CHUBU CENTRAIR INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT
Chubu Centrair International Airport also known as Central Japan
International Airport is the international airport servicing
Nagoya and the surrounding area.
Chubu Centrair International Airport (Japanese: 中部国際空港 Chūbu Kokusai
Kūkō), also known as Central Japan International Airport (CENTRAIR,
Japanese: セントレア), is an airport on an artificial island in Ise Bay,
Tokoname City in Aichi Prefecture, south of
Nagoya, Japan. It is named after
the surrounding Chubu region. It opened on 17
February 2005. As a replacement for
Nagoya Airport, it inherited its IATA airport code NGO. Its ICAO
airport code is RJGG. Central Japan International Airport Co.,Ltd.
operates the airport. The Japanese government classifies Chubu as a
first class airport.
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Chubu
is Japan's third off-shore airport, after Nagasaki Airport and
Kansai International Airport in
Osaka. When it opened on February of 2005, it
took over all of the existing Nagoya
Airport's commercial flights. The airport was opened in time for
the Expo 2005 in Aichi Prefecture.
Picture: Chubu Centrair International Airport from the air. Picture by
Wiki0001
Chubu Centrair International Airport - Main Terminal
The
main terminal is shaped like a "T," with three piers radiating from a
central ticketing area. This design keeps check-in to aircraft
distances below 300 meters. Originally, designers planned to make the
main terminal resemble an origami crane from above, but this plan was
abandoned due to cost.
Arrivals are processed on the second floor, and departures on the
third: the lower level is for maintenance, catering, and other ground
operations, as well as for passenger buses to hardstands in the middle
of the apron.
Chubu Centrair International Airport - Transport Access
Train
Centrair International Airport is located on the Meitetsu Tokoname Line operated by the
Nagoya Railroad. The fastest "Rapid Limited Express" service connects
the airport to Meitetsu Nagoya Station in 28 minutes. Meitetsu Nagoya
is adjacent to JR Nagoya Station, allowing transfers to
Shinkansen
high-speed trains bound for Tokyo,
Kyoto, Osaka (Shin
Osaka), Yokohama and Shizuoka, as well as JR, Meitetsu, and Kintetsu local trains, and the Nagoya Subway.
Bus
Scheduled bus service is available to a number of locations throughout
central Japan, including:
Central Nagoya: 60 min., ¥1,000
Toyota: 1 hr. 10 min., ¥1,700
Toyohashi: 1 hr. 55 min., ¥2,200
Toba: 2 hr. 10 min., ¥2,300
Hamamatsu: 2 hr., ¥3,000
Nagano: 4 hr. 5 min., ¥4,000
Ferry
Two high-speed ferry services link Centrair to the west side of Ise
Bay. One ferry operates between Tsu to the passenger terminal, a
40-minute trip costing ¥1,890. The other ferry links Toba to Tokoname,
opposite the airport island, taking 1 hour 40 minutes and costing
¥1,500.
Car
A toll road links Centrair and the mainland; the toll from central
Nagoya is ¥1,800. Taxi fare to central Nagoya
is approximately ¥12,000.
Airlines serving or planning to serve Chubu
Passenger airlines (International)
Air Canada (Vancouver)
Air China (Beijing,Chongqing via Shanghai)
Air New Zealand (Auckland)
All Nippon Airways (Seoul)
American Airlines (Chicago O'Hare)
Asiana Airlines (Seoul)
Cathay Pacific (Hong Kong, Taipei)
China Airlines (Taipei)
China Eastern Airlines (Xi'an via Shanghai)
China Southern Airlines (Dalian)
Continental Micronesia (Guam, Honolulu)
Garuda Indonesia (Denpasar)
JALways (Guam, Honolulu)
Japan Airlines (Bangkok, Beijing, Busan, Guam, Guangzhou, Manila,
Paris,Seoul, Shanghai, Tianjin, Narita(Tokyo;Connection to
International Lines)
Japan Asia Airways (Taipei)
Jetstar (Sydney via Cairns)
Korean Air (Busan, Jeju, Seoul)
Lufthansa (Frankfurt)
Malaysian Airlines (Kuala Lumpur)
Northwest Airlines (Detroit, Manila, Saipan)
Philippine Airlines (Manila)
Singapore Airlines (Singapore)
Thai Airways International (Bangkok)
United Airlines (Chicago O'Hare via San Francisco, Taipei)
Chubu Centrair International Airport - Passenger airlines (Domestic)
ANA
Group* (Sapporo Chitose, Memanbetsu, Asahikawa, Hakodate, Wakkanai
[summer only], Akita, Fukushima, Sendai, Tokyo Narita, Niigata,
Tottori, Yonago, Tokushima, Matsuyama, Fukuoka, Nagasaki, Kumamoto,
Miyazaki, Oita, Kagoshima, Naha, Ishigaki)
Japan Airlines (Sapporo Chitose, Kushiro, Aomori, Hanamaki, Sendai,
Tokyo Narita, Fukuoka, Nagasaki, Kumamoto, Kagoshima, Naha)
*ANA Group includes All Nippon Airways, Air Japan, Air Nippon, Air
Nippon Network and Air Central. All flights are coded ANA.
Cargo airlines
FedEx
Nippon Cargo Airlines
Chubu Centrair International Airport - Construction
The
construction started August 2000, with a budget of 768 billion yen
(€5.5 billion, $7.3 billion), but through efficient management nearly
100 billion yen was saved [1].
In addition to cost cutting measures, a number of environmental
protection measures had been taken. The artificial island itself was
shaped like rounded letter "D" so that sea currents inside the bay
will flow freely. Its shores were partially constructed with natural
rocks and sloped to aid sea lifeforms to set up colonies. During the
construction a species of little tern occasionally came, so a part of
it was selected and set aside to aid nesting.
(Article based on
Wikipedia article and used under the
GNU Free Documentation License)
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