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Cars and Transportation

Berlin airport advises passengers to walk

Darko Janjevic
February 15, 2019

With public transport workers on strike in Berlin, the city's Tegel airport was forced to rent buses to ferry passengers to the train station. The option, officials recommended, was to walk more than 3 kilometers.

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Lufthansa  Jumbo-Jet lands on Tegel in 2017
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/W. Kumm

An hours-long strike disrupted public transport in Berlin on Friday, leaving the city's Tegel airport scrambling to provide transport for passengers coming to and from the closest train station.

On Twitter, airport authorities said they had set up an "emergency shuttle transport" with four rented buses.

"Alternatively, please use the footpath," officials said, referring to the 3.1 kilometers (1.9 miles) long walkway which they estimate would take 38 minutes to traverse.

Read more: Tegel airport's long-running drama

Waiting for airport that never comes

While the strike ended at noon local time, traffic officials said they expected additional hours of delays and disruptions. Local and regional trains were unaffected by the strike.

Despite being the main international airport in Germany's capital, Tegel is also one of the few airports in the country without its own railway station.

The airport, first opened in 1948, was set to close years ago and traffic redirected to a modern new facility. The Berlin Brandenburg airport, however, has turned into a major embarrassment for the German government due to massive cost overruns and repeated delays. Originally planned to open in 2011, the tentative opening date is now 2020, with rumors of further delays.

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