Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

New Chitose Airport

 
Wikipedia: New Chitose Airport
New Chitose Airport
Sapporo/New Chitose Airport
新千歳空港
Shin-Chitose Kūkō
New Chitose Airport Terminal.jpg
IATA: CTSICAO: RJCC
Summary
Airport type Public
Operator Ministry of Transport (airfield)
Hokkaidō Airport Terminal Co., Ltd. (terminal)
Serves Sapporo metropolitan area
Location Chitose and Tomakomai
Elevation AMSL 70 ft / 21 m
Coordinates 42°46′31″N 141°41′33″E / 42.77528°N 141.6925°E / 42.77528; 141.6925 (New Chitose Airport)Coordinates: 42°46′31″N 141°41′33″E / 42.77528°N 141.6925°E / 42.77528; 141.6925 (New Chitose Airport)
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
01R/19L 9,843 3,000 Asphalt/Concrete
01L/19R 9,843 3,000 Asphalt/Concrete
Statistics (2007)
International Passengers 833,902
Domestic Passengers 17,249,023
Total Passengers 18,082,925
Source: Japanese AIP at AIS Japan[1]

New Chitose Airport (新千歳空港 Shin-Chitose Kūkō?) (IATA: CTSICAO: RJCC), is an airport located 2.7 NM (5.0 km; 3.1 mi) south southeast of Chitose[1] and Tomakomai, Hokkaidō, Japan, serving the Sapporo metropolitan area. By land area, it is the largest airport in Hokkaidō. In FY 2006, it served 18,536,350 passengers, third in Japan to only Narita and Haneda.

The airport has a single semicircular terminal building (similar to the terminals at DFW Airport), which handles domestic and international flights.

Contents

History

New Chitose opened in 1991 to replace Chitose Airport (now a JASDF base). Its IATA airport code was originally SPK, but that code was later adopted as a city code to refer to both Chitose and the smaller Okadama Airport in central Sapporo.

New Chitose became Japan's first 24-hour airport in 1994. During the 1990s, it was touted as an international gateway and had regular flights to Europe and Oceania. Today, its services to Europe have ceased, while its international services are mainly transporting tourists from East Asia and Australia for sightseeing and skiing.

On July 24, 1999, All Nippon Airways Flight 61, which was flying from Tokyo International Airport to Chitose, was hijacked shortly after takeoff. The hijacker killed the pilot before he was subdued. The Boeing 747 landed safely.

Airlines and destinations

Domestic

Airlines Destinations
Air Do Niigata, Sendai, Tokyo-Haneda, Fukushima, Komatsu, Toyama
All Nippon Airways Fukuoka, Kobe, Nagoya-Centrair, Osaka-Itami, Osaka-Kansai, Rishiri, Sendai, Tokyo-Haneda, Tokyo-Narita, Wakkanai
Japan Airlines Akita, Aomori, Fukuoka, Iwate-Hanamaki, Hiroshima, Kobe, Memanbetsu, Nagoya-Centrair, Osaka-Itami, Osaka-Kansai, Sendai, Tokyo-Haneda, Tokyo-Narita, Yamagata
Japan Airlines operated by Hokkaidō Air System Kushiro
Japan Airlines operated by Japan Air Commuter Shinshu-Matsumoto
Skymark Airlines Asahikawa, Tokyo-Haneda

International

Airlines Destinations
Air China Beijing-Capital
Cathay Pacific Hong Kong
China Airlines Taipei-Taoyuan
China Eastern Airlines Shanghai-Pudong
China Southern Airlines Dalian
Continental Airlines operated by Continental Micronesia Guam
EVA Air Taipei-Taoyuan
Hong Kong Express Airways Hong Kong
Korean Air Busan, Seoul-Incheon
Sakhalin Airlines Khabarovsk, Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk
Viva Macau Macau [sesaonal]
Airport diagram. Civil flights use the parallel runways to the southeast; JASDF flights use the parallel runways to the northwest.
Terminal building

Ground transportation

Rail

New Chitose Airport Station is located on a spur off the Chitose Line of Hokkaido Railway Company (JR Hokkaido). Rapid service trains operate to and from Sapporo Station, taking 36–39 minutes and costing ¥1,040.

Bus

  • Hokkaidō Chūō Bus/Hokuto Kotsu joint service (Sapporo 4 trips/hr., Oyachi 4 trips/hr.)
  • Hokkaidō Chūō Bus (Asabu 1–2 trips/hr., Miyanosawa 1–2 trips/hr.)
  • Hokuto Kotsu (Apa Hotel & Resort 2 trips/hr., Maruyama Park hourly)
  • Donan Bus (Tomakomai 1–2 trips/hr., Noboribetsu 3 trips/day, Muroran 12 trips/day, Hobetsu 2 trips/day, Urakawa 2 trips/day)
  • Atsuma Bus (Atsuma 3 trips/day)

References

External links


Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "New Chitose Airport" Read more