Memmingen Airport

Memmingen Airport
Flughafen Memmingen

IATA: FMMICAO: EDJA

FMM
Location of the airport in Bavaria

Summary
Airport type Public
Serves Memmingen and the Allgäu, Germany
Elevation AMSL 633 m / 2,077 ft
Coordinates 47°59′33″N 10°14′37″E / 47.99250°N 10.24361°E / 47.99250; 10.24361Coordinates: 47°59′33″N 10°14′37″E / 47.99250°N 10.24361°E / 47.99250; 10.24361
Website allgaeu-airport.de
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
06/24 2,981 9,777 asphalt

Memmingen Airport (IATA: FMM, ICAO: EDJA), also known as Allgäu-Airport Memmingen, is an international airport in the town of Memmingerberg near Memmingen, in the Swabia region of Germany. It is the smallest of the three commercial airports in Bavaria after Munich Airport and Nuremberg Airport and has the highest altitude of any commercial airport in Germany. It is operated by Allgäu Airport GmbH & Co. KG, a limited partnership of 71 mostly local, medium-sized companies with only minor public shares.

Located about 3.8 km (2.4 mi) from the centre of Memmingen and 110 km (68 mi) from the city centre of Munich, it serves Memmingen and the Allgäu area and also provides a low-cost alternative to Munich Airport and therefore is sometimes referred to as Memmingen/Munich-West Airport or similar by some low-cost airlines. It mostly features flights to European leisure and some metropolitan destinations.

History

A military airfield was built at Memmingerberg in 1935. It was used during World War II. After being rebuilt, it was used for US Air Force training flights from 1956. From 1959 to 2003, it was the home base of German Air Force fighterbomber wing 34 ("Allgäu").

The airport was certified as a regional commercial airport on 20 July 2004 and commenced operation on 5 August 2004, but there were no scheduled or regular chartered flights. Scheduled flights to the 2005 Hanover Fair were cancelled due to lack of demand. In June 2005, the district of Oberallgäu granted initial finance of €480,000. A further sum of €200,000 was granted by the city of Memmingen after a popular vote on 25 September 2005. In 2006, scheduled flights to Dortmund and Rostock were planned but cancelled because the carrier became insolvent. In autumn 2006, Luftfahrtgesellschaft Walter offered chartered flights to Dortmund for two months, during which only 100 passengers were carried.

In March 2007, a subsidy of €7,500,000 promised by Bavaria was approved by the European Commission. Until 25 September 2008 it was known as Allgäu Airport/Memmingen.

On 28 June 2007,[1] TUIfly started offering domestic flights to Berlin, Hamburg and Cologne/Bonn and also flights to holiday destinations such as Mallorca, Crete, Naples, Rome, Venice and Antalya. In March 2009, Ryanair announced seven new routes to/from Memmingen starting May 2009. They have continued to announce new routes and from May 2010 Ryanair operated 14 routes to and from Memmingen. Wizz Air also started serving Memmingen and has established eight routes since then. On 24 October 2013, Ryanair announced a new seasonal service to Shannon, while Palermo was added as a destination from the summer season of 2015.

On 5 June 2014, the airport welcomed its five-millionth passenger.[1]

In December 2014, InterSky announced that it would be taking over the domestic flights from Memmingen to Berlin and Hamburg by 1 March 2015, as Germanwings had announced that it would cease the same services just a few days earlier.[2] In earlier years, these routes had already been unsuccessfully served by TUIfly, Air Berlin and Avanti Air.

In April 2015, Wizz Air announced that it would serve Vilnius as its eighth destination from Memmingen.[3]

In May 2015, InterSky announced that it would have a presence at Memmingen Airport by October 2015 consisting of one aircraft, adding a new route to Cologne and increasing frequencies on the already existing services to Berlin and Hamburg.[4] Later, that plan was changed as a triangular route of Friedrichshafen - Memmingen - Cologne/Bonn will be established instead of basing an aircraft in Memmingen.[5] However, on 6 November 2015, InterSky ceased all operations due to financial difficulties, leaving Memmingen again without any domestic connections.[6]

Infrastructure

Aerial view of Memmingen Airport
Check-in area inside the main hall

Terminal

Memmingen Airport has one passenger terminal building equipped with 10 check-in counters and 7 departure gates[7] used for Schengen flights (1-3) on the ground floor and non-Schengen flights (4-7) on the upper floor. The building has no jet bridges, therefore walk-boarding and bus-boarding is used. There is also a duty-free shop, as well as some restaurants and car-hire facilities at the airport. The terminal has a capacity of two million passengers per year.[7]

Runway and apron

Memmingen Airport has an Instrument Landing System (ILS) Category 1 for runway 24, NDB/DME and GPS RNAV. Although the runway length of about 3 km would allow larger planes, the airport's certificate only allows planes with wingspans up to 36 m due to the narrow taxiways originally designed for Lockheed F-104G Starfighters and Panavia Tornados.

Two aprons provide parking spaces for five mid-sized jets (such as the Airbus A320 and Boeing 737) at a time, as well as some smaller business jets and general aviation aircraft.

Airlines and destinations

The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights at Memmingen Airport:[8]

AirlinesDestinations
Austrian Airlines Seasonal charter: Naples
Corendon Airlines Seasonal: Antalya (begins 5 August 2016)[9]
Niki Seasonal charter: Calvi
Pobeda Moscow-Vnukovo
Ryanair Alicante, Dublin, Faro, London-Stansted, Málaga, Palermo, Porto, Sofia (begins 31 October 2016), Tenerife-South
Seasonal: Alghero, Chania, Girona, Palma de Mallorca, Shannon
SunExpress Seasonal: Antalya
Wizz Air Belgrade, Cluj-Napoca, Kiev-Zhulyany, Kutaisi (begins 23 September 2016),[10] Sibiu (begins 21 August 2016), Skopje, Sofia, Târgu Mureș, Timișoara, Tuzla, Vilnius

Statistics

Ryanair Boeing 737-800 at Memmingen Airport with the Bavarian Alps visible in the background
Passengers
2008 462,000[11]
2009 Increase 810,000[11]
2010 Increase 911,609[12]
2011 Decrease 764,782[12]
2012 Increase 869,937[13]
2013 Decrease 838,971[13]
2014 Decrease 750,000[14]
2015 Increase 883,490[15]

Ground transportation

Road

The airport is located close to the A96 motorway (Memmingen Ost exit) and its intersection with the A7 motorway. The A96 leads directly to Munich, Lake Constance and Switzerland, while the A7 leads to Stuttgart and Austria. Taxis as well as several car-hire companies are available at counters in the terminal building.[16]

Coach

There are coach services from Memmingen Airport directly to Munich (journey time approx. 90 minutes), Ulm, Zürich, St. Gallen and the Kleinwalsertal mountain and ski resort.[16]

Bus

Local bus lines 2 and 810/811 connect the airport within a 15-minute drive with Memmingen town centre, including Memmingen railway station, from where frequent Deutsche Bahn regional services depart for Munich (journey time approx. 1:35) and Augsburg, as well as some long-distance Swiss Federal Railways services to Bregenz and Zürich.[16]

See also

References

External links

Media related to Flughafen Memmingen at Wikimedia Commons

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