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Revision as of 05:36, 3 March 2010

Shanghai Pudong International Airport

上海浦东国际机场

Shànghǎi Pǔdōng Guójì Jīchǎng
File:PudongAirportLogo.png
Logo of Shanghai Airport Authority
Summary
Airport typePublic
OperatorShanghai Airport Authority
ServesShanghai
LocationPudong District
Hub for
Elevation AMSL13 ft / 4 m
Coordinates31°08′36″N 121°48′19″E / 31.14333°N 121.80528°E / 31.14333; 121.80528
Website www.shairport.com
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
16/34 3,800 12,467 Concrete
17L/35R 4,000 13,123 Concrete
17R/35L 3,400 11,154 Concrete
Source: DAFIF[1][2]
Shanghai Pudong International Airport
Traditional Chinese
Simplified Chinese
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinShànghǎi Pǔdōng Guójì Jīchǎng
Yue: Cantonese
Jyutping???

Shanghai Pudong International Airport (IATA: PVG, ICAO: ZSPD) (SSE: 600009) (simplified Chinese: 上海浦东国际机场; traditional Chinese: 上海浦東國際機場; pinyin: Shànghǎi Pǔdōng Guójì Jīchǎng) is a major aviation hub in Asia, particularly in the East Asian region, and is the primary international airport serving Shanghai of the People's Republic of China. Located about 30 kilometres from the city centre, it occupies a 40 kilometre square site adjacent to the coastline in the eastern edge of Pudong district within the boundaries of the Shanghai Municipality.

The airport is the main hub for China Eastern Airlines and Shanghai Airlines, and a major international hub for Air China. Pudong airport is organised around two main passenger terminals, flanked on both sides by three parallel runways. Current airport masterplans call for the building of a third passenger terminal, a satellite terminal and two additional runways by 2015, raising its capacity from the current 60 million passengers annually to 80 million, along with the ability to handle six million tonnes of air freight.[3] A station for the Shanghai Maglev Train is sited between the passenger teminals, providing the world's first commercial high-speed maglev service to downtown Pudong in 7 minutes and 20 seconds. The airport is open 24 hours, one of only a few Chinese airports to be so.

Shanghai Pudong International Airport is a major hub for cargo traffic in the world. With 2,602,916 metric tonnes handled in 2008, the airport is the 3rd busiest airport in the world in terms of freight traffic. A total of 28.24 million passengers passed through the airport in 2008, making the airport the 3rd busiest in mainland China. However, it handles more international passengers than Beijing Capital International Airport,[4] currently the busiest Chinese airport in terms of total passengers handled, with 17,518,790 international passengers handled in 2007, a 9.0% increase over the previous year.

History

Early development

Terminal 1 (Interior)

Prior to the establishment of Pudong International Airport, Hongqiao International Airport was the primary airport of Shanghai. During the 1990s, the expansion of Hongqiao was impossible as the urban area surrounding Hongqiao was developing significantly. As a result, the government had to seek an alternative for Hongqiao International Airport to take all of its international flights. A suitable site was at the coast of the Pudong development zone to the east of Shanghai. The airport was significantly funded by a 40-billion-yen (~450 million USD) Official Development Assistance (ODA) from Japan.[5]

The airport opened on October 1, 1999, replacing Shanghai Hongqiao International Airport as Shanghai's international airport and taking over all of its international flights, including regional flights to Hong Kong and Macau. The first phase of the airport began in October 1997 and took two years to build at a cost of RMB 12 billion (1.67 billion USD). It covers an area of 40 kilometers squared and is around 30 km from downtown Shanghai. The first phase of the airport has one 4E category runway (4000 m x 60 m) along with two parallel taxiways, an 800,000 m2 apron, seventy-six aircraft positions and 50,000 m2 cargo warehouse.

The second and third runways were opened on March 17, 2005 and March 26, 2008 respectively, and a fourth runway is in planning stage. The second terminal was opened on March 26, 2008 and the third terminal is currently at planning stage. The master plan calls for a total of three terminals, two satellite halls, and five parallel runways, ultimately for a capacity of 100 million passengers per year.

Limited international services resumed at Hongqiao Airport in October 2007 with flights to Tokyo International Airport (Haneda) and in November 2007, flights to Gimpo International Airport in Seoul. This is believed to be a major effort to provide convenience to business travelers, a practice already in place between Haneda and Gimpo for years. Hongqiao, Haneda and Gimpo are much closer to their respective metro centers than their newer but remote international gateways Pudong, Narita and Incheon.

Expansion

Terminal 2 (Interior)

In 2004, the airport handled nearly 500 flights per day, carrying more than 21 million passengers per year in and out of China's most populated city. Shanghai Pudong International Airport is ranked sixth-busiest in terms of cargo traffic, and 28th in terms of in international passenger traffic. It is also ranked 40th in Passenger traffic, carrying 26,790,826 passengers in and out of the airport. It is the eighth-busiest airport in Asia in passenger traffic.

Shanghai Pudong International Airport had recently experienced massive increases, thus never falling below a 10% growth rate of cargo. From 2002–2003, it had seen near double growth of cargo traffic; 87.3% in that period. From 2002–2006, it has risen from 26th place to 6th place in cargo traffic, with cargo traffic tripling since 2002. In 2006, it had a growth rate of 16.8% while Narita (Tokyo) experienced a -0.5% decrease and Incheon with an 8.7% increase. It may surpass Narita International Airport within a few years and Incheon International Airport to become fourth place in cargo and later Hong Kong International Airport, which is the busiest cargo hub in Asia and second-largest in the world. Complementing that, UPS and DHL will be adding hubs in the next few years and therefore, Pudong will become the first airport to have two international cargo express hubs.

Pudong sees many aircraft movements during rush hour times, resulting in most planes having to park on the apron. To alleviate this, construction of phase two (including a 2nd terminal, a third runway and a cargo terminal) started during December 2005 and was fully complete in time for the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics; Shanghai Airport Authority played a major role with improvement of facilities.. The architects of Terminal 2 chose to use many world-renowned interior finishes such as Bentley Prince Street and Brinton carpets for this new terminal.

Terminal 2, located behind Terminal 1, opened on March 26, 2008 (same day as the official opening of Terminal 3 at Beijing Capital International Airport), adding an additional capacity of 40 million passengers a year. Once phase two is fully complete, it will give Pudong a capacity of 60 million passengers and 4.2 million tonnes of cargo annually[6]. A transportation center will be added to connect passengers between Terminal 1 and 2 in the future.

Shanghai Airlines moved to Terminal 2 upon its opening on March 26, 2008 with 14 other airlines, including Air India, Northwest Airlines, Qatar Airways, Alitalia, British Airways, Qantas Airways, Virgin Atlantic Airways, Philippine Airlines, Malaysia Airlines, Transaero Airlines, Cebu Pacific, Aerosvit Airlines, Garuda Indonesia and Royal Nepal Airlines. Fellow Star Alliance partners Air Canada, Air China, Air New Zealand, ANA, Asiana Airlines, Lufthansa, Singapore Airlines, Thai Airways and United Airlines have moved on April 29, 2008[7] along with other airlines, involving 33 airlines in all now operating at Terminal 2[6].

The next ambitious expansion, includes the addition of the fourth and fifth runways, a Satellite concourse, larger than the size of both of the current terminals combined, and additional cargo terminals will expand the size of Pudong International Airport. Land reclamation will be included for the fifth runway and some of the cargo terminals. Because of this, a large amount of money will be needed in the future to cope with the demand. This next ambition will be completed by 2015 and will become one of the world-class airports in the world. It will become one of the world's largest airports by land size.

Recently, China Southern Airlines stated that Shanghai Pudong International Airport will be home to its five Airbus A380s, however there is no statement if China Southern Airlines will have a hub in Shanghai Pudong International Airport.

Incidents

Infrastructure

Terminal 1 (Interior) September 2004

The airport had 28 boarding bridges along with 127 parking positions and with a tarmac of 1.49 million square meters prior to the opening of Terminal 2. It also has two runways; the 4000-meter runway on category 4E and the 3800-meter runway with a category 4F rating, able to handle the Airbus A380. It is also predicted that the third runway will be on a 4F rating.

Terminal 1 was opened on October 1, 1999 along with a 4000m runway and including a cargo hub. It was built to handle the demand for traffic and to relieve Shanghai Hongqiao International Airport's traffic. Terminal 1 is shaped like Kansai International Airport's terminal, but it is shorter and with 28 gates, 13 of which are double decker gates. The exterior of the terminal is shaped like waves. The capacity of Terminal 1 is 20 million passengers. It currently has 204 check-in counters, thirteen luggage conveying belts and covering an area of 280,000 square meters. Terminal 1 has received some controversy about the lack of shopping stalls, the pricing of the shops, confusing locations of restrooms, the escalators and passenger difficulty of moving through the terminal.

Terminal 2, opened at the 26th of March 2008, along with the 3rd runway, gives a capacity of 60 million passengers and 4.2 million tonnes of cargo annually. Terminal 2 is shaped like the 1st terminal but it has more of a seagull shaping, rather than a wave shape and is slightly larger than Terminal 1. Terminal 2 will be used for Air China, Shanghai Airlines and other Star Alliance members but it is known that some SkyTeam and Oneworld members will relocate their operations to the terminal.

Terminals, airlines and destinations

AirlinesDestinationsTerminal
Aeroflot Moscow-Sheremetyevo2
Aeroméxico Mexico City [resumes 27 March], Tijuana [resumes 27 March][14]2
Air Canada Toronto-Pearson, Vancouver2
Air China Bangalore, Beijing-Capital, Chengdu, Chongqing, Frankfurt, Fukuoka, Guiyang, Melbourne, Milan-Malpensa, Nagoya-Centrair, Osaka-Kansai, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Sendai, Shenzhen, Sydney, Taipei-Taoyuan, Tokyo-Narita, Wenzhou, Xi'an2
Air France Paris-Charles de Gaulle1
Air India Delhi, Mumbai2
Air Macau Macau2
Air New Zealand Auckland2
All Nippon Airways Nagoya-Centrair, Osaka-Kansai, Tokyo-Narita2
American Airlines Chicago-O'Hare2
Asiana Airlines Busan, Daegu, Seoul-Incheon2
British Airways London-Heathrow2
Cathay Pacific Hong Kong2
Cebu Pacific Manila2
China Airlines Kaohsiung, Taipei-Taoyuan1
China Eastern Airlines Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi, Beijing-Capital, Busan, Cebu, Changchun, Chengdu, Cheongju, Chongqing, Daegu, Dalian, Delhi, Denpasar/Bali, Frankfurt, Fukuoka, Fukushima, Fuzhou, Guangzhou, Guilin, Haikou, Harbin, Hiroshima, Hong Kong, Jeju, Kagoshima, Komatsu, Kota Kinabalu, Kuala Lumpur, Kunming, London-Heathrow [resumes March 29], Los Angeles, Matsuyama, Melbourne, Moscow-Sheremetyevo [begins 28 March], Nagasaki, Nagoya-Centrair, Naha, New York-JFK, Niigata, Ningbo, Okayama, Osaka-Kansai, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Qingdao, Sanya, Sapporo-Chitose, Seoul-Incheon, Shenyang, Shenzhen, Singapore, Sydney, Taipei-Taoyuan, Tokyo-Narita, Vancouver, Wenzhou, Wuhan, Wuyishan, Xi'an, Zhangjiajie, Zhuhai1
China Southern Airlines Changchun, Dalian, Dandong, Guangzhou, Haikou, Harbin, Kunming, Mudanjiang, Nagoya-Centrair, Qiqihar, Sanya, Seoul-Incheon, Shenyang, Shenzhen, Taipei-Taoyuan, Wuhan, Xi'an, Zhangjiajie, Zhuhai2
Continental Airlines Newark2
Delta Air Lines Detroit, Tokyo-Narita2
Dragonair Hong Kong2
Emirates Dubai2
EVA Air Kaohsiung, Taipei-Taoyuan2
Finnair Helsinki2
Garuda Indonesia Denpasar/Bali, Jakarta-Soekarno-Hatta2
Grand China Express Dongying, Weifang1
Hainan Airlines Brussels [begins 28 May], Haikou, Xi'an1
Hong Kong Express Airways Hong Kong2
Japan Airlines Nagoya-Centrair, Osaka-Kansai, Tokyo-Narita1
Japan Airlines operated by JAL Express Osaka-Kansai1
Juneyao Airlines Beihai, Changchun, Dalian, Fuzhou, Guilin, Harbin, Qingdao, Shenyang, Wenzhou, Xiamen1
KLM Amsterdam1
Korean Air Busan, Seoul-Incheon1
Lufthansa Frankfurt, Munich2
Malaysia Airlines Kuala Lumpur2
Philippine Airlines Manila2
Qantas Sydney2
Qatar Airways Doha2
Royal Brunei Airlines Bandar Seri Begawan [resumes 28 March][15]TBD
Shandong Airlines Qingdao2
Shanghai Airlines Busan, Cebu, Changchun, Changsha, Chengdu, Chongqing, Dalian, Denpasar/Bali, Guilin, Haikou, Hanoi, Harbin, Ho Chi Minh City, Hong Kong, Huangshan, Jinzhou, Macau, Osaka-Kansai, Phnom Penh, Qinhuangdao, Qingdao, Saipan [seasonal], Sanya, Seoul-Incheon, Shenyang, Taipei-Songshan, Toyama, Weihai, Wuhan, Xi'an, Xiangfan, Yantai, Zhangjiajie2
Shenzhen Airlines Shenzhen1
Sichuan Airlines Chengdu, Chongqing1
Singapore Airlines Singapore2
Spring Airlines Changchun, Chongqing, Dalian, Fuzhou, Guilin, Haikou, Harbin, Lanzhou, Qingdao, Sanya, Shenyang, Wuhan, Zhangjiajie1
Swiss International Air Lines Zürich2
Thai Airways International Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi2
Transasia Airways Taichung, Taipei-Songshan, Taipei-Taoyuan1
Turkish Airlines Istanbul-Atatürk2
United Airlines Chicago-O'Hare, San Francisco2
Vietnam Airlines Hanoi [begins 29 March][16], Ho Chi Minh City [begins 30 March]2
Virgin Atlantic Airways London-Heathrow2
Cities with international airlink to Shanghai Pudong International Airport

Cargo airlines

AirlinesDestinations
Aeroflot-Cargo Novosibirsk
Air China Cargo Beijing-Capital, Los Angeles, Milan-Malpensa, Manchester, Portland (OR), Vienna
Air France Paris-Charles de Gaulle
Air Hong Kong Hong Kong
AirBridgeCargo Airlines Krasnoyarsk
ANA & JP Express
Atlas Air Chicago-O'Hare, Frankfurt, Honolulu, Melbourne, New York-JFK, Sydney
Cargolux Luxembourg
China Cargo Airlines
El Al Cargo Tel Aviv
Emirates SkyCargo Dubai
FedEx Express Anchorage, Beijing-Capital, Guangzhou
Great Wall Airlines Amsterdam, Manchester
JAL Cargo Tokyo-Narita
MASkargo Amsterdam, Basel/Mulhouse, Kuala Lumpur, Penang, Tashkent
Nippon Cargo Airlines Osaka-Kansai, Tokyo-Narita
Polar Air Cargo Osaka-Kansai
SAS Cargo Group Beijing-Capital, Copenhagen
Shanghai Airlines Cargo
Singapore Airlines Cargo Los Angeles, Singapore
TNT Airways Liège, Singapore
UPS Airlines Louisville
Volga-Dnepr Abakan
Yangtze River Express

Ground transportation

Transrapid constructed the first commercial high-speed maglev railway in the world, from the Pudong International Airport to Longyang Road Metro station. It was inaugurated in 2002. It has a peak speed of 431 km/h and a track length of 30 km. A transportation center will be built in Phase 3, and will become operational in 2015. The extension of the Shanghai Metro Line 2 to Pudong International Airport has started construction. When Line 2 is completed, it will link Pudong International Airport with Shanghai Hongqiao Airport by subway, to be completed by 2010, in time for the 2010 World Expo.

See also

Template:Companies portal

References

  1. ^ Template:WAD
  2. ^ Airport information for PVG at Great Circle Mapper. Source: DAFIF (effective October 2006).
  3. ^ Shanghai Airport reports profit growth, despite big investments in massive new facilities at Pudong - China Airlines, Airports and Aviation News
  4. ^ Shanghai's Pudong Airport Has Most Passengers from Abroad - china.org.cn
  5. ^ "Overview of Official Development Assistance (ODA) to China". Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan.
  6. ^ a b TheMoodieReport.com | Shanghai Pudong International Airport begins new era with opening of Terminal Two – 26/03/08
  7. ^ e-Travel Blackboard: Star Alliance carriers move to new terminals at Beijing and Shanghai - Pudong Airports
  8. ^ Photos: Boeing 747-4R7F/SCD Aircraft Pictures | Airliners.net
  9. ^ [1]
  10. ^ [2]
  11. ^ [3]
  12. ^ [4]
  13. ^ Report: Three dead in cargo plane crash in Shanghai | CNN.com
  14. ^ http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2010/jan/12/china-lifting-ban-flights-mexico/
  15. ^ Royal Brunei Airlines Flying To Shanghai
  16. ^ http://www.vietnamairlines.com/wps/wcm/connect/en/site/news/moduongbaysha_en