Munich Airport

Munich Airport
Flughafen München
IATA: MUCICAO: EDDM
Summary
Airport type Public
Owner/Operator Flughafen München GmbH
Serves Munich, Germany
Location near Freising
Hub for
Focus city for
Elevation AMSL 1,487 ft / 453 m
Coordinates 48°21′14″N 011°47′10″E / 48.35389°N 11.78611°ECoordinates: 48°21′14″N 011°47′10″E / 48.35389°N 11.78611°E
Website munich-airport.de
Map
MUC

Location within Bavaria

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 (2014)
Aircraft Movements 376,678 Decrease -1.4%
Passenger Movements 39,700,515 Increase 2.7%
Freight (in tons) 309,361 Increase 7.5%
Sources: Passenger Traffic & Aircraft Movements, ADV[1]
German AIP at EUROCONTROL[2]

Munich Airport (IATA: MUC, ICAO: EDDM) (German: Flughafen München), is the international airport of Munich, the capital of Bavaria. It is the second busiest airport in Germany in terms of passenger traffic behind Frankfurt Airport, and the seventh busiest airport in Europe, handling 39.7 million passengers in 2014, an increase of close to 3% from 2013.[3] It is the world's 14th busiest airport in terms of international passenger traffic,[4] and was the 30th busiest airport worldwide in 2013.[5] As of March 2015, the airport features flights to 228 destinations in 66 countries.[6] Munich Airport serves as the secondary hub for Lufthansa including Lufthansa Regional and its Star Alliance partners besides Frankfurt. The biggest foreign carrier in Munich in terms of passenger numbers is Air Dolomiti.[7]

The airport is located 28.5 km (17.7 mi) northeast[2] of Munich near the old city of Freising and is named in memory of the former Bavarian Prime Minister Franz Josef Strauss. It features two passenger terminals and two runways as well as extensive cargo and maintenance facilities and is fully capable of handling large aircraft such as the Airbus A380. Munich is the only airport in Europe and one of only five airports worldwide to be designated a Five Star Airport by Skytrax.[8]

History

Development

From 1939 to 1992, Munich was served by Munich-Riem Airport. First plans to expand or build a new airport were made in 1954 due to the traffic flow-rate and the population density in its proximity. The decision for building the new airport at Erdinger Moos was made on 5 August 1969 by the Bavarian government. When construction started on 3 November 1980, a village named Franzheim was demolished and their ~500 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, a district of Freising.

The airport is named after Franz Josef Strauß, who played a prominent, albeit sometimes controversial role in politics of the Federal Republic of Germany from the 1950s until his death in 1988. Among other positions, Strauß was a long-time Minister-President (Governor) of the state of Bavaria, where the airport is located and was initiated under his government. Strauß, having been a private pilot himself, had a particular interest in the aviation industry. He is regarded one of the fathers of Airbus and served as initial chairman of its supervisory board.[9] Naming the airport by its full name "Flughafen München Franz Josef Strauß" is fairly uncommon. The company that owns and operates the airport is named "Flughafen München GmbH" and brands itself as "M – Flughafen München" respectively "M – Munich Airport". In the Munich area, most people use the term "Flughafen München" (Munich Airport), sometimes "Flughafen München II" in order to distinguish from the earlier airport or simply "MUC" for its IATA-code.

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 addded 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.[10]

Operations

The new Munich Airport commenced operation on 17 May 1992, when operations moved from the former site at Munich-Riem Airport, which was closed shortly before midnight on the day before. 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 sees many more intercontinental routes.

Between 1995 and 2006 passenger numbers doubled from under 15 million per annum to over 30 million,[11] 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.

Terminals and facilities

Munich Airport covers 15.6 square kilometres (3,900 acres) of land area. Most of the airport's facilities are located in the area between the two runways. The approach road and railway divide the west part into a southern half, which contains cargo and maintenance facilities, and a northern half, which contains mostly administrative buildings, a holiday long-term parking lot and the visitors' centre. It is followed by the west apron and terminal 1, then the Munich Airport Center (MAC), Terminal 2 and the east apron. Munich Airport only has two terminals, and shuffled 20-25 million people through each terminal in 2014. [12]

Map of Munich Airport (included planned expansion)

Terminal 1

Munich Airport, apron in front of Terminal 1
Check-in area at Terminal 1B
Boarding gate area at Terminal 1

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 only equipped to handle arrivals. 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 of it. Hall F is separate, located near Terminal 2 and handles flights with increased security requirements, i.e. those to Israel. Furthermore, the checkin counters for some flights departing from Terminal 1 are located in the central area Z (German: Zentralbereich) where also most of the shopping and restaurant facilities of this Terminal as well as the airport's suburban railway station are located.

The 1,081 m (3,547 ft) 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 investments 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, due to lack of capacity at Terminal 2, Lufthansa's subsidiary Germanwings and former affiliate Condor both moved back to Terminal 1 in 2007.[13][14] Some of the major users at Terminal 1 are Air Berlin, Condor, Emirates, Qatar Airways, Delta Air Lines, US Airways, easyJet and TUIfly amongst several others.

Terminal 2

Check-in area at Terminal 2
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, Luxair and BMI Regional also use Terminal 2.

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. Due 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 there are no designated stands or additional jet bridges for it until the opening of the Terminal 2 satellite building. As there is no airline currently serving Terminal 2 with the A380, the largest passenger aircraft regularly handled there are the Thai Airways Boeing 747-400s.

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

Construction for the satellite building has started in 2012, it and will be completed by the end of 2015 and inaugurated by summer 2016.[15] This extension to Terminal 2 will see the baggage sorting hall on the east apron upgraded to become a satellite terminal. This will allow an additional 11 million passengers to be handled per year, adding 52 gates using 27 parking positions of which 11 will be able to handle widebody aircraft including the Airbus A380.[15] This plan was approved in December 2010. An expansion for the satellite building into a 'T' shape is also planned for the future along with another satellite and room for a possible 3rd Terminal to the east.[16]

While Terminal 1 still has plenty of capacity left – in 2011, it only handled about 11 million passengers[17] – the extension of the Terminal 2, which operates near full capacity, is required by Lufthansa and its Star Alliance partners to allow easy transfers within a single terminal. When Terminal 2 and its east apron were built, preparations for a satellite terminal had already been made. Besides the baggage transport tunnel, there are three more tunnels beneath the Terminal 2 apron that can receive a people mover and extensions to the current S-Bahn rail tunnel and unused inter-city rail tunnel respectively. The preparations also allow construction of a second satellite or an independent third terminal further to the east.

Munich Airport Center

Munich Airport Center

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

The Munich Airport Center is the only location in the entire state of Bavaria where one can shop at a supermarket from 05.30 until midnight every day, including Sundays.[18] This supermarket is given an exception from the Bavarian shop closing law (German: Ladenschlussgesetz).[19]

Runways

The Franz-Josef Strauss Airport has two parallel runways and one helipad. The two runways at Munich's airport are 08R/26L and 26R/08L, made of concrete and the same size, at 4,000 metres (13,120 ft) long, and 60 metres (200 ft) wide.[20] There is also a concrete helipad.

Planned third runway

A third runway would increase the number schedulable aircraft movements per hour from 90 to 120.[21] It would run in parallel to the existing runways and be located to the northeast of the current north runway, significantly extending the total area occupied by the airport. According to Flughafen München GmbH (FMG), the airport's operator, the current two-runway system is already operating at full capacity during peak hours, 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 August 2007, the airport operator applied for a planning permission from the government of Upper Bavaria. As more than 60,000 objections have been filed during public display of the plans. The objections, lawsuits and results of a city wide referendum against the 3rd 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 Company 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.[22]

Visitor viewing facilities

Visitors Park at Munich Airport

The airport authorities have set out to cater for visitors and sight-seers by creating a 'Visitors Park' which includes a 'Visitors Hill', from which a good view of the westerly aircraft apron and Terminal 1 can be obtained, as well as a restaurant and a shop for airplane 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. There are three historic aircraft on display in the park, a Super Constellation, a Douglas DC-3 and a Junkers Ju 52/3m.

There is also a visitors viewing terrace on the roof of Terminal 2 that features a wide glassed balcony with seating areas and gives a view of the easterly aircraft apron. As of September 2013 the entrance fee has been abolished, the terrace is accessible from the landside for all visitors. Furthermore 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

Passenger

Countries served by flights from Munich Airport as of December 2014

The following airlines offer regular scheduled and charter flights at Munich Airport:[23]

Airlines Destinations Terminal / Check-in
Adria Airways Ljubljana, Łódź, Pristina 2–4
Aegean Airlines Athens, Chania, Larnaca,[24] Rhodes, Thessaloniki
Seasonal: Corfu, Heraklion, Kalamata, Mytilene/Lesbos
2–3
Aer Lingus Cork, Dublin 1-C
Aeroflot Moscow-Sheremetyevo 1-C
Aeroflot
operated by Rossiya
Saint Petersburg 1-C
airBaltic Riga 1-D
Air Berlin Alicante, Berlin-Tegel, Brindisi, Catania, Cologne/Bonn, Düsseldorf, Fuerteventura, Funchal, Gran Canaria, Hamburg, Hurghada, Olbia, Palma de Mallorca, Puerto Plata, Punta Cana, Tel Aviv-Ben Gurion, Tenerife-South
Seasonal: Agadir, Cagliari, Cancún, Corfu, Enfidha, Faro, Heraklion, Hurghada, Ibiza, Karpathos, Kavala, Kos, Lamezia Terme, Málaga, Malta, Minorca, Mytilene/Lesbos, Naples, Preveza, Reykjavik-Keflavik, Rhodes, Samos, Sylt, Thessaloniki, Tivat, Varadero, Zakynthos
Charter: Barbados, Marsa Alam, Montego Bay
1-A, 1-F
Air Canada Toronto-Pearson 2–3
Air China Athens, Beijing-Capital, Shanghai-Pudong[25] 2–3
Air Dolomiti Bari, Bergamo, Bologna,[26] Florence, Venice-Marco Polo, Verona 2–4
Air Europa Madrid[27] 1-D
Air France Paris-Charles de Gaulle 1-D
Air Lituanica Vilnius 1-D
Air Malta Catania, Malta 2–4
Air VIA Seasonal charter: Burgas, Varna 1-C
Alitalia Rome-Fiumicino 1-D
All Nippon Airways Tokyo-Haneda 2–3
Arkia Israel Airlines Tel Aviv-Ben Gurion 1-F
AtlasGlobal Seasonal charter: Antalya 1-C
Austrian Airlines Vienna 2-4
BMI Regional Bern,[28] Bristol, Liège,[28] Rotterdam[28] 2-4
British Airways London-Heathrow 1-B
British Airways
operated by Sun Air of Scandinavia
Billund 1-B
Condor Agadir, Antalya, Djerba, Fuerteventura, Funchal, Gran Canaria, Hurghada, Lanzarote, Santa Cruz de la Palma, Tenerife-South
Seasonal:[29][30] Cancún, Corfu, Dalaman, Enfidha, Goa, Heraklion, Ibiza, Kalamata, Kos, Larnaca, Marsa Alam, Mauritius, Montego Bay, Palma de Mallorca, Pointe-à-Pitre,[31] Puerto Plata,[31] Punta Cana, Rhodes, Santa Clara, Santorini, Sharm el-Sheikh, Skiathos, Varadero
1-B
Croatia Airlines Split, Zagreb
Seasonal: Zadar, Rijeka
2–4
Delta Air Lines Atlanta 1-B
easyJet Edinburgh, London-Gatwick, London-Luton, London-Stansted, Manchester, Milan-Malpensa, Rome-Fiumicino 1-Z
EgyptAir Cairo 2–4
El Al Tel Aviv-Ben Gurion 1-F
Emirates Dubai-International 1-C
Estonian Air Seasonal: Tallinn[32] 1-D
Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi 1-C
Finnair Helsinki 1-D
Flybe Cardiff (begins 31 August 2015)[33] 1-B
Freebird Airlines Charter: Antalya 1-C
Germania[34]Erbil, Sulaymaniyah
Seasonal: Hurghada, Larnaca,[35] Marsa Alam
1-C
Germanwings Dortmund 1-D
Iberia Madrid 1-D
Icelandair Reykjavik-Keflavik 1-D
InterSky Seasonal: Elba 1-D
Israir Seasonal: Tel Aviv-Ben Gurion 1-F
KLM Amsterdam 1-D
KLM
operated by KLM Cityhopper
Amsterdam 1-D
Kuwait Airways Kuwait City (resumes 16 July 2015)[36] 1-Z
LOT Polish Airlines Warsaw-Chopin 2–4
Lufthansa Ankara, Antalya, Athens, Barcelona, Beijing-Capital, Belgrade, Berlin-Tegel, Bilbao, Boston, Bremen, Brussels, Bucharest, Budapest, Charlotte, Chicago-O'Hare, Cologne/Bonn, Copenhagen, Delhi, Düsseldorf, Dubai-International, Dublin, Faro, Frankfurt, Hamburg, Hanover, Helsinki, Hong Kong, Istanbul-Atatürk, Izmir, Kiev-Boryspil, Kraków, Larnaca, Lisbon, London-Heathrow, Los Angeles, Madrid, Málaga, Manchester, Mexico City, Milan-Malpensa, Montréal-Trudeau, Moscow-Domodedovo, Mumbai, Münster/Osnabrück, Naples, New York-JFK, Newark, Nice, Oslo-Gardermoen, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Prague, Riyadh, Rome-Fiumicino, Saint Petersburg, San Francisco, São Paulo-Guarulhos, Sarajevo, Seoul-Incheon, Shanghai-Pudong, Sofia, Stockholm-Arlanda, Tbilisi, Tel Aviv-Ben Gurion, Tokyo-Haneda, Valencia, Venice-Marco Polo, Vienna, Washington-Dulles, Zagreb, Zürich
Seasonal: Bodrum, Cape Town, Catania, Dubrovnik, Fuerteventura (begins 25 October 2015), Glasgow-International (begins 16 May 2015),[37] Gran Canaria, Heraklion (begins 23 May 2015), Kittilä (begins 19 December 2015),[38] Lamezia Terme,[39] Malta, Miami, Palma de Mallorca, Reykjavik-Keflavik (begins 23 May 2015), Seville,[37] Split, Tenerife-South (begins 31 October 2015), Toronto-Pearson,[40] Tunis, Vancouver
2–3, 2–4
Lufthansa Regional
operated by Air Dolomiti
Ancona, Catania, Genoa, Milan-Malpensa, Palermo, Pisa, Perugia, Rome-Fiumicino, Trieste, Turin 2–4
Lufthansa Regional
operated by Lufthansa CityLine
Amsterdam, Basel/Mulhouse, Belgrade, Bilbao, Birmingham, Bremen, Brussels, Bucharest, Budapest, Chișinău, Cluj-Napoca, Cologne/Bonn Dresden, Gdańsk, Geneva, Gothenburg-Landvetter, Graz, Kraków, Leipzig/Halle, Luxembourg, Lyon, Lviv, Marseille, Milan-Malpensa, Münster/Osnabrück, Nice, Nuremberg, Paderborn/Lippstadt, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Pisa, Prague, Rome-Fiumicino, Rostock, Poznań, Sarajevo, Sibiu, Sofia, Split, Stuttgart, Timișoara, Tirana, Toulouse, Turin, Vienna, Warsaw-Chopin, Wrocław, Zagreb, Zürich
Seasonal: Bastia, Dubrovnik, Montpellier, Olbia, Pula, Sylt, Zadar
2–3
Luxair Luxembourg 2–4
Mahan Air Tehran-Imam Khomeini[41] 1-Z
Monarch Airlines Seasonal: London-Luton 1-D
Niki Vienna 1-A
Norwegian Air Shuttle Alicante, Gran Canaria, Málaga, Oslo-Gardermoen, Stockholm-Arlanda, Tenerife-South 1-D
Nouvelair Charter: Djerba, Enfidha 1-Z
Oman Air Muscat 1-C
Onur Air Istanbul-Atatürk 1-D
Orenair Seasonal: Chelyabinsk, Omsk, Samara 1-B
Pegasus Airlines Istanbul-Sabiha Gökçen 1-C
Qatar Airways Doha 1-B
Royal Air Maroc Casablanca,[42] Marrakech, Moscow-Sheremetyevo (begins 24 May 2015)[43] 1-B
Royal Jordanian Amman-Queen Alia 1-B
S7 Airlines Moscow-Domodedovo 1-B
SATA International Porto, Ponta Delgada 1-D
Scandinavian Airlines Copenhagen 2–4
Singapore Airlines Manchester, Singapore 2–3
SkyWork Airlines Bern 1-D
South African Airways Johannesburg-OR Tambo 2–4
SunExpress Antalya, Izmir 1-C
SunExpress Deutschland Adana, Antalya, Enfidha, Hurghada, Kayseri, Marsa Alam
Seasonal: Ankara (begins 21 July 2015),[44] Fuerteventura, Heraklion, Rhodes, Varna (begins 30 July 2015)
1-C
Swiss International Air Lines
operated by Swiss Global Air Lines
Zürich 2–4
TAP Portugal Lisbon 2–4
TAROM Bucharest, Sibiu 1-D
Thai Airways Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi 2–3
TUIfly Boa Vista, Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria, Hurghada, Lanzarote, Marsa Alam, Sal, Tenerife-South
Seasonal: Antalya, Araxos/Patras, Corfu, Dalaman, Faro, Heraklion, Jerez de la Frontera, Kos, Minorca, Palma de Mallorca, Rhodes, Tel Aviv-Ben Gurion
1-Z
Transavia France Paris-Orly (begins 4 September 2015)[45] 1-D
Tunisair Djerba, Enfidha, Tunis 1-C
Turkish Airlines Istanbul-Atatürk, Istanbul-Sabiha Gökçen
Seasonal: Ankara, Izmir, Kayseri, Samsun
1-C
Ukraine International Airlines Kiev-Boryspil 1-B
United Airlines Chicago-O'Hare, Houston–Intercontinental, Newark, Washington-Dulles 2–3
Ural Airlines Moscow-Domodedovo 1-C
US Airways
operated by American Airlines
Philadelphia 1-B
Volotea Seasonal: Bordeaux, Nantes 1-D
Vueling Barcelona, Málaga, Palma de Mallorca, Rome-Fiumicino
Seasonal: Santiago de Compostela (begins 25 June 2015)
1-D

Cargo

Airlines Destinations
AirBridgeCargo Airlines Moscow-Sheremetyevo[46]
ATRAN Liège, Moscow-Sheremetyevo
Cargolux Atlanta, Luxembourg
DHL Aviation
operated by EAT Leipzig
Leipzig/Halle
FedEx Express Cologne/Bonn, Frankfurt, Milan-Malpensa, Paris-Charles de Gaulle
Star Air (Maersk) Athens, Cologne/Bonn
TNT Airways Liège, Ljubljana
Yangtze River Express Brussels, Shanghai-Pudong

Statistics

Passenger numbers

Historic planes on display at the Visitors Park of Munich Airport
Maintenance facility of Lufthansa Technik at Munich Airport
A Singapore Airlines Boeing 777-300ER at Munich Airport
A Qatar Airways Boeing 787-8 at Munich Airport
Passengers
2000 23,125,872
2001 Increase 23,646,900
2002 Decrease 23,163,720
2003 Increase 24,193,304
2004 Increase 26,814,505
2005 Increase 28,619,427
2006 Increase 30,757,978
2007 Increase 33,959,422
2008 Increase 34,530,593
2009 Decrease 32,681,067
2010 Increase 34,721,605
2011 Increase 37,763,701
2012 Increase 38,360,604
2013 Increase 38,672,644
2014 Increase 39,700,515
Source: ADV[47]

Route statistics

Busiest international routes from Munich Airport (2013)[48]
Rank Destination Passengers Change
Continental
1 United Kingdom, London-Heathrow 1,156,000 Increase 4.8%
2 France, Paris-Charles de Gaulle 926,000 Decrease 7.6%
3 Spain, Barcelona 716,000 Increase 6.3%
4 Netherlands, Amsterdam 690,000 Increase 0.4%
5 Turkey, Istanbul-Atatürk 652,000 Increase 7.6%
6 Spain, Madrid 643,000 Decrease 3.1%
7 Russia, Moscow-Domodedovo 567,000 Increase 13.4%
8 Spain, Palma de Mallorca 564,000 Increase 8.5%
9 Austria, Vienna 561,000 Decrease 0.3%
10 Italy, Rome-Fiumicino 538,000 Increase 5.3%
Intercontinental
1 United Arab Emirates, Dubai 660,000 Increase 6.1%
2 United States, Newark 328,000 Increase 5.2%
3 Japan, Tokyo-Narita 298,000 Decrease 2.5%
4 United States, Chicago-O'Hare 295,000 Decrease 4.4%
5 Qatar, Doha 258,000 Increase 26.2%
6 United States, Washington-Dulles 245,000 Decrease 9.7%
7 People's Republic of China, Beijing 232,000 Decrease 2.0%
8 Thailand, Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi 199,000 Decrease 5.9%
9 United States, San Francisco 193,000 Decrease 0.2%
10 People's Republic of China, Shanghai-Pudong 186,000 Decrease 2.4%

Other facilities

Environment

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[58]

Landscape

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 1560 hectares which remained planted, only 60%.[59] 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 taking in making the airport unattractive to birds, in order to prevent bird strikes. An additional 230-acre greenbelt was placed around the airport as a compensation area, in which the overall compensation areas extend over 600 acres.[60] 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.[61]

Waters

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 in which drainage ditches were created. Existing watercourses, such as small streams, were not interrupted, but redirected so that they run either around or underneath the property, lowering 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 returned to the natural water cycle. In order to accomplish this, 100 km of sewer lines were laid, 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 purified in a purification plant. For the necessary winter de-icing of the airport, deicing chemical such as glycol are used and 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.[62]

Noise

General info

To reduce noise from thrust reversal during landings of aircraft, the runways were built to a length of 4,000 meters, although this reduction in noise is offset by increased taxiing times. For engine testing a hall was built so that noise pollution can be reduced; after 11pm 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.[63] There are 16 stationary noise measuring points at the airport.[64]

Regulations of night flights

At Munich airport there is no strict ban on night flights, but a ban on flights arriving and departing between 10pm and 6am. The only exemptions are flights from mail services and DFS survey flights. From midnight until 5am only those flights that are operating in the interest of the public are generally possible, this includes so-called Emergency flights, such as; 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.

In the period from 10pm till midnight and 5am to 6am 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.[65]

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.[58]

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

Cogeneration plant

The Munich airport is supplied for the most part with electricity and heat generated in its own cogeneration plant (CHP), which is located south of the northern runway to the west of the airport. Within the CHP there are nine so-called cogeneration modules, seven are operated by diesel gas, the other two by Otto gas. The electrical generating capacity is 18.5 megawatts. The cogeneration modules run smoothly all year long; this creates unnecessary heat at certain times which is stored in heat storage to be used at a later time. In summer, the heat generated is used for the operation of the absorption refrigerating machine. The total gross utilization rate is 78 percent (diesel-gas) and 83 percent (gas-gasoline). The cogeneration modules are an obligation, from the Renewable Energy Sources Act, so that the Munich Airport can generate electricity from renewable energy sources, using biogas.[58] Furthermore, the airport has a connection to the district heating network of the Zolling power plant.

Photovoltaic system

On the roof of the central hall of Terminal 2 is a photovoltaic system; it is a joint project of BP Solar, German BP, Bundesdeutscher Arbeitskreis für Umweltbewusstes Management, Lufthansa, Munich Airport and others since 10 July 2003, operating and generated an average of 445,000 kilowatt hours per year, equivalent to the consumption of 155 households.[66] The power comes from 2,856 modules of silicon cells, covering a total area of 3594 square meters. It has a lifetime of 30 years and will save an expected 12,000 tons of carbon dioxide emission over that period of time.[58] €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, to which there are also other information.

Biofuel gas station

With the establishment of a biofuel gas station with rapeseed oil fuels, ethanol fuel and biomethane in the private sector, making it possible for the operating companies to slowly convert its vehicle fleet to biofuels; this gas station can also be used by external companies operating at the airport.[58]

Bird sanctuary

Despite the necessary airport aversive conditions of large and/or swarm-forming birds to prevent bird strikes the northern Erdinger Moos is still an important habitat for birds, especially for so-called grassland birds such as lapwing, curlew or rare winter visitor such as the 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 are an attraction for birds of open meadows. However, this leads to constant conflicts and killings of even rare birds by airplane accidents (vortices) and with the safety requirements to avoid the bird strikes. For the planned third runway 3,440,000 square meters in the bird sanctuary should be laid with concrete, using 8,000,000 square meters of living space. This represents a substantial interference with the bird sanctuary.[67]

Ground transportation

Road

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.

Railway

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

Munich Airport is connected to the city by Munich suburban railway (S-Bahn) lines S1 and S8. The ride takes approximately 45 minutes to the Marienplatz station in the city centre. S1 runs from the airport through the northwestern suburbs and reaches the city centre from the west (HauptbahnhofMarienplatzMünchen Ost), while S8 comes in from the eastern suburbs passing the stations from the opposite direction. The S-Bahn from the airport to the city runs approx. 20 hours a day with a short break between 01:30 and 04:00.[68]

Furthermore, a scheduled bus service (MVV line 635) connects the airport within 20 minutes to the Freising railway station, providing access to regional trains to destinations like Munich, Nuremberg, Regensburg and Prague.

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

A second tunnel beneath the terminals is currently unused. Originally, there were plans to use it for 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.

Bus

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

See also

References

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External links

Media related to Munich Airport at Wikimedia Commons