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Stuttgart Airport

 
Wikipedia: Stuttgart Airport
 
Stuttgart Airport
Flughafen Stuttgart

IATA: STRICAO: EDDS
Summary
Airport type Public
Operator Flughafen Stuttgart GmbH
Location Stuttgart, Germany
Elevation AMSL 1,276 ft / 389 m
Coordinates 48°41′27″N 009°13′23″E / 48.69083°N 9.22306°E / 48.69083; 9.22306Coordinates: 48°41′27″N 009°13′23″E / 48.69083°N 9.22306°E / 48.69083; 9.22306
Website www.stuttgart-airport.com
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
07/25 10,974 3,345 Concrete

Stuttgart Airport (in German Flughafen Stuttgart, formerly Flughafen Stuttgart-Echterdingen) (IATA: STRICAO: EDDS) is an international airport located approximately 13 km (8 miles) south of Stuttgart city centre, Germany.

The airport lies on the boundary between the nearby town of Leinfelden-Echterdingen, Filderstadt and Stuttgart itself. It is the 7th most important airport in Germany and the main airport of the Bundesland Baden-Württemberg with 10,109,425 passengers in 2006.

Although it is the only major airport in Germany with only one runway, it is an important hub for the German low cost carriers Germanwings and TUIfly; and global headquarters for car parking company APCOA Parking.

In 2007 Stuttgart Trade Fair - the ninth biggest exhibition centre in Germany moved to grounds directly next to the airport, raising the profile of the airport and strengthening calls for a second runway.

Contents

History

The airport was built in 1939 to replace Böblingen airport. In 1945 the US Air Force took over the airport and the US Army still maintains a helicopter base on the southern side of the airport which it shares with the Baden-Württemberg State Police helicopter wing. The police helicopter wing falls under the control of Stuttgart Police Department and has six modern helicopters based at Stuttgart and two in Söllingen. In 1948 the airport was returned to German authorities.

The airport was expanded after World War II. The runway was extended to 1,800 metres in 1948, then to 2,250 metres in 1961 and finally to 3,345 metres in 1996.

The original 1938 terminal was finally replaced in 2004 and there are now four terminals with a maximum capacity of approximately 12 million passengers.

Expansion

Politicians, town planners and nearby residents have been arguing for years about the construction of a second runway. However, on 25 June 2008 Minister-President Günther Öttinger announced that for the next 8–12 years no 2nd runway will be built and that the restrictions for night operations stay in place[1] [2].

Public transportation and access

The motorway leading to the Airport

Stuttgart Airport can be easily reached within 30 minutes from the city's central railway station using the Stuttgart suburban railway S2 or S3. The airport lies right next to the Autobahn A8 that connects the cities of Karlsruhe, Stuttgart and Munich.

A large car park belonging to Stuttgart Messe spans the A8 Autobahn leading to the airport.

Airlines and destinations

Terminal 1

Airlines Destinations
Aegean Airlines Athens, Thessaloniki
Air Malta Malta
Austrian Airlines operated by Tyrolean Airways Graz, Vienna
British Airways London-Heathrow
Cirrus Airlines Münster/Osnabrück
Lufthansa Berlin-Tegel, Bremen, Düsseldorf, Frankfurt, Hamburg, Palma de Mallorca
Lufthansa Regional operated by Augsburg Airways Munich
Lufthansa Regional operated by Contact Air Brussels, Hamburg, Hanover, Milan-Malpensa, Munich, Nice, Palma de Mallorca, Turin [begins 14 September], Vienna
Lufthansa Regional operated by Eurowings Düsseldorf, Frankfurt
Lufthansa Regional operated by Lufthansa CityLine Barcelona, Berlin-Tegel, Bilbao, Frankfurt, London-Heathrow, Munich, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Warsaw [ends 19 July]
Malév Hungarian Airlines Budapest
Scandinavian Airlines System Copenhagen
Swiss International Air Lines operated by Swiss European Air Lines Zürich
Turkish Airlines Ankara [seasonal], Istanbul-Atatürk

Terminal 2

Airlines Destinations
Germanwings Ankara [begins 4 July], Antalya, Athens, Barcelona, Bastia, Belgrade, Berlin-Schönefeld, Bucharest-Băneasa, Budapest, Corfu, Dresden, Faro, Hamburg, Heraklion, Istanbul-Sabiha Gökçen, Katowice, Kavala, Kraków, Leipzig/Halle, Lisbon, London-Stansted, Madrid, Moscow-Vnukovo, Pristina, Reykjavik-Keflavik, Rome-Fiumicino, Rostock/Laage, Split, Sarajevo, Thessaloniki, Vienna, Warsaw, Zagreb

Terminal 3

Airlines Destinations
Air Berlin Alicante [seasonal], Antalya [seasonal], Berlin-Tegel, Düsseldorf, Hamburg, Hurghada [seasonal], Kos [seasonal], Lamezia Terme [seasonal], Las Palmas [seasonal], Nice, Palma de Mallorca, Samos [seasonal], Tenerife-South [seasonal], Westerland/Sylt [seasonal]
Air France Paris-Charles de Gaulle
Air France operated by Régional Lyon
Blue Air Bucharest-Băneasa, Sibiu
Carpatair Timişoara
Condor Antalya, Fuerteventura, Funchal, Hurghada, Lanzarote, Larnaca, La Palma, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Palma de Mallorca, Sharm el-Sheikh, Tenerife-South
Czech Airlines Prague
Delta Air Lines Atlanta
Finnair operated by Finncomm Airlines Helsinki
Flybe Birmingham
Israir Tel Aviv [seasonal]
Jat Airways Belgrade
KLM Amsterdam
KLM operated by KLM Cityhopper Amsterdam
Olympic Airlines Athens, Thessaloniki
Robin Hood Aviation Klagenfurt, Graz
TUIfly Agadir, Antalya, Araxos, Bari, Cagliari, Catania, Dalaman, Dubrovnik, Faro, Fuerteventura, Funchal, Hanover, Heraklion, Hurghada, Jerez de la Frontera, Kerkyra, Kos, Lanzarote, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Luxor, Malaga, Manchester [ends 30 October], Marsa Alam, Minorca, Naples, Olbia, Palermo, Palma de Mallorca, Porto, Rhodes, Rijeka, Rimini, Sharm el-Sheikh, Tenerife-South, Thessaloniki, Valencia, Venice-Marco Polo, Westerland/Sylt
Tunisair Djerba, Monastir
XL Airways Germany Arvidsjaur, Sharm el-Sheikh

Terminal 4

Airlines Destinations
Air Via Bourgas, Varna [seasonal]
Bulgarian Air Charter Bourgas, Varna [seasonal]
Eurocypria Airlines Larnaca
Freebird Airlines Antalya
Germania Pristina
Nouvelair Monastir
Pegasus Airlines Ankara, Istanbul-Sabiha Gökçen, Izmir, Kayseri
Sky Airlines Antalya
SunExpress Antalya, Izmir
Turkuaz Airlines Istanbul-Atatürk

See also

Gallery

References

  1. ^ Flughafen bekommt keine zweite Startbahn. Stuttgarter Zeitung online vom 25. Juni 2008 (in German).
  2. ^ Das Versprechen gilt nur auf „absehbare Zeit“. Stuttgarter Zeitung online vom 25. Juni 2008 (in German).

External links



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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Stuttgart Airport" Read more