The Project
Athens International Airport
Eleftherios Venizelos

Athens International Airport Eleftherios Venizelos (Greek: Διεθνής Αερολιμένας Αθηνών «Ελευθέριος Βενιζέλος»; IATA: ATH, ICAO: LGAV) is the principal international gateway for Greece, located at Spata, 25 kilometers east of Athens in the Attica region. By the early 1990s, the existing Hellenikon airport — a single-runway facility on the Athens coastline — was chronically overcrowded, handling up to 8,000 passengers per hour in summer months through a terminal designed for a fraction of that number. A new airport had been under consideration since the 1950s and repeatedly postponed through successive governments. The challenge was not technical but financial and political: how to deliver a major greenfield airport without burdening the Greek state budget, at a time when Greece was simultaneously absorbing the demands of EU convergence and preparing to host the 2004 Olympic Games.
Project Description
In 1991 the Greek government launched an international competitive tender for a Build-Own-Operate-Transfer partner to develop, finance, and operate a new international airport at Spata. After an extended bidding and renegotiation process — the incoming Papandreou government reopened the competition in 1993, and the Hochtief-led consortium was reconfirmed on 23 December 1994 — the contract was ratified by the Greek Parliament on 31 August 1995 and the concession commenced in June 1996. Athens International Airport S.A. was established as a public-private partnership with a 30-year concession. The Hellenic Republic held a 55% stake and the Hochtief-led private consortium held the remaining 45%. Construction began in July 1996 with a 56-month programme. The airport opened on 28 March 2001, five months ahead of the original schedule.
At a total project cost of DM 4.125 billion — the construction contract alone valued at DM 3.259 billion — Eleftherios Venizelos was at the time of its financial closing the world's first privately financed BOOT airport project, the largest infrastructure project in the modern history of Greece, and the largest cross-border airport financing ever executed within the European Union. It was named Continental European Deal of the Year 1995 by Privatisation International. The airport was designed for an initial capacity of 16 million passengers per year across two independent parallel runways, with phased expandability to 50 million. By 2018 it was handling over 24 million passengers annually and ranked as the 26th-busiest airport in Europe.
Financial Advisory
Project Finance
The financing was a project finance deal on the basis of Build-Own-Operate-Transfer (BOOT), which means that the securities for the loans were not based on the credit-worthiness of the owners, but on the future cashflow of the project. In the framework of a public-private partnership with the Greek State (45% private/55% public ownership), the airport will be operated over the period of 30 years (including construction time) in the legal form of a private company.
Within the Hochtief consortium, ABB led an internal sub-consortium covering ABB Calor Emag Schaltanlagen AG for electrical engineering works and H. Krantz-TKT GmbH for mechanical engineering works. Peter Hellmonds was the sole finance professional responsible for both entities, negotiating the project finance package and the Hermes export credit guarantee coverage on behalf of ABB and Krantz-TKT. The Hermes guarantee covered ABB's and Krantz-TKT's equipment supply — the German exported content of the project — while Hochtief's civil works, executed predominantly by Greek contractors, lay outside Hermes scope.
| Assignment | Negotiation of the finance package within the framework of a 30-year BOOT project finance |
| Client | ABB (Asea Brown Boveri) within a consortium with Hochtief, Krantz-TKT, and Fraport |
| Total project value | DM 4,118 million (approx. EUR 2,050 million) |
| Client part of project value | DM 890 million (approx. EUR 445 million) — ABB, includes Krantz-TKT part |
| ECA coverage | Hermes (German federal export credit guarantee) |
| Financial closing | 11 June 1996 |
After engagement on this project, the total time to financial closing of the BOOT project finance deal was approximately 18 months. At the time of financial closing in 1996, the Athens Airport financing ranked among the largest project finance transactions in Europe, exceeded in scale only by the Channel Tunnel.
Key Characteristics
| Project | Athens International Airport Eleftherios Venizelos — greenfield BOOT airport |
| Location | Spata, Attica, Greece — 25 km east of Athens city center |
| IATA / ICAO | ATH / LGAV |
| Structure | Build-Own-Operate-Transfer (BOOT) / 30-year concession |
| Ownership | 55% Hellenic Republic — 45% private consortium |
| Private shareholders | Hochtief AG 36.125% — ABB Calor Emag Schaltanlagen AG 5% — H. Krantz-TKT GmbH 3.75% — Flughafen Athen-Spata Projektgesellschaft mbH 0.125% |
| Total project cost | DM 4.125 billion |
| Construction contract | DM 3.259 billion |
| Construction period | 56 months (July 1996 – March 2001) |
| Initial capacity | 16 million passengers per year |
| Runway system | 2 independent parallel runways: 4,000 m and 3,800 m |
| Site area | 1,244 hectares |
| Commencement date | June 1996 |
| Opening | 28 March 2001 |
| Recognition | Continental European Deal of the Year 1995 (Privatisation International); world's first privately financed BOOT airport; first major cross-border airport financing in the EU |
Financing Package
The total financing package of DM 4.125 billion was structured as a public-private partnership combining European institutional lending, EU grant funding, Greek government contributions, and private consortium equity. The European Investment Bank provided senior debt covering 50% of total project value — the largest single funding component — supported by a sovereign guarantee from the Hellenic Republic. A consortium of nine commercial banks provided additional debt covered by Hermes export credit insurance, reflecting the German export content of the ABB and Krantz-TKT equipment contracts. EU Cohesion Fund grants and Greek government grants together contributed a further significant tranche, alongside an Airport Development Fund financed through passenger departure fees collected at the existing Hellenikon airport during the construction period.
| Financing component | DM million |
|---|---|
| Consortium equity and subordinated debt | 330 |
| — of which equity | 247 |
| — of which subordinated debt | 83 |
| European Investment Bank (EIB) senior loan | 1,950 |
| EU Cohesion Fund grants | 456 |
| Greek Government grants | 273 |
| Airport Development Fund | 499 |
| Commercial bank loan (9 banks, Hermes-covered) | 610 |
| Total | 4,118 |
Note: The DM 4,118 million financing package total reflects the funded components as structured at closing. The total project cost figure of DM 4,125 million cited in primary sources includes additional development costs outside the financed package.
