Rostock–Laage Airport

Airport From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rostock–Laage Airportmap

Rostock Airport, German: Flughafen Rostock-Laage (IATA: RLG, ICAO: ETNL), is the airport of Rostock, the largest city in the German state Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, and is named after Laage, within the boundary of which it is located. Laage is a town in the Rostock district. It features flights to major cities throughout Germany as well as some leisure routes. In addition to civil activity, Jagdgeschwader 73 of the German Air Force is stationed on the military side of the airport.

Quick Facts Rostock Airport Flughafen Rostock–Laage, Summary ...
Rostock Airport

Flughafen Rostock–Laage
Thumb
Summary
Airport typePublic/Military
OperatorFlughafen Rostock Laage-Güstrow GmbH
ServesRostock, Germany
Elevation AMSL42 m / 138 ft
Coordinates53°55′06″N 12°16′42″E
Websitewww.rostock-airport.de
Map
Thumb
RLG
Location of Airport in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
Thumb
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
10/28 2,500 8,202 Paved
Statistics (2022)
Passengers60,997 +185,0%
Aircraft movements15,440 +139,6%
Cargo (metric tons)0 -100,0%
Sources: Statistics at ADV.[1]
Close

History

Summarize
Perspective

Early years

Construction of the airport began in 1979 as a National People's Army facility. It became operational in 1984 with the Fighter Wing JBG 77 and the Navy Fighter Wing 28. It was deactivated by the Bundeswehr in 1990 and was reactivated in 1993 when Jagdgeschwader 73 was posted there. In the same year the Rostock-Laage-Güstrow GmbH begins civilian operations on a 60 hectare section of the airport.

Development since the 2000s

The airport was expected to post losses of €2.8 million for 2013 while the passenger numbers decreased by 12 percent in the same year. As the government of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern is not willing to give additional financial aid, the airport operator may face bankruptcy in the near future.[2] In October 2014, Rainer Schwarz, a former general manager of Berlin Brandenburg Airport was appointed to the same position at Rostock–Laage Airport.[3]

After the British airline Flybmi, which operated domestic flights to Munich and Stuttgart ceased the operation and declared bankruptcy, Lufthansa took over the route from Rostock to Munich with up to two daily rotations with Bombardier CRJ900 aircraft. However, this service has since been terminated.

In 2019, the airport suffered a sharp downfall in passenger numbers with a decrease by more than half to just 148,000.[4] This was mainly caused by the shutdown of Germania which operated several leisure routes from Rostock. In February 2021, Lufthansa Aviation Training relocated their practical training from Bremen Airport to Rostock.[5]

On the airfield it is a part of the major maneuver held in June 2023, held under the leadership of the German Air Force Air Defender 23 it is the greatest exercise of air forces since NATO was announced.[6]

In November 2024, Condor announced it would terminate their two-weekly, summer seasonal route from Rostock to Palma de Mallorca, citing low profitability.[7]

Facilities

The airport consists of one modern passenger terminal building containing a large check-in hall as well as some shops and restaurants. The building is equipped with two jet bridges and apron positions. Rostock–Laage Airport usually sees traffic by mid-sized aircraft such as the Airbus A320 but is equipped to handle wide-body aircraft up to the Boeing 747-400.[8] It also has several stands for smaller general aviation planes.

Airlines and destinations

The following airlines operate scheduled flights at Rostock Airport:[9]

More information Airlines, Destinations ...
AirlinesDestinations
Air Nostrum Seasonal charter: Zurich (begins 18 May 2025, ends 28 September 2025)[10]
Corendon Airlines Seasonal: Antalya[11]
Close

Additionally, the airport is frequently used for non-public cruise ship charter flights to and from Southern Europe, e. g. operated by ITA Airways, to carry passengers travelling to and from the nearby cruise port of Warnemünde.[12][13] The nearest major international airports are Berlin Brandenburg Airport 190 kilometres (120 mi) to the south and Hamburg Airport 200 kilometres (120 mi) to the west.

Statistics

Thumb
Aerial view
Thumb
Check-in hall
More information Rank, Destination Country ...
Busiest Flight Routes from RLG by country in 2023[14]
RankDestination CountryPassengers
1 Turkey16,998
2 Greece4,394
3 Italy1,677
This statistic includes only departures. (No arrivals)
Close
More information Rank, Destination Airport ...
Busiest Flight Routes from RLG in 2023[14]
RankDestination AirportDestination CountryPassengers
1Antalya Turkey16,998
2Heraklion Greece4,386
3Milan-Linate Italy1,543
4Las Palmas Spain340
5Tenerife South Spain334
This statistic includes only departures. (No arrivals)
Close
More information Passengers ...
Passengers
2010 219.489
2011 Increase 223,516
2012 Decrease 203,990
2013 Decrease 177,464
2014 Decrease 169,946
2015 Increase 190,869
2016 Increase 250,199
2017 Increase 290,654[15]
2018 Increase 298,000[4]
2019 Decrease 148,000[4]
2023 52,579[16]
Source: Rostock Airport[17]
Close

Ground transportation

Public transport

For all scheduled and most charter flights, a direct bus connection to Rostock Hauptbahnhof (25 km distance) is provided by the regional public transport company (Rebus). A special fare ("Flughafenticket") is introduced, allowing passengers to use suburban trains and street cars within the City of Rostock for one connecting trip. The same applies for one additional trip on regional busses from Rostock within the integrated fare region of Rostock.

Road

The motorways A19 (Rostock–Berlin) and A20 (LübeckSzczecin) are nearby. There are 4 parking areas at the airport with more than 1,000[18] parking spots in total. Several international as well as local car rental agencies are located at the airport.[19]

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.