BMW Driving Academy will open for
business. This new BMW Group driver training centre just outside
Munich lies close to the heart of the company, with barely
30 kilometres separating it from BMW headquarters. The site of
what used to be the Fürstenfeldbruck airfield in Maisach covers some
130 hectares (1.3 million square metres) – an ample area
on which to simulate and practise every conceivable type of driving
manoeuvre and situation. “The new facility in Maisach allows us to
offer our customers an array of new training options, something that
hasn’t been possible up to now due to space restrictions,” says
Robert Eichlinger, Head of BMW and MINI Driving Experience. “Here,
our customers can now experience and learn to deal with driving
situations at various speeds. And that means the driving safety
training courses will be more realistic and participants will be able
to experience up close how brake distances increase, for example, and
at what speed they hit their personal limits when it comes to car
control.” With the exception of the racing track courses, adventure
trips in South Africa and snow and ice training, this is where all
BMW Driving Experience driving safety training courses will take
place in the future.
As well as driving
safety training courses, in which participants learn skills such as
how to drive defensively, save fuel and prepare in advance for
situations on the road ahead, the BMW Driving Academy will also help
customers to work on responding more safely in more dynamic
situations. Handily, they won’t need to worry about brake or tyre
wear in the process, as cars are laid on as part of every BMW Driving
Experience training course. An extensive line-up of BMW 1
Series, BMW 3 Series, BMW M and BMW X models allows
the participants to simply climb in behind the wheel and enjoy the
experience. MINI cars can also be provided for the training courses
on request.
The
BMW Driving Academy demonstrates the BMW Group’s commitment to
improving driving safety on the roads. Its aim is to offer all sorts
of customers – from novices to advanced drivers seeking to hone
their skills – a wide selection of training courses aimed at
demonstrating the art of car control in all situations and thus
enabling them to be good road users. A report by the TÜV Nord
technical inspection authorities underlines the positive effect of
driver training on accident occurrence.
As well as driver
training, the BMW Driving Academy offers the ideal environment
for exclusive events containing a driving element. It also provides
the perfect venue for special events such as product presentations,
international media events and tailor-made customer events. Whatever
the occasion, driving pleasure will be a paramount factor.
The BMW Group has put together a
multi-stage long-term development plan for the site. At present the
company has a rental arrangement with an option to buy. What you
currently see at the facility is therefore merely “phase 1” of a
bigger plan. Should the company decide to purchase the site, the plan
would envisage commencing a
wide-reaching programme of
construction and adding further sections to the facility.
“We
have a lot of ideas and concepts in mind for driver training that we
would like to put into practice here,” says Robert Eichlinger, with
an eye to the future.
The BMW Driving
Academy offers wide open areas for practical driving exercises.
The
130-hectare (1.3 million-square-metre) facility offers
impressive room – in the most literal sense – for new ideas. The
first development phase already provides an excellent environment in
which to improve car control and sharpen up reactions, thanks to a
100,000-square-metre apron with watered surfaces, a just under
1.8-kilometre circuit and a 3-kilometre-long take-off and landing
strip. The aim is always to present course participants with
situations that are as realistic as possible, making it easy for them
to apply their newly- refined skills when they get back to normal
roads.
Flexible and
spacious – the airfield apron.
Spanning 100,000 square metres,
the apron area of the BMW Driving Academy alone is twice as large as
the entire usable space available to the previous driver training
centre at Munich Airport. With its asphalt and concrete surfaces,
four watered zones and three circular areas, the apron offers ideal
practice areas for steering, braking and evading manoeuvres in all
weather conditions.
There is no change
in level at the transitions between asphalt and concrete areas of the
apron. The freshly-asphalted areas of the apron meet the highest
current road-building standards. The three circular tracks can be
watered individually, allowing participants to follow a range of
exercises, such as a large oval test or a figure of eight. The
circular tracks therefore allow for a much more adaptable training
concept than the two equivalents of the previous facility. The
circular tracks help participants to learn about the phenomena of
oversteer and understeer, correct cornering technique and how to deal
with aquaplaning. “Here, the participants get the best possible
demonstration of what the laws of physics are all about,” explains
Robert Eichlinger.
The watering system integrated into the
apron uses a water recirculation system which ensures the water is
used as effectively as possible and consumption is kept to a minimum.
The water, which is sprayed through jets onto the surface of the
apron, drains away into several collection and filtering systems,
where it is purified and then stored in an underground tank. Rain
water can also be stored here and used for the training courses.
Consumption of drinking water is therefore kept to a minimum.
The concreted
practice areas of the apron will be used for drills such as low-speed
evading and braking manoeuvres up to 40 km/h. The aim here is to
maintain total control over the car from the outset and, at the same
time, speed up reaction times. These exercises offer the best
preparation for situations where the driver suddenly has to evade an
obstacle in heavy urban traffic without putting himself or other
people in danger. Participants are made aware of how high a speed
40 km/h really is when a quick and precise evading manoeuvre is
required. The new exercise areas of the apron are suitable for
manoeuvres at up to 120 km/h, which is fast enough to demand
special driving skills – expertise the BMW Driving Academy
participants will, of course, be able to develop.
Enjoyable driving
challenges on the circuit.
The new circuit area branches off the
apron to the north. With a completely
newly-asphalted surface, at
1,792 metres in length and measuring 10 to 15 metres in
width, the circuit is perfect for higher-speed drills. It offers
numerous sections where various manoeuvres, such as slalom
manoeuvres, evading and braking, can be practised in isolation. But
participants can also use this area to explore the ideal line or, at
the end of the course, to put together everything they have learned
one more time and get their heart pumping a little faster into the
bargain. The layout of the course and the presence of a chicane
purposefully presents the driver with certain challenges.
Take-off and landing
strip, extra tracks in the pipeline.
Part of the circuit section
runs over the airfield’s former take-off and landing strip, which
fits the three-kilometre-long, 45-metre-wide NATO template. By way of
comparison, a four-lane motorway measures just 34 metres in
width. The circuit sees course participants carry out drills at
speeds of over 120 km/h, such as motorway slip road simulations.
This is also an excellent place to recreate and practise queuing
traffic scenarios and special manoeuvres for personal security staff.
Ample run-off areas around the take-off and landing strip ensure
potential risks are minimised, making it ideal for safely practising
and repeating driving situations which would not be feasible on a
normal road.
A handling course is
in the pipeline for the next stage of development at the site.
The
idea is for the driver and car to simulate dangerous situations on an
approximately 2.5-kilometre-long course replicating the character of
a country road. At up to eight metres in width and featuring hollows
and crests, it is intended to push participants to their limits as
realistically as possible. Finding the ideal line, executing
overtaking manoeuvres and developing a feel for the car at higher
speeds will all be on the agenda here.
The BMW Driving
Academy buildings.
Beyond its driving practice areas, the
BMW Driving Academy also comprises a series of buildings.
Catching the eye immediately is the new reception building with its
very modern-looking Welcome Area. Behind it are two hangars dating
back to the formative days of the airfield in 1935. Both are
protected as historic buildings and have been carefully restored and
modernised accordingly. A total of 12 former aircraft hangars (known
as “NATO shelters”) are dotted around the site. These hangars can
be used in a variety of ways and will take on new functions – as
event venues, for example – as future development phases are
launched at the site.
Reception building
and Welcome Area.
The Welcome Area of the BMW Driving Academy
greets visitors from a considerable distance with its modernistic and
open architecture standing adjacent to the historic hangar. This will
be visitors’ first real point of contact with the BMW Driving
Academy. After entering the buildings, they are met by a Guest
Manager, who welcomes them and explains how their programme will
unfold. Visitors arriving for a driver training course check in using
an iPad and are then looked after in the best possible way. In this
area of the building visitors can also bring themselves up to speed
on the BMW Group brand and its model line-up, or find out more
about the extensive range of
BMW Driving Experience courses
available. The area as a whole has a bright,
friendly air to it
and is designed to give visitors an instant feeling of relaxation.
On the first floor
of the Welcome Area is the BMW M Power area, a separate room for
groups of 40 to 60 people that offers the ideal environment for
exclusive events. This area leads out onto a generously-sized roof
terrace. From here visitors can enjoy an exceptional view over the
whole of the BMW Driving Academy site. In all, the upper floor
offers 100 square metres of space for visitors excluding the
terrace, or 220 square metres terrace included.
The hangar –
seminar building, paddock and workshop in one.
After checking in
at the Welcome Area, visitors can proceed to the adjacent hangar. One
of the original buildings from 1935, it is now protected as a
historic monument. The basic architectural structure of the original
building was therefore preserved and kept visible to visitors when
renovation work was carried out. However, attention was also paid to
providing the kind of modern, sophisticated appointments that reflect
the premium image of the BMW Group. The end result sees old and new
combining to create a special atmosphere. The building certainly does
not shy away from the site’s history, with holes in the hangar’s
steel girders remaining as scars from the aerial bombardment of the
airfield during the Second World War.
The side section of
the hangar houses seminar rooms, offices and a cafeteria. Catering
for participants is included as part of all the full-day BMW Driving
Experience training courses. The seminar rooms for the theory section
of the courses will be the first port of call for visitors after they
have checked in, and up to 50 people can be accommodated amid the
modern furnishings and light, friendly ambience. Once the theory
element of the course has been completed, the participants move on to
the vehicle handover area in the hangar’s large, two-section hall.
In one section they get behind the wheel of the spotless and
fully-fuelled cars they will be using for the course, before driving
out through a roller gate. This has the advantage of allowing them to
get in and out of the cars under shelter from any inclement weather.
This area can also be used to host events; it offers space for
400 people while mobile presentation facilities allow it to be
adapted to suit almost any occasion. The other section of the hall
behind the partition houses the entire workshop area and BMW Driving
Academy offices. Two lifting platforms are on hand in the workshop to
carry out smaller jobs, such as tyre and fluid changes. This set-up
allows the cars to be kept in optimum condition at all times during
the
BMW Driving Experience training courses.
Up to 10 courses
can be run concurrently at any one time – that represents an
increase of 30 per cent in this initial development phase alone.
Plus, the infrastructure of the building is designed to allow the
programme to be expanded at any time. Larger events can also be
catered for upon request; indeed, using the shelter and outside area
significantly increases the available capacity once again.
Driving safety in
harmony with nature.
The whole former Fürstenfeldbruck airfield
site has been classified as a nature conservation area. There have
been no military flying activities here since
September 2003,
leaving a rich and unique array of flora and fauna to put down roots.
The area represents the largest unbroken area of lime dry grassland
and lowland hay meadow habitats anywhere in Europe. And it goes
without saying that the BMW Group is committed to keeping it
intact. Before we set up the new centre at the site we obtained a
number of reports, including one on noise levels, to ensure that the
BMW Driving Academy would not adversely affect the development
of the plants and animals on the site. The BMW Group sticks
closely to the stipulations of the Bavarian environment ministry when
it comes to looking after the site and protecting the species living
on it. Indeed, in the area around the apron, 6,000 square metres
of unused space has already been returned to its natural state.
Reports are compiled to examine every construction proposal before
building begins and projects continue to be monitored once work is
under way to ensure the environment is looked after as effectively as
possible. If green areas are built on, “ecological compensation
areas” two-and-a-half to three times the size are created and
protected in the towns of Garching and Eching near Munich.
Added to which, the
BMW test centres in Aschheim (Bavaria) and Miramas in southern
France have found that nature thrives at their facilities and there
are no drawbacks for flora and fauna. Indeed, with the sites closed
to public use, nature is left to establish itself and flourish all
but undisturbed.
A site steeped in
history.
The location of the BMW Driving Academy can look
back on a turbulent history. In October 1935 building work began on
the open airfield for the “Luftkriegsschule 4” training
school, one of the German military’s key prestige projects at the
time. From 1936 pilots were trained here for the Luftwaffe, and in
1937 the German air force took over the site. In 1943 a concrete
take-off strip was laid down and initial testing began with the
Luftwaffe’s first jet aircraft, the ME-262, which was due to go
into service the following year. To prevent this from happening,
American bombers began a bombardment of the airfield on 9 April
1945 and destroyed the buildings and take-off strip almost without
trace. Today, the scars of the Allied attack remain etched into the
structure of surviving hangars. On 29 April 1945 the site was
occupied by the Americans, but was still used as an airfield by the
new German air force from 1957 to 1996. This period covered the
terrorist attacks of the 1972 Munich Olympics, a situation that came
to a tragic conclusion at the Fürstenfeldbruck airfield. The
airfield site served as a reserve airfield from 1996 to 2003, when it
was finally decommissioned for military use.
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