Frankfurt Airport
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Frankfurt Airport Flughafen Frankfurt am Main |
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Frankfurt Airport from Air | |||
IATA: FRA – ICAO: EDDF | |||
Summary | |||
Airport type | Public | ||
Owner/Operator | Fraport | ||
Serves | Frankfurt am Main | ||
Location | Flughafen (Frankfurt am Main) | ||
Hub for | |||
Elevation AMSL | 364 ft / 111 m | ||
Coordinates | 50°02′00″N 008°34′14″E / 50.0333333°N 8.57056°ECoordinates: 50°02′00″N 008°34′14″E / 50.0333333°N 8.57056°E | ||
Website | |||
Runways | |||
Direction | Length | Surface | |
m | ft | ||
07L/25R | 4,000 | 13,123 | Asphalt |
07R/25L | 4,000 | 13,123 | Concrete |
18A | 4,000 | 13,123 | Concrete |
Source: German AIP at EUROCONTROL[1] :A.^ The opposite end of Runway 18, which if marked would be Runway 36, is unused. |
Frankfurt am Main Airport (IATA: FRA, ICAO: EDDF), known in German as Flughafen Frankfurt am Main or Rhein-Main-Flughafen is a major international airport located in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, 12 km (7.5 mi) southwest of the city centre.[1] Run by Fraport, it is by far the busiest airport by passenger traffic in Germany, the third busiest in Europe and the ninth busiest worldwide in 2008. It serves the most international destinations in the world and is the busiest airport in Europe by cargo traffic. The southern side of the airport, Rhein-Main Air Base, was a major airlift base for the United States from 1947 until late 2005, when it was acquired by Fraport.
The airport is directly located in the Frankfurt Rhine Main Region, Germany's second largest metropolitan area, which itself has a central location in the densely populated region of west-central Europe. Thereby, along with a strong rail and motorway connection, the airport serves as a major transportation hub to the greater region, less than two hours by ground to Cologne, the Ruhr Area, and Stuttgart.
There are plans to expand Frankfurt Airport with a fourth runway and a new Terminal 3. First modifications to the airport to make it Airbus A380 compatible are completed, including the first building of a large A380 maintenance facility near the former U.S. Air Base. The work on the fourth runway has been delayed several times due to environmental concerns, but received zoning approval in December 2007. The runway should go into operation in 2011.
Frankfurt is a hub of Lufthansa, the German national carrier and Air India for its North American services. Lufthansa's secondary hub is Munich Airport where many key medium and long haul routes are available, lessening the need to overburden Frankfurt Airport.
Contents |
[edit] History
The Rhein-Main Airport and Airship Base opened in 1936 and was the second-largest airport in Germany (after Tempelhof Airport in Berlin) through World War II.
Plans for a new airport in the south of Frankfurt existed since before 1930, but they were not realized due to the Great Depression. After 1933 the plans were revived by the Nazi regime and they started the construction of the airport. Initially the airport was the main base for the airships LZ 127 Graf Zeppelin and LZ 129 Hindenburg, but the regular flights were discontinued after the Hindenburg disaster in 1937.
During World War II the airport saw military use; from August to November 1944 the concentration camp Walldorf existed close to the airport where female prisoners were forced to work for the airport.
After the war, it served as the main West German operations base for the United States Air Force's contribution to the Berlin Airlift. Since the main runway deteriorated due to the heavy use, a second runway was constructed during this time. The German Lufthansa finally recommenced their flights from Frankfurt in 1955.
The airport did not emerge as a major international hub until 1972, when its new passenger terminal (now Terminal 1) opened. The runways were extended to 3,000 meters in 1957 and further extended to 3,900 meters in the following years. A new terminal building was opened in 1958. In 1962 it was decided to build an even larger terminal building (Terminal Mitte), planned for 30 million passengers per year. The works on this terminal began in 1965 and it was opened to the public in 1972.
Planning for a new runway (18 West) began in 1973. This project spawned massive protests by residents and environmentalists. While the protests and related lawsuits were unsuccessful in preventing the construction of the runway, the "Startbahn West" protests were one of the major crystallization points for the German environmentalist movement of the 1980s. The protests even continued after the runway had been opened in 1984.[2]
Work on a new Terminal building began in 1990; the Terminal 2 was opened in 1994. The new railway station at the airport was inaugurated in 1999.
The Rhein-Main Air Base of the US Air Force was closed in 2005 and the property passed to Frankfurt airport.
A new runway, located just to the Northwest in the Kelsterbach Forest, is currently under construction and should open in 2011. The runway will measure 2,800 meters (9,240 feet) and be primarily used for landings. The centerline separation from the existing North runway will be approx. 1,400 meters (4,620 feet). This will allow for simultaneous landing operations on these two runways, which has not been possible on the existing parallel runways because they are not far enough apart.[3]
[edit] Structure and function
Frankfurt Airport has several structures for passenger, cargo and general aviation operations.
[edit] Terminals
There are two passenger terminals at the airport: Terminal 1 is divided into concourses A, B and C and Terminal 2 is divided into concourses D and E. Lufthansa also maintains a dedicated terminal for use by their First Class passengers.
[edit] Terminal 1
Terminal 1 opened on 14 March 1972, called Terminal Mitte (Central Terminal) back then for being in the middle of the runways, and between the original terminal in the east and the cargo area in the west. It was designed in a modern style for the period, with polished silver interiors and corrugated walls.
The terminal is functionally divided into three levels, the departure level in the upper deck with the check-in counters, the arrival level with the baggage claim areas at ground level and, underneath, a distribution level with access to the (regional) train station and the underground and multi-storey parking. Departure and arrivals levels have both separate street approaches. A bus station is located at arrivals level. Parallel to the terminal, on the other side of the street, are a hotel and an office building ("FAC" = Frankfurt Airport Centre). The three level deep underground parking garages are beneath those buildings. The tracks of the train station run between the terminal as such and the range of office and hotel buildings.
The landside of Terminal 1 is 420 metres long. Horizontally it is divided into three areas called A, B and C. It is divided into three concourses. Lufthansa and its Star Alliance partners currently dominate all of Terminal 1.
[edit] Lufthansa First Class Terminal
Lufthansa maintains a separate First Class Terminal at Frankfurt Airport for the use of its first class passengers. The terminal is exclusively available to passengers flying Lufthansa First Class or Lufthansa's Miles & More HON Circle members, that depart with a flight operated by Air Dolomiti, Austrian Airlines Group, Lufthansa, Lufthansa Regional or SWISS. Passengers flying other Star Alliance partners in First Class have no access to the First Class Terminal. The terminal has 200 staff for around 300 passengers per day, and provides individualised security screening and customs facilities, valet parking, a white-linen restaurant, a cigar room and bubble baths. Passengers clear exit immigration controls in the terminal and then are driven from the terminal directly to their aircraft by a chaffeured Mercedes-Benz S-Class or Porsche Cayenne. The commercial success of the FCT at Frankfurt has led Lufthansa to plan the opening of a similar facility at Munich Airport.[4]
[edit] Airlines and destinations
Airlines | Destinations | Terminal |
---|---|---|
Adria Airways | Ljubljana, Vienna | 1A |
Aegean Airlines | Athens, Thessaloniki | 1B |
Aer Lingus | Dublin | 2D |
Aeroflot | Moscow-Sheremetyevo | 2E |
Air Algérie | Algiers | 1B |
Air Astana | Astana | 2E |
Air Berlin | Alicante, Berlin-Tegel, Catania, Corfu [seasonal], Djerba [seasonal], Fuerteventura [seasonal], Hamburg, Hurghada, Ibiza [seasonal], Jerez de la Frontera [ends 26 April], Kavala [seasonal], Lamezia Terme [seasonal], Málaga [begins 27 March, seasonal], Monastir [seasonal], Naples [begins 6 March], Olbia [begins 30 March, seasonal], Palma de Mallorca, Pristina, Rhodes [seasonal], Samos [begins 3 May, seasonal], Tenerife-South [ends 10 April], Thessaloniki [seasonal], Westerland/Sylt [begins 31 March], Zakynthos [seasonal] | 2E |
Air Canada | Calgary, Montreal-Trudeau, Ottawa, Toronto-Pearson | 1B |
Air China | Beijing-Capital, Shanghai-Pudong | 1B |
Air France | Paris-Charles de Gaulle | 2D |
Air India | Ahmedabad, Chicago-O'Hare, Delhi, Mumbai, Newark | 1C |
Air Malta | Catania [begins 29 March], Malta | 1B |
Air Mauritius | Mauritius | 2D |
Air Moldova | Chişinău | 1B |
Air Namibia | Windhoek | 2D |
Air Seychelles | Mahé [ends 11 April][5] | 2D |
Air Transat | Calgary, Edmonton [seasonal; begins 16 June], Toronto-Pearson, Vancouver | 2E |
Air Via | Burgas [seasonal], Varna [seasonal] | 2D |
airBaltic | Riga | 2E |
Albanian Airlines | Tirana | 2E |
Alitalia | Milan-Linate, Rome-Fiumicino | 2D |
Alitalia operated by Air One | Rome-Fiumicino | 2D |
All Nippon Airways | Tokyo-Narita | 1B |
American Airlines | Chicago-O'Hare, Dallas/Fort Worth | 1C |
Ariana Afghan Airlines | Kabul | 2E |
Asiana Airlines | Seoul-Incheon | 1C |
Atlas Blue | Nador | 2D |
Austrian Airlines | Vienna | 1A |
Austrian operated by Tyrolean Airways | Innsbruck, Salzburg, Vienna | 1A |
B&H Airlines | Sarajevo, Tuzla | 2D |
Belavia | Minsk | 2D |
British Airways | London-Heathrow | 2E |
British Airways operated by BA CityFlyer | London-City | 2E |
Brussels Airlines | Brussels [ends 27 March] | 1C |
Bulgaria Air | Sofia | 1B |
Bulgarian Air Charter | Burgas [seasonal], Varna [seasonal] | 2E |
Cathay Pacific | Hong Kong | 2E |
China Airlines | Taipei-Taoyuan | 2D |
China Eastern Airlines | Shanghai-Pudong | 2D |
Condor Flugdienst | Agadir, Anchorage [seasonal], Antalya [ends April 12], Antigua, Bahrain [ends 13 April], Barbados, Burgas [begins 25 May, seasonal], Cancún, Chania [seasonal], Colombo, Corfu [begins 15 May, seasonal], Dalaman [seasonal], Djerba [begins 29 March, seasonal], Fairbanks [seasonal], Fuerteventura, Funchal, Goa [seasonal], Grenada, Fort Lauderdale [seasonal], Halifax [seasonal], Havana, Heraklion [seasonal], Holguín, Hurghada, Ibiza [seasonal], Jerez de la Frontera, Kilimanjaro, Kos [seasonal], Lanzarote, Larnaca, La Romana, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Las Vegas, Luxor [seasonal], Málaga, Malé, Marsa Alam, Mauritius, Mombasa, Montego Bay, Nassau, Palma de Mallorca, Paphos, Porlamar [seasonal], Phuket [seasonal], Puerto Plata, Punta Cana, Rhodes [seasonal], Saint Lucia, Salvador da Bahia, Samana [seasonal], San José de Costa Rica, Santa Cruz de la Palma, Santo Domingo, Santorini [seasonal], Seychelles, Sharm el-Sheikh, Tenerife-South, Tobago [seasonal], Vancouver [seasonal], Varadero, Whitehorse, Zanzibar | 1C |
Continental Airlines | Houston-Intercontinental, Newark | 1B |
Croatia Airlines | Dubrovnik, Split, Zagreb | 1A |
Cyprus Airways | Larnaca | 1B |
Czech Airlines | Prague | 2E |
Delta Air Lines | Atlanta, Detroit, New York-JFK | 2D |
Donavia | Rostov-on-Don | 2D |
EgyptAir | Cairo | 1B |
El Al | Tel Aviv | 1C |
Emirates | Dubai | 2E |
Ethiopian Airlines | Addis Ababa | 1C |
Etihad Airways | Abu Dhabi | 2E |
Finnair | Helsinki | 2E |
Flybe | Birmingham, Manchester, Southampton | 2E |
Free Bird Airlines | Antalya | 2D |
Georgian Airways | Tbilisi | 2D |
Gulf Air | Bahrain | 2D |
Iberia Airlines | Madrid | 2E |
Iberia operated by Air Nostrum | Zaragoza | 2E |
Icelandair | Reykjavík-Keflavík | 2E |
Iran Air | Tehran-Imam Khomeini | 1C |
Iraqi Airways | Arbil , Baghdad | 2E |
Japan Airlines | Tokyo-Narita | 2D |
Jat Airways | Belgrade | 1C |
KLM operated by KLM Cityhopper | Amsterdam | 2D |
Korean Air | Seoul-Incheon | 2D |
Kuwait Airways | Kuwait | 1B |
LAN Airlines | Madrid, Santiago | 2E |
LOT Polish Airlines | Gdańsk, Kraków, Poznań, Warsaw | 1A |
LOT operated by EuroLOT | Poznań, Wrocław | 1A |
Lufthansa | Abu Dhabi, Abuja, Accra, Addis Ababa, Algiers, Almaty, Amman, Amsterdam, Ashgabat, Asmara, Astana, Athens, Atlanta, Bahrain, Baku, Bangalore, Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi, Barcelona, Beijing-Capital, Beirut, Belgrade, Berlin-Tegel, Bilbao, Billund, Birmingham, Bologna, Boston, Bremen, Brussels, Bucharest-Otopeni, Budapest, Buenos Aires-Ezeiza, Cairo, Calgary, Cape Town [seasonal], Caracas, Casablanca, Chennai, Chicago-O'Hare, Copenhagen, Dallas/Fort Worth, Dammam, Delhi, Denver, Detroit, Doha, Dresden, Dubai, Dublin, Düsseldorf, Edinburgh, Faro, Geneva, Gothenburg-Landvetter, Guangzhou, Hamburg, Hanover, Helsinki, Ho Chi Minh City, Hong Kong, Houston-Intercontinental, Hyderabad, Istanbul-Atatürk, Jakarta, Jeddah, Johannesburg, Kazan, Khartoum [ends 28 March], Kiev-Boryspil, Kolkata, Kuala Lumpur, Kuwait, Lagos, Larnaca, Leipzig/Halle, Libreville, Lisbon, London-Heathrow, Los Angeles, Luanda, Lyon, Madrid, Malabo, Málaga, Manchester, Marseille, Mexico City, Miami, Milan-Linate, Milan-Malpensa, Minsk, Moscow-Domodedovo, Mumbai, Munich, Muscat, Nagoya-Centrair, Nanjing, New York-JFK, Newark, Nice, Nizhniy Novgorod, Nuremberg, Orlando, Osaka-Kansai, Oslo-Gardermoen, Palma de Mallorca, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Perm, Philadelphia, Port Harcourt, Porto, Poznań, Prague, Riga, Riyadh, Rome-Fiumicino, Rostov-on-Don, Saint Petersburg, Samara, San Francisco, Sana’a, São Paulo-Guarulhos, Seattle/Tacoma, Seoul-Incheon, Shanghai-Pudong, Singapore, Sofia, Stavanger, Stockholm-Arlanda, Stuttgart, Tallinn, Tehran-Imam Khomeini, Tel Aviv, Tokyo-Narita, Toronto-Pearson, Toulouse, Tripoli, Tunis, Turin, Vancouver, Venice-Marco Polo, Vienna, Vilnius, Warsaw, Washington-Dulles, Yekaterinburg, Zagreb, Zürich | 1A, 1B, 1C |
Lufthansa operated by Cirrus Airlines | Hof/Plauen [begins 29 March], Katowice, Münster/Osnabrück, Toulouse | 1A |
Lufthansa operated by PrivatAir | Bahrain, Dammam, Khartoum [begins 29 March], Kuwait, Pune | 1A |
Lufthansa Regional operated by Air Dolomiti | Turin, Verona | 1A |
Lufthansa Regional operated by Contact Air | Hof/Plauen [ends 27 March] | 1A |
Lufthansa Regional operated by Eurowings | Billund, Bremen, Brussels, Gdańsk, Geneva, Graz, Hanover, Kraków, Leipzig/Halle, London-City, Nuremberg, Stavanger, Stuttgart, Wrocław | 1A |
Lufthansa Regional operated by Lufthansa CityLine | Basel/Mulhouse, Bergen, Florence, Friedrichshafen, Linz, London-City, Münster/Osnabrück, Poznań, Rzeszów, Stuttgart, Turin | 1A |
Luxair | Luxembourg | 1A |
Malaysia Airlines | Kuala Lumpur | 2D |
Malév Hungarian Airlines | Budapest | 2E |
Middle East Airlines | Beirut | 1B |
Montenegro Airlines | Podgorica | 2D |
Niki | Vienna | 2E |
Nouvelair | Monastir | 2E |
Oman Air | Muscat | 2D |
Ostfriesische Lufttransport | Heringsdorf [begins 8 May] | 2E |
Pakistan International Airlines | Islamabad, Lahore | 2D |
Pegasus Airlines | Antalya | 2D |
Qantas Airways | Singapore, Sydney | 2E |
Qatar Airways | Doha | 1B |
Rossiya | Saint Petersburg | 2D |
Royal Air Maroc | Casablanca | 1B |
Royal Jordanian | Amman | 2E |
S7 Airlines | Moscow-Domodedovo, Novosibirsk | 2E |
Safi Airways | Kabul | 2E |
Saravia | Saratov | 2E |
SATA International | Ponta Delgada [begins 14 March] | 2E |
Saudi Arabian Airlines | Jeddah, Riyadh | 2D |
Scandinavian Airlines | Copenhagen, Gothenburg-Landvetter, Oslo-Gardermoen, Stockholm-Arlanda | 1A |
Singapore Airlines | New York-JFK, Singapore | 1B |
Sky Airlines | Antalya | 2D |
Somon Air | Dushanbe | 2D |
South African Airways | Johannesburg | 1B |
Spanair | Madrid | 1A |
SriLankan Airlines | Colombo | 1B |
SunExpress | Antalya, İstanbul-Sabiha Gökçen, İzmir | 1B |
Swiss International Air Lines | Zürich | 1A |
Swiss operated by Swiss European Air Lines | Zürich | 1A |
Syrian Air | Aleppo, Damascus | 2D |
TAM Airlines | São Paulo-Guarulhos | 1B |
TAP Portugal | Lisbon | 1B |
TAROM | Bucharest-Otopeni, Cluj-Napoca | 1B |
Thai Airways International | Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi | 1C |
Transaero | Moscow-Domodedovo | 2D |
TUIfly | Antalya [seasonal], Boa Vista, Corfu [seasonal], Dalaman [seasonal], Faro [seasonal], Fuerteventura, Funchal [seasonal], Heraklion [seasonal], Hurghada, Jerez de la Frontera [seasonal], Kalamata [begins 4 May, seasonal], Kos [seasonal], Lanzarote, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Luxor [ends 29 April], Marsa Alam [ends 27 April], Palma de Mallorca, Patras/Araxos [seasonal], Rhodes [seasonal], Sal, Sharm el-Sheikh [ends 27 April], Tenerife-South | 2D |
Tunisair | Djerba, Monastir, Tunis | 1B |
Turkish Airlines | Ankara, Istanbul-Atatürk | 1B |
Turkmenistan Airlines | Ashgabat | 2D |
Ukraine International Airlines | Kiev-Boryspil, Simferopol [resumes 1 May] | 2D |
United Airlines | Chicago-O'Hare, San Francisco, Washington-Dulles | 1B |
US Airways | Charlotte, Philadelphia | 1C |
Uzbekistan Airways | Tashkent | 2D |
Vietnam Airlines | Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City | 1B |
XL Airways Germany | Adana, Ankara, Antalya, Kayseri, Malatya, Samsun | 2D |
Yemenia | Sana'a | 2E |
[edit] Cargo Terminal
Airlines | Destinations |
---|---|
AeroLogic | Atlanta, Chicago, Leipzig |
Air Bridge Cargo | Krasnojarsk, Moscow-Sheremetyewo |
Air China Cargo | Beijing-Capital, Novosibirsk, Shanghai-Pudong |
Asiana Cargo | Seoul-Incheon, Gothenburg, Moscow-Domodedovo, Vienna |
British Airways World Cargo | Atlanta, Bangalore, Chicago, Delhi, Dubai, Hong Kong, London-Stansted |
Cathay Pacific Cargo | Delhi, Dubai, Hong Kong, Manchester, Milan-Malpensa, Mumbai, Stockholm |
China Airlines | Abu Dhabi, Taipei-Taoyuan |
China Southern Airlines | Shanghai-Pudong, Urumqi |
Emirates SkyCargo | Dubai, Toledo |
European Air Transport | London-Heathrow |
Eva Air Cargo | Dubai, Taipei-Taoyuan |
FedEx Express | Almaty, Athens, Delhi, Frankfurt-Hahn, Memphis, Milan-Malpensa, Munich, New York-Newark, Osaka, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Shanghai-Pudong, Tel Aviv, Tokyo-Narita |
Grandstar Cargo | Shanghai-Pudong, Tianjin |
Iran Air Cargo | Teheran |
Jade Cargo | Barcelona, Kolkata, Lahore, Mumbai, Seoul-Incheon, Shanghai-Pudong, Shenzhen, Tianjin, Vienna |
JAL Cargo | Amsterdam, Tokyo-Narita |
Korean Air Cargo | Brussels, Moscow-Sheremetyevo, Navoi, Seoul-Incheon, Stockholm |
LAN Cargo | Amsterdam, Buenos Aires, Campinas, Santiago de Chile |
Lufthansa Cargo | |
MASKargo | Amsterdam, Colombo, Dubai, Kuala Lumpur, Sharjah, Tashkent |
Qatar Airways Cargo | Doha |
Shanghai Airlines Cargo | Shanghai-Pudong |
Thai Airways International | Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi, Dubai |
Turkish Airlines Cargo | Istanbul |
[edit] Other features and amenities
Frankfurt has two cargo terminals, North and South, as well as a separate General Aviation Terminal on the south side of the airport. There is also a Sheraton hotel adjacent to Terminal 1. Terminal 1 also has a full-service German Post Office and a DHL office open to the public.
[edit] Access
[edit] Public transport
There are two railway stations at Frankfurt Airport: one for suburban/regional trains and one for long distance trains.
Frankfurt Airport Regional station at Terminal 1 provides access to the S-Bahn commuter rail lines S8 and S9 which depart every 15 minutes during the day to Wiesbaden in the west via Rüsselsheim and Mainz and to Hanau in the east via Frankfurt Central Station, Frankfurt city centre and Offenbach am Main. The journey time to Frankfurt Central Station is 11 minutes, to the city centre (Hauptwache) 15 minutes. The first S-Bahn trains arrive at 4:28h from Frankfurt and Hanau, and at 4:29h from Mainz and Wiesbaden; the last ones depart at 1:32h to Frankfurt, at 0:29h to Wiesbaden and at 0:59h to Rüsselsheim.
Regional-Express trains to other destinations like Saarbrücken in the west, Koblenz down the Rhine valley to the north, or Würzburg in the east also call at the Regional Railway Station, as do some long distance trains, especially at night when the Long Distance Railway Station is closed.
Frankfurt Airport long-distance station was opened in 1999. It is the end point of the newly-built Cologne-Frankfurt high-speed rail line, which links southern Germany to the Rhein-Ruhr metropolitan area, the Netherlands and Belgium via Cologne at speeds up to 300 km/h (190 mph). All ICE trains between Cologne and southern Germany stop at Frankfurt Airport, taking slightly less than an hour from Cologne. About 10 trains per hour depart in all directions.
The station is squeezed in between the A3 and the four-lane Bundesstraße B43, linked to Terminal 1 by a building that bridges the Autobahn. Arriving railway passengers can check in right at the train station for about 60 airlines.
Deutsche Bahn operates the AIRail Service in conjunction with Lufthansa, American Airlines and Emirates. The service operates to the central stations of Bonn, Cologne, Düsseldorf, Freiburg, Karlsruhe, Leipzig, Hamburg, Hannover, Mannheim, Munich, Nuremberg, Stuttgart and to Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe.
Various transport companies provide bus services to the airport.
[edit] Car and taxi
Frankfurt Airport is located in the Frankfurt City Forest and directly connected to a Autobahn intersection called Frankfurter Kreuz where the A3 and A5 meet. It takes a 10-15 minutes ride by car or taxi to get to Frankfurt Central Station or the city centre.
There are multi-level parking garages along the terminals, mostly underground, for passengers coming with their own car. A long term holiday parking lot is located south of the runways and connected with a shuttle bus to the terminals.
[edit] Ground transportation statistics
In 2006, 29.5% of the 12,299,192 passengers whose air travel originated in Frankfurt came by private car, 27.9% came by rail, 20.4% by taxi, 11.1% parked their car at the airport for the duration of their trip, 5.3% came by bus, and 4.6% arrived with a rental car.[6]
[edit] Incidents and Accidents
On 22 May 1983 during an airshow at the Rhein-Main Air Base, a Canadian RCAF F-104 Starfighter crashed onto a nearby road, hitting a car and killing all passengers, a vicar's family of 5. The pilot was able to eject.
In 1988 the first leg of Pan Am Flight 103 (a Boeing 727) took off from Frankfurt. About half of the passengers and baggage were from other flights and had changed planes to Flight 103 (a Boeing 747) at Heathrow Airport to continue to New York. A bomb exploded on the aircraft above the Scottish town of Lockerbie, killing all the passengers on board. The bomb is believed to have been planted by Libyan terrorists.
In September 2007, German authorities arrested three suspected Islamic terrorists for plotting a "massive" terror attack, which posed "an imminent threat" to Frankfurt Airport and the US Air Force base in Ramstein.[7]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ a b EAD Basic
- ^ hr-online: Startbahn West Chronik
- ^ http://www.ausbau.fraport.com/cms/default/rubrik/2/2227.htm
- ^ "A Bubble Bath and a Glass Of Bubbly — at the Airport," Wall Street Journal, July 10, 2007.[1]
- ^ http://airseychelles.biz/listing/index.php?lg=UK&rr=31&per=4%7C2010
- ^ Statistical data prepared by Fraport department MVG-MF based on polls conducted in the departure lounges every four days
- ^ 'Massive' Terror Plot Foiled In Germany (Sky News)
[edit] External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Flughafen Frankfurt am Main |