New Kitakyushu Airport
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New Kitakyushu Airport 新北九州空港 Shin Kitakyūshū Kūkō |
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IATA: KKJ - ICAO: RJFR | |||
Summary | |||
Airport type | Public | ||
Operator | Ministry of Transport (airfield) Kitakyushu Air Terminal Co. (terminal) | ||
Serves | Kitakyushu | ||
Elevation AMSL | 21 ft (6 m) | ||
Coordinates | |||
Runways | |||
Direction | Length | Surface | |
ft | m | ||
18/36 | 8,202 | 2,500 | Asphalt |
New Kitakyūshū Airport (新北九州空港 Shin Kitakyūshū Kūkō?) (IATA: KKJ, ICAO: RJFR), has been built three kilometres offshore in the Suo Nada area of the Seto Inland Sea on an artificial island (4th in Japan) in the south of Kitakyushu, Japan. It opened on March 16, 2006.
It is the fourth airport in Japan to operate round the clock, 24 hours a day, after New Chitose International Airport (Sapporo), Kansai International Airport (Osaka) and Chubu International Airport (Nagoya). Connections between the city of Kitakyushu and Tokyo have been greatly strengthened thanks to this airport, including business trips and sightseeing in both directions.
On June 4, 2006 a rugby game was played at Honjo stadium between Japan and Tonga as part of the inaugural IRB Pacific 5 Nations series. This game commemorated the opening of the airport.
On August 2, 2006 the one millionth user of the airport was presented with souvenirs. On January 5, 2007, 2 million passengers had used this airport.
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[edit] Introduction
The new airport is eagerly anticipated for the benefits it will bring in terms of increased prosperity, tourism and trade to the Kanmon area (Kitakyushu and Shimonoseki), Kanda and Yukuhashi. It is designated a second class airport by the Japanese government. Free bus tours were organised by Kitakyushu city to show the citizens the project under construction. Unlike Kobe Airport which opened exactly one month before, there is no controversy as to the need for this airport.
The opening date was March 16, 2006. A committee to promote the construction of the new airport was founded in 1978, with the governor of Fukuoka prefecture as chairman. Construction began in October 1994.
The first aircraft to land at the airport was a StarFlyer Airbus, on February 8, 2006. The first international flight from Shanghai landed on March 26, 2006. (Shanghai and Tokyo are roughly equidistant from Kitakyushu.)
A once-only marathon was held on February 5, 2006 with half-marathon, 10 kilometre and five kilometre courses to celebrate the opening of the new airport. [1]
Contests were held to decide on the airport's new logo and catchphrase. The winning logo uses the "kita" (北) character in "Kitakyushu", stretched out like wings. The winning catchphrase, "A new sky, a new me," refers to the concept of flying from a new airport and rediscovering oneself. [2]
[edit] Measurements
The runway is 2500 metres long by 60 metres wide (with a separate taxiway of 2500 by 30 metres), enough to accommodate Jumbo Jets and other large jet aircraft, but as the island is 4125 metres long and 900 metres wide (3.73 km²) it will be possible to extend it in future, and the bay is shallow (about 7 metres only) so a new runway could also be built relatively cheaply. The island has been built inexpensively from sludge dredged from the Kanmon Straits which silts up at the rate of 15 centimetres per annum. There have been some suggestions that the airport might be named the Kanmon airport also.
[edit] Reasons for building
The former Kitakyushu Airport had restrictions on aircraft operation due to its small size and location, close to mountains and residential areas, causing inconvenience. Similar problems are apparent at the nearby Fukuoka Airport, which is only open from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily.
The New Kitakyushu Airport is free from such problems and causes minimal noise nuisance because of its location, making possible the operation of large aircraft even through 24 hours (subject to approval of the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport). Operation in the very early morning and around midnight is being realised, as well as international flights.
[edit] Airlines
The following airlines are currently using the airport (subject to change):
[edit] Domestic
- Japan Airlines (Tokyo-Haneda)
- J-Air (Nagoya-Komaki)
- Japan Transocean Air (Okinawa)
- StarFlyer (Tokyo-Haneda)
[edit] International
- China Southern Airlines (Guangzhou via Shanghai-Pudong )
- Vladivostok Air (Vladivostok [seasonal])
[edit] Cargo
- Galaxy Airlines Company - cargo (wholly owned by Sagawa Kyubin) - night flying only, from October 2006. This company was founded in 2005. It will be based in Haneda Airport.
[edit] Access
Access is secured by a toll-free airport bridge of 2.1 km length connected to the Eastern Kyushu Expressway via Kanda-Kitakyushukuko IC. A direct rail link from Kokura station which is 15 kilometres away will probably be established eventually, dependent on sufficient demand, and parking lots on the man-made airport island will be expanded, providing flexibility for passengers.
On November 30, 2005 five bus routes to the airport from various points in Kitakyushu were announced.
[edit] Hotels
The Toyoko Inn hotel chain will open a hotel on the airport island (announced September 6, 2005).
[edit] Car parking
Car parking near the terminal is relatively cheap at 390 yen for 24 hours.
[edit] External links
- Shin Kitakyushu Kuko - official website in Japanese
- Kitakyushu air terminal - official website
- List of destinations from Kitakyushu
- Photographs of the airport, terminal, control tower and access routes under construction - from the official Japanese website
- Official brochure in English about the airport
- StarFlyer - home page in English with a faq
- World Aero Data airport information for RJFR