Auckland International Airport

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Auckland International Airport

Image:Auckland Int Airport aerial photo.jpg

IATA: AKL – ICAO: NZAA
Summary
Airport type Public
Owner AIAL
Operator Auckland International Airport Ltd
Serves Auckland
Location Auckland, New Zealand
Elevation AMSL 23 ft / 7 m
Coordinates 37°00′29″S 174°47′30″E / -37.00806, 174.79167
Website http://www.auckland-airport.co.nz/
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
05R/23L 11,926 3,635 Concrete
05L/23R 10,197 3,108 Asphalt
Image:NZ-AkldAirport.png
Location of the airport relative to Auckland urban area
Image:AKL airport.JPG
Typical scene at the international terminal at Auckland International Airport

Auckland International Airport (IATA: AKLICAO: NZAA) is the largest and busiest international airport in New Zealand with over 12 million (some 7 million international and 6 million domestic) passengers a year, expected to more than double by 2025.[1] The airport is in Mangere, a western suburb of Manukau City, and is 21 km south of Auckland City centre. It is the central hub for Air New Zealand.

Auckland Airport is one of New Zealand’s most important infrastructure assets, providing thousands of jobs for the region, and is the country’s second-largest cargo 'port' by value, contributing around $14 billion to the economy, and catering for over four million visitors each year, resulting in a 70% share of New Zealand's international travellers.[citation needed]

In terms of total passenger numbers it is the fourth largest airport in Australasia, after Kingsford Smith International Airport (Sydney), Melbourne Airport (Tullamarine) and Brisbane Airport (Eagle Farm). As has been noted by its CEO and the Prime Minister of New Zealand, it is the second largest airport in Australasia in terms of high-yield international passengers, being around 50% larger than Melbourne Airport.[2]

It has a capacity of about 45 flight movements per hour,[1] using a single runway. A close by taxiway was upgraded for use as a runway when the main runway requires maintenance or for use during emergencies.[3] It does not have sufficient separation distance to operate simultaneously with the runway.

In November 2007 work began on a new northern runway. Located north of and parallel to the existing runway the new runway will be developed in stages eventually to be 2150 metres long. Stage one of the northern runway is expected to be operational early in 2011 in time for the Rugby World Cup. It will be 1200 metres in length. Initially, this will limit the runway's use to small turbo prop aircraft. However, stage two will see the runway lengthened to 1650m which will enable domestic jet flights to use it. Stage three and the final stage, will lengthen the runway to 2150m which means medium sized international jet flights will be able to land there. Eventually a new domestic terminal will be built to the north to better utilize the new runway. This will free up the longer southern runway to handle more heavy jet operations.[4]



Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Overview

The site of the airport was first used as an airfield by the Auckland Aero Club. In 1928, the club leased some land from a dairy farmer to accommodate the club's three De Havilland Gypsy Moths. The club president noted at the time that the site "has many advantages of vital importance for an aerodrome and training ground. It has good approaches, is well drained and is free from power lines, buildings and fogs."

In 1960 work started to transform the site into Auckland's main airport, taking over from Whenuapai in the north-west of the city. Much of the runway is on land reclaimed from the Manukau Harbour. The first flight to leave was an Air New Zealand DC-8 in November 1965, bound for Sydney. The airport was officially opened the following year, with a 'grand air pageant' on Auckland Anniversary weekend, 29 January to 31 January, 1966.

A new international terminal, named after Jean Batten, was built in 1977. The most recent substantial upgrade was in 2005, separating arriving and departing passengers in response to the terrorism fears after 9-11, which caused concerns that passengers arriving from 'unsafe' airports (i.e. those considered to have insufficient screening procedures) could transfer bombs or weapons in the mixed zone, passing them to other passengers departing for, for example, the USA.

[edit] Expansion

The airport is preparing for the construction of a second main runway about one km north of the current area used by the airport. The project's initial NZ$32 million stage is to provide a 1.2 km strip for use by smaller regional-connection planes. To be finished in time for the 2011 Rugby World Cup, the new runway is expected to substantially increase the international-flight capacity of the airport, as smaller planes can be removed from the main runway. These require long safety distances from the air turbulence wakes of preceding jet airliners, causing associated additional delays.[1]

Eventually the second runway is to be extended into to 2.15 km, able to accommodate international flights to destinations like Australia or the Pacific Islands. This 10-year project would cost NZ$120 million, not including substantial extensions planned for the airport arrivals/departure buildings and associated structures.[1]

[edit] International Terminal

[edit] Departures

Image:Auckland airport international terminal.jpg
International Terminal at the Auckland International Airport

Check-in counters are at the eastern end of the international terminal building on the ground level. Unusually for most international airports, the counters are arranged in a straight line, rather than in islands.

After checking in, passengers proceed to the first floor via escalators and lifts to passport control and emigration. Premium class passengers flying on various airlines have expedited clearance facilities.[citation needed] There are no special clearance facilities for Australian and New Zealand passport holders (as in Arrivals).

After clearing passport control and the central security checkpoint, passengers walk through a duty-free mall before going up a short escalator to the new upper level, which was completed in December 2005 to satisfy CAA requirements that arriving and departing passengers be separated.

[edit] Arrivals

Most large planes disembark directly by airbridge onto the first floor at the international terminal. Airstairs may be used during peak periods. International passengers walk past duty-free shops before descending via escalators, stairs or lift to passport control on the ground floor.

An express clearance facility for New Zealand and Australian passport holders is available on level 1, with eligible passengers clearing immigration control there before proceeding by direct escalator to the baggage hall on the ground floor, although this express facility is seldom open. This express clearance facility was the result of an ill-conceived measure to promote duty-free sales by allowing expedited clearance for New Zealand and Australian passport holders who purchased duty-free goods on arrival. However, New Zealand and Australian passport holders traditionally enjoyed short queues at immigration, and after negative reviews in newspapers such as The New Zealand Herald and peak-time passenger flow resulting in long queues at the main facility, the duty-free purchase requirement was removed in 2004.[citation needed]

Five flat-bed baggage belts are provided in the arrivals hall. Reclaim belt 5 is longer than the others as it was intended that 747-400 flights use this, due to their larger capacity for both passengers and baggage. 747-400 aircraft rarely use this reclaim because it is generally used by airlines which contract ground handling to Menzies, and only Singapore Airlines, Air New Zealand and QANTAS operates the 747-400 into Auckland.

The latest project is to move arrivals to the west of the existing facilities, so they can be used to clear passengers from the intended Pier B, with a central processing area for both piers. This will require passengers arriving at Pier A (the current terminal) to walk to the west, clearing immigration, before retracing their steps to collect their baggage. Auckland Airport has indicated that it will be installing travelators along this new passageway.

In early November 2007, Auckland Airport announced it would be fast-tracking a new project to extend the first floor of the current terminal building over the departures forecourt, and to open that the new arrivals hall (currently on the ground floor) in time for the 2011 Rugby World Cup. Arriving passengers will access carparks by sloping travelators, escalators and lifts. It is unclear how departures, currently on the first floor with check-in on the ground floor, and the location of the baggage carousels and biosecurity screening, currently on the ground floor, will be affected by the move of arrivals to level one. Air New Zealand has criticised the expansion as being "unnecessary" and an abuse of the airport's monopoly position.[citation needed]

[edit] Passenger separation

Prior to 2006 Auckland Airport arriving and departing passengers were allowed to mingle airside. After the terrorist attacks of September 11, the airport operated with a CAA exemption that allowed this to continue, although flights to the US and all Qantas-operated flights (and for a short while Cathay Pacific flights) were restricted to leaving from gates where a secondary X-ray and metal detector inspection had been set up. This exemption expired in 2006.[citation needed]

Auckland Airport decided that rather than building a new sub-top level to stream arriving passengers (as at Beijing, Vancouver or Heathrow), they needed to build a new departures floor for passengers to "drop down" into the existing gate lounges on the first floor, which would be closed off from a central arrivals corridor by glass. However, this design has been criticised by many frequent flyers on online bulletin boards such as Flyertalk, as the new design forces passengers to wind their way through a series of passages adding a few minutes to what was previously a straight-line two-minute walk. New piers and the planned walkway from the existing international terminal to the new planned Pier B, will be split-level in line with standard international airport practice.

The new level introduces an airside Burger King and large windows on one side, which overlook the western end of the airport runway. The other side has only has one large viewing window area because of the shop space.

There are drop-down points for gates 1/3, 2/4, 5/7, 6/8 and 9/10. Each drop-down point has with a down escalator, a lift and a staircase. Remote bus gates 4A/B/C/D are accessed by a down escalator from gate 2/4.

Passengers departing on US and London bound flights have a secondary passport check by an Aviation Security Service officer stationed at the top of the drop-down point prior to descending to their lounge.

[edit] Biosecurity

New Zealand has tough quarantine laws and all arriving passengers are subject to screening. During non-peak hours, passengers with no baggage can expect to get from plane to exit within 10 minutes; for passengers with baggage about 15-20 minutes. Screening involves detection dogs and x-ray machine screening. A NZ$200 fine applies for risky items not being declared, while a fine of up to NZ$100,000 and ten years in prison are possible for the importation of certain specifically risky goods.[5]. This process also applies at other international airports in New Zealand which is carried out by MAF. During peak hours, depending on the backlog at passport control and at MAF Screening, clearance can take up to an hour.

[edit] Domestic Terminal

The domestic terminal buildings are undergoing a significant renovation programme. The project will see the Air New Zealand and Qantas domestic concourses, previously separate buildings, linked by a common retail area. Pacific Blue will have two new check-in counters in between Qantas and Air New Zealand.[citation needed]

Qantas domestic services operate from gates 20 and 21 (airbridge service); Pacific Blue from gates 22 and 24 (mobile stairs) and Air New Zealand jet services from gates 29-33 (airbridge service). Air New Zealand regional services operated by propeller aircraft depart from the regional section of the domestic terminal, at the eastern end.[citation needed]

[edit] Holding company

Auckland International Airport Limited (AIAL) was formed in 1988, when the New Zealand Government corporatised the airport. It had previously been run by the Auckland Regional Authority, covering the five councils in the Auckland region.

The Government was AIAL’s majority shareholder, the rest being held by the local councils. In 1998 the Government sold its shareholding, and AIAL became the fifth airport company in the world to be publicly listed.

AIAL appears on the New Zealand Stock Exchange (NZX: AIA) and Australian Stock Exchange (ASX: AIA). International shareholders hold around 40% of the shares, domestic approximately 60%.[citation needed] The company has a Standard & Poor's credit rating of A+/Stable/A-1.

AIAL enjoys diverse revenue streams, and operates a 'dual-till' approach, whereby its finances are split into aeronautical and non-aeronautical balance sheets. Aeronautical income is derived from airfield charges, terminal services charge and the airport development charge (or departure fee). Non-aeronautical revenue comes from its significant property portfolio, car park, and retail income. Income from the non-aeronautical side of the business accounts for just over half of its revenue. The airport has been criticised by airlines, led by Air New Zealand, for its purportedly high landing charges.

This diversity in revenue has been of benefit in the recent downturn in international aviation following the events of September 11 2001, and subsequently the Bali bombing, SARS and the Iraq war. The airport has been able to rely on steady income from the non-aeronautical side of the business, which has softened the blow of international events. On top of this, New Zealand has retained favour among the world’s travellers as a safe destination.

It has reportedly been singled out by airline lobby group IATA for its consistent excessive levels of profits. Airlines such as Air New Zealand, complain of excessive landing charges, currently in the process of being increased again [6]. On June 5, 2007, the airport's 60% profit margin was criticised by IATA director general and CEO Giovanni Bisignani. He said the airport had a "happy monopoly" and that IATA would ask the New Zealand government to investigate [7].

AIAL charges all departing passengers (12 years old or older) a $25 departure fee. This is viewed negatively by passengers and the airlines as in most other airports around the world it is included in the airfare ticket. Queues at the Bank of New Zealand airport branches to pay this tax and to obtain exemption stickers for passengers who are not required to pay it are frequently long and frustrating for all involved.

[edit] Current directors

  • Wayne Boyd
  • Anthony N Frankham
  • Dr Keith Turner
  • Michael Smith
  • Joan Withers

[edit] Airlines And Destinations

[edit] International airlines

[edit] Domestic airlines

[edit] Fatal accidents

There have been three fatal aircraft accidents on or near the airport

  • On 4 July 1966 an Air New Zealand Douglas DC-8 on a training flight crashed on the runway shortly after taking off, killing two of the five crew (no passengers were onboard).
  • On 31 July 1989 a Mainfreight Convair 340/580 crashed shortly after taking off at night. The three crewmembers were killed.

The Mount Erebus disaster was a notable accident that involved an aircraft from Auckland. On 28 November 1979 an Air New Zealand sightseeing flight from Auckland to Antarctica, crashed into Mount Erebus, killing all on board.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d Mathew Dearnaley. "Stage one begins for second runway", The New Zealand Herald, 2007-10-05, pp. A7. 
  2. ^ Prime Minister’s Statement to Parliament (from the New Zealand Parliament website. Retrieved Tuesday 2006-02-14.)
  3. ^ Summary (from the 'Masterplan: 2005-2025' document of Auckland International airport. Retrieved 2007-10-08.)
  4. ^ http://www.auckland-airport.co.nz/NewsHistory/press_releases.php?rid=222&pid=1
  5. ^ If You Break The Law (from the MAF Biosecurity New Zealand website. Retrieved 2007-10-08)
  6. ^ Remarks by Giovanni Bisignani - Global Press Briefing, Geneva: Auckland is an example (from an IATA press release, 2006-12-01. Retrieved 2007-11-11.)
  7. ^ Auckland Airport labelled greedy - TV New Zealand, One News, 2007-06-06. Retrieved 2007-11-11.

[edit] External links

Image:Flag of New Zealand.svg Airports of New Zealand Image:Civil Air Ensign of New Zealand.svg
Auckland | Christchurch | Dunedin | Hamilton | Invercargill | Milford Sound | Palmerston North | Rotorua | Queenstown | Wellington
de:Flughafen Auckland

es:Aeropuerto Internacional de Auckland fr:Aéroport international d'Auckland id:Bandar Udara Internasional Auckland ja:オークランド国際空港 (ニュージーランド) pl:Port lotniczy Auckland sv:Auckland International Airport vi:Sân bay quốc tế Auckland zh:奧克蘭國際機場

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