The metropolitan region is a strong economic driver and a centre of the European transportation network. The central location and infrastructure of the region makes it accessible nationally and internationally. Individual and delivery traffic can connect to the national highway network, with highways A5/A67 and A61/A65 from north to south and the A6 from east to west, as well as the respective federal highways. Connection to
Frankfurt International Airport takes 31 minutes by ICE train from
Mannheim Hbf. In addition, domestic business air travel is served by
Mannheim City Airport with an own local airline (
Rhein-Neckar Air) and a second regional airport in Speyer. Travelling by rail also provides direct access to national major cities as well as European capitals. With around 240 long-distance departures daily from the central station, Mannheim is the second largest ICE terminal in Germany and connects the region to the European long-distance rail network. The Rhine-Neckar public transport system (VRN), with the
Rhine-Neckar S-Bahn as its backbone, provides infrastructure and connects to neighbouring regions. The Mannheim/Ludwigshafen harbour complex has the second-largest railway yard in Germany and one of the largest inland ports in Europe, and is a central hub for the European handling of goods. The Mannheim railway yard dispatches up to 5,300 freight cars daily. == Education ==