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Home » Germany » Berlin Voters: Keep Tegel Airport Open
GermanyNews

Berlin Voters: Keep Tegel Airport Open

Matthew Klint Posted onSeptember 25, 2017November 14, 2023 3 Comments

a close-up of a building

We don’t know when Berlin Brandenburg Airport will finally open, but it’s now slated for 2019…only nine years late. Even when it finally does, Berlin voters have expressed a preference to keep Tegel Airport open.

The original plan was that Berlin Brandenburg Airport (BER) would replace both Berlin Tegel (TXL) and Berlin Schönefeld Airport (SXF). But Schönefeld will certainly remain and is now being expanded. Yesterday Germany held a federal election but like elections in the USA, local issues were voted on as well.

In Berlin, voters rejected a city government plan to turn Tegel Airport into a new mini-city with apartment buildings and an industrial park. Housing costs are soaring in once-affordable Berlin as demand far outstrips supply.

  • 55% voted to re-consider plans to close Tegel
  • 43% were opposed to its closing

The vote is non-binding, but is too significant to be ignored.

Berlin Tempelhof Airport closed in 2008, with anticipation that BER would open just a couple years later. That never happened and Tempelhof has become a massive refugee center.

Critics of the plan to close Tegel contend that Brandenburg plus Schönefeld will still be unable to handle sufficient demand and that Tegel should be preserved for shorthaul flights. Furthermore, they contend the attractive location of Tegel in the heart of the Berlin spurs commerce and remains far more convenient than BER or SXF.

But the hexagonal-shaped 1970s airport does not meet current safety protocols and would cost more than one billion Euros to update.

The debate will continue.

CONCLUSION

I find Tegel amusing. I don’t particularly like the airport, but there is certainly something nostalgic about it. The airport itself is an important historical reminder: it was built in just 90 days during the 1948 Berlin Airlift. Ultimately, I’m agnostic to whether it should remain open, but would hate to see airlines run out of room in Brandenburg or Schönefeld.

image: Jérôme / Wikimedia Commons

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About Author

Matthew Klint

Matthew is an avid traveler who calls Los Angeles home. Each year he travels more than 200,000 miles by air and has visited more than 135 countries. Working both in the aviation industry and as a travel consultant, Matthew has been featured in major media outlets around the world and uses his Live and Let's Fly blog to share the latest news in the airline industry, commentary on frequent flyer programs, and detailed reports of his worldwide travel.

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3 Comments

  1. UA-NYC Reply
    September 25, 2017 at 10:05 pm

    I didn’t mind the LH gates (the ones w/individual security)…those are convenient.

    The “barn” that AB flies (or flew) out of was a hot mess though.

  2. Mark Reply
    September 26, 2017 at 12:51 am

    Schoenefeld is shares runways with ber . So if they keep sxf it would basically be a lcc terminal for ber. My understanding is that ber will be over capacity when it opens so keeping txl might make some sense

  3. Goytá Reply
    December 5, 2017 at 8:47 pm

    Per IATA’s rules, if and when Brandenburg opens and if Tegel is to remain open, it won’t be possible for it to have the code BER. That’s currently the generic metropolitan code for Berlin (all airports) and would become the new airport’s code because it was meant to be the only remaining active Berlin airport. If Tegel remains open, Brandenburg and Schönefeld will be considered different terminals of the same airport (since they share runways), and the codes SXF (for Schönefeld/Brandenburg) and TXL (for Tegel) will also remain. Even if Brandenburg had opened as planned and Schönefeld had been closed, it would still keep ICAO code EDDB, already used by Schönefeld today.

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