Leipzig/Halle Airport

Leipzig/Halle Airport (IATA: LEJ, ICAO: EDDP) (German: Flughafen Leipzig/Halle) is an international airport located in Schkeuditz, Saxony, and serves both Leipzig, Saxony, and Halle, Saxony-Anhalt.

Leipzig/Halle Airport

Flughafen Leipzig/Halle
Summary
Airport typePublic
OwnerMitteldeutsche Airport Holding AG
OperatorFlughafen Leipzig/Halle GmbH
ServesLeipzig and Halle
LocationSchkeuditz, Germany
Hub for
Focus city for
Elevation AMSL470 ft / 143 m
Coordinates51°25′26″N 012°14′11″E
Websiteleipzig-halle-airport.de
Map
LEJ
Location of Airport in Saxony
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
08L/26R 3,600 11,811 Concrete
08R/26L 3,600 11,811 Concrete
Statistics (2019)
Passengers2,618,772
Passenger change 18–191.9%
Freight (tonnes)1,238,343
Freight change 18–191.4%
Sources: AIP from Eurocontrol,
Annual Traffic Report 2019[3]

It is Germany's 11th largest airport by passengers and handled more than 2.61 million passengers in 2019 mainly with flights to European leisure destinations. In terms of cargo traffic, the airport is the fifth-busiest in Europe and the second-busiest in Germany after Frankfurt Airport, having handled 1,238,343 metric tonnes of cargo in 2019. The airport serves as the main European hub for DHL Aviation and the main hub for AeroLogic. Military installations have also been built at the airport for NATO and EU military aircraft.[4]

History

The airport in May 1929

The airport was built new from scratch at a location between Halle and Leipzig from 1926 and opened in 1927.

On 18 March 1986 Air France flew a Concorde to the airport, to coincide with the world-renowned Leipzig trade fair. Two days later British Airways also flew a Concorde to Leipzig/Halle. In the following years, both airlines operated Concorde flights from Paris and London when the trade fair was held in Leipzig.

Despite its name, the airport is located in the town of Schkeuditz, Nordsachsen. A deal between the city of Leipzig and the Landkreis Delitzsch led to a land exchange. In 2007, Leipzig received land outside the airport while ownership of the airport land was transferred to Delitzsch. The District of Delitzsch, which by now has merged to become part of Landkreis Nordsachsen, owns and claims taxes from the grounds and commercial interest from the airport.

DHL Aviation moved its European hub from Brussels Airport to Leipzig/Halle in early 2008, leading a significant increase in cargo traffic at the airport. Leipzig bid to host the 2012 Olympic Games and the airport was modernised as a result, even though London was eventually awarded the games.

In spring 2013, Ryanair announced the start of operations to Leipzig/Halle on six routes. However, one year later all of them except the flights to London–Stansted were terminated.[5] In February 2015, Etihad Regional announced the immediate termination of all their Leipzig/Halle operations which had started only two years earlier, due to changes to their operational concept. All three routes were shut down while two newly announced ones did not start.[6]

In September 2016, Pakistan International Airlines announced plans to replace Manchester on their Islamabad - Manchester - New York City route with Leipzig/Halle in 2017 due to lower operational costs and time-saving measures. As the airline holds Fifth Freedom rights, this would be Leipzig/Halle's first passenger service to the United States.[7] In October 2017 the airline announced it would end of all routes to the United States, so plans to use Leipzig as layover to New York-JFK never came to be.[8]

In October 2016, DHL inaugurated a major expansion to its freight facilities at the airport. Two new cargo terminals increased handling capacity by 50 percent.[9]

As of April 2018, the largest passenger Airline at Leipzig/Halle Airport (measured by weekly departures) is Condor with 55 outgoing flights per week. For this purpose, three Airbus A321 aircraft are stationed at the airport. The second largest Airline on place is Small Planet Airlines (Germany) with 18 outgoing flights per week. The airline stationed an Airbus A320 aircraft to serve several leisure destinations for TUI Group.[10] It is followed by SunExpress Deutschland which operates 15 weekly departures and stationed for this a Boeing B737 aircraft at the Airport.[11][12]

In August 2018, DHL announced further expansion of its facilities at the Airport. Beside an enlargement of the apron also a new pilot training center is planned. The number of employees should increase from actual 5700 to 6000.[13] At the same time, EAT Leipzig announced that they would add five used Airbus A330 freighters to their fleet, for a total of 36 aircraft.[14]

Also in August 2018, the Russian Volga-Dnepr Group announced plans to launch a new German freight subsidiary based at the airport.[15][16]

Facilities

Terminal

The modern airport terminal structure extends over the adjacent motorway and railway. It integrates the main car park as well as the check-in-facilities and is connected to a pier equipped with six jet bridges as well as several apron stands. Due to its compact design, it provides short walking distances. The airport terminal has immigration facilities for international flights but no international transfer area.

Runways

Leipzig/Halle Airport has two runways. The terminal access is south of the railway while the runway 08L/26R parallels the driveway north of the railway, requiring aircraft to taxi on a bridge over the tracks and roads.

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights at Leipzig/Halle Airport:[17]

AirlinesDestinations
Air Cairo Seasonal charter: Hurghada[18]
Austrian Airlines Vienna
Bulgarian Air Charter[19] Seasonal charter: Burgas, Varna
Condor[20][21] Fuerteventura, Funchal, Gran Canaria, Hurghada, Lanzarote, Palma de Mallorca, Tenerife–South
Seasonal: Antalya, Corfu, Heraklion, Kos, Paphos, Rhodes
Corendon Airlines Antalya
Corendon Airlines Europe Hurghada
Seasonal: Heraklion
Seasonal charter: Agadir, Rhodes,[22] Sharm El Sheikh[23]
Eurowings Cologne/Bonn, Düsseldorf, Palma de Mallorca, Stuttgart
Freebird Airlines Antalya
Freebird Airlines Europe[24] Seasonal charter: Burgas, Corfu, Djerba, Dubrovnik,[25] Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria, Heraklion, Hurghada, Kos, Rhodes, Varna
Holiday Europe Charter: Dubai–Al Maktoum,[26] Fuerteventura,[27] Hurghada,[26] Marsa Alam[26]
Seasonal charter: Sharm El Sheikh[26]
Lufthansa Frankfurt, Munich
Montenegro Airlines Seasonal: Tivat[28]
Nesma Airlines Seasonal charter: Hurghada[29]
Nouvelair[30] Seasonal charter: Djerba, Monastir
Onur Air[31] Charter: Antalya
Seasonal charter: Bodrum
Pegasus Airlines Seasonal: Antalya[32]
Pobeda Moscow–Vnukovo
SunExpress Antalya
TUI fly Deutschland Gran Canaria
Turkish Airlines Istanbul
Wizz Air Kyiv–Zhuliany

Cargo

AirlinesDestinations
AirBridgeCargo[33] Moscow–Sheremetyevo
DHL Aviation[34] Almaty, Amsterdam, Athens, Bahrain, Bangalore, Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi, Barcelona, Basel/Mulhouse, Belgrade, Bergamo, Bologna, Bratislava, Brussels, Budapest, Cincinnati, Cologne/Bonn, Copenhagen, Delhi, Dubai–International, East Midlands, Edinburgh, Frankfurt, Gdańsk, Geneva, Helsinki, Ho Chi Minh City,[35] Hong Kong, Istanbul-Atatürk, Istanbul-Sabiha Gökçen,[36] Katowice, Kiev–Boryspil, Lagos, Lahore, Linz, Ljubljana, London–Heathrow, London–Luton, Los Angeles,[37] Lyon, Madrid, Marseille, Milan–Malpensa, Miami,[38] Moscow–Sheremetyevo, Mumbai, Munich, Nantes, New York–JFK, Oslo–Gardermoen, Ostrava, Paris–Charles de Gaulle, Pisa, Riga, Rome–Ciampino, Seoul–Incheon, Shanghai–Pudong, Sharjah, Singapore, Sofia, Stockholm–Arlanda, Stuttgart, Tashkent, Tel Aviv–Ben Gurion, Treviso, Tokyo-Narita,[39] Turku, Vilnius, Vitoria, Warsaw–Chopin

Military

Some US airlines fly to Leipzig/Halle on behalf of the US Department of Defense, to bring US Army troops and US Marines to Afghanistan and Iraq. Leipzig/Halle is used as technical stop for refueling on these flights. They do not appear at any official timetable. Marines and soldiers flown via Leipzig/Halle are listed as transit passengers in its traffic statistics. Military charter flights are also operated via Leipzig/Halle.

Statistics

General plan of the airport
Concourse connecting the check-in and airside areas
Cargo facilities
Taxiway crossing the Autobahn
PassengersMovementsFreight (in t)
1990 274,8789,549366
1991 634,424 26,089 4,372
1992 1,073,378 42,960 8,611
1993 1,521,436 48,510 17,482
1994 1,901,797 52,590 23,189
1995 2,104,822 53,807 25,225
1996 2,186,649 50,298 22,410
1997 2,248,852 47,284 17,220
1998 2,108,779 43,778 12,866
1999 2,162,769 47,944 15,220
2000 2,288,931 47,030 17,086
2001 2,185,130 42,408 15,799
2002 1,988,854 41,209 16,882
2003 1,955,070 40,303 17.559
2004 2,041,046 39,316 12,575
2005 2,127,895 37,905 15,641
2006 2,348,011 42,417 29,330
2007 2,723,000 50,972 101,364
2008 2,462,256 59,924 442,453
2009 2,421,382 60,150 524,082
2010 2,348,597 62,247 663,024
2011 2,266,743 64,097 760,344
2012 2,286,151 62,688 863,665
2013 2,240,860 61,668 887,101
2014 2,331,399 63,569 910,708
2015 2,321,975 65,061 988,240
2016[40] 2,192,145 64,492 1,052,372
2017[41] 2,365,141 69,815 1,138,477
2018[42] 2,571,119 79,218 1,221,429
2019[43] 2,618,772 78,980 1,238,343
Source: Leipzig/Halle Airport Traffic statistics[44]

Ground transportation

Train

Leipzig/Halle Airport railway station

Leipzig/Halle Airport railway station is located directly beneath the passenger terminal and has both Intercity and Intercity-Express connections to cities like Frankfurt, Erfurt, Magdeburg, Hanover, Cologne and Dresden. Two lines of the suburban S-Bahn Mitteldeutschland connect directly to Leipzig and Halle, furthermore to Altenburg and Zwickau. Transit connection of the network reach most of parts of Central Germany.

Car

The airport is connected to two motorways: the A14 connecting to Dresden (130 km), Halle (Saale, 20 km) and Magdeburg (130 km), and the A9 connecting to Munich (430 km), Nuremberg (280 km), and Berlin (180 km).

Coach

Flixbus connects in both ways twice per day to Dresden, Göttingen, Kassel and once per day to Dortmund and Cologne.

The airport's facilities have been featured in major films during recent years:

  • In December 2004, Leipzig/Halle Airport was a filming location for Flightplan starring Jodie Foster and Peter Sarsgaard.[45] According to the film, Jodie Foster's flight departs from Berlin but all shots showing Berlin's supposed airport were actually taken at Leipzig/Halle Airport.
  • In 2010, the check-in area of Leipzig/Halle was a filming location for Unknown starring Liam Neeson and Diane Kruger.[46]
  • The airport's terminal and apron were featured heavily as the location of a major confrontation between the fractured Avengers in the 2016 film Captain America: Civil War. Branded equipment featuring the airport's logo was shown several times during the scenes.

See also

References

  1. "Leipzig/Halle erhält zwei AN-124-Anbieter". airliners.de.
  2. Höhne, Steffen (3 November 2016). "Nato vergibt Auftrag: Antonovs bleiben am Flughafen Halle/Leipzig stationiert". Mitteldeutsche Zeitung.
  3. "www.german-foreign-policy.com". Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  4. "Ryanair streicht fast alle Flugziele ab Leipzig/Halle". Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  5. "Etihad Regional zieht sich komplett aus Deutschland zurück". airliners.de. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  6. aero.de - "Pakistan International Airlines connects Leipzig and New York" (German) 10 September 2016
  7. "Ausgeträumt: Direktverbindung Leipzig - New York endgültig vom Tisch". LVZ - Leipziger Volkszeitung.
  8. aero.de - "DHL opens new terminals at Leipzig/Halle Airport" (German) 12 October 2016
  9. "Small Planet Airlines". www.smallplanet.aero.
  10. "Neue Ziele: Sun Express stationiert Flugzeug in Leipzig/Halle". airliners.de.
  11. "Flughafen Leipzig/Halle - Unternehmen > Newsroom > Pressemitteilungen > Neuigkeiten im Sommerflugplan 2018 > Neuigkeiten im Sommerflugplan 2018". www.leipzig-halle-airport.de.
  12. "DHL baut Leipzig/Halle kräftig aus: Post-Tochter plant künftig mehr Flüge am Airport". Mitteldeutsche Zeitung. 29 August 2018.
  13. "DHL kauft fünf Airbus A330 von Etihad". airliners.de.
  14. "CargoLogic Germany Ante Portas". CargoForwarder Global. 26 August 2018.
  15. "Volga-Dnepr Group's new German unit to launch with B737s". ch-aviation.
  16. "Flughafen Leipzig/Halle - Passengers and visitors > Flights > Destinations and timetables > Destinations". Retrieved 8 April 2019.
  17. https://www.leipzig-halle-airport.de/mediapool/mfag_faltflugplans20_5.2.pdf?t=a30wbpzazs
  18. https://www.leipzig-halle-airport.de/mediapool/mfag_faltflugplans20_5.2.pdf?t=a30wbpzazs
  19. "Timetable".
  20. condor.com - Flugplan Sommer 2020 (German) retrieved 8 June 2020
  21. https://www.leipzig-halle-airport.de/mediapool/mfag_faltflugplans20_5.2.pdf?t=a30wbpzazs
  22. Liu, Jim (30 October 2019). "Corendon Airlines Europe expands Leipzig network in W19". routesonline.com.
  23. "Tui sends Freebird Europe to Leipzig / Halle - Airbus A320 is stationed in Schkeuditz". lvz.de. 4 October 2019.
  24. https://www.leipzig-halle-airport.de/mediapool/mfag_faltflugplans20_5.2.pdf?t=a30wbpzazs
  25. "Flight". fti.de.
  26. "FTI is expanding its hot water capacity with a new charter airline". airliners.de. 28 August 2019.
  27. 2018, UBM (UK) Ltd. "Montenegro Airlines increases German flights in S19". routesonline.com.CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  28. https://www.leipzig-halle-airport.de/mediapool/mfag_faltflugplans20_5.2.pdf?t=a30wbpzazs
  29. https://www.leipzig-halle-airport.de/mediapool/mfag_faltflugplans20_5.2.pdf?t=a30wbpzazs
  30. https://www.leipzig-halle-airport.de/mediapool/mfag_faltflugplans20_5.2.pdf?t=a30wbpzazs
  31. https://www.leipzig-halle-airport.de/mediapool/mfag_faltflugplans20_5.2.pdf?t=a30wbpzazs
  32. ch-aviation.com retrieved 1 November 2019
  33. "Flughafen Leipzig/Halle - Business and partners > Cargo > Location > Airlines > Airlines". www.leipzig-halle-airport.de.
  34. http://www.flightera.net/flight/AeroLogic/3S621
  35. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 16 January 2019.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  36. "dpdhl.de". Archived from the original on 21 January 2018. Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  37. ""Alma": Neuer DHL-Frachtflieger trägt den Namen seiner 18 Taufpatinnen". LVZ - Leipziger Volkszeitung.
  38. https://www.flightera.net/route/EDDP/RJAA/BOX
  39. "Flughafen Leipzig/Halle und Dresden hatten 2016 weniger Passagiere". airportzentrale.de.
  40. "Flughafen Leipzig/Halle - Unternehmen > Newsroom > Pressemitteilungen > Verkehrsentwicklung der Flughäfen Leipzig/Halle und Dresden im Jahr 2017 > Verkehrsentwicklung der Flughäfen Leipzig/Halle und Dresden im Jahr 2017". www.leipzig-halle-airport.de.
  41. https://www.leipzig-halle-airport.de/unternehmen/newsroom/pressemitteilungen/verkehrsentwicklung-der-flughaefen-leipzig-halle-und-dresden-im-jahr-2018-zuwaechse-im-passagierverkehr-frachtanstieg-in-leipzig-halle-3159.html
  42. https://www.leipzig-halle-airport.de/unternehmen/newsroom/pressemitteilungen/verkehrszahlen-2019-lej-mit-frachtrekord-und-mehr-passagieren-drs-nach-germania-aus-im-minus-3213.html
  43. "Leipzig/Halle Airport Traffic statistics". Archived from the original on 19 September 2011.
  44. RP ONLINE. "'Flightplan'-Arbeit am Flughafen: Jodie Foster dreht in Leipzig". RP ONLINE. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  45. LVZ-Online. "Hollywood fliegt erneut auf Leipzig". Archived from the original on 18 March 2015. Retrieved 4 June 2015.

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