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21 December 2024 / 10:08
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BBC
Airport has finally been given clearance for take off on 31 October

There may be no passengers on the horizon because of the coronavirus pandemic, but Berlin’s long-awaited new airport has finally been given clearance for take off on 31 October.

Berlin-Brandenburg was due to open in March 2011 but delays and scandals put it on hold for almost a decade. Building authorities have now given it the green light, 14 years after construction began.

It will replace the capital’s old Tegel and Schönefeld airports.

Berlin-Brandenburg, also known as Willy Brandt airport after the former West German chancellor, was never going to be ready in time for the summer.

 

Holidays on hold

That tourist season is already under threat, with the government aiming to extend a worldwide travel ban for tourists up to 14 June and leaving a decision on the rest of the summer until later.

German states operate a staggered summer holiday with the northern state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania starting on 22 June.

A normal holiday that we’ve grown used to with full beaches won’t happen this year anywhere, whether in Europe or anywhere else in the world,” Foreign Minister Heiko Maas has said.

 

Germany's-new-Berlin-airport-set-for-take-off,-nine-years-late-2

 

The travel sector has been hit especially hard by lockdown restrictions. Germany is predicting a 6.3% fall in economic output in 2020, bigger than the slump that followed the 2008 financial crisis, reports say.

 

What took the airport so long?

Construction at the airport, south of Schönefeld, began in 2006. But a mixture of design fiascos and other issues turned Berlin-Brandenburg into a national embarrassment as it missed six opening dates in succession. The main problems were:

• Meinhard von Gerkan’s original terminal design had to be redrawn with twice the capacity in a row over the airport company adding airport shopping
• The construction planning company went bankrupt
• Then there were problems with sprinklers, fire doors and cabling and the public cost mushroomed
• A corruption scandal prompted accusations that a whistleblower had become ill after his coffee was poisoned
• It soon emerged that the increase in flights to Berlin meant it would already not be big enough even by the time it opened

Now safety company TÜV has given the airport a clean bill of health and airport boss Engelbert Lütke Daldrup sees the opening as a sign that “things are back on the rise in the capital region and that the economy is getting back on its feet”.

 

 


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