A drive to save Tempelhof Airport, base of the Berlin airlift
The city plans to close it and concentrate air traffic at a facility scheduled to open in 2011. A referendum seeks to keep it open.
BERLIN Gabriele Leech-Anspach was a young mother with a toddler when Soviet authorities suddenly imposed a blockade on West Berlin in 1948, cutting off all road, train and boat access and leaving 2.2 million Berliners stranded on an island of the new Cold War.
"I was 29 years old. I had a boy of 2 years. It was very important that he got enough food," recalled Leech- Anspach, now 89, describing the new anxiety that spread across the city like a cold wind from the East just a few years after a world war had ended.
In what is now considered one of the greatest operations in aviation history, U.S. and British pilots began flying in the first of what would be more than 5,000 tons of supplies daily to Tempelhof Airport, whose grand passenger hall once was considered a temple to Adolf Hitler's dream of a grand Germania.
For the next 11 months, Leech-Anspach and her family had a steady supply of powdered eggs and milk, canned meat, dried vegetables and cornmeal for "yellow bread," delivered by planes that touched down at Tempelhof every 90 seconds. They cut wood from the nearby forests to heat their houses. Thanks to the Berlin airlift, they survived.
Today, Berlin residents will go to the polls to vote in a referendum on plans to close Tempelhof, which stands as a majestic relic near the center of a now-united Berlin. City officials say the aging airport, which today serves only a few small regional airlines and private jets, is too expensive and too close to a constantly growing city. Losses are reaching $15.7 million a year.
The city hopes to divert all of Berlin's air traffic to the huge Berlin-Brandenburg International Airport, scheduled to open 10 miles southeast of the city in 2011.
Rarely in recent years has a civic issue so mobilized the population as the battle for this neglected old airfield, so frozen in time that it looks like Ingrid Bergman might be about to board a DC-3 in the fog out on its grand, canopied tarmac.
The Berlin government, citing noise, crash and pollution hazards with neighborhoods little more than half a mile away, has ordered the facility closed in October.
The nonbinding referendum, if approved, would ask the city government to reverse the closure order and withdrawal of the airport's license.
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"I think it's just a reminder of history," Leech-Anspach said. "Of course, some people say it's so expensive to keep it in its normal use, because we shall have this big new airport. But there's so much that has already been destroyed. I think it should remain as a document."
The campaign group leading the referendum drive gives a nod to history but seems more attuned to Chancellor Angela Merkel's claim that the airport is good for business.
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Two U.S. investors have proposed leaving the airport in place while converting the terminal building into a $550-million medical, research and commercial network centered on a large healthcare facility.
Perhaps ironically, those who want to close the airport are pushing hardest to preserve its history, as the place where war-ravaged Germans came to see the U.S. and Britain as liberators and friends.
City officials, with backing from several citizens and environmental groups, have proposed turning the storied terminal building into a museum of the Berlin airlift, while converting the huge tarmac and greenbelt behind it possibly into parks or some other public use, along with perhaps a small number of homes and businesses on the perimeter.
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Tempelhof's history, like that of some other remnants of prewar Germany, is so grand that it can be a bit uncomfortable.
A monument to National Socialist architecture constructed in the neoclassic style from 1934 to 1941, Tempelhof's terminal is still one of the largest buildings in the world. The carved eagles at its entrance no longer clutch swastikas, but the towering vertical space inside remains intimidating for mere weekend holiday-makers.
Designed by Ernst Sagebiel as part of chief Hitler architect Albert Speer's plan for the reconstruction of Berlin, the building was erected on an airfield where Orville Wright gave an air show in 1903. The new facility was intended to become a gateway to Europe and a symbol of Hitler's "world capital." Instead, it became a prototype for modern airports around the world.
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A new poll commissioned by Tempelhof advocates showed 63% in favor of keeping the airport open and 21% in favor of closing it.
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-tempelhof27apr27,1,1000632.story
I thought this was an interesting story. I've never heard of a popular effort to prevent an airport from closing, let alone an urban airport. Is history or commerce the main driving force?