The airport website has a useful overview of public transport options. Make sure to get a Berlin taxi (look for a single "B" as the first letter on the license plate) - drivers from the surrounding Brandenburg region may be willing to take your fare, but might not be familiar with Berlin. A trip to the city centre will set you back somewhere in the region of €25 - €35. Taxis are of course available at Schönefeld, and can be picked up outside the terminal building. Facilities at the station are limited and hard to find. Tip: purchase public transport tickets in the airport terminal buildings. Public transport faresĪll the above public transport options (except the SXF1 bus) are covered by a unified fare scheme - to get to the centre of Berlin (VBB fare zone A) the minimum ticket required will be a Berlin zone A/B/C ticket (" Einzelfahrausweis ABC") which at the time of writing (February 2011) costs €3.00 (€2.10 concessions). The fare is €6, but this price includes a Berlin-zone ABC ticket covering onwards public transportation from Südkreuz. There is also a semi-commercial express bus SXF1 which runs every 20 minutes to Südkreuz station, which offers good connections to some central Berlin locations such as Potsdamer Platz. Both the X7 and Bus 171 stop at Rudow ( U7) which is about 10 minutes from Schönefeld. These are mainly useful for local locations in the south of Berlin. Buses arrive and depart directly in from of the main terminal building. SXF1 (express bus) Schönefeld Airport Südkreuz station (non-stop)īVG buses run to and from Schönefeld.N7 (night bus) Schönefeld Airport Rathaus Spandau ( U7) via Rudow ( U7).X7 ("JetExpressBus") Schönefeld Airport Rudow ( U7).Bus 171 Schönefeld Airport Hermannplatz ( U7) via Rudow ( U7).Travellers going to Potsdam can take the regional train R22 from Schönefeld station directly to Potsdam-Hauptbahnhof, bypassing Berlin. Access to the platforms is via an underground passageway there are no lifts or escalators, but all platforms and the underground entrance are accessible via ramps. Note that Schönefeld Station is somewhat spartan, retaining much of its original GDR character. The S9 formerly took the same route, but now runs via Ostkreuz to Pankow, and no longer serves the Stadtbahn. These trains run at 30 minute intervals, and take around 20 minutes to reach Alexanderplatz. The regional trains RE7 and RB14 provide the easiest and quickest route into the city centre, running over the central Stadtbahn and stopping at Alexanderplatz, Friedrichstrasse, Berlin-Hauptbahnhof and Zoo Station. The dotted line shows the S-Bahn extension currently under construction to the new BBI airport station, scheduled to open in 2012. Map of public transport routes from Schönefeld Airport station Note that before the construction of the covered walkway, a free shuttle bus was operated between the terminal building and the station. The station is served by both the S-Bahn (lines S45 and S9) and by regional trains (RE7 and RB14). The station - Flughafen Berlin-Schönefeld - is located a 5-10 minute walk from the terminal buildings along a half-covered walkway (400 meters / quarter of a mile). The best way to get to and from Schönefeld is by train. Access by train (S-Bahn, regional trains and U-Bahn) AccessĪlthough located outside Berlin's boundaries, Schönefeld nevertheless provides easy access to the city centre (and is far more convenient than many airports in many other cities). Formerly East Berlin's main airport, following re-unification it lost much of its traffic to the former West Berlin's Tegel, but in recent years it has grown as a hub for low-cost / no-frills carriers and is now in the process of being expanded to become the city's main and only airport, to be known as Berlin Brandenburg International ( BBI). ![]() Berlin-Schönefeld International Airport (IATA-Code: SXF, sometimes written Schoenefeld or Schonefeld) is Berlin's second-largest airport and is located on the southeastern edge of Berlin.
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