PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Griesheim Airport
rdfs:comment
  • Griesheim Airport is a private airfield in Germany, located southwest of Griesheim (Hessen); approximately southwest of Berlin. Formerly a NATO military airfield, it was closed in 1992. In 1996, a large part of the airfield site was placed under the control of Technische Universität Darmstadt, where a variety of disciplines carry out experiments and operate several small aircraft.
owl:sameAs
r1-length-f
  • 5571
Mark
  • Red_pog.svg
dcterms:subject
elevation-m
  • 160
dbkwik:military/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
ICAO
  • EDES
lon deg
  • 8
Label
  • Griesheim Airport
lat sec
  • 15
float
  • right
lon sec
  • 19
r1-length-m
  • 1688
Name
  • Griesheim Airport
r1-surface
  • Asphalt
Type
  • Private
nativename r
  • Darmstadt Army Airfield
Caption
  • Location of Griesheim Airport, Germany
Width
  • 200
marksize
  • 6
LON DIR
  • E
LAT DIR
  • N
IATA
  • ZCS
r1-number
  • 7
Operator
lat min
  • 51
elevation-f
  • 525
lon min
  • 35
lat deg
  • 49
Position
  • right
metric-rwy
  • Y
Location
  • Griesheim, Germany
abstract
  • Griesheim Airport is a private airfield in Germany, located southwest of Griesheim (Hessen); approximately southwest of Berlin. Formerly a NATO military airfield, it was closed in 1992. In 1996, a large part of the airfield site was placed under the control of Technische Universität Darmstadt, where a variety of disciplines carry out experiments and operate several small aircraft. Griesheim was originally part of an Imperial German Army (Reichsheer) military artillery firing range in 1874, an airfield was established on the site in 1908, being Germany's first airfield and flight school. During World War I it was used as a Prisoner of War Camp. Re-established as an airfield in 1930, the German Research Institute for Gliding was established on the site. After 1939, the Luftwaffe established a military presence at the airfield, and after World War II, it was a United States Army Airfield (Darmstadt Army Airfield) until the end of the Cold War, jointly used in the late 1980s as civil airport for light aircraft and sailplanes (Griesheim Airport).