Noise protection: Leipzig modernizes engine test run hall

Leipzig / Halle Airport (Photo: Leipzig / Halle Airport GmbH, Uwe Schossig).
Leipzig / Halle Airport (Photo: Leipzig / Halle Airport GmbH, Uwe Schossig).

Noise protection: Leipzig modernizes engine test run hall

Leipzig / Halle Airport (Photo: Leipzig / Halle Airport GmbH, Uwe Schossig).
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Leipzig/Halle Airport wants to continue investing in noise protection and announces that the engine test hangar is to be modernized. This should lead to the residents being protected even in unfavorable wind conditions.

To do this, the flow conditions in the hall must be improved, which are necessary for a trouble-free test run of the engines. The construction project is scheduled to last eight months. The airport is investing around 2,5 million euros in the modernization.

Several cargo airlines are based at the airport, which maintain maintenance bases for their aircraft fleets. Between 250 and 290 engine tests are required every year as part of aircraft maintenance. To date, around 80 percent of the necessary test runs have been carried out in the engine test run hall. For technical reasons, the remaining tests had to be carried out outdoors during the day. At night, outdoor test runs are excluded.

The hall will not be available for test runs during the conversion. Mitteldeutsche Flughafen AG therefore applied to the Saxon State Ministry for Economic Affairs, Labor and Transport (SMWA) for a special permit for engine test runs outdoors. As the highest aviation authority in Saxony, the SMWA approved this application under strict conditions. This is to ensure that this investment in noise protection can be made while maintaining airport operations and that the impact on the surrounding area can be kept to a minimum.

In coordination with the SMWA and the aircraft noise protection officer, engine test runs at night between 22 p.m. and 00 a.m. are limited to a maximum of five tests per month. In justified cases, these exceptions must be applied for individually by the airlines. The criteria for approval include unforeseeable repair work to maintain flight safety or a necessary repair of sudden damage such as a bird strike.

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Editor of this article:

Amely Mizzi is Executive Assistant at Aviation Direct Malta in San Pawl il-Baħar. She previously worked in the Aircraft and Vessel Financing division at a banking group. She is considered a linguistic talent and speaks seven languages ​​fluently. She prefers to spend her free time in Austria on the ski slopes and in summer on Mediterranean beaches, practically on her doorstep in Gozo.
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Amely Mizzi is Executive Assistant at Aviation Direct Malta in San Pawl il-Baħar. She previously worked in the Aircraft and Vessel Financing division at a banking group. She is considered a linguistic talent and speaks seven languages ​​fluently. She prefers to spend her free time in Austria on the ski slopes and in summer on Mediterranean beaches, practically on her doorstep in Gozo.
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