(Redirected from Chubu Centrair International Airport)

CENTRAIR logo.PNG
is an airport on an
artificial island in
Ise Bay,
Tokoname City in
Aichi Prefecture, south of
Nagoya in central
Japan.
Centrair is classified as a
first class airport and is the main international gateway for the
Chūbu ("central") region of Japan. The name is an abbreviation of 'Central Japan International Airport', an alternate translation used in the English name of the airport's operating company, .
Some 12,351,136 people used the airport in the first year (2005), ranking 8th busiest in the nation. Passenger numbers should increase as the regional economy has been outpacing the nation for quite some time, and figures are for a partial year. 273,874 tons of cargo was moved in 2005.
Future
Apron expansion began in 7 locations in 2006, scheduled to be done in 2010. A second 4000 meter runway is planned, with an extra 3 km
2 of area, 300 meters from the existing runway, scheduled to be funded in 2008, costing 2 trillion yen. (about $17 billion).
History
Chūbu is Japan's third off-shore airport, after
Nagasaki Airport and
Kansai International Airport, and second airport on a
manmade island. There are currently 5 offshore airports in Japan, including
Kobe Airport and
New Kitakyushu Airport.
With much lobbying by local business groups such as
Toyota, especially for 24 hour cargo flights, 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 after learning from
Kansai International Airport. The artificial island itself was shaped like the 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.
When it opened on
February 17,
2005, it took over almost all of the existing Nagoya Airport (now
Nagoya Airfield)'s commercial flights, and relieved Tokyo and Kansai areas for cargo shipments. As a replacement for Nagoya Airport, it also inherited its
IATA airport code 'NGO'. The airport's opening anticipated the
Expo 2005 in
Aichi Prefecture. It will have some competition for passengers and cargo when
Shizuoka Airport, currently under construction, opens.
Main terminal

Gate at Centrair
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.
Airlines and Destinations
The following airlines serve Chūbu Centrair International Airport as of December 2006:
Passenger airlines (International)
★
Air China (Beijing, Chongqing, Shanghai-Pudong)
★
All Nippon Airways (Seoul-Incheon, Shanghai-Pudong)
★
★
Air Nippon (Guangzhou, Taipei-Taiwan Taoyuan, Tianjin)
★
Asiana Airlines (Seoul-Incheon)
★
Cathay Pacific (Hong Kong, Taipei-Taiwan Taoyuan)
★
China Airlines (Kaohsiung, Taipei-Taiwan Taoyuan)
★
China Eastern Airlines (Beijing, Qingdao, Shanghai-Pudong, Xi'an)
★
China Southern Airlines (Changchun, Dalian, Guangzhou)
★
Continental Airlines
★
★
Continental Micronesia (Guam, Honolulu, Saipan)
★
Emirates (Dubai)
★
EVA Air (Taipei-Taiwan Taoyuan)
★
Finnair (Helsinki)
★
Japan Airlines (Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi, Beijing, Busan, Guangzhou, Palau, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Seoul-Incheon, Shanghai-Pudong, Tianjin)
★
★
JALways (Guam, Honolulu)
★
★
Japan Asia Airways (Taipei-Taiwan Taoyuan)
★
Korean Air (Busan, Jeju, Seoul-Incheon)
★
Lufthansa (Frankfurt)
★
Malaysia Airlines (Kuala Lumpur)
★
Northwest Airlines (Detroit, Guam, Manila, Saipan)
★
Philippine Airlines (Manila)
★
Qantas
★
★
Jetstar Airways (Cairns)
★
Singapore Airlines (Singapore)
★
Thai Airways International (Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi)
★
Vietnam Airlines (Ho Chi Minh City)
★
United Airlines (San Francisco)
Passenger airlines (Domestic)
★
ANA Group
★ (Akita, Ashikawa, Fukuoka, Fukushima, Hakodate, Ishigaki, Kagoshima, Kumamoto, Matsuyama, Memanbetsu, Miyazaki, Nagasaki, Naha, Niigata, Oita, Sapporo-Chitose, Sendai, Tokushima, Tokyo-Narita, Wakkanai [seasonal], Yonago)
★
Japan Airlines (Aomori, Fukuoka, Hanamaki, Nagasaki, Naha, Kagoshima, Kumamoto, Kushiro, Sapporo, Sendai, Tokyo-Narita)
★ 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
★
AirBridge Cargo
★
El Al Cargo [begins Spring, 2008/Pending Government Approval]
★
Lufthansa Cargo
★
Air Hong Kong
★
Evergreen International
★
China Airlines Cargo
★
Japan Airlines (JALCARGO)
★
All Nippon Airways (ANA Cargo)
★
China Cargo Airlines
★
Korean Air Cargo
★
Asiana Cargo
★
Boeing (Evergreen International)
Access
Train

Meitetsu's "Rapid Limited Express" trains
Centrair is located on the
Meitetsu Tokoname Line operated by
Nagoya Railroad (Meitetsu). The fastest "Rapid Limited Express" service connects the airport to
Meitetsu Nagoya Station in 28 minutes. Meitetsu Nagoya is adjacent to
Japan Railway Nagoya Station, allowing transfers to
Shinkansen high-speed trains bound for
Kyoto 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. 40 min., ¥2,200
★ Toba: 2 hr. 20 min., ¥2,520
★ Fukui: 3 hr., ¥3,300
★ Hamamatsu: 1 hr. 55 min., ¥3,000
★ Numazu: 4 hr., ¥5,000
★ Matsumoto: 3 hr. 40 min., ¥3,500
★ Nagano: 4 hr. 45 min., ¥4,000
Ferry
Three high-speed ferry services link Centrair to the west side of Ise Bay. One ferry connects to the passenger terminal in
Tsu, a 40-minute trip costing ¥1,890. Another ferry links
Toba to
Tokoname, opposite the airport island, taking 1 hour 40 minutes and costing ¥1,700. The third ferry links
Yokkaichi to the airport, a 30-minute trip costing ¥1,690.

Entrance to Centrair's 4th Floor Sky Town
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.
Shopping
Centrair features the '4th Floor Sky Town' shopping center, accessible to the general public, with 61 shops and restaurants. organized into two "streets,"
Renga-dori and
Chochin-yokocho. The Chochin-yokocho shops are individually themed to have an authentic Japanese look.
There is a
Duty Free area in the international departure area on the 3rd floor as well.
External links
★
Chubu Centrair International Airport in Wikitravel
★
Centrair home page (English)
★
Centrair home page (Japanese)
★