How To F#€k Up An Airport is presented by Radio Spaetkauf and RadioEins.Great radio shows aren’t great because of luck. Will any politician ever take responsibility? Then they fire the CEO Rainer Schwarz, but bungle the paperwork. The BER supervisory board fires the only people who know what's going on, creating new chaos. This is going to be from the beginning an old airport."īut finally, heads are starting to roll. New airports are already building in a different way. And the builders forgot to install lightning rods.Įven when it's fixed, BER will need another overhaul: "As soon as they open it they have to modernize it," Marco says. More than 600 fire walls had to be reconstructed. The sprinkler pipes too small to carry the required water. Cables were stuffed together in overloaded enclosures - a fire risk. They were just one of 150,000 mistakes discovered in an audit after the 2012 cancellation. Joel and Jöran drive out to the unfinished BER terminal to inspect the too-short escalators that end with stairs. Employees were busy stealing copper instead of fixing the fire system. We hear from Marco, an engineer who worked on site. Producers: Joel Dullroy, Maisie Hitchcock, Jöran Mandik and Daniel SternīER has been built twice - the first time incorrectly, the second time incompletely. We meet the man who put a stop to it all – Stephan Loge, the administrator of the Brandenburg building department.Īlso on this episode, Joel and Jöran visit the Schönefeld S-Bahn station in search of the empty train that runs nightly to the unfinished airport to keep air moving through the tunnels. Instead of a working fire safety system, they planned to hire up to 800 people to act as human fire alarms.ĭespite multiple warnings, the airport board pushed ahead with opening party plans right up until May 8, 2012, when the first major delay was announced. They demanded a 70% increase in terminal space to add hundreds of extra shops, and requested special double story boarding gates for the supersized Airbus A380, even though no airline requested it. What was really going on? On this episode, we look at how the airport managers and politicians were messing with the plans, even as construction was underway. Produced by Joel Dullroy, Maisie Hitchcock, Jöran Mandik and Daniel Sternĭays away from the planned 2012 opening party, nothing seemed wrong at BER. Presented by Radio Spaetkauf and RadioEins On this episode we’ll go way back to before any plans had been drawn, before even the Berlin wall had come down, to discover the foundational flaws that continue to haunt the unfinished airport. We’ll interview insiders and disgruntled workers, chase ghost trains running to the terminal, and go inside the unfinished airport. Costs have ballooned from around €1 billion to at least €5.4 billion.Īcross this series, you’ll learn why the escalators are too short, why the lights are always on, and why the rooms seemed to be numbered by bingo. It has been under construction for 11 years, blown through six opening dates, three general managers and two state leaders. But despite outward appearances, BER is far from finished. If you’ve flown to Berlin Schönefeld Airport in the last few years, you’ll have seen BER as your plane taxied along the runway. It has also become a signifier of failure, incompetence, corruption and Berlin’s general inability to get its act together. BER is the international airport code for Berlin Brandenburg Airport, nickname Willy Brandt.
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