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O. R. Tambo International Airport

O. R. Tambo International Airport (IATA: JNB, ICAO: FAOR) is an international airport serving the twin cities of Johannesburg and the main capital of South Africa, Pretoria. It is situated in Kempton Park, Gauteng. It serves as the primary airport for domestic and international travel for South Africa and since 2020, it is Africa's second busiest airport, with a capacity to handle up to 28 million passengers annually.[3] The airport serves as the hub for South African Airways. The airport handled over 21 million passengers in 2017.

O. R. Tambo International Airport

O.R. Tambo Internasionale Lughawe
O.R. Tambo International Airport in Gauteng, South Africa
Summary
Airport typePublic
Owner/OperatorAirports Company South Africa
ServesJohannesburg
Pretoria
LocationKempton Park, Gauteng, South Africa
Opened1952; 71 years ago (1952)
Hub for
Time zoneSAST (UTC+02:00)
Elevation AMSL5,558 ft / 1,694 m
Coordinates26°08′00″S 028°15′00″E / 26.13333°S 28.25000°E / -26.13333; 28.25000Coordinates: 26°08′00″S 028°15′00″E / 26.13333°S 28.25000°E / -26.13333; 28.25000
Websiteairports.co.za
Map
JNB
Location in the Johannesburg area
JNB
JNB (South Africa)
JNB
JNB (Africa)
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
03L/21R 14,495 4,421 Asphalt
03R/21L 11,155 3,405 Asphalt
Statistics (April-March 2022)
Passengers9,633,154
Aircraft movements139,105
Economic impact$3.2 billion[1]
Social impact128.2 thousand[1]
Source: Passenger Statistics[2]

It was originally known as Jan Smuts International Airport,[4] after the former South African Prime Minister of the same name. The airport was renamed Johannesburg International Airport in 1994 when the newly elected African National Congress (ANC) government implemented a policy of not naming airports after politicians. This policy was later reversed, and on 27 October 2006 the airport was renamed after anti-apartheid politician Oliver Reginald Tambo (1917–1993).[5]

History

The airport was founded in 1952 as Jan Smuts International Airport, two years after Smuts's death, near the town of Kempton Park on the East Rand. It replaced Palmietfontein International Airport, which had handled European flights since 1945.

In 1943, a decision was made by the Cabinet of the Union of South Africa to construct three international airports with a Civil Airports Advisory Committee formed to investigate and report on the viability.[6]: 224  That report was submitted to the Cabinet in March 1944 with one main international airport on the Witwatersrand and two smaller international airports at Cape Town and Durban.[6]: 224  The South African Railways and Harbours Administration was given the role of managing the project and later in 1944, a member went to the United States to study standards and methods of construction.[6]: 224–5  Four possible sites around Johannesburg were identified, with one south of Johannesburg chosen but soon discarded due to being situated on land with gold bearing reefs below.[6]: 225  Sites were then narrowed down to Kempton Park and the existing airport at Palmietfontein.[6]: 225 

Layouts and rough costing for the two sites were established and submitted for a ministerial decision.[6]: 226  The site would be at Kempton Park and be named Jan Smuts Airport.[6]: 226  The area outside Kempton Park was an expropriated undulating dairy farm of 3,706 acres with a 598 acre eucalyptus plantation.[6]: 227  Sitting on a plateau, the area sloped away towards the east.[6]: 227  The area was drained by the Blesbok River.[6]: 227  The airport became operational on 1 September 1953.[7] The new airport was officially opened by Minister for Transport, Paul Sauer on 4 October 1953 having taken eight years to build at £6.2 million.[7][8] It had one main runway of 3,200m and two smaller ones of 2,514m that crossed the main with all runways being 60m wide.[7][8] A 1,000 men had been employed in the repair workshops.[7] The technical areas consisted of 2,957m of roads, 26,477sqm of concrete apron while the hangars had openings of 106m at a height of 21m.[7] It was expecting to manage thirty flights-a-day and over 200,000 passengers that year.[8] Airlines using the airport at its opening were BOAC, Air France, KLM, SAA, Central African Airways, Qantas, El Al, SAS Group and DETA.[7]

In the late 1950s, jet passenger aircraft became the norm and there was a need to expand the existing ground facilities at the airport, which began in the 1960s and early-1970s. In addition to the new airside facilities, ground developments included: improved road access, parking areas, hotel, retail areas and car hire.[9]: 50 

The late-1960s saw a new choice of aircraft for South African Airways, the Boeing 747.[10]: 339  A decision was made by the Minister of Transport to obtain three, later five 747s for the airline.[10]: 339  Delivery would begin in October 1971 with the first flight to London on 10 December 1971 with daily services from February 1972.[10]: 339  These purchases however required new hangar facilities with the contract awarded in September 1969 initially worth R2,983,408.[10]: 339  Construction started in December 1968 and was completed in October 1971 for R8,000,000 while other work at the airport associated with the arrival of these new aircraft brought the costs to R40,000,000.[10]: 341  Other new buildings such as workshops, testing facilities, stores, staff accommodation and air cargo handling building were built. The new hangar would allow for two 747s in each bay with dimensions of 73.2 m wide, 24.4 m high and a depth of 91.4 m.[10]: 341 

It was used as a test airport for Concorde during the 1970s, to determine how the aircraft would perform while taking off and landing at high elevations ('hot and high' testing).[11] During the 1980s, many countries stopped trading with South Africa because of the United Nation sanctions imposed against South Africa in the struggle against apartheid, and many international airlines stopped flying to the airport. These sanctions also resulted in South African Airways being refused rights to fly over most African countries, and in addition, the risk of flying over some African countries was emphasised by the shooting down of two passenger aircraft over Rhodesia (e.g. Air Rhodesia Flight 825 and 827),[12] forcing them to fly around the "bulge" of Africa. This required specially-modified aircraft like the long-range Boeing 747SP. A second runway was built at the airport in the late-1980s.[9]: 50 

In December 1993, a R120,000,000 upgrade at the airport was completed.[13]: 14  The main part of the projects was an 880 m, 3000 t steel airside corridor consisting of two levels high of 6 m wide with thirteen passenger bridges.[13]: 14  The upper levels are connected the departure lounges through security screening points. Lower levels are for arrivals for entry into the immigration and custom areas.[13]: 14  A future provision for extensions to this airside corridor was included in the design.[13]: 14  A new airside bus terminal was also added for bussing in passengers to aircraft not able dock next to the terminal. Other parts of the project included upgrading the terminal facilities for the passengers.[13]: 14 

Following the ending of apartheid, the airport's name, and that of other international airports in South Africa, were changed and these restrictions were lifted. With the creation of the Airports Company of South Africa (ACSA) in the mid-nineties, a plan to commercialise the airport began with new passenger and retail and airside facilities to handle a larger number of aircraft completing this phase in 2004.[9]: 50 

The airport overtook Cairo International Airport in 1996 as the busiest airport in Africa[14] and is the fourth-busiest airport in the Africa–Middle East region after Dubai International Airport, Hamad International Airport, and Abu Dhabi International Airport. In fiscal year 2010, the airport handled 8.82 million departing passengers.[15]

In late 2005, a name change was proposed for the airport to "O. R. Tambo International", after former ANC President and anti-apartheid activist Oliver Reginald Tambo, an apparent change to the precedent of neutrally-named airports. The name change was formally announced in the Government Gazette of South Africa on 30 June 2006, allowing a 30-day window for the public to register objections. The name change was implemented on 27 October 2006 with the unveiling of new signs at the airport. Critics noted the considerable expense involved in renaming the airport, and the decision to use a politician as the name would be obscure, confusing and in some instances, offensive. Corne Mulder of the Freedom Front Plus has stamped the renaming "nothing less than political opportunism and attempts by the ANC government to dodge the true socio-economic issues of the country".[16] Unnecessary confusion can be caused, for O. R. Tambo is also a district municipality in the Eastern Cape, seated in Mthatha. The town of Mthatha has an international airport known as Mthatha Airport, formerly named the K. D. Matanzima Airport after former Transkei President Kaiser Matanzima.

On 26 November 2006, the airport became the first in Africa to host the Airbus A380.[17] The aircraft landed in Johannesburg on its way to Sydney via the South Pole on a test flight.

There was no provision for rapid train access until 2010, when the Gautrain project allowed train passengers to reach the airport from the Johannesburg CBD, Sandton and Pretoria.[9]: 50 

Airport information

 
A now removed O.R Tambo bust at the aircraft viewing deck above the CTB.

O. R. Tambo International Airport is a hot and high airport. Situated 1,700 metres (5,500 feet) above mean sea level, the air is thin.[18] This is the reason for the long runways.

On 10 January 2013 the airport's ICAO code was changed from FAJS to FAOR.[19]

South African Airways Museum

The South African Airways Museum once was located at the airport. This room full of South African Airways memorabilia was started by two fans of the airline as a temporary location until they could set it up in one of Jan Smuts International's buildings in 1987. The museum has since relocated to Rand Airport (FAGM).

Aircraft viewing decks

The airport has two viewing decks. One is located above the Central Terminal Building, and the other in an administrative section of the airport above the international check-in counters. There are regular displays of Oliver Reginald Tambo, the airport's namesake in the viewing decks.

Infrastructure

 
Inside the O. R. Tambo International Airport.
 
OR Tambo terminal buildings
 
Check-in booths in the International Terminal.

Runways

O. R. Tambo International Airport has two runways (one pair of parallel runways) adjacent to the airport's terminal buildings. There used to be a third runway, 09/27, but was closed due to the danger it posed. It is now taxiway Juliet. Another decommissioned runway includes runway 14/32, crossing runway 03L/21R and 03R/21L, which has since converted into taxiway Echo.

Number Length Width ILS Notes
03L/21R 4,421 metres (14,505 ft)[20] 60 metres (197 ft)[21] PALS CAT II[21] Fully laden aircraft require a far greater length of runway to achieve take-off velocity at this altitude. It is the 33rd longest runway in the world.
03R/21L 3,405 metres (11,171 ft)[22] 60 metres (197 ft)[22] PALS CAT II[22]

The runways are equipped with approach lighting systems. Sequenced flashers are not used at any South African runways and therefore not installed. Touchdown zone (TDZ) lighting is available, but never turned on. Runway Threshold, Edge and Centerline lights are the only lighting available. During busy periods, outbound flights use the western runway (03L/21R) for take-off, while inbound flights use the eastern runway (03R/21L) for landing. Wind factors may cause numerous variations, but on most days flights will take off to the north and land from the south.

Taxiways and aprons

O. R. Tambo International Airport has a network of asphalt taxiways connecting runways, aprons and maintenance facilities.[23] All of these taxiways are 30.5 metres wide, except for taxiway Echo and Juliet which is 60 metres wide, as it was formerly runway 14/32 and 09/27, respectively. The airport also has nine aprons. Cargo aircraft park at aprons Golf and Whiskey. Many airlines have their aircraft wait long hours between arriving and departing flights. Such aircraft and other cargo aircraft are parked at aprons Delta and Foxtrot to free up jetbridges. Aprons Alpha, Charlie and Echo have jetbridges that connect them to their respective gates. The Bravo apron is not connected to the terminal building, and thus aircraft that land there must use an airport bus service.

Developments

ACSA reported that major new developments took place at the airport, in preparation for the 2010 FIFA World Cup. The development includes expansion of the international terminal, with the new international pier (opened in 2009), which includes gates for the Airbus A380 and increased capacity at the same time. A new Central Terminal building, designed by Osmond Lange Architects and Planners, was completed on 1 April 2009.[citation needed] An additional multi-storey parkade was built in January 2010, at a cost of R470 million opposite the Central Terminal Building,[citation needed] plus Terminal A was also upgraded and the associated roadways realigned to accommodate more International Departures space.

The Central Terminal Building (CTB) (cost: R2 billion) boosted passenger capacity at the landside of the terminal in 3 levels, and allows direct access from international and domestic terminals. Additional luggage carousels were added on 12 March 2010 to accommodate the Airbus A380.[citation needed] Arrivals are accommodated on Level 1, with departures expanded on Level 3; Level 2 accommodates further retail and commercial activities. The Gautrain Rapid Rail Link station is above the terminal.

The new International Pier (cost: R535 million) has increased international arrivals and departures capacity in a two-storey structure with nine additional airside contact stands, four of which are Airbus A380 compatible.[citation needed] Air bridges are already in place and the existing duty-free mall will be extended into this area. Additional lounges and passenger-holding areas will be constructed on the upper level.

A second terminal between the two runways has been cancelled. It would have contained its own domestic and international check-in facilities, contact stands, shops and lounges and was projected to cost R8 billion.[citation needed]

Terminals

There are six terminals at the airport, but these can be broken down into three major areas: the international terminals; the domestic terminals; and the transit terminals. The transit terminal housed disused parts of the old domestic terminals. It has been mostly demolished to build a new Central Terminal that will provide an indoor link between domestic and international terminals, as well as a central passenger check-in area and more gates. It was constructed for the 2010 FIFA World Cup. Terminals A1 and A2 handle international passengers while the other two terminals handle domestic passengers. Due to the airport's design, departure and arrivals terminals are considered separate terminals. The Central Terminal that is under construction will be named Terminal A3 and it will be used for both international and domestic passengers. The two terminals, Terminal A and Terminal B have been restructured. Several airlines now use Terminal B for all check-ins (top floor, adjacent to the arrivals atrium), for both national and international flights. The airlines that use Terminal B include Air Cote D'Ivoire, RwandAir, South African Airways, Airlink, Lift-Airline, FlySafair, KLM, Air France, Ethiopian Airlines, Qantas and Air Mauritius.[24]

Terminals A and B boast over 140 retail stores. The Duty-Free stores are based airside in Terminal A and many of them stock products exclusively available at the airport.

The ample parking available at O. R. Tambo International Airport was revamped as part of the upgrades made prior to the 2010 World Cup with the introduction of state-of-the-art technology that allows visitors to identify available parking spaces easily.

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

AirlinesDestinationsRefs
Air Austral Saint-Denis de la Réunion [25]
Air Belgium Brussels [26][27]
Air Botswana Francistown, Gaborone, Kasane, Maun [28]
Air China Beijing–Capital,[29][30] Shenzhen [31]
Air Côte d'Ivoire Abidjan, Kinshasa–N'djili [32]
Air France Paris–Charles de Gaulle [33][34]
Air Madagascar Antananarivo [35]
Air Mauritius Mauritius [36]
Air Peace Abuja, Lagos [37][38]
Air Seychelles Mahé, Malé [39]
Air Zimbabwe Bulawayo, Harare [40]
Airlink Antananarivo, Beira, Bloemfontein, Bulawayo, Cape Town, Dar es Salaam, Durban, East London, Entebbe, Gaborone, George, Harare, Hoedspruit, Kasane, Kimberley, Livingstone, Luanda, Lubumbashi, Lusaka, Manzini, Maputo, Maseru, Maun, Mbombela, Mthatha, Nairobi–Jomo Kenyatta, Nampula, Ndola, Nosy Be, Pemba, Phalaborwa, Pietermaritzburg, Polokwane, Port Elizabeth, Richards Bay, Saint HelenaA, Sishen, Skukuza, Tete, Upington, Victoria Falls, Vilanculos, Walvis Bay, Windhoek–Hosea Kutako
Charter: Ascension IslandB
[41][42][43][44][45]
ASKY Airlines Brazzaville, Douala, Kinshasa–N'djili, Lagos, Libreville, Lomé [46]
British Airways London–Heathrow
Cathay Pacific Hong Kong (resumes 1 August 2023)[47] [48]
CemAir Bloemfontein, Cape Town, Durban, George, Hoedspruit, Kimberley, Luanda, Lusaka, Maputo, Margate, Maun,[49] Plettenberg Bay, Port Elizabeth, Sishen [50][51][52]
Condor Seasonal: Frankfurt [53]
Congo Airways Kinshasa–N'djiliE, Lubumbashi [54][55]
Delta Air Lines AtlantaM [56]
EgyptAir Cairo [57][58]
El Al Tel Aviv [59]
Emirates Dubai–International [60]
Eswatini Air Manzini [61]
Ethiopian Airlines Addis Ababa [62]
Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi [63]
Fastjet Zimbabwe Bulawayo, Harare, Victoria Falls [64]
FlySafair Bloemfontein, Cape Town, Durban, East London, George, Mauritius, Port Elizabeth, Zanzibar [65][66]
Global Aviation Charter: Zanzibar [67]
Kenya Airways Nairobi–Jomo Kenyatta [68][69]
KLM Amsterdam [70][34]
LAM Mozambique Airlines Beira, Maputo, NampulaF, PembaG, Vilanculos [71][72]
LATAM Brasil São Paulo–Guarulhos (resumes 3 August 2023) [73]
LIFT Cape Town, Durban [74][75][76]
Lufthansa Frankfurt [77]
Malawi Airlines Blantyre, LilongweH [78]
Proflight Zambia Ndola [79]
Qantas Sydney
Seasonal: Perth[80]
[81]
Qatar Airways DohaI [82]
Royal Zambian Airlines Lusaka [83]
RwandAir KigaliJ, Lusaka [84]
Singapore Airlines SingaporeL [85][86][87]
South African Airways Accra, Blantyre,[88] Cape Town, Nairobi–Jomo Kenyatta[89]Durban, Harare, Kinshasa–N'djili, Lagos, Lilongwe,[88] Lusaka, Maputo, Mauritius, Port Elizabeth,[90] Victoria Falls,[90] Windhoek–Hosea Kutako[91][92][93][94][95]
Swiss International Air Lines Zürich [96]
TAAG Angola Airlines Luanda [97]
Turkish Airlines Istanbul [98]
Uganda Airlines Entebbe [99]
United Airlines Newark [100][101]
Virgin Atlantic London–Heathrow [102]
Zambia Airways Livingstone, Lusaka [103]
Notes
  • ^A : This flight operates via Walvis Bay. However, this carrier does not have rights to transport passengers solely between Walvis Bay and Saint Helena.
  • ^B : This flight operates via Saint Helena.
  • ^C : This flight operates via Douala or Libreville.
  • ^D : This flight operates via Douala and Lagos.
  • ^E : This flight operates via Lubumbashi.
  • ^F : This flight operates via Beira.
  • ^G : Some flights operate via Maputo.
  • ^H : This flight operates via Blantyre.
  • ^I : Two flights originate from Durban and Gaborone respectively. However, this carrier does not have rights to transport passengers solely between Johannesburg and Durban/Gaborone.
  • ^J : This flight operates via Lusaka.
  • ^K : Two flights originate from Maputo and Durban respectively. However, this carrier does not have rights to transport passengers solely between Johannesburg and Maputo/Durban.
  • ^L : This flight operates between Singapore and Cape Town with a stopover at Johannesburg. However, this carrier does not have rights to transport passengers solely between Johannesburg and Cape Town.
  • ^M : One of two of these flights from Atlanta continues on to Cape Town. However, this carrier does not have rights to transport passengers solely between Johannesburg and Cape Town.

Cargo

AirlinesDestinationsRefs
Astral Aviation Lusaka, Nairobi–Jomo Kenyatta[104]
ASL Airlines Belgium Nairobi–Jomo Kenyatta[105]
BidAir Cargo Cape Town, Dar es Salaam, Durban, East London, George, Harare, Kigali, Livingstone, Mauritius, Nairobi–Jomo Kenyatta, Port Elizabeth, Victoria Falls, Windhoek–Hosea Kutako[106]
Cargolux Luxembourg[107]
EgyptAir Cargo Cairo[108]
Emirates SkyCargo Dubai–Al Maktoum[109]
Ethiopian Airlines Cargo Addis Ababa[110]
Etihad Cargo Nairobi–Jomo Kenyatta[111]
FedEx Express Dubai-International, Nairobi–Jomo Kenyatta[112]
Lufthansa Cargo Frankfurt, Lagos, Nairobi–Jomo Kenyatta[113]
Magma Aviation Nairobi–Jomo Kenyatta[114]
Martinair Amsterdam, Harare, Nairobi–Jomo Kenyatta[115]
Qatar Airways Cargo Doha[116]
Saudia Cargo Jeddah[117]
Singapore Airlines Cargo Nairobi–Jomo Kenyatta, Singapore[118]
Turkish Cargo Istanbul[119]
Uganda Air Cargo Entebbe[120]

Traffic and statistics

O. R. Tambo International Airport recorded 21.2 million passengers in 2017–2018, up from 20.7 million passengers the year before. Of those passengers, 9.2 million were international and 11 million domestic, with the remainder being classified as "regional" or "unscheduled". 220,644 aircraft traffic movements were recorded; the majority being domestic services. O. R. Tambo International Airport is the busiest airport in South Africa.

Passenger traffic

Annual (civil years) passenger traffic for O.R. Tambo. See Wikidata query.
Passenger traffic per fiscal year for O. R. Tambo International Airport (April-March)[121]
Year International Regional Domestic Unscheduled Total
Passenger movements % Change Passenger movements % Change Passenger movements % Change Passenger movements % Change Passenger movements % Change
2006–07 6,958,277 no data 651,642 no data 10,094,758 no data 89,423 no data 17,794,100 no data
2007–08 7,645,647  9.9% 714,717  9.7% 11,009,841  9.1% 87,293  2.4% 19,457,498  9.3%
2008–09 7,480,461  2.2% 730,387  2.2% 9,582,332  13.0% 91,679  5.0% 17,884,859  8.1%
2009–10 7,489,211  0.1% 762,033  4.3% 9,270,478  3.3% 74,481  18.8% 17,596,203  1.6%
2010–11 7,965,594  6.4% 794,477  4.3% 9,732,250  5.0% 150,824  102.5% 18,643,145  5.9%
2011–12 8,088,013  1.5% 846,067  6.5% 9,985,246  2.6% 84,216  44.2% 19,003,542  1.9%
2012–13 8,276,845  2.3% 826,676  2.3% 9,437,069  5.5% 80,669  4.2% 18,621,259  2.0%
2013-14 8,570,384  3.6% 894,670  8.2% 9,257,225  1.9% 98,709  22.3% 18,820,988  1.0%
2014-15 8 614 192  0.5% 914 644  2.2% 9 510 809  2.7% 95 448  3.4 19 135 093  1.7%
2015-16 8 791 210  2.1% 905 729  1.0% 10 586 823  11.3% 91 236  4.6% 20 374 998  6.5%
2016- 17 8 974 372  2.0% 931 594  2.8% 10 703 205  1.1% 83 609  8.3% 20 692 780  1.5%
2017- 18 9 237 487  2.9% 897 409  3.7% 11 018 062  2.9% 78 552  6.0% 21 231 510  2.6%
2018-19 9 156 517  0.8% 891 726  0.6% 11 193 511  1.6% 72 189  8.4% 21 313 943  0.4%
2019-20 8 773 298  4.2% 843 909  5.5% 11 213 778  0.2% 72 581  0.5% 20 903 566  1.9%
2020-21 635 873  172% 59 102  173% 3 264 655  109% 104 109  35.7% 4 063 739  134%
2021-22 2 533 745  119% 289 970  132% 6 738 796  69.4% 70 643  38.3% 9 633 154  81.3%

Aircraft movements

Annual aircraft movements for O. R. Tambo International Airport[122][123]
Year International Regional Domestic Unscheduled Total
Aircraft movements % Change Aircraft movements % Change Aircraft movements % Change Aircraft movements % Change Aircraft movements % Change
2006–07 53,003 no data 17,684 no data 114,917 no data 26,037 no data 211,641 no data
2007–08 59,031  11.4% 18,799  6.3% 121,621  5.8% 29,591  13.6% 229,042  8.2%
2008–09 57,559  2.5% 17,965  4.4% 109,372  10.1% 28,297  4.4% 213,193  6.9%
2009–10 59,382  3.2% 19,732  9.8% 103,166  5.7% 20,252  28.4% 202,532  5.0%
2010–11 63,414  6.8% 19,846  0.6% 105,627  2.4% 24,031  18.7% 212,918  5.1%
2011–12 63,233  0.3% 20,769  4.6% 107,053  1.3% 21,515  10.4% 212,570  0.1%
2012–13 63,610  0.3% 19,021  8.4% 95,869  10.4% 21,302  0.9% 199,802  6.0%
2013–14 66,993  6.0% 19,408  2.0% 96,788  0.9% 23,414  9.9% 206,603  3.4%
2014–15 65,874  1.6% 21,164  9.0% 103,612  6.5% 26,977  13.2% 217,627  5.0%
2015–16 65,910  0.1% 21,382  1.0% 110,741  6.8% 26,158  3.0% 224,191  3.0%
2016–17 65,705  0.3% 21,069  1.4% 110,173  0.5% 23,987  8.3% 220,934  1.5%
2017–18 66,214  0.7% 20,314  3.6% 108,599  1.4% 25,607  6.8% 220,644  0.1%

Other buildings

 
Airways Park, the head office of South African Airways

South African Airways is headquartered in Airways Park on the grounds of O. R. Tambo International Airport.[124][125] The building was developed by Stauch Vorster Architects.[126] Airways Park was completed in March 1997 for R70 Million ($17.5 Million).[127] The fourth floor of the West Wing of the Pier Development of O. R. Tambo was also the head office of South African Express until it ceased operating in 2020.[128][129][130]

Ground transport

 
Gautrain at O. R. Tambo Int'l Airport

Rail transit

A transit terminal has been built between the domestic and international terminals. It houses the Gautrain station linking the airport to Sandton, a major business district and a primary tourist area, and, from there, the rest of the Gautrain system.

In September 2006 Gauteng Province contracted Bombardier Transportation for a rail link connecting Johannesburg, Pretoria, and the airport, with construction to begin immediately.[131] The section linking the airport to Sandton in Johannesburg was completed on 8 June 2010 in time for the World Cup. Trains run 90 trips per day and carry an estimated 60000 passengers daily.[132]

Car

The airport is easily accessible by car and it is located northeast of Johannesburg Central at the eastern end of the R24 Airport Freeway. It can be accessed by the R24 Airport Freeway (also known as the Albertina Sisulu Freeway) from Johannesburg Central and the R21 highway from Pretoria and the central part of the East Rand. The R24 intersects with the R21 near the airport and with the O. R. Tambo Airport Highway. This highway goes through the airport terminals, separating them from the parking bays, but it branches off into two directions: "departures" and "arrivals", and then it re-branches into the intersection.

Bus

Five bus city lines, operated by Metrobus and Putco, pass through the airport twice a day. The buses are accessible in the morning and the evening, when there are many passengers departing and arriving. There are also private bus lines operating express buses to the CBD of Johannesburg, as well as other locations.

Accidents and incidents

  • 20 October 1957 – A Vickers Viscount G-AOYF, operated by Vickers on a test flight, was damaged beyond economic repair when the starboard undercarriage collapsed following a heavy landing.[133]
  • 1 March 1988 – A Comair Embraer EMB 110 Bandeirante ZS-LGP operating Flight 206, exploded in mid-air whilst on final approach. All seventeen occupants were killed. A passenger was suspected of detonating an explosive device but to this day it has never been proven.[134]
  • 22 April 1999 – A Boeing 727 ZS-IJE was damaged beyond repair by large hailstones while on approach for landing. The aircraft landed safely with no loss of life.[135]
  • 3 November 2001 – A Reims-Cessna F406 crashed shortly after takeoff from runway 03R, killing all 3 occupants. The aircraft did not have a valid certificate of airworthiness at the time of the incident.[136]
  • 9 April 2004 – An Emirates Airbus A340-300 A6-ERN operating flight EK764 from Johannesburg to Dubai sustained serious damage during takeoff when it failed to become airborne before the end of the runway, striking 25 approach lights, causing four tyres to burst which in turn threw debris into various parts of the aircraft, ultimately damaging the flap drive mechanism. This rendered the flaps immoveable in the takeoff position. The aircraft returned for an emergency landing during which the normal braking system failed as a result of the damage. The aircraft was brought to a stop only 250 metres from the end of the 3,400-metre runway using reverse thrust and the alternate braking system.[137][138] In their report, South African investigators found that the captain had used an erroneous take-off technique, and criticised Emirates training and rostering practices.[139]
  • 22 December 2013 – A British Airways Boeing 747-400 G-BNLL operating flight BA33 collided with a building at the airport. Four ground-handling staff in the building sustained minor injuries. The airplane was written off and scrapped by April 2015.[140][141][142]
  • 26 October 2015 – A British Airways operated by Comair Boeing 737-400 ZS-OAA operating flight BA6234 from Port Elizabeth suffered a gear collapse while landing at the airport. There were no injuries.[143][144]
  • 12 November 2022 - A South African Airways Airbus A320 (ZS-SZJ) being towed collided with a parked FlySafair Boeing 737-8BG (ZS-SJH) at O. R. Tambo International Airport.[145][146] No passengers were onboard either aircraft at the time. The FlySafair's empennage section and SAA wing tip were damaged. As a result, both aircraft were rendered inoperable.[147][21][148]

See also

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External links

  •   Media related to OR Tambo International Airport at Wikimedia Commons
  •   O.R. Tambo International Airport travel guide from Wikivoyage

tambo, international, airport, johannesburg, airport, redirects, here, another, airport, johannesburg, lanseria, international, airport, iata, icao, faor, international, airport, serving, twin, cities, johannesburg, main, capital, south, africa, pretoria, situ. Johannesburg Airport redirects here For another airport in Johannesburg see Lanseria International Airport O R Tambo International Airport IATA JNB ICAO FAOR is an international airport serving the twin cities of Johannesburg and the main capital of South Africa Pretoria It is situated in Kempton Park Gauteng It serves as the primary airport for domestic and international travel for South Africa and since 2020 it is Africa s second busiest airport with a capacity to handle up to 28 million passengers annually 3 The airport serves as the hub for South African Airways The airport handled over 21 million passengers in 2017 O R Tambo International AirportO R Tambo Internasionale LughaweO R Tambo International Airport in Gauteng South AfricaIATA JNBICAO FAORWMO 68368SummaryAirport typePublicOwner OperatorAirports Company South AfricaServesJohannesburgPretoriaLocationKempton Park Gauteng South AfricaOpened1952 71 years ago 1952 Hub forAirlink CemAir FlySafair LIFT Airline South African AirwaysTime zoneSAST UTC 02 00 Elevation AMSL5 558 ft 1 694 mCoordinates26 08 00 S 028 15 00 E 26 13333 S 28 25000 E 26 13333 28 25000 Coordinates 26 08 00 S 028 15 00 E 26 13333 S 28 25000 E 26 13333 28 25000Websiteairports co zaMapJNBLocation in the Johannesburg areaShow map of Greater JohannesburgJNBJNB South Africa Show map of South AfricaJNBJNB Africa Show map of AfricaRunwaysDirection Length Surfaceft m03L 21R 14 495 4 421 Asphalt03R 21L 11 155 3 405 AsphaltStatistics April March 2022 Passengers9 633 154Aircraft movements139 105Economic impact 3 2 billion 1 Social impact128 2 thousand 1 Source Passenger Statistics 2 It was originally known as Jan Smuts International Airport 4 after the former South African Prime Minister of the same name The airport was renamed Johannesburg International Airport in 1994 when the newly elected African National Congress ANC government implemented a policy of not naming airports after politicians This policy was later reversed and on 27 October 2006 the airport was renamed after anti apartheid politician Oliver Reginald Tambo 1917 1993 5 Contents 1 History 2 Airport information 2 1 South African Airways Museum 2 2 Aircraft viewing decks 3 Infrastructure 3 1 Runways 3 2 Taxiways and aprons 4 Developments 5 Terminals 6 Airlines and destinations 6 1 Passenger 6 2 Cargo 7 Traffic and statistics 7 1 Passenger traffic 7 2 Aircraft movements 8 Other buildings 9 Ground transport 9 1 Rail transit 9 2 Car 9 3 Bus 10 Accidents and incidents 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksHistory EditThe airport was founded in 1952 as Jan Smuts International Airport two years after Smuts s death near the town of Kempton Park on the East Rand It replaced Palmietfontein International Airport which had handled European flights since 1945 In 1943 a decision was made by the Cabinet of the Union of South Africa to construct three international airports with a Civil Airports Advisory Committee formed to investigate and report on the viability 6 224 That report was submitted to the Cabinet in March 1944 with one main international airport on the Witwatersrand and two smaller international airports at Cape Town and Durban 6 224 The South African Railways and Harbours Administration was given the role of managing the project and later in 1944 a member went to the United States to study standards and methods of construction 6 224 5 Four possible sites around Johannesburg were identified with one south of Johannesburg chosen but soon discarded due to being situated on land with gold bearing reefs below 6 225 Sites were then narrowed down to Kempton Park and the existing airport at Palmietfontein 6 225 Layouts and rough costing for the two sites were established and submitted for a ministerial decision 6 226 The site would be at Kempton Park and be named Jan Smuts Airport 6 226 The area outside Kempton Park was an expropriated undulating dairy farm of 3 706 acres with a 598 acre eucalyptus plantation 6 227 Sitting on a plateau the area sloped away towards the east 6 227 The area was drained by the Blesbok River 6 227 The airport became operational on 1 September 1953 7 The new airport was officially opened by Minister for Transport Paul Sauer on 4 October 1953 having taken eight years to build at 6 2 million 7 8 It had one main runway of 3 200m and two smaller ones of 2 514m that crossed the main with all runways being 60m wide 7 8 A 1 000 men had been employed in the repair workshops 7 The technical areas consisted of 2 957m of roads 26 477sqm of concrete apron while the hangars had openings of 106m at a height of 21m 7 It was expecting to manage thirty flights a day and over 200 000 passengers that year 8 Airlines using the airport at its opening were BOAC Air France KLM SAA Central African Airways Qantas El Al SAS Group and DETA 7 In the late 1950s jet passenger aircraft became the norm and there was a need to expand the existing ground facilities at the airport which began in the 1960s and early 1970s In addition to the new airside facilities ground developments included improved road access parking areas hotel retail areas and car hire 9 50 The late 1960s saw a new choice of aircraft for South African Airways the Boeing 747 10 339 A decision was made by the Minister of Transport to obtain three later five 747s for the airline 10 339 Delivery would begin in October 1971 with the first flight to London on 10 December 1971 with daily services from February 1972 10 339 These purchases however required new hangar facilities with the contract awarded in September 1969 initially worth R2 983 408 10 339 Construction started in December 1968 and was completed in October 1971 for R8 000 000 while other work at the airport associated with the arrival of these new aircraft brought the costs to R40 000 000 10 341 Other new buildings such as workshops testing facilities stores staff accommodation and air cargo handling building were built The new hangar would allow for two 747s in each bay with dimensions of 73 2 m wide 24 4 m high and a depth of 91 4 m 10 341 It was used as a test airport for Concorde during the 1970s to determine how the aircraft would perform while taking off and landing at high elevations hot and high testing 11 During the 1980s many countries stopped trading with South Africa because of the United Nation sanctions imposed against South Africa in the struggle against apartheid and many international airlines stopped flying to the airport These sanctions also resulted in South African Airways being refused rights to fly over most African countries and in addition the risk of flying over some African countries was emphasised by the shooting down of two passenger aircraft over Rhodesia e g Air Rhodesia Flight 825 and 827 12 forcing them to fly around the bulge of Africa This required specially modified aircraft like the long range Boeing 747SP A second runway was built at the airport in the late 1980s 9 50 In December 1993 a R120 000 000 upgrade at the airport was completed 13 14 The main part of the projects was an 880 m 3000 t steel airside corridor consisting of two levels high of 6 m wide with thirteen passenger bridges 13 14 The upper levels are connected the departure lounges through security screening points Lower levels are for arrivals for entry into the immigration and custom areas 13 14 A future provision for extensions to this airside corridor was included in the design 13 14 A new airside bus terminal was also added for bussing in passengers to aircraft not able dock next to the terminal Other parts of the project included upgrading the terminal facilities for the passengers 13 14 Following the ending of apartheid the airport s name and that of other international airports in South Africa were changed and these restrictions were lifted With the creation of the Airports Company of South Africa ACSA in the mid nineties a plan to commercialise the airport began with new passenger and retail and airside facilities to handle a larger number of aircraft completing this phase in 2004 9 50 The airport overtook Cairo International Airport in 1996 as the busiest airport in Africa 14 and is the fourth busiest airport in the Africa Middle East region after Dubai International Airport Hamad International Airport and Abu Dhabi International Airport In fiscal year 2010 the airport handled 8 82 million departing passengers 15 In late 2005 a name change was proposed for the airport to O R Tambo International after former ANC President and anti apartheid activist Oliver Reginald Tambo an apparent change to the precedent of neutrally named airports The name change was formally announced in the Government Gazette of South Africa on 30 June 2006 allowing a 30 day window for the public to register objections The name change was implemented on 27 October 2006 with the unveiling of new signs at the airport Critics noted the considerable expense involved in renaming the airport and the decision to use a politician as the name would be obscure confusing and in some instances offensive Corne Mulder of the Freedom Front Plus has stamped the renaming nothing less than political opportunism and attempts by the ANC government to dodge the true socio economic issues of the country 16 Unnecessary confusion can be caused for O R Tambo is also a district municipality in the Eastern Cape seated in Mthatha The town of Mthatha has an international airport known as Mthatha Airport formerly named the K D Matanzima Airport after former Transkei President Kaiser Matanzima On 26 November 2006 the airport became the first in Africa to host the Airbus A380 17 The aircraft landed in Johannesburg on its way to Sydney via the South Pole on a test flight There was no provision for rapid train access until 2010 when the Gautrain project allowed train passengers to reach the airport from the Johannesburg CBD Sandton and Pretoria 9 50 Airport information Edit A now removed O R Tambo bust at the aircraft viewing deck above the CTB O R Tambo International Airport is a hot and high airport Situated 1 700 metres 5 500 feet above mean sea level the air is thin 18 This is the reason for the long runways On 10 January 2013 the airport s ICAO code was changed from FAJS to FAOR 19 South African Airways Museum Edit The South African Airways Museum once was located at the airport This room full of South African Airways memorabilia was started by two fans of the airline as a temporary location until they could set it up in one of Jan Smuts International s buildings in 1987 The museum has since relocated to Rand Airport FAGM Aircraft viewing decks Edit The airport has two viewing decks One is located above the Central Terminal Building and the other in an administrative section of the airport above the international check in counters There are regular displays of Oliver Reginald Tambo the airport s namesake in the viewing decks Infrastructure Edit Inside the O R Tambo International Airport OR Tambo terminal buildings Check in booths in the International Terminal Runways Edit O R Tambo International Airport has two runways one pair of parallel runways adjacent to the airport s terminal buildings There used to be a third runway 09 27 but was closed due to the danger it posed It is now taxiway Juliet Another decommissioned runway includes runway 14 32 crossing runway 03L 21R and 03R 21L which has since converted into taxiway Echo Number Length Width ILS Notes03L 21R 4 421 metres 14 505 ft 20 60 metres 197 ft 21 PALS CAT II 21 Fully laden aircraft require a far greater length of runway to achieve take off velocity at this altitude It is the 33rd longest runway in the world 03R 21L 3 405 metres 11 171 ft 22 60 metres 197 ft 22 PALS CAT II 22 The runways are equipped with approach lighting systems Sequenced flashers are not used at any South African runways and therefore not installed Touchdown zone TDZ lighting is available but never turned on Runway Threshold Edge and Centerline lights are the only lighting available During busy periods outbound flights use the western runway 03L 21R for take off while inbound flights use the eastern runway 03R 21L for landing Wind factors may cause numerous variations but on most days flights will take off to the north and land from the south Taxiways and aprons Edit O R Tambo International Airport has a network of asphalt taxiways connecting runways aprons and maintenance facilities 23 All of these taxiways are 30 5 metres wide except for taxiway Echo and Juliet which is 60 metres wide as it was formerly runway 14 32 and 09 27 respectively The airport also has nine aprons Cargo aircraft park at aprons Golf and Whiskey Many airlines have their aircraft wait long hours between arriving and departing flights Such aircraft and other cargo aircraft are parked at aprons Delta and Foxtrot to free up jetbridges Aprons Alpha Charlie and Echo have jetbridges that connect them to their respective gates The Bravo apron is not connected to the terminal building and thus aircraft that land there must use an airport bus service Developments EditACSA reported that major new developments took place at the airport in preparation for the 2010 FIFA World Cup The development includes expansion of the international terminal with the new international pier opened in 2009 which includes gates for the Airbus A380 and increased capacity at the same time A new Central Terminal building designed by Osmond Lange Architects and Planners was completed on 1 April 2009 citation needed An additional multi storey parkade was built in January 2010 at a cost of R470 million opposite the Central Terminal Building citation needed plus Terminal A was also upgraded and the associated roadways realigned to accommodate more International Departures space The Central Terminal Building CTB cost R2 billion boosted passenger capacity at the landside of the terminal in 3 levels and allows direct access from international and domestic terminals Additional luggage carousels were added on 12 March 2010 to accommodate the Airbus A380 citation needed Arrivals are accommodated on Level 1 with departures expanded on Level 3 Level 2 accommodates further retail and commercial activities The Gautrain Rapid Rail Link station is above the terminal The new International Pier cost R535 million has increased international arrivals and departures capacity in a two storey structure with nine additional airside contact stands four of which are Airbus A380 compatible citation needed Air bridges are already in place and the existing duty free mall will be extended into this area Additional lounges and passenger holding areas will be constructed on the upper level A second terminal between the two runways has been cancelled It would have contained its own domestic and international check in facilities contact stands shops and lounges and was projected to cost R8 billion citation needed Terminals EditThere are six terminals at the airport but these can be broken down into three major areas the international terminals the domestic terminals and the transit terminals The transit terminal housed disused parts of the old domestic terminals It has been mostly demolished to build a new Central Terminal that will provide an indoor link between domestic and international terminals as well as a central passenger check in area and more gates It was constructed for the 2010 FIFA World Cup Terminals A1 and A2 handle international passengers while the other two terminals handle domestic passengers Due to the airport s design departure and arrivals terminals are considered separate terminals The Central Terminal that is under construction will be named Terminal A3 and it will be used for both international and domestic passengers The two terminals Terminal A and Terminal B have been restructured Several airlines now use Terminal B for all check ins top floor adjacent to the arrivals atrium for both national and international flights The airlines that use Terminal B include Air Cote D Ivoire RwandAir South African Airways Airlink Lift Airline FlySafair KLM Air France Ethiopian Airlines Qantas and Air Mauritius 24 Terminals A and B boast over 140 retail stores The Duty Free stores are based airside in Terminal A and many of them stock products exclusively available at the airport The ample parking available at O R Tambo International Airport was revamped as part of the upgrades made prior to the 2010 World Cup with the introduction of state of the art technology that allows visitors to identify available parking spaces easily Airlines and destinations EditPassenger Edit AirlinesDestinationsRefsAir AustralSaint Denis de la Reunion 25 Air BelgiumBrussels 26 27 Air BotswanaFrancistown Gaborone Kasane Maun 28 Air ChinaBeijing Capital 29 30 Shenzhen 31 Air Cote d IvoireAbidjan Kinshasa N djili 32 Air FranceParis Charles de Gaulle 33 34 Air MadagascarAntananarivo 35 Air MauritiusMauritius 36 Air PeaceAbuja Lagos 37 38 Air SeychellesMahe Male 39 Air ZimbabweBulawayo Harare 40 AirlinkAntananarivo Beira Bloemfontein Bulawayo Cape Town Dar es Salaam Durban East London Entebbe Gaborone George Harare Hoedspruit Kasane Kimberley Livingstone Luanda Lubumbashi Lusaka Manzini Maputo Maseru Maun Mbombela Mthatha Nairobi Jomo Kenyatta Nampula Ndola Nosy Be Pemba Phalaborwa Pietermaritzburg Polokwane Port Elizabeth Richards Bay Saint HelenaA Sishen Skukuza Tete Upington Victoria Falls Vilanculos Walvis Bay Windhoek Hosea Kutako Charter Ascension IslandB 41 42 43 44 45 ASKY AirlinesBrazzaville Douala Kinshasa N djili Lagos Libreville Lome 46 British AirwaysLondon HeathrowCathay PacificHong Kong resumes 1 August 2023 47 48 CemAirBloemfontein Cape Town Durban George Hoedspruit Kimberley Luanda Lusaka Maputo Margate Maun 49 Plettenberg Bay Port Elizabeth Sishen 50 51 52 CondorSeasonal Frankfurt 53 Congo AirwaysKinshasa N djiliE Lubumbashi 54 55 Delta Air LinesAtlantaM 56 EgyptAirCairo 57 58 El AlTel Aviv 59 EmiratesDubai International 60 Eswatini AirManzini 61 Ethiopian AirlinesAddis Ababa 62 Etihad AirwaysAbu Dhabi 63 Fastjet ZimbabweBulawayo Harare Victoria Falls 64 FlySafairBloemfontein Cape Town Durban East London George Mauritius Port Elizabeth Zanzibar 65 66 Global AviationCharter Zanzibar 67 Kenya AirwaysNairobi Jomo Kenyatta 68 69 KLMAmsterdam 70 34 LAM Mozambique AirlinesBeira Maputo NampulaF PembaG Vilanculos 71 72 LATAM BrasilSao Paulo Guarulhos resumes 3 August 2023 73 LIFTCape Town Durban 74 75 76 LufthansaFrankfurt 77 Malawi AirlinesBlantyre LilongweH 78 Proflight ZambiaNdola 79 QantasSydneySeasonal Perth 80 81 Qatar AirwaysDohaI 82 Royal Zambian AirlinesLusaka 83 RwandAirKigaliJ Lusaka 84 Singapore AirlinesSingaporeL 85 86 87 South African AirwaysAccra Blantyre 88 Cape Town Nairobi Jomo Kenyatta 89 Durban Harare Kinshasa N djili Lagos Lilongwe 88 Lusaka Maputo Mauritius Port Elizabeth 90 Victoria Falls 90 Windhoek Hosea Kutako 91 92 93 94 95 Swiss International Air LinesZurich 96 TAAG Angola AirlinesLuanda 97 Turkish AirlinesIstanbul 98 Uganda AirlinesEntebbe 99 United AirlinesNewark 100 101 Virgin AtlanticLondon Heathrow 102 Zambia AirwaysLivingstone Lusaka 103 Notes A This flight operates via Walvis Bay However this carrier does not have rights to transport passengers solely between Walvis Bay and Saint Helena B This flight operates via Saint Helena C This flight operates via Douala or Libreville D This flight operates via Douala and Lagos E This flight operates via Lubumbashi F This flight operates via Beira G Some flights operate via Maputo H This flight operates via Blantyre I Two flights originate from Durban and Gaborone respectively However this carrier does not have rights to transport passengers solely between Johannesburg and Durban Gaborone J This flight operates via Lusaka K Two flights originate from Maputo and Durban respectively However this carrier does not have rights to transport passengers solely between Johannesburg and Maputo Durban L This flight operates between Singapore and Cape Town with a stopover at Johannesburg However this carrier does not have rights to transport passengers solely between Johannesburg and Cape Town M One of two of these flights from Atlanta continues on to Cape Town However this carrier does not have rights to transport passengers solely between Johannesburg and Cape Town Cargo Edit AirlinesDestinationsRefsAstral AviationLusaka Nairobi Jomo Kenyatta 104 ASL Airlines BelgiumNairobi Jomo Kenyatta 105 BidAir CargoCape Town Dar es Salaam Durban East London George Harare Kigali Livingstone Mauritius Nairobi Jomo Kenyatta Port Elizabeth Victoria Falls Windhoek Hosea Kutako 106 CargoluxLuxembourg 107 EgyptAir CargoCairo 108 Emirates SkyCargoDubai Al Maktoum 109 Ethiopian Airlines CargoAddis Ababa 110 Etihad CargoNairobi Jomo Kenyatta 111 FedEx ExpressDubai International Nairobi Jomo Kenyatta 112 Lufthansa CargoFrankfurt Lagos Nairobi Jomo Kenyatta 113 Magma AviationNairobi Jomo Kenyatta 114 MartinairAmsterdam Harare Nairobi Jomo Kenyatta 115 Qatar Airways CargoDoha 116 Saudia CargoJeddah 117 Singapore Airlines CargoNairobi Jomo Kenyatta Singapore 118 Turkish CargoIstanbul 119 Uganda Air CargoEntebbe 120 Traffic and statistics EditO R Tambo International Airport recorded 21 2 million passengers in 2017 2018 up from 20 7 million passengers the year before Of those passengers 9 2 million were international and 11 million domestic with the remainder being classified as regional or unscheduled 220 644 aircraft traffic movements were recorded the majority being domestic services O R Tambo International Airport is the busiest airport in South Africa Passenger traffic Edit Graphs are temporarily unavailable due to technical issues Annual civil years passenger traffic for O R Tambo See Wikidata query Passenger traffic per fiscal year for O R Tambo International Airport April March 121 Year International Regional Domestic Unscheduled TotalPassenger movements Change Passenger movements Change Passenger movements Change Passenger movements Change Passenger movements Change2006 07 6 958 277 no data 651 642 no data 10 094 758 no data 89 423 no data 17 794 100 no data2007 08 7 645 647 9 9 714 717 9 7 11 009 841 9 1 87 293 2 4 19 457 498 9 3 2008 09 7 480 461 2 2 730 387 2 2 9 582 332 13 0 91 679 5 0 17 884 859 8 1 2009 10 7 489 211 0 1 762 033 4 3 9 270 478 3 3 74 481 18 8 17 596 203 1 6 2010 11 7 965 594 6 4 794 477 4 3 9 732 250 5 0 150 824 102 5 18 643 145 5 9 2011 12 8 088 013 1 5 846 067 6 5 9 985 246 2 6 84 216 44 2 19 003 542 1 9 2012 13 8 276 845 2 3 826 676 2 3 9 437 069 5 5 80 669 4 2 18 621 259 2 0 2013 14 8 570 384 3 6 894 670 8 2 9 257 225 1 9 98 709 22 3 18 820 988 1 0 2014 15 8 614 192 0 5 914 644 2 2 9 510 809 2 7 95 448 3 4 19 135 093 1 7 2015 16 8 791 210 2 1 905 729 1 0 10 586 823 11 3 91 236 4 6 20 374 998 6 5 2016 17 8 974 372 2 0 931 594 2 8 10 703 205 1 1 83 609 8 3 20 692 780 1 5 2017 18 9 237 487 2 9 897 409 3 7 11 018 062 2 9 78 552 6 0 21 231 510 2 6 2018 19 9 156 517 0 8 891 726 0 6 11 193 511 1 6 72 189 8 4 21 313 943 0 4 2019 20 8 773 298 4 2 843 909 5 5 11 213 778 0 2 72 581 0 5 20 903 566 1 9 2020 21 635 873 172 59 102 173 3 264 655 109 104 109 35 7 4 063 739 134 2021 22 2 533 745 119 289 970 132 6 738 796 69 4 70 643 38 3 9 633 154 81 3 Aircraft movements Edit Annual aircraft movements for O R Tambo International Airport 122 123 Year International Regional Domestic Unscheduled TotalAircraft movements Change Aircraft movements Change Aircraft movements Change Aircraft movements Change Aircraft movements Change2006 07 53 003 no data 17 684 no data 114 917 no data 26 037 no data 211 641 no data2007 08 59 031 11 4 18 799 6 3 121 621 5 8 29 591 13 6 229 042 8 2 2008 09 57 559 2 5 17 965 4 4 109 372 10 1 28 297 4 4 213 193 6 9 2009 10 59 382 3 2 19 732 9 8 103 166 5 7 20 252 28 4 202 532 5 0 2010 11 63 414 6 8 19 846 0 6 105 627 2 4 24 031 18 7 212 918 5 1 2011 12 63 233 0 3 20 769 4 6 107 053 1 3 21 515 10 4 212 570 0 1 2012 13 63 610 0 3 19 021 8 4 95 869 10 4 21 302 0 9 199 802 6 0 2013 14 66 993 6 0 19 408 2 0 96 788 0 9 23 414 9 9 206 603 3 4 2014 15 65 874 1 6 21 164 9 0 103 612 6 5 26 977 13 2 217 627 5 0 2015 16 65 910 0 1 21 382 1 0 110 741 6 8 26 158 3 0 224 191 3 0 2016 17 65 705 0 3 21 069 1 4 110 173 0 5 23 987 8 3 220 934 1 5 2017 18 66 214 0 7 20 314 3 6 108 599 1 4 25 607 6 8 220 644 0 1 Other buildings Edit Airways Park the head office of South African Airways South African Airways is headquartered in Airways Park on the grounds of O R Tambo International Airport 124 125 The building was developed by Stauch Vorster Architects 126 Airways Park was completed in March 1997 for R70 Million 17 5 Million 127 The fourth floor of the West Wing of the Pier Development of O R Tambo was also the head office of South African Express until it ceased operating in 2020 128 129 130 Ground transport Edit Gautrain at O R Tambo Int l Airport Rail transit Edit A transit terminal has been built between the domestic and international terminals It houses the Gautrain station linking the airport to Sandton a major business district and a primary tourist area and from there the rest of the Gautrain system In September 2006 Gauteng Province contracted Bombardier Transportation for a rail link connecting Johannesburg Pretoria and the airport with construction to begin immediately 131 The section linking the airport to Sandton in Johannesburg was completed on 8 June 2010 in time for the World Cup Trains run 90 trips per day and carry an estimated 60000 passengers daily 132 Car Edit The airport is easily accessible by car and it is located northeast of Johannesburg Central at the eastern end of the R24 Airport Freeway It can be accessed by the R24 Airport Freeway also known as the Albertina Sisulu Freeway from Johannesburg Central and the R21 highway from Pretoria and the central part of the East Rand The R24 intersects with the R21 near the airport and with the O R Tambo Airport Highway This highway goes through the airport terminals separating them from the parking bays but it branches off into two directions departures and arrivals and then it re branches into the intersection Bus Edit Five bus city lines operated by Metrobus and Putco pass through the airport twice a day The buses are accessible in the morning and the evening when there are many passengers departing and arriving There are also private bus lines operating express buses to the CBD of Johannesburg as well as other locations Accidents and incidents Edit20 October 1957 A Vickers Viscount G AOYF operated by Vickers on a test flight was damaged beyond economic repair when the starboard undercarriage collapsed following a heavy landing 133 1 March 1988 A Comair Embraer EMB 110 Bandeirante ZS LGP operating Flight 206 exploded in mid air whilst on final approach All seventeen occupants were killed A passenger was suspected of detonating an explosive device but to this day it has never been proven 134 22 April 1999 A Boeing 727 ZS IJE was damaged beyond repair by large hailstones while on approach for landing The aircraft landed safely with no loss of life 135 3 November 2001 A Reims Cessna F406 crashed shortly after takeoff from runway 03R killing all 3 occupants The aircraft did not have a valid certificate of airworthiness at the time of the incident 136 9 April 2004 An Emirates Airbus A340 300 A6 ERN operating flight EK764 from Johannesburg to Dubai sustained serious damage during takeoff when it failed to become airborne before the end of the runway striking 25 approach lights causing four tyres to burst which in turn threw debris into various parts of the aircraft ultimately damaging the flap drive mechanism This rendered the flaps immoveable in the takeoff position The aircraft returned for an emergency landing during which the normal braking system failed as a result of the damage The aircraft was brought to a stop only 250 metres from the end of the 3 400 metre runway using reverse thrust and the alternate braking system 137 138 In their report South African investigators found that the captain had used an erroneous take off technique and criticised Emirates training and rostering practices 139 22 December 2013 A British Airways Boeing 747 400 G BNLL operating flight BA33 collided with a building at the airport Four ground handling staff in the building sustained minor injuries The airplane was written off and scrapped by April 2015 140 141 142 26 October 2015 A British Airways operated by Comair Boeing 737 400 ZS OAA operating flight BA6234 from Port Elizabeth suffered a gear collapse while landing at the airport There were no injuries 143 144 12 November 2022 A South African Airways Airbus A320 ZS SZJ being towed collided with a parked FlySafair Boeing 737 8BG ZS SJH at O R Tambo International Airport 145 146 No passengers were onboard either aircraft at the time The FlySafair s empennage section and SAA wing tip were damaged As a result both aircraft were rendered inoperable 147 21 148 See also EditList of airports in South Africa List of South African airports by passenger movementsReferences Edit a b O R Tambo International airport Economic and social impacts Ecquants Archived from the original on 22 May 2014 Retrieved 7 September 2013 O R Tambo Airport Passenger Statistics Airports Company South Africa Archived from the original on 28 August 2012 Retrieved 15 January 2013 YouTube www youtube com Retrieved 9 January 2023 Bulpin T V 1980 Mayhew Vic Duncan Tony Handler Rosemund eds Illustrated Guide to Southern Africa 2 ed Reader s Digest p 198 col 1 ISBN 0 620 04650 3 T Mbeki O R Tambo International Airport renaming South African Government www gov za Retrieved 11 August 2021 a b c d e f g h i j Greathead Walter Robinson Hawkins Robert Drake January 1948 First stages in the construction of the Jan Smuts Airport Johannesburg Historical Civil Engineering Siviele Ingenieurswese 46 1 224 225 Archived from the original on 18 March 2018 Retrieved 18 March 2018 via Sabinet subscription required a b c d e f South Africa s Main Airport Flight International 64 2332 481 2 October 1953 via Internet Archive a b c South Africa Officially Opens Jan Smuts Airport Foreign Commerce Weekly 50 20 23 16 November 1953 via Internet Archive a b c d Mitchell Malcolm October 2014 Chapter 9 Airport infrastructure development in South Africa a rapidly growing sector of the transport family infrastructure Civil Engineering Siviele Ingenieurswese 22 9 49 51 Archived from the original on 18 March 2018 Retrieved 18 March 2018 via Sabinet subscription required a b c d e f Westwood A R Klintworth K E Kemp W J October 1971 The Boeing 747 hangar at Jan Smuts Airport Civil Engineering Siviele Ingenieurswese 13 10 339 348 Archived from the original on 18 March 2018 Retrieved 18 March 2018 via Sabinet subscription required CONCORDE SST TIMELINE 70 s www concordesst com Retrieved 9 January 2023 Details p of Air Rhodesia Flight RH825 Viscount Disasters Archived from the original on 18 March 2012 Retrieved 12 November 2006 a b c d e Airside corridor facilitates passenger handling at Jan Smuts Civil Engineering Siviele Ingenieurswese 1 11 14 16 December 1993 Archived from the original on 18 March 2018 Retrieved 18 March 2018 via Sabinet subscription required Busiest Airports in Africa Pprune org PRRuNe Forums 13 October 2009 Archived from the original on 13 October 2009 Airports Company South Africa Annual Report Part I archived from the original on 20 July 2011 Wolmarans Riaan 10 July 2006 Welcome to OR Tambo Airport Mail amp Guardian Archived from the original on 17 July 2006 Retrieved 22 September 2006 Oliver R Tambo Johannesburg International Airport JNB FAJS Airport Technology Retrieved 9 January 2023 Climate and weather in Johannesburg and on the Highveld South Africa Southafrica travel net Archived from the original on 31 August 2012 Retrieved 11 May 2013 South African Civil Aviation Authority AIRAC AIP Supplement S087 12 20 September 2012 PDF OR Tambo INTL RWY 03L 21R PDF Archived PDF from the original on 3 April 2018 a b c Hendry Jonathan E 12 November 2022 FlySafair Boeing 737 Struck By SAA Airbus A320 After Tow Bar Broke Simple Flying Retrieved 20 November 2022 a b c OR Tambo INTL RWY 03R 21L PDF Archived PDF from the original on 3 April 2018 FAOR Ground Movement chart PDF Archived PDF from the original on 24 March 2016 Johannesburg or Tambo Airport JNB Terminal B Domestic Departures Today 12 00h to 17 59h Timetable Air Austral Archived from the original on 12 May 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Air Belgium to Begin Flights to Johannesburg and Cape Town from September Aviationghana com 23 March 2022 Retrieved 1 May 2022 Air Belgium to connect Brussels with South Africa and other countries 16 September 2022 Flight schedule Air Botswana Archived from the original on 12 May 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Air China NW22 International Operations 30 OCT22 AeroRoutes 31 October 2022 Retrieved 31 October 2022 Air China NS23 South Africa Service Changes Aeroroutes Retrieved 7 February 2023 Flight schedule Information Air China Archived from the original on 26 March 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Air Cote d Ivoire Schedules South Africa late June 2022 Launch Aeroroutes Retrieved 14 June 2022 Flight schedule Air France Archived from the original on 13 May 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 a b Timetable PDF SkyTeam Archived PDF from the original on 12 May 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Air Madagascar resumes Antananarivo Johannesburg from mid June 2019 Routes Online Archived from the original on 3 May 2019 Retrieved 3 May 2019 Timetable PDF Air Mauritius Archived PDF from the original on 29 December 2018 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Air Peace to commence commercial flights into Johannesburg 27 October 2020 Steven Walker 14 April 2022 Air Peace returns to Dubai Johannesburg Simple Flying Flights to Johannesburg Air Seychelles 29 December 2014 Retrieved 30 January 2020 Timetable and Networking Air Zimbabwe Archived from the original on 13 November 2018 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Flight schedule Airlink Airlink launches new daily service between Jhb and Livingstone www bizcommunity com Retrieved 23 April 2021 Flight Info Flyairlink Airlink to resume flights between South Africa and Madagascar Namibia Economist South Africa s Airlink Launches New Daily Nairobi Service Asky Airlines resumes Johannesburg flights AeroRoutes 11 April 2022 Cathay Pacific Plans Johannesburg Service Resumption in 2H23 Aeroroutes Retrieved 16 February 2023 Flight timetable Cathay Pacific Archived from the original on 17 June 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 CemAir Adds Johannesburg Maun Service From May 2023 Aeroroutes Retrieved 10 February 2023 CemAir Scheduled flights in South Africa Kate 14 November 2019 CemAir resumes flights Business Traveller Africa Retrieved 1 May 2022 CemAir Johannesburg Casey David Condor Adds New South Africa Route Routesonline Retrieved 22 February 2022 Network Map Congo Airways Archived from the original on 12 May 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Flight index 8Z flightmapper net Archived from the original on 12 May 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Worldwide Timetable PDF Delta Air Lines Archived PDF from the original on 14 April 2018 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Timetable EgyptAir Archived from the original on 24 March 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 EgyptAir resumes more flight destinations Times Aerospace Flight Schedule El Al Archived from the original on 18 November 2018 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Flight schedules Emirates Archived from the original on 12 May 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 SA to Swaziland Eswatini Air to launch flights in South Africa this March The South African 3 March 2023 Retrieved 4 March 2023 Flight Schedule Ethiopian Airlines Archived from the original on 31 March 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Flight timetables Etihad Archived from the original on 17 April 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Route overview Fastjet Retrieved 19 March 2022 Pack your bags Flysafair is heading to Mauritius Cheap Flight Schedules FlySafair Archived from the original on 12 May 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Direct Flights to Zanzibar Africastay com Retrieved 1 May 2022 Flight Timetable and Schedules Kenya Airways Archived from the original on 12 May 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Worldwide timetable PDF SkyTeam Archived PDF from the original on 12 May 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Timetable KLM Archived from the original on 12 May 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Seb 14 February 2020 TravelComments com Official Blog LAM Mozambique Airlines to launch flights between Pemba lt gt Johannesburg update Umhambi blogspot com Retrieved 1 May 2022 Flight index TM Flightmapper net Archived from the original on 12 May 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 LATAM Resumes Sao Paulo Johannesburg Service From August 2023 Aeroroutes 25 November 2022 Retrieved 25 November 2022 Lift launches new route expands flights in South Africa 22 September 2022 LIFT Schedule www lift co za Retrieved 9 January 2023 Lift Airlines on ch aviation ch aviation Retrieved 9 January 2023 Timetable PDF Lufthansa Archived PDF from the original on 12 May 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Flight Schedule Malawi Airlines Archived from the original on 6 April 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 PRoFlight Zambia adds Johannesburg service from Sep 2019 Airlineroute 9 July 2019 Archived from the original on 9 July 2019 Retrieved 9 July 2019 QANTAS MAINTAINS PERTH JOHANNESBURG SERVICE IN NW22 AeroRoutes 28 October 2022 Retrieved 28 October 2022 Timetable Qantas Archived from the original on 12 May 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Flights Time table Qatar Airways Archived from the original on 4 October 2017 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Royal Zambian Airlines commences flight operations ch aviation Flight Schedule RwandAir Archived from the original on 20 September 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Flight schedules Singapore Airlines Archived from the original on 12 May 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Reporter Travel Singapore Airlines to resume Joburg flights from October www iol co za Jim Liu Singapore Airlines NW22 Passenger Operations as of 25 July 2022 Aeroroutes a b South African Airways March 2023 Network Additions Aeroroutes Retrieved 9 February 2023 https www flysaa com flights to nairobi a b SAA Adding New Routes Ahead Of Holidays Routes Online Retrieved 3 December 2022 South African Airways Resumes Victoria Falls Service in Dec 2022 Aeroroutes Retrieved 14 November 2022 Johnson Harry South African Airways relaunches Johannesburg to Durban flights now eTurboNews Retrieved 19 January 2022 Moodley Clinton SAA takes off on September 23 with these routes www iol co za Flight Schedules South African Airways Archived from the original on 17 June 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Flights to Windhoek South African Airways www flysaa com Retrieved 22 December 2022 Timetable Swiss International Air Lines Archived from the original on 12 May 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Routes and Timetables TAAG Angola Airlines Archived from the original on 24 April 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Flight Timetable Turkish Airlines Archived from the original on 12 May 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 SoftPower 31 May 2021 Uganda Airlines Direct Flights To South Africa Excite Frequent Travelers Kampala SoftPower Uganda Retrieved 31 May 2021 United Airlines Plans to Increase Service on More than 40 Caribbean and Mexican Beach Routes in November United 2 October 2020 Retrieved 2 October 2020 United pushes back two major long haul launches following low demand 2 February 2021 Retrieved 16 April 2021 Flight Schedules Virgin Atlantic Archived from the original on 13 May 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Zambia Airways Adds Johannesburg Flights From June 2022 Aeroroutes Retrieved 28 April 2022 1 retrieved 6 April 2023 2 retrieved 6 April 2023 bidaircargo com Network retrieved 13 January 2021 Cargolux Airlines International S A Cargolux Retrieved 9 January 2023 Egyptair Cargo Schedule Retrieved 25 April 2022 skychain emirates com View Schedule retrieved 13 January 2021 cargoethiopianairlines com Cargo Network retrieved 13 January 2021 Cargo Schedule retrieved 13 May 2022 FedEx Express launches its first regular flight into Kenya 26 May 2022 Flugplan Lufthansa Cargo in German Retrieved 9 January 2023 Flugplan Cargo Forwarder Retrieved 5 April 2023 AIR FRANCE KLM MARTINAIR Cargo Our Network afklcargo com Retrieved 9 January 2023 Qatar Airways Cargo www qrcargo com Retrieved 9 January 2023 saudiacargo com Network retrieved 13 January 2021 Network www siacargo com Retrieved 9 January 2023 Flight Schedule www turkishcargo com tr Retrieved 9 January 2023 ugandaaircargo com Destination Route retrieved 13 January 2021 O R Tambo International Airport Passenger Statistics Airports Company South Africa Archived from the original on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 23 October 2013 ACSA Cape Town Aircraft Statistics Airports Company South Africa Archived from the original on 21 April 2012 Retrieved 23 November 2011 Statistics www airports co za Archived from the original on 11 May 2017 Retrieved 21 March 2017 Corporate Travel Terms and Conditions PDF South African Airways Retrieved 23 June 2010 with its principal place of business at No 1 Jones Road Airways Park O R Tambo International Airport Policies amp Disclaimer South African Airways Archived from the original on 17 November 2009 Retrieved 23 June 2010 Physical address for receipt of legal service Airways Park 1 Jones Road OR Tambo International Airport Kempton Park Gauteng South Africa Beaver Robyn 2004 1000 Architects Vol 1 Images Publishing p 504 ISBN 9781876907914 Archived from the original on 28 May 2013 Printable version of the site PDF Stauch Vorster Architects October 2018 Archived from the original PDF on 12 June 2004 Retrieved 23 June 2010 Contact Us South African Express Retrieved 6 February 2011 OR Tambo International Airport Head Office About Us South African Express Archived from the original on 19 August 2010 Retrieved 6 February 2011 Legal South African Express Archived from the original on 2 February 2011 Retrieved 6 February 2011 Grant Tavia 28 September 2006 Bombardier wins 1 65 billion in contracts The Globe and Mail Canada permanent dead link SouthAfrica info 13 October 2006 SA s high speed train on track Archived from the original on 17 October 2008 Retrieved 11 October 2008 Accident description Aviation Safety Network Archived from the original on 25 October 2012 Retrieved 8 September 2009 ASN Aircraft accident Embraer 110P1 Bandeirante ZS LGP Germiston c 13 km SW of Johannesburg International Airport JNB Archived from the original on 12 October 2012 Boeing B727 23 sic Johannesburg International Airport PDF South African Civil Aviation Authority Archived PDF from the original on 7 December 2008 Retrieved 4 November 2009 ReimsF406 700m South of the threshold of Runway 03R FAJS PDF South African Civil Aviation Authority Archived PDF from the original on 7 December 2008 Retrieved 4 November 2009 Report Emirates A340 at Johannesburg on April 20th 2004 runway overrun during takeoff near catastrophy Avherald com Retrieved 1 May 2022 ASN Aircraft accident Airbus A340 A6 ERN Aviation Safety Network Archived from the original on 25 March 2009 Retrieved 18 December 2011 David Learmount 11 January 2006 Emirates censured in Airbus A340 Johannesburg runway overrun probe Flightglobal Archived from the original on 30 January 2012 Retrieved 18 December 2011 Accident British Airways B744 at Johannesburg on Dec 22nd 2013 took wrong taxiway and buried wing in building Archived from the original on 17 October 2017 Retrieved 19 September 2018 Malkin Bonnie 22 December 2013 British Airways plane collides with building at Johannesburg airport The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 23 December 2013 Retrieved 3 April 2018 Plane B747 Archived from the original on 9 December 2018 gt Accident Comair B734 at Johannesburg on Oct 26th 2015 left main gear collapse on landing Archived from the original on 19 April 2017 Retrieved 19 September 2018 Kubheka Thando 26 October 2015 British Airways Plane in Incident at OR Tambo Eyewitness News Archived from the original on 29 June 2017 Retrieved 9 March 2017 Reporter Citizen 12 November 2022 FlySafair plane struck by SAA aircraft in parking accident at OR Tambo airport The Citizen Retrieved 20 November 2022 Head Tom 13 November 2022 SAA technician accused of sleeping during OR Tambo collision The South African Retrieved 20 November 2022 Newsroom South African Airways www flysaa com Retrieved 20 November 2022 Mthethwa Cebelihle FlySafair aircraft struck by wingtip of SAA Airbus at OR Tambo airport News24 Retrieved 20 November 2022 External links Edit Media related to OR Tambo International Airport at Wikimedia Commons O R Tambo International Airport travel guide from WikivoyagePortals South Africa Aviation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title O R Tambo International Airport amp oldid 1152947040, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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