Early years Caravelle at Düsseldorf Airport in 1973 The current airport was opened on 19 April 1927, after two years of construction. The first international route was inaugurated by
SABENA in 1929 between
Brussels,
Antwerp, Düsseldorf and
Hamburg. At the beginning of
World War II, civil use of the airport ceased in September 1939 and the airfield was used by the military. Terminals A and B had to be completely reconstructed. While repairs were ongoing, passengers were housed in big tents.
Development since the 2000s Airbus A330-300s at their Düsseldorf base in 2003 The first construction stage in the "Airport 2000+" programme commenced in 1998 with the laying of a foundation stone for an underground parking garage under the new terminal. The new
Düsseldorf Airport station was opened in May 2000, with a capacity of 300 train departures daily. 16million passengers used the airport that year; Düsseldorf is now the third-biggest airport in Germany. The new departures hall and Terminal B were opened in July 2001 after 2½ years of construction time; the rebuilt Gebäude Ost (East Building) was reopened. In 2002, the inter-terminal shuttle bus service was replaced by the suspended
monorail called the
SkyTrain connecting the terminal building with the
InterCity train station. The monorail travels the between the terminal and station at a maximum speed of . The system was developed by
Siemens and is based on the similar
H-Bahn operating with two lines on the
Dortmund university campus. On 12 November 2006, the first
Airbus A380 landed in Düsseldorf as part of a
Lufthansa promotional flight. In March 2013, the Airport received a new corporate design and dropped the phrase
International from its official name. In January 2015,
Emirates announced it would schedule the
Airbus A380 on one of their two daily flights from
Dubai to Düsseldorf starting in July 2015. In June 2015,
Lufthansa announced the closure of its long-haul base at Düsseldorf Airport for economic reasons by October 2015. The base consisted of two
Airbus A340-300s which served
Newark and
Chicago-O'Hare. Newark remained a year-round service which is operated in a W-pattern from
Munich Airport (Munich - Newark - Düsseldorf - Newark - Munich) while the Chicago service was suspended for the winter 2015/2016 season. A few months later, Lufthansa announced the cancellation of the Düsseldorf-Chicago route. The same route was served by
American Airlines during the summer seasons from 2013 to 2016, when it was discontinued. In January 2017, the airport's largest hub operator
Air Berlin announced a massive downsizing of its operations due to restructuring measures. While some leisure routes were handed to
Niki more than a dozen destinations were cancelled entirely. In August 2017, Air Berlin also announced the termination of all long-haul routes from Düsseldorf to destinations in the
Caribbean on short notice due to ongoing bankruptcy proceedings. However, both
Condor and
Eurowings announced it would step in and start some of the terminated Caribbean destinations by themselves. Shortly after, Air Berlin also announced the termination of all remaining long-haul operations leading to the loss of several connections to the United States at Düsseldorf Airport. On 9 October 2017, Air Berlin announced the termination of all of its own operations, excluding wet leases, by the end of the month leading to the loss of one of the airport's largest customers. In February 2018,
Eurowings announced the relocation of all long-haul routes currently served from
Cologne Bonn Airport to Düsseldorf by late October 2018 to strengthen its presence there. In March 2018,
Lufthansa announced it would close its base at Düsseldorf Airport after the 2018/2019 winter schedule which ended in March 2019. When the single remaining long-haul route to
Newark was taken over by
Eurowings, 400 staff members were offered a relocation to either
Frankfurt Airport or
Munich Airport. In November 2018,
Ryanair also announced they would close their base in Düsseldorf after only a year. Its routes were taken over by
Lauda. In August 2020,
Delta Air Lines removed the
Atlanta route from their schedule due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It started resuming its three-times-weekly service to and from Atlanta on 9 May 2023, albeit making the route to Düsseldorf summer seasonal only, therefore leaving the airport without any transatlantic connection in the winter season. Shortly after Delta Air Lines suspended its Atlanta route,
Ryanair announced the closure of its base in Düsseldorf — which was operated on a wetlease basis by
Lauda — by 24 October 2020. In September 2020,
Singapore Airlines permanently removed the route to
Singapore from their schedule. In the autumn of 2022, German airline
Sundair drastically reduced its operations from Düsseldorf, leaving a single route to
Beirut. The two previously based aircraft were relocated. In January 2023 it became public that Sundair would not return to Düsseldorf in the summer season of 2023 with any flight, eradicating its former base from the network. Just five months after resuming the previously long-standing route to
Atlanta,
Delta Air Lines announced in September 2023 that it would not return to Düsseldorf in the 2024 summer season, leaving Düsseldorf without scheduled
transatlantic flights. ==Facilities==