AlbawingsPristina 60 All Nippon AirwaysTokyo Haneda 61 62 American AirlinesCharlotteAnadoluJetAnkara Antalya Istanbul Sabiha GokcenAustrian AirlinesViennaBeOndMale 63 64 British AirwaysLondon HeathrowBrussels AirlinesBrussels 65 Condor 66 67 Fuerteventura Gran Canaria Hurghada Lanzarote La Palma Palma de Mallorca Tenerife South Seasonal Agadir 68 Alicante Antalya 69 Chania Corfu Faro 69 Funchal Heraklion Ibiza Jerez de la Frontera Kalamata Karpathos Kavala Kefalonia Kos Lamezia Terme Malaga 69 Mykonos Olbia Preveza Lefkada Rhodes Samos Santorini Skiathos Split Sulaimaniyah Volos Zakynthos Charter Pristina 70 Corendon AirlinesSeasonal Antalya 71 Hurghada 72 IzmirCroatia AirlinesOsijek 73 Split Zadar 74 Zagreb Seasonal Brac 75 Dubrovnik RijekaDelta Air LinesAtlanta Seasonal Detroit New York JFK begins 9 April 2024 76 Discover Airlines 77 78 Gran Canaria Lanzarote 79 Marrakesh 78 Tenerife South Seasonal Bodrum 78 Chania 78 Corfu Djerba begins 1 May 2024 80 Fuerteventura 78 Funchal 78 Heraklion Hurghada Ibiza 81 Jerez de la Frontera Kalamata begins 18 May 2024 80 Kefalonia begins 3 May 2024 80 Kos Marsa Alam 82 Menorca begins 6 April 2024 80 Monastir begins 3 May 2024 80 Mykonos Palma de Mallorca 81 Preveza Lefkada 83 Rhodes 78 Samos 78 Santorini Varna begins 3 May 2024 80 Zakynthos 78 easyJetEdinburgh London Gatwick Manchester Milan Malpensa Naples 84 EgyptairCairoEl AlTel AvivEmiratesDubai InternationalEtihad AirwaysAbu DhabiEuropean Air CharterSeasonal charter Burgas 85 EVA AirTaipei Taoyuan 86 Eurowings 87 Cologne Bonn Dortmund Dusseldorf Hamburg Palma de Mallorca PristinaFinnairHelsinkiFlyErbil 88 ErbilFlyOneChișinău 89 Freebird Airlines 90 Seasonal AntalyaGeorgian AirwaysTbilisi 91 IberiaMadridIcelandairReykjavik KeflavikIraqi AirwaysBaghdad ErbilIsrairSeasonal Tel AvivITA AirwaysRome FiumicinoJazeera AirwaysSeasonal Kuwait 92 KLMAmsterdamKM Malta AirlinesMalta begins 31 March 2024 58 Kuwait AirwaysKuwaitLeav AviationSeasonal Arvidsjaur 93 LOT Polish AirlinesWarsaw ChopinLufthansaAlicante Amsterdam Ancona Athens Bangalore 94 Bangkok Suvarnabhumi Barcelona Basel Mulhouse 95 Beijing Capital 96 Belgrade Berlin Bilbao Billund 97 Birmingham Bordeaux 98 Boston Bremen Brussels Bucharest Otopeni Budapest Cairo Catania Charlotte Chicago O Hare Cologne Bonn Copenhagen Debrecen Delhi Denver Dresden Dubai International Dublin Dusseldorf Edinburgh Faro Frankfurt Funchal Gdansk Geneva Gothenburg Graz Hamburg Hanover Helsinki Hong Kong resumes 31 March 2024 99 Johannesburg O R Tambo begins 3 June 2024 99 Katowice Krakow Larnaca Leipzig Halle Lisbon Ljubljana London Heathrow Los Angeles Luxembourg Lyon Madrid Malaga Manchester Marrakesh 100 Marseille Mexico City Milan Malpensa Montreal Trudeau Mumbai Munster Osnabruck Nantes resumes 28 April 2024 101 Naples Newark New York JFK Nice Osaka Kansai Oslo Oulu 102 101 Paderborn Lippstadt Palermo Palma de Mallorca Paris Charles de Gaulle 101 Porto Poznan Prague Rome Fiumicino Rzeszow 98 San Diego 103 San Francisco Seattle Tacoma begins 30 May 2024 104 Seoul Incheon Shanghai Pudong 96 Sibiu Singapore Sofia Stockholm Arlanda Stuttgart Sylt Tallinn Tbilisi Tel Aviv Thessaloniki Timișoara Tirana Tokyo Haneda Toulouse Trondheim begins 28 April 2024 105 Tunis Turin Valencia Vienna Warsaw Chopin Washington Dulles Wroclaw Zagreb Zurich Seasonal Asturias 98 Bastia Bergen 97 Biarritz Bodrum Cape Town Cagliari Corfu Dubrovnik Fuerteventura Glasgow Gran Canaria Heraklion Hurghada Ibiza Jerez de la Frontera Jersey Kalamata 97 Kittila Lanzarote London Stansted 106 Malta Marsa Alam Menorca 97 Miami Mykonos Olbia Pisa Preveza Lefkada 83 Pula Reykjavik Keflavik Rhodes Rijeka Rimini Santorini Seville Split Tenerife South Tivat Toronto Pearson Tromso Vancouver Varna Zadar Zakynthos 107 LuxairLuxembourgMarabuGran Canaria Hurghada 108 Lanzarote La Palma 108 Palma de Mallorca Tenerife South Seasonal Chania Corfu Faro Fuerteventura Heraklion Karpathos Kefalonia Kos Lamezia Terme Malaga Olbia Preveza Lefkada Rhodes Split Volos ZakynthosNesma AirlinesCharter Hurghada 109 Norwegian Air ShuttleCopenhagen Oslo Seasonal Alicante resumes 1 April 2024 110 Malaga resumes 31 March 2024 110 Stockholm ArlandaNouvelairDjerba 111 Monastir Seasonal Tunis 112 Oman AirMuscatPegasus AirlinesIstanbul Sabiha Gokcen Seasonal Antalya Izmir 113 Qatar AirwaysDohaRoyal JordanianAmman Queen AliaSalamAirMuscat 114 SaudiaJeddah RiyadhScandinavian AirlinesCopenhagen Oslo Stockholm ArlandaSingapore AirlinesSingaporeSky AlpsSeasonal Mostar begins 2 May 2024 115 Sky ExpressAthens 116 SmartLynx AirlinesSeasonal charter Ras Al Khaimah 117 Somon AirDushanbe 118 119 Southwind AirlinesSeasonal Antalya 120 SunExpressAnkara Antalya Izmir Seasonal Adana Bodrum Dalaman Gaziantep 121 Kayseri Samsun 121 Swiss International Air LinesZurichTAP Air PortugalLisbonThai Airways International 122 Bangkok SuvarnabhumiTravelcoupSeasonal Ibiza 123 Palma de Mallorca 123 Zurich 123 TUI fly DeutschlandBoa Vista Fuerteventura Gran Canaria Hurghada Lanzarote Palma de Mallorca Sal Tenerife South Seasonal Corfu Dalaman Djerba Heraklion Jerez de la Frontera Kos Marsa Alam Menorca Patras RhodesTunisairDjerba Monastir TunisTurkish AirlinesIstanbul Seasonal Adana Ankara Antalya Bodrum Dalaman Gaziantep 124 Izmir Kayseri Ordu Giresun Samsun Trabzon 124 United AirlinesChicago O Hare Denver Houston Intercontinental Newark San Francisco Washington DullesUzbekistan AirwaysTashkent 125 Vueling 126 Barcelona Palma de Mallorca Seasonal Alicante MalagaWideroeBergen 127 Cargo edit AirlinesDestinationsAir Atlanta Icelandic 128 Greenville SpartanburgAir China Cargo 129 Beijing CapitalCargolux 130 LuxembourgDHL Aviation 131 Leipzig HalleFedEx Express 132 Cologne Bonn Milan Malpensa Paris Charles de Gaulle Tel AvivQatar Airways Cargo 133 134 Bangalore Chicago Rockford Doha London Heathrow Milan MalpensaTurkish Cargo 135 IstanbulUPS Airlines 136 Cologne BonnStatistics editAnnual traffic edit nbsp Historic planes on display at the Visitors Park of Munich Airport nbsp Maintenance facility of Lufthansa Technik at Munich Airport nbsp Control tower at Munich Airport nbsp Lufthansa maintains its secondary hub at Munich Airport s Terminal 2 nbsp Flughafen Munchen GmbH headquarters on the airport s groundsGraphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Annual passenger traffic at MUC airport See Wikidata query Annual Passenger Traffic Year Passengers Change2000 23 125 872 nbsp 2001 23 646 900 nbsp 2 2002 23 163 720 nbsp 2 2003 24 193 304 nbsp 4 4 2004 26 814 505 nbsp 11 2005 28 619 427 nbsp 6 7 2006 30 757 978 nbsp 7 4 2007 33 959 422 nbsp 10 4 2008 34 530 593 nbsp 1 6 2009 32 681 067 nbsp 5 3 2010 34 721 605 nbsp 6 2011 37 763 701 nbsp 8 7 2012 38 360 604 nbsp 1 5 2013 38 672 644 nbsp 1 2014 39 700 515 nbsp 2 6 2015 40 998 553 nbsp 3 2 2016 42 277 920 nbsp 3 1 2017 44 546 263 nbsp 5 3 2018 46 253 623 nbsp 3 8 2019 47 959 885 nbsp 3 6 2020 11 120 224 nbsp 76 8 2021 12 496 432 nbsp 12 4 Source Munich Airport 137 138 139 Busiest routes edit Busiest domestic routes from MUC 2020 140 Rank Airport Departing passengers Operating airlines1 Hamburg 271 704 Eurowings Lufthansa2 Berlin Tegel 219 586 Lufthansa3 Dusseldorf 215 028 Eurowings Lufthansa4 Frankfurt 170 653 Lufthansa5 Cologne Bonn 117 261 Eurowings LufthansaBusiest international European routes from MUC 2020 140 Rank Airport All passengers Operating airlines1 London Heathrow 156 903 British Airways Lufthansa2 Amsterdam 129 741 Eurowings KLM Lufthansa Transavia3 Paris Charles de Gaulle 119 506 Air France Lufthansa4 Madrid 102 736 Air Europa Iberia Lufthansa5 Athens 97 928 Aegean Lufthansa6 Rome Fiumicino 93 632 Alitalia Lufthansa7 Barcelona 88 487 Lufthansa Vueling8 Stockholm Arlanda 76 405 Lufthansa Norwegian Scandinavian Airlines9 Copenhagen 72 981 Lufthansa Norwegian Scandinavian Airlines10 Lisbon 72 946 Lufthansa TAPBusiest intercontinental routes from MUC 2020 140 Rank Airport Departing passengers Operating airlines1 Dubai International 76 353 Emirates Lufthansa2 Doha 48 104 Qatar Airways3 Bangkok Suvarnabhumi 39 402 Lufthansa Thai Airways4 Abu Dhabi 37 895 Etihad5 Newark 37 813 Lufthansa United AirlinesOther facilities editLufthansa maintains a Flight Operations Center at the airport for crews based here at its secondary hub 141 In 2014 its subsidiary Lufthansa CityLine relocated their administration offices from Cologne to the grounds of Munich Airport 142 Additionally there is a large Lufthansa Technik maintenance facility which can handle up to six Boeing 747s at once 143 There are two hotels directly on the airports grounds the Hilton Munich Airport which was the Kempinski Hotel Airport Munich until 31 December 2014 144 near Terminal 2 and a Novotel at the long term parking area 145 with several more in the nearby villages German car manufacturer Audi established a large training facility for its retailers on the grounds of the airport in 2010 146 Designated areas near the apron are used for drive training The defunct German airline DBA originally Deutsche BA had its head office on the grounds of the airport and in Hallbergmoos 147 148 The helicopter operations division of the Bavarian State police is based here 149 Environment edit nbsp Munich Airport from the International Space Station circa 2010 Since November 2005 the Munich Airport has a certified environmental management system according to DIN ISO 14001 and EMAS Munich Airport was involved in the Air Transport Initiative for Germany which was also attended by Fraport Deutsche Flugsicherung and Lufthansa It developed a so called four pillar strategy with an overall concept designed to improve environmental protection these four pillars include Reduction of CO2 emissions through technological progress and innovation particularly in the field of engine development a more efficient infrastructure with a needs based adaptation of airport capacity with concentration on the avoidance of for example polluting queues operational measures such as the optimization of soil processes economic incentives Perspectives Environmental Statement 2008 Munich Airport GmbH 150 Landscape edit From the beginning the state administered parts of nature conservation aspects were considered in the planning of the airport At the opening of the airport 70 of the grounds were planted today there are 925 of the 1 575 hectares which remained planted only 60 151 The prevalent Erdinger Moos area with its many intersecting small streams and woodland series was taking into consideration in the planning by the landscape architect At the same time consideration was taken in making the airport unattractive to birds in order to prevent bird strikes An additional 230 acre green belt was placed around the airport as a compensation area in which the overall compensation areas extend over 600 acres 152 Even with the focus on the environment environmental groups criticize the enormous land consumption of the airport and each additional expansion project Also they believe that the compensation areas are not sufficient enough in order to compensate for the damage caused by the airport see below 153 Water edit The construction in the Erdinger Moos area had a large impact on the water budget of the region since the groundwater levels in the marshy landscape had to be greatly reduced by creating drainage ditches Existing watercourses such as small streams were not interrupted but redirected so that they now run either around or underneath the property limiting the effects of groundwater reduction to only the areas in which the airport is located The wastewater from the airport and the collected rain water are both returned to the natural water cycle In order to accomplish this 100 km of sewer lines were laid and seven pumping stations a water treatment plant and four rainwater sedimentation tanks were built and put into operation The already rough cleansed water is then sent to a purification plant For the necessary winter de icing of the airport used deicing chemicals such as glycol are collected together with the contaminated melted water and then either purified or reused The cleaning is done in the degradation system area where soil bacteria decompose the glycol into harmless components of water and carbon dioxide 154 Noise edit GeneralTo reduce noise from thrust reversal during aircraft landings the runways were built to a length of 4 000 meters however the noise reduction is offset by increased taxiing times To reduce noise pollution a hall for engine testing was built After 11 p m engine tests may be carried out only with the approval of air traffic control To motivate airlines to use low noise aircraft the airport charges are calculated according to the level of noise pollution 155 There are 16 stationary noise measuring points at the airport 156 Night flight regulationsAt Munich airport there is no strict ban on night flights but a ban on flights arriving and departing between 10 p m and 6 a m The only exemptions are flights from mail services and DFS survey flights From midnight until 5am only those flights that operate in the interest of the public are generally possible this includes so called emergency flights police and rescue helicopter missions or medical emergencies Also aircraft movements for security reasons such as for precautionary landings are allowed at all times Flights with special permission from the Bavarian Ministry for Economic Affairs Infrastructure Transport and Technology are also feasible at this time From 10 p m to midnight and 5 a m to 6 a m flights are possible through the so called bonus list Exceptions are delayed flights or premature landings if these aircraft are at least noise admitted according to ICAO Chapter 3 In addition to both the bonus list and noise requirements they must fulfill further conditions this includes that the airline must have a maintenance base at the airport the maximum number of 28 scheduled flights per night charter and scheduled services must not be exceeded the aircraft is not louder than 75 db A or it is an education or training flight 157 This rule applies until the total annual volume is exhausted in air traffic movements by these regulations More flights of this type are then no longer allowed The number of night flights increased from 1999 to 2007 from 42 to 60 flights average per night 150 Residents have been protesting for years against aircraft noise in particular against the noise pollution at night The Government of Upper Bavaria approved the night flight regulations currently in force in 2001 Energy edit Cogeneration plantMost of Munich airport s electricity and heat is generated by its own cogeneration plant CHP which is located south of the northern runway to the west of the airport CHP has nine so called cogeneration modules seven run on diesel fuel the other two on gasoline The electrical generating capacity is 18 5 megawatts The cogeneration modules run smoothly all year long this creates surplus heat at certain times which is stored in heat storage to be used later In summer the heat generated is used for the operation of the absorption refrigerating machine The total gross utilization rate is 78 percent diesel and 83 percent gasoline The cogeneration modules are an obligation from the Renewable Energy Sources Act so that Munich Airport can generate electricity from renewable energy sources using biogas 150 The airport also has a connection to the district heating network of the Zolling power plant Photovoltaic systemThere is a photovoltaic system on the roof of the central hall of terminal 2 It is a joint project of BP Solar German BP Bundesdeutscher Arbeitskreis fur Umweltbewusstes Management Lufthansa Munich Airport and others In operation since 10 July 2003 it generates an average of 445 000 kilowatt hours per year equivalent to the consumption of 155 households 158 The power comes from 2 856 modules of silicon cells covering a total area of 3 594 square metres It is expected to save 12 000 tons of carbon dioxide emissions over its 30 year lifetime 150 2 65 million EUR were invested in the plant The plant produces direct current which after conversion to alternating current is initiated immediately in the power system In Terminal 2 the energy currently generated is displayed on an overhead screen which also displays other information Biofuel gas stationA biofuel gas station supplying rapeseed oil fuels ethanol fuel and biomethane has been established making it possible for the operating companies to convert their vehicle fleets to biofuels the station can also be used by external companies operating at the airport 150 Bird sanctuary edit Despite measures to prevent bird strikes the northern part of Erdinger Moos is still an important habitat for birds especially for grassland birds such as northern lapwing Eurasian curlew or rare winter visitors such as the hen harrier This led automatically to the area being reported under the European Birds Directive as a bird sanctuary The fencing of the airport and the large meadows inside the fence attract open meadow birds This leads to constant conflicts and the deaths even of rare birds as a result of airplane accidents vortices and safety measures to avoid bird strikes The planned third runway 3 440 000 square metres in the bird sanctuary will be laid with concrete eliminating 8 000 000 square metres of living space This would represent substantial interference with the bird sanctuary 159 Safety editPolice edit nbsp Eurocopter EC135 the police helicopter squad of Bavaria at Munich AirportFor the safety of passengers and flight operations four 160 inspections by the Federal Police departments of the Bavarian State Police Police Inspection Munich Airport PP Oberbayern Nord and the security department of Flughafen Munchen GmbH are responsible The airport police station is located in Nordallee 6 and the police officers working there have an adapted qualification to the specific field of application for example they are also trained in the case of an aircraft hijacking Bavaria s police helicopter squad is also based at the Munich Airport where five of the Eurocopter EC135 helicopters are stationed A move of the unit to Schleissheim Airport is planned for 2020 In addition one of the world s two chambers for explosive goods the second one is located at Kuala Lumpur International Airport is located on the airport grounds In this chamber explosive substances can be defused citation needed Fire department edit nbsp Fire engine at Munich AirportThe airport has its own fire department with 32 fire engines distributed over two fire stations which are located near the runways They are positioned in a way that the emergency vehicles can reach every point of the apron taxiway and runway in a maximum of three minutes as long as no adverse weather conditions prevail Should larger missions occur the fire departments of the surrounding municipalities can be called in which can provide up to 36 vehicles and about 216 men in exchange the airport fire department helps in large fires in the region Most recently this happened when a BMW plant in Eching went up in flames Statistics of the Fire Department Year Missions Fires Technical assistance False alarms2013 3997 104 1754 21392012 3613 107 1717 17892011 3582 118 1831 16332010 3946 128 2070 17482009 3254 118 1599 15372008 2999 107 1389 15032007 2651 116 1328 12072006 3011 123 1052 12092005 2095 127 1103 11162004 2704 119 950 1103 The sum of the missions also includes other missions such as guided tours Ambulance service edit Emergency medical care is provided by a rescue guard on Nordallee operated by the Malteser Hilfsdienst under a public service contract A rescue vehicle is ready for use around the clock which is also used outside the airport area for normal emergencies If necessary other rescue workers from the region or supraregional are used the deployment coordination is carried out by the integrated control center which is also responsible for the area of the airport On the premises of the airport is an emergency physician from the medical center that arrives on the emergency site when required in a separate vehicle according to the rendezvous procedure Ground transportation editRoad edit Munich Airport is accessible via nearby Motorway A 92 which connects to motorway A9 towards Nuremberg and Munich s ring motorway A99 Bavarian State Road St 2584 connects A 92 s exit 6 Flughafen Munchen an incomplete interchange that can only be used by traffic to and from the west to the terminals Access from the east is possible via exit 8 Freising Ost and Bavarian State Road St 2580 which connects to St 2584 in the east of the airport The north southbound so called Flughafentangente Ost literally airport tangential road east between A92 and A94 was finally opened in 2010 161 with a single lane in each direction Originally it was planned to be opened as expressway quiet simultaneously with the new Airport Gradually the accident prone road shall be selectively upgraded from 2021 on to two alternating lanes per direction 162 It can be reached by bicycle on national highway 301 B301 and an airport road branching from this highway into the airport area Suburban railway edit nbsp A S Bahn train leaving the tunnel beneath the apron of Terminal 1There are two railway stations on the grounds of Munich Airport Munich Airport Terminal station is located in a tunnel directly beneath the central area between both passenger terminals A second station called Besucherpark German for Visitors Park is located in the area that contains the cargo and maintenance areas long term parking administrative buildings and the Visitors Park from which the station gets its name The airport is connected to the city by Munich suburban railway S Bahn lines nbsp and nbsp The ride takes approximately 45 minutes to the Marienplatz station in the city centre nbsp runs from the airport through the northwestern suburbs and reaches the city centre from the west Hauptbahnhof Marienplatz Munchen Ost while nbsp comes in from the eastern suburbs passing the stations from the opposite direction The S Bahn from the airport to the city runs approximately 20 hours a day with a short break between 1 30 a m and 4 a m 163 Furthermore a scheduled regional bus service nbsp 635 connects the airport within 20 minutes to the Freising railway station providing access to regional trains towards Munich as well as to Nuremberg Regensburg and Prague A second tunnel beneath the terminals is currently unused Originally there were plans to use it for intercity railway then for a Transrapid maglev train making the trip to Munchen Hauptbahnhof in 10 minutes However this project was cancelled in March 2008 due to cost escalation Discussions regarding a faster connection between Munich city centre and the airport have fruitlessly taken place for several years as the journey time of 40 60 minutes faces ongoing criticism 164 Even a rudimentary express suburban railway service is not in sight 165 Regional railway services edit As of September 2015 construction works to connect the airport with regional railway services of Deutsche Bahn to and from the north east had started 166 This project called Neufahrner Kurve Neufahrn curve after the nearby town of Neufahrn bei Freising saw the existing southwest bound S Bahn tracks being expanded with a curve leading to the north connecting them with the already existing tracks of the Munich Regensburg line This new connection enabled hourly regional express train services from Regensburg via Landshut directly to the airport without the need to use a connecting bus coming from the north or to go to Munich city center at first and then backtracking to the airport The entire project was completed in November 2018 167 On 9 December 2018 the new hourly service Flughafenexpress airport express between Regensburg and Munich Airport commenced Bus edit MVV regional bus lines connect the airport to the nearby city of Freising as well as Erding and Markt Schwaben Lufthansa Airport Bus provides an alternative to the S Bahn stopping at Nordfriedhof U Bahn station and Munich Central Station INVG proposes a direct express coach service between the airport and Ingolstadt during the summer season an hourly service is offered whereas a less frequent timetable based service is proposed during the remainder of the year Stops served at the airport are terminal 2 and the centrally located Airport Center In Ingoldstadt the service serves Ingolstadt Nord station which allows connection to regional rail services including to and from Nuremberg Future editImprovements in public transport edit At the beginning of the 1990s the Deutsche Bundesbahn considered four options for a better railway connection to the airport At an estimated cost of between 500 million and 2 billion Deutsche Mark each option would have allowed the airport to be integrated into the ICE network 168 However the idea was rejected and instead emphasis was put on a better connection of the airport to regional transportation as well as to Munich main station Airport Express S Bahn edit After the cancellation of Transrapid proposal several alternative proposals had been put forward that would utilise the current railway system with minor technical upgrades One proposal called Humpel Express would utilise the most of current Munich Regensburg railway and S1 lines with very limited stops along the route 169 The Humpel Express would travel at 200 kilometres per hour 120 mph and depart the Central Station and Munich Airport at 15 minute interval The biggest issue was frequent level crossing closures at Fasanerie and Feldmoching total of 39 minutes for every hour causing the severe traffic congestions Additionally the construction of new line between Moosach and Munich Airport would cut through several towns and neighbourhoods which the residents vehemently opposed The new line also required the construction of new viaduct over the federal highway B471 increasing the cost further The opposition from the resident and unwillingness to allot additional funding killed the proposal 170 With the Second S Bahn Tunnel under construction the proposed Airport Express service will peruse second S Bahn tunnel upon completion with one stop instead of four at Marienhof between Hauptbahnhof and Ostbahnhof This would reduce the travel time between Hauptbahnhof and Munich Airport to 30 minutes Additionally Deutsche Bahn has proposed the underground four track S Bahn tunnel from Leuchtenbergring to Halbergmoos S Bahn stations This would eliminate the need to slow down before passing through the intervening stations and the need to close the level crossings frequently If the four track extension is approved and constructed the travel time would be reduced further to 15 18 minutes 171 Subway edit Through the extension of different subway lines to the intersection with one of the two airport suburban railways the travel time to the airport from different parts of the north of Munich can be considerably reduced This was realized for the suburbs of Milbertshofen Am Hart and Feldmoching Hasenbergl with the subway line nbsp to the nbsp station Feldmoching in 1996 and the construction of the airport connector near Neufahrn in 1998 In 2010 the travel time to the airport from Moosach Schwabing West and Neuhausen Nymphenburg districts was shortened by connecting the subway line nbsp to the nbsp station Moosach The extension of the nbsp from Garching to Neufahrn is currently being examined 172 Erdinger ring connections edit nbsp Map of the Erdinger Ring connections with a drawn Walpertskirchener connection and Neufahrn Link nbsp Construction work for the Neufahrn LinkThe Erdinger Ring connection is to extend the S Bahn S2 from Erding in the direction of the airport and connect to neighboring Freising through a connecting curve the Neufahrn Link It will fulfill the demand of a rail connection between Eastern Bavaria including the neighboring airport commuter cities Moosburg and Landshut to the airport realized with its own regional railway line A faster connection from the airport to the inner city is not achieved by the Erdinger ring connection however a direct connection between the airport and the Munich Messe would be For this the S2 would also make a short route north of Messe Munchen and have a stop north of the exhibition center Already before the opening of the airport there were plans for a regional station at the airport To this a railway connection from Muhldorf am Inn is to be made between Erding and Dorfen with the help of the Erdinger ring connection as well as a short new construction single track called Walpertskirchner Spange The actual planning phase for this also began as in the case of the Erdinger ring connection in August 2006 On 29 August 2013 the Bavarian Administrative Court rejected the complaints against the plan approval decision of the Neufahrn Link of October 2012 and therefore freed the way for a direct rail connection of the Munich airport from Regensburg Landshut Moosburg and Freising The Neufahrner Kurve is to connect the railway line Landshut Munich from Neufahr with the railway connection line Neufahr Flughafen Munich approximately 2 5 kilometres long two track and electrified section of the line In the construction and financing agreement signed by rail and free trade in April 2013 it was agreed that the Neufahrn Link will be built and put into operation by the end of 2018 On 9 December 2018 the new train service to Regensburg and Landshut has commenced 173 Third runway edit It has been proposed to build a third runway in the airport It would likely run in parallel to the existing runways and be located to the north east of the current north runway significantly extending the total area occupied by the airport Justification edit According to the airport the growth of air traffic in Munich from 1997 to 2006 was an average of 7 per year and the airport s capacity was already exhausted Since new airlines in Munich no longer received the desired slots a traffic spoiling effect occurred 174 An air traffic forecast of Intraplan Consult GmbH estimated 58 2 million passengers for 2025 provided the airport has a tight fitting growth 175 176 According to Flughafen Munchen GmbH FMG the airport s operator the current two runway system is already operating at full capacity during peak hours and requests for additional slots from airlines have been denied Further increase in air traffic is expected as Munich is to become a second major hub in Germany after Frankfurt In order to cope with the potential traffic in Munich the operator plans to expand today s capacity from 90 movements per hour to 120 movements per hour by constructing a third runway 177 The shareholders of Flughafen Munchen GmbH FMG stated that the construction of a third runway was necessary for the Munich region and for Bavaria as a whole for reasons of transport and economic policy Various associations and institutions from economics and politics reacted in favor of the plan approval decision issued by the government of Oberbayern for the construction of a third runway at Munich Airport 178 Counterarguments edit The project for the construction of a third runway is particularly contentious in the directly affected airport region of the districts of Freising and Erding but also in other nearby counties 179 180 Above all they question the growth projections presented by FMG and one district calls for the use of larger aircraft in order to meet demand 181 The opponents of the expansion project joined forces to form the action alliance aufgeMUCkt over 80 groups including citizens initiatives ecclesiastical groups and environmental organizations supported by among others the BUND in Bavaria 182 that organized many demonstrations 183 184 The Catholic Church which is the owner of some of the affected sites also announced resistance to the construction 185 Since the plan approval decision of 26 July 2011 more protests have taken place On 29 October 2011 a large demonstration with around 7 000 participants 186 took place in Munich in Marienplatz directly in front of the Old Town Hall Progress edit In August 2007 the airport operator applied for planning permission from the government of Upper Bavaria More than 60 000 objections have been filed during public display of the plans The objections and lawsuits against the third runway were later overturned by the Bavarian Administrative Court allowing for construction plans to proceed On 26 July 2011 the government of Upper Bavaria issued the zoning approval for the construction of a third runway With this decision the zoning authority after the intensive examination and consideration of all ramifications expressly approved the need presented by Flughafen Munchen GmbH and the plans submitted for the third runway Also tied to the approval by the government of Upper Bavaria is the prompt completion of the construction project However the airport operator has chosen to follow the advice of Bavaria s Higher Administrative Court and not to proceed until the principal proceedings concerning the project have reached a conclusion The decision is currently being reviewed by the court The building permit associated with the zoning will continue to be valid for up to 15 years While according to ICAO Regulations Annex XIV the new runway would have to be named 08L 26R renaming the existing north runway to 08C 26C it is currently assigned the working title 09 27 in all plans 187 In 2015 the airport received approval from Germany s Federal Administrative Court to build a third runway dismissing all complaints and appeals and confirming the 2014 decision of Bavaria s Higher Administrative Court to grant approval The plans include a new 4 000 metre 13 000 ft runway northeast of the existing airport and a new satellite building at Terminal 2 the latter of which did open in April 2016 However construction of the new runway may yet be delayed as the project has to have unanimous approval by the airport s three shareholders Bavaria Federal Republic of Germany and the City of Munich The latter has opposed the plan since a 2012 referendum 188 In September 2020 the Bavarian government stopped all progression regarding the third runway until at least 2028 due to the massive decrease of traffic in the wake of the COVID 19 pandemic 189 See also editMemmingen Airport an airport 110 km 68 mi from Munich that serves the city with low cost flights List of airports in Germany Transport in GermanyReferences edit Aus Eurowings Discover wird Discover Airlines 5 September 2023 ADV Monthly Traffic Report 12 2022 PDF 919 KB adv aero in German Arbeitsgemeinschaft Deutscher Verkehrsflughafen e V 13 February 2023 Retrieved 17 February 2023 AIP VFR online dfs de DFS Deutsche Flugsicherung GmbH Retrieved 21 February 2023 AIP IFR Germany Langen DFS Deutsche Flugsicherung GmbH Retrieved 9 July 2023 Verkehrszahlen 12 months ACI aero Archived from the original on 28 May 2016 Retrieved 23 September 2016 Year to date ACI aero Archived from the original on 13 August 2018 Retrieved 23 September 2016 aero de Frankfurt offers the most destinations 20 February 2017 Early days 1967 1969 Archived from the original on 5 July 2011 Retrieved 2 June 2015 Munich s traffic doubles in 10 years Lufthansa adds more routes than it drops as a host of new airlines announce new services anna aero 20 April 2010 Achim Schaffrinna 29 November 2013 Flughafen Munchen erhalt neues Corporate Design Design Tagebuch Retrieved 2 June 2015 airliners de Condor announces new long haul destinations from Munich German retrieved 23 June 2015 airliners de Transavia starts German base in spring German 30 November 2015 aero de Luftfahrt Nachrichten und Community aero de 22 November 2013 Retrieved 2 June 2015 airliners de Flughafen Munchen knackt 40 Millionen Marke bei Passagierzahlen 13 January 2016 handelsblatt com Eurowings in Munchen Lufthansa Tochter fliegt 32 Ziele an German 21 December 2016 routesonline com Eurowings outlines leased airberlin aircraft operation in S17 3 January 2017 aero de Transavia dissolves base in Munich German 13 February 2017 Munich Airport Press Release Take offs and landings up 2 6 to over 400 000 15 January 2018 airliners de German 3 February 2021 Facts amp Figures www munich airport com Retrieved 14 October 2023 Munich International Flight Hub Flight Hub Reviews 2 May 2015 Archived from the original on 19 April 2015 Retrieved 2 June 2015 Germanwings wechselt Terminals in Munchen Archived from the original on 15 April 2016 Retrieved 2 June 2015 Travel ONE Produkt travel one net Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 2 June 2015 munich airport de Weitere 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Albawings to open Pristina base launch eleven routes 17 January 2024 ANA connects Tokyo with Munich again in German ANA To Resume Brussels And Munich Services Beond New All Business Class Maldivian carrier to start operations from November 2023 and releases first routes One Mile At A Time 11 October 2023 Retrieved 12 October 2023 Maldives BeOnd Revised NW23 Operations Brussels Airlines adds eight new destinations to its Summer 2022 schedule 18 January 2022 condor com Flight schedule summer 2021 German retrieved 31 October 2021 Flugplan Winter 2021 2022 PDF Condor Winter 2023 24 Condor reaktiviert Agadir Fluge Aviation Direct 8 March 2023 a b c CONDOR NS24 EUROPE NETWORK ADDITIONS 06AUG23 Charter Condor bedient Munchen Pristina Aviation Direct 20 July 2023 CORENDON AIRLINES NW22 SCHEDULED SERVICE ADJUSTMENT 20OCT22 aeroroutes com 20 October 2022 Flugplan Croatia Airlines povezuje Osijek s poznatim europskim cvoristem Retrieved 21 September 2021 Croatia Airlines adds one new route extends seasonal flights 17 August 2023 Croatia Airlines uvodi liniju Munchen Brac 13 December 2022 Summer in Europe Delta to fly largest ever trans Atlantic schedule Delta News Hub 22 September 2023 Retrieved 22 September 2023 Sommer 2022 Sieben zusatzliche touristische Langstreckenverbindungen ab Frankfurt und Munchen Press release in German Cologne Lufthansa Group a b c d e f g h i lufthansaexperts com Switch of the touristic short and midhaul offers to Eurowings Discover German retrieved 1 December 2021 Eurowings Discover 2022 23 Short Haul Expansion Update 03APR22 a b c d e f Eurowings Discover NS24 Munich Network Additions 04JUL23 a b lufthansaexperts com Factsheet Lufthansa Eurowings transition German retrieved 21 May 2022 Eurowings Discover NW22 Intercontinental Network Changes 28SEP22 a b Eurowings Eurowings Discover NS22 Short Haul Network Adjustment 12JUN22 Angebotsausbau Easyjet legt neue Route ab Munchen auf Flug Burgas Munchen ab 191 billige Fluge buchen bei idealo EVA to Launch Nonstop Milan Munich Flights Airline s first European route expansion in 25 years EVA Air Press release Taipei Evergeen Group eurowings com retrieved 3 February 2020 Flight Schedule FlyErbil flyebl com Retrieved 26 March 2023 FLYONE NS23 CHISINAU NETWORK ADDITIONS 07MAR23 Flight list freebirdairlines com Georgian Airways ი ახალ ევროპულ მიმართულებას ამატებს Avianews ge in German 13 November 2023 Retrieved 21 December 2023 JAZEERA NS23 EUROPE NETWORK EXPANSION Leav Aviation Adds Munich Arvidsjaur Service in 1Q24 Anithya Balachandran Lufthansa to expand operations in India Business Traveller India Mumbai Panacea Publications Retrieved 27 April 2023 abouttravel com Lufthansa cancels Basel Munich flights 21 March 2023 a b Lufthansa Resumes Munich Mainland China Service in NS23 a b c d Lufthansa Book now for the summer Press release Cologne Lufthansa Group a b c Lufthansa Offering 5 200 weekly flights to 205 destinations in summer 2023 Press release in German Cologne Lufthansa Group a b Go West Lufthansa expands flights to the USA with three new connections LUFTHANSA RESUMES MUNICH MARRAKECH SERVICE IN NW23 a b c LUFTHANSA AIR DOLOMITI NS24 EUROPEAN NETWORK FREQUENCY CHANGES 21JAN24 Lufthansa aloittaa lennot Munchenista Ouluun joulukuussa matkailijoita odotetaan talviseen pohjolaan Yle Uutiset in Finnish 18 July 2023 Retrieved 18 July 2023 Lufthansa Expands Nonstop Service to Germany from San Diego International Airport San Diego International Airport 13 September 2023 Archived from the original on 1 January 2024 Retrieved 1 January 2024 SEA Grows International Gateway with Lufthansa Service to Munich Port of Seattle 12 September 2023 Lufthansa Group Strengthens Its Commitment in Norway with New Routes and Increased Capacity in the Summer 2024 Program the Avinor Group LUFTHANSA ADDS LIMITED TIME MUNICH LONDON STANSTED SERVICE IN SEP OCT 2023 Lufthansa Group July 2022 Short Haul Passenger Operation Update 12JUN22 a b MARABU AIRLINES OUTLINES NS23 NETWORK Nesma Airlines starts Munich Hurghada in German 3 March 2023 a b Norwegian NS24 Network Additions 14NOV23 AeroRoutes Summer 2023 Nouvelair expands services to D A CH region 5 January 2023 Nouvelair Network cite web lt url https www aeroroutes com eng 230418 pcns23 7Ctitle PEGASUS NS23 NETWORK ADDITIONS 16APR23 SALAMAIR SCHEDULES MUNICH LATE SEP 2023 LAUNCH Aeroroutes Retrieved 19 September 2023 https www flyingbosnian blogspot com 2024 02 skyalps schedules mostar flights launch html Milan Munich and Sofia new destinations for SKY express 5 August 2022 SmartLynx connects Munich with Ras Al Khaimah for FTI in German 16 March 2023 News Archive Somon Air fliegt weiter nach Munchen 24 January 2024 SOUTHWIND AIRLINES NS23 NETWORK OVERVIEW 21MAY23 22 May 2023 a b SunExpress NS24 Network Expansion 24SEP23 News 7 October 2021 a b c Travelcoup VIP Fluge nun auch uber GDS buchbar 6 June 2023 a b Turkish Airlines NS22 European Network Expansion Update 08APR22 Uzbekistan Airways Adds Munich Scheduled Service From late Oct 2023 AeroRoutes 16 August 2023 Retrieved 16 August 2023 vueling com Flight schedule retrieved 15 April 2022 Wideroe postpones Hamburg and Munich flights 21 March 2023 Senator International Launches Atlantic Air Bridge cargoforwarder eu 24 July 2016 Retrieved 5 November 2016 StackPath www aviationpros com 24 January 2022 cargolux com Network amp Offices retrieved 8 September 2019 Flughafen Leipzig Halle Business and partners gt Cargo gt Location gt Airlines gt Airlines www leipzig halle airport de airlineroutemaps com FedEx retrieved 8 September 2019 munich airport com 17 January 2022 QATAR AIRWAYS CARGO ADDS NEW EUROPEAN SECTORS FROM JAN 2023 austrianwings info German 12 May 2021 ups com World Airports Served By Region retrieved 8 September 2019 Flughafenverband ADV Flughafenverband ADV Unsere Flughafen Regionale Starke Globaler Anschluss Retrieved 2 June 2015 Annual Traffic Reports 31 May 2016 Munich Airport www munich airport de Archived from the original on 31 May 2016 Annual traffic Traffic figures www munich airport com a b c Air passenger transport between the main airports of Germany and their main partner airports routes data Eurostat Retrieved 6 December 2021 Flughafen Munchen FOC Flight Operations Center Archived from the original on 13 May 2015 Retrieved 2 June 2015 COMKOM GmbH Germany Lufthansa CityLine Contact Retrieved 2 June 2015 Standort Munchen Lufthansa Technik AG www lufthansa technik com Kempinski verliert Flughafen Hotel in Munchen Erweiterung zu Hilton Doppelmarke geplant HOTTELLING 2 0 DIGITAL NEWS FOR HOTELIERS Archived from the original on 23 March 2015 Retrieved 2 June 2015 Flughafen Munchen Hotels Archived from the original on 12 May 2015 Retrieved 2 June 2015 Audi eroffnet Trainingscenter in Munchen Retrieved 2 June 2015 World Airline Directory Flight International 29 March 4 April 1995 68 Wartungsallee 13 Munchen Flughafen Munchen D 85 356 Germany Contact Us DBA 4 February 2004 Retrieved on 21 January 2010 dba Luftfahrtgesellschaft mbH Wartungsallee 13 85356 Munchen Munich Airport Germany The address on Google Maps goes to Wartungsallee 13 85356 Hallbergmoos Germany Bayerische Polizei Bereitschaftspolizei Hubschrauberstaffel Bayern a b c d e Perspectives PDF Munich Airport 4 August 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 17 December 2014 General information Munich Airport Archived from the original on 17 December 2014 Retrieved 17 December 2014 Landscape concept and planning Munich Airport Archived from the original on 17 December 2014 Retrieved 17 December 2014 Bauernverband und BN kritisieren Landverbrauch in German Bund Naturschutz Kreisgruppe Erding Retrieved 17 December 2014 Water management Munich Airport Archived from the original on 17 December 2014 Retrieved 17 December 2014 Larmsteuer fur laute Flugzeuge Der Standard in German 11 September 2007 Retrieved 17 December 2014 Noise control Munich Airport Archived from the original on 17 December 2014 Retrieved 17 December 2014 Night flight operations Munich Airport Archived from the original on 17 December 2014 Retrieved 17 December 2014 Lufthansa celebrates 10th Anniversary of Solar Panels at Munich Airport Airport World 2 July 2013 Retrieved 12 January 2015 Biodiversity Munich Airport Archived from the original on 17 December 2014 Retrieved 12 January 2015 Bundespolizeidirektion Munchen in German Bundespolizei Retrieved 6 June 2017 Flughafentangente durchgehend befahrbar www meine anzeigenzeitung de in German 22 December 2010 Retrieved 13 June 2021 Zeitung Suddeutsche 4 August 2020 Achtung Baustelle Suddeutsche de in German Retrieved 13 June 2021 MVV Air travellers 15 December 2014 Archived from the original on 20 May 2015 Retrieved 2 June 2015 sueddeutsche de Faster to Munich Airport German 13 November 2015 muenchen de Konkrete Plane fur Express S Bahn zum Flughafen muenchen de in German Retrieved 13 June 2021 Neuer Zug von Regensburg zum Flughafen Munchen in German Bayerisches Rundfunk 15 September 2015 Bayern Bahnland 16 November 2018 Neue Zugverbindung In 75 Minuten von Regensburg zum Munchner Flughafen in German Wochen Blatt Ein Jahr Hochgeschwindigkeitsverkehr in German Deutsche Bahn 1992 pp 4 6 Alexandra Vettori 11 July 2016 Wo bleibt der Humpel Express in German Suddeutsche Zeitung Johannes Welte and Felix Muller 13 November 2015 Geheimplan Flughafen pruft eigene Expressbahn in German Munchner Merkur Florian Zick 31 March 2017 Ganze Region will in den MVV Neue Plane furs Netz das wird eine Mega S Bahn in German Abendzeitung Munchen Mehr U Bahnen und Trams fur die Region in German Munchner Merkur 17 July 2017 Retrieved 5 September 2017 Weg frei fur eine direkte Schienenanbindung des Munchner Flughafens aus Nordostbayern in German Wirtschaftsforderung im Landkreis Dingolfing Landau 30 August 2013 Retrieved 29 June 2017 Planfeststellungsbeschluss fur den Verkehrsflughafen Munchen 3 Start und Landebahn in German Regierung von Bayern Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 4 July 2017 Planfeststellungsbeschluss fur den Verkehrsflughafen Munchen 3 Start und Landebahn Band 1 PDF in German Regierung von Oberbayern 5 July 2011 Archived from the original PDF on 31 March 2016 Retrieved 4 July 2017 Flughafen Munchen GmbH Der Flughafen Munchen jetzt Perspektiven schaffen in German Retrieved 4 July 2017 Flughafen Munchen Prospekt PDF in German Flughafen Munchen 26 October 2010 Archived from the original PDF on 28 September 2011 Retrieved 4 July 2017 Grosse Zustimmung zum positiven Planfeststellungsbeschluss 3 Bahn in German Flughafen Munchen 9 September 2011 Archived from the original on 9 September 2012 Retrieved 4 July 2017 Halser Marlene 29 July 2011 Wutburger im Erdinger Moos Die Tageszeitung Taz in German taz Retrieved 9 July 2017 Streit um Startbahn spaltet die CSU in German Suddeutsche Zeitung 28 July 2011 Retrieved 9 July 2017 Landtag streitet um Flugverkehr Prognose in German Suddeutsche Zeitung 27 April 2011 Retrieved 9 July 2017 Kleine Demonstration vor Reserl Sems verschlossener Haustur in German Passauer Neue Presse 27 April 2011 Retrieved 9 July 2017 Flughafen Munchen Contra Laut dreckig und uberflussig in German Bayern Online 15 April 2010 Archived from the original on 12 October 2010 Retrieved 9 July 2017 Weiter Protest gegen Munchner Flughafen Ausbau in German Augsburger Allgemeine 1 August 2011 Retrieved 9 July 2017 Erzbischof Marx Kirche verkauft keinen Grund fur dritte Startbahn in German Munchner Merkur 8 December 2009 Retrieved 9 July 2017 Tausende Munchner fordern koa Dritte in German Suddeutsche Zeitung 29 October 2011 Retrieved 9 July 2017 DC Airports 20 August 2007 Erlauterungsbericht Technische Planung Luftseite PDF Planfeststellungsverfahren 3 Start und Landebahn in German pp 16 42 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2009 Retrieved 24 November 2008 Green Light for Munich Expansion Airliner World 8 October 2015 br de German 16 September 2020External links edit nbsp Media related to Munich Airport at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Munich Airport travel guide from Wikivoyage Official website Munich Flight Tracking Live flight tracking at Flightradar24 Current weather for EDDM at NOAA NWS Accident history for MUC at Aviation Safety NetworkPortals nbsp Germany nbsp Aviation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Munich Airport amp oldid 1207309732, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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