Early years Aviation in Mannheim started with the
airship constructors
Schütte-Lanz in 1909. Their first airship, called SL 1, lifted off from Mannheim-Rheinau in 1911. With the growing importance of airships for military purposes, a new airfield with hangars and barracks was opened in the north of Mannheim, where the Schönau district is located today. By the end of
World War I, 22 airships had been built in Mannheim. In 1922 all hangars had to be demolished, complying with the conditions imposed by the
Treaty of Versailles. The first
commercial airport in Mannheim was founded on May 16, 1925, as
Flughafen Mannheim-Heidelberg-Ludwigshafen in the northern district of
Sandhofen. With its opening Mannheim became part of an important
air track, running from north to south and vice versa. In the late 1920s and early 1930s Deutsche Aero Lloyd operated cargo and passenger flights from
Hamburg to
Zürich stopping in Mannheim. Balair from Switzerland flew between
Geneva and
Amsterdam via Basel, Mannheim, Frankfurt and Essen. Badisch-Pfälzische Luftverkehrs A.G operated the
Black Forest route to Konstanz, via Karlsruhe, Baden Baden and Villingen. In 1926 the airfield was transferred to
Mannheim-Neuostheim, its present site. The same year
Deutsche Luft Hansa was founded in
Berlin. A Luft Hansa route map of the 1930s shows scheduled flights from Mannheim to
Frankfurt via
Darmstadt and other destinations, like
Stuttgart,
Saarbrücken and
Konstanz. In 1939 Luft Hansa flew nonstop to the capital
Berlin using various
Junkers aircraft. During
World War II the airport was severely damaged. After the war the airport was occupied by the
US-Army and temporarily used as a transmitter site. The terminal building and hangars were partly demolished and partly refurbished. The airfield was reopened to the public in 1958, but with the growing size of postwar aircraft, Mannheim-Neuostheim was no longer served by any major airline and mainly used for private flying.
Development since the 1980s approaching Runway 09 In 1983, a test flight for
STOL (short take-off and landing) aircraft took place with a four-engined
Dash-7 turboprop aircraft. In 1986, DRF (Deutsche Rettungsflugwacht, e. V.) installed a helicopter air rescue center at MHG. Scheduled passenger flights did not start again until the 1980s when
Arcus-Air Logistic operated flights between Mannheim and
Oberpfaffenhofen near
Munich, using
Dornier 228 aircraft. These flights were offered up to three times daily, depending on demand. Besides cargo flights the airline added three weekly passenger flights to
Leipzig and
Dresden in 1991. In 1997
Cosmos Air (Arcus-Air Logistic) was founded in Mannheim and started nonstop flights to
Berlin Tempelhof Airport and
London City Airport using the larger
Dornier 328 turboprop. Due to lack of demand, the London route was suspended one year later. Until that time, a provisional container building had been used as the terminal, but new facilities opened in 1998. In 1999
Cosmos Air was taken over by
Cirrus Airlines, continuing the flights to Berlin-Tempelhof and opening new routes to Hamburg and Saarbrücken. With the entry of
Cirrus Airlines into
Team Lufthansa in 2000,
Lufthansa came back to Mannheim after 60 years of absence, and Mannheim reappeared in the official Lufthansa itinerary. In 2002 Mannheim-Neuostheim was officially renamed
Mannheim City Airport. In October 2008 Cirrus Airlines started new direct flights from Mannheim to Munich, connecting the city to one of the Lufthansa main hubs. However, this service consisted for only four months. In August 2010, the Mannheim-Hamburg service celebrated its 10th anniversary, but due to hard competition coming from
Frankfurt Airport on this route, Cirrus Airlines had to discontinue it on November 26, 2010. On December 22, 2011, Cirrus Airlines decided to also end the last scheduled route to Berlin-Tegel, shortly before filing bankruptcy.
Cirrus Technik also operated a
maintenance facility for
Dornier 328 turboprop aircraft, which moved to
Saarbrücken at the end of 2009.
Today Due to its problematic
geographical location, an extension of the airport has become impossible, preventing modern
regional jets, such as the
Canadair Regional Jet or the
Embraer 145, from operating from MHG. With the introduction of the new JAR-OPS 2 regulation, strict weight restrictions have been imposed, allowing only smaller and lighter airplanes to land at MHG. From 2014 on, even tighter restrictions from
EASA will become effective in Europe, which will probably bring a further impact on commercial air traffic. After a first accident involving a scheduled passenger flight on March 19, 2008, and the growing lack of airlines with the adequate equipment to fly into MHG, discussions about a relocation of the airport have regained political importance. With its coming closure in 2015,
Coleman Airfield is seen as a possible, but challenging alternative, as well as the airport of
Speyer, where
BASF has its corporate jets based. There are ongoing controversial discussions about shutting down the airport in the future and proposals are being considered, such as using the site for the 2023
Bundesgartenschau. ==Infrastructure==