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Kai Tak Airport

Kai Tak Airport (IATA: HKG, ICAO: VHHH, VHHX) was the international airport of Hong Kong from 1925 until 1998. Officially known as Hong Kong International Airport from 1954 to 6 July 1998, it is often referred to as Hong Kong International Airport, Kai Tak,[1] or simply Kai Tak and Kai Tak International Airport, to distinguish it from its successor, Chek Lap Kok International Airport, built on reclaimed and levelled land around the islands of Chek Lap Kok and Lam Chau, 30 kilometres (19 mi) to the west.[2]

Kai Tak International Airport

啟德機場
Kai Tak Airport in 1998, the morning after its closure
Summary
Airport typeDefunct
OwnerGovernment of Hong Kong
OperatorCivil Aviation Department
LocationKowloon, Hong Kong
Opened25 January 1925 (1925-01-25)
Closed6 July 1998 (1998-07-06)
Hub forCathay Pacific (1954-1998)
Elevation AMSL9 m / 30 ft
Coordinates22°19′43″N 114°11′39″E / 22.32861°N 114.19417°E / 22.32861; 114.19417
Map
Kai Tak International Airport
Location of Kai Tak Airport in Hong Kong
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
13/31 3,390 11,122 Asphalt (Closed)
Kai Tak Airport
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese啟德機場
Simplified Chinese启德机场
JyutpingKai2dak1 Gei1coeng4
Cantonese YaleKáidāk Gēichèuhng
Hanyu PinyinQǐdé Jīchǎng
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinQǐdé Jīchǎng
Wade–GilesCh'i3-te2 chi1-ch'ang2
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationKáidāk Gēichèuhng
JyutpingKai2dak1 Gei1coeng4
Japanese name
Kanji啓徳空港
Transcriptions
RomanizationKaitakku kūkō
Keitoku kūkō

Officially, Kai Tak Airport held the ICAO code of VHHH, but for logistical reasons during the transition to the new airport, it also temporarily used the ICAO code of VHHX, which is also the code used by the flight simulation community to virtually represent the airport.

Because of the geography of the area, by which water was on three sides of the runway, with Kowloon City's residential apartment complexes to the north-west and 2,000-plus ft (610 m-plus) mountains to the north-east of the airport, aircraft could not fly over the mountains and quickly drop in for a final approach. Instead, aircraft had to fly above Victoria Harbour and Kowloon City, passing north of Mong Kok's Bishop Hill. After passing Bishop Hill, pilots would see Checkerboard Hill with a large orange and white checkerboard pattern. Once the pattern was sighted and identified, aircraft made a low-altitude (sub-600 ft; 180 m) 47-degree right-hand turn, ending with a short final approach and touchdown. For pilots, this airport was technically demanding, as the approach could not be flown by aircraft instruments, but had to be flown visually because of the right-hand turn required.[3] The History Channel programme Most Extreme Airports ranked it as the sixth-most dangerous airport in the world.[4]

The airport was home to Hong Kong's international carrier Cathay Pacific, as well as regional carrier Dragonair (since 2016 known as Cathay Dragon), freight airline Air Hong Kong and Hong Kong Airways. The airport was also home to the former RAF Kai Tak and the Hong Kong Aviation Club.

Geographic environment Edit

 
The airport was surrounded by high-rise buildings. The airport car park is at the centre, and offices are on the right of the photograph.

Kai Tak was located on the eastern side of Kowloon Bay in Kowloon, Hong Kong. The area is surrounded by rugged mountains. Less than 4 km (2.5 mi) to the north and northeast of the former runway 13 threshold is a range of hills reaching an elevation of 2,000 ft (610 m). To the east of the former 31 threshold, the hills are less than 3 km (1.9 mi) away. Immediately to the south of the airport is Victoria Harbour, and farther south is Hong Kong Island with hills up to 2,100 ft (640 m).

When Kai Tak closed, there was only one runway in use, numbered 13/31 and oriented southeast–northwest (134/314 degrees true, 136/316 degrees magnetic). The runway was made by reclaiming land from the harbour and was extended several times after its initial construction. The runway was 2,529 m (8,297 ft) when it was opened in 1958 and 3,390 m (11,120 ft) long when the airport closed in 1998. During the period between 1945 and 1955[citation needed] the airport used a different 13/31 alongside a crossing 07/25. These two runways were 1,450 by 70 m (4,756 by 231 ft) and 1,652 by 61 m (5,420 by 201 ft).[5]

At the northern end of the runway at closure, buildings rose up to six stories just across a major multi-lane arterial road. The other three sides of the runway were surrounded by Victoria Harbour. The low-altitude turning manoeuvre before the shortened final approach was so close to these buildings that passengers could spot television sets in the apartments: "...as the plane banked sharply to the right for landing ... the people watching television in the nearby apartments seemed an unsettling arm's length away."[6]

History Edit

1925 to 1930s Edit

The story of Kai Tak started in 1912 when two businessmen, Ho Kai and Au Tak, formed the Kai Tak Investment Company to reclaim land in Kowloon for development.[7] The land was acquired by the government for use as an airfield after the business plan failed.[8]

In 1924, Harry Abbott opened the Abbott School of Aviation on that piece of land.[9] Soon, it became a small grass strip runway airport used by the RAF, and by several flying clubs which, over time grew to include the Hong Kong Flying Club, the Far East Flying Training School, and the Aero Club of Hong Kong; these exist today as an amalgamation known as the Hong Kong Aviation Club. In 1928, a concrete slipway was built for seaplanes that used the adjoining Kowloon Bay.[2] The first control tower and hangar at Kai Tak were built in 1935. In 1936, the first domestic airline in Hong Kong was established.[citation needed]

World War II Edit

Hong Kong fell into the hands of the Japanese on December 12, 1941, during World War II. In 1942, the Japanese army expanded Kai Tak, using many Allied prisoner-of-war (POW) labourers,[10] building two concrete runways, 13/31 and 07/25. Numerous POW diary entries exist recalling the gruelling work and long hours working on building Kai Tak.[11] During the process, the historic wall of the Kowloon Walled City and the 45-metre (148 ft) tall Sung Wong Toi, a memorial for the last Song dynasty emperor, were destroyed for materials.[12] A 2001 Environmental Study recommended that a new memorial be erected for the Sung Wong Toi rock and other remnants of the Kowloon area before Kai Tak.[13]

1945 to 1970s Edit

 
Aerial view of the airport in 1971, three years before the 1974 extension

From September 1945 to August 1946 the airport was a Royal Navy shore base, "HMS Nabcatcher",[14] the name previously attached to a Mobile Naval Air Base for the Fleet Air Arm. On 1 April 1947, a Royal Naval Air Station, HMS Flycatcher, was commissioned there.[15]

A plan to turn Kai Tak into a modern airport was released in 1954.[2] By 1957 runway 13/31 had been extended to 1,664 metres (5,459 ft), while runway 7/25 remained 1,450 metres (4,760 ft) long; night operations were not allowed.[16] Bristol Britannia 102s took over BOAC's London-Tokyo flights in summer 1957 and were the largest airliners scheduled to the old airport (Boeing Stratocruisers never flew there). In 1958 the new NW/SE 2,550-metre (8,350 ft) runway extending into Kowloon Bay was completed by land reclamation. The two old runways were removed with footprint used by apron and terminal building. The passenger terminal was completed in 1962.[2] The runway was extended in the mid-1970s to 3,390 metres (11,130 ft), the final length.[17] This extension was completed in June 1974, but the full length of the runway was not in use until 31 December 1975, as construction of the new Airport Tunnel had kept the northwestern end of the runway closed.[18]

In 1955 Kai Tak Airport featured in the film "The Night My Number Came Up."

An Instrument Guidance System (IGS) was installed in 1974 to aid landing on runway 13. Use of the airport under adverse conditions was greatly increased.

In the 1970s an aircraft crash called attention to the potential loss of life in the high-density residential developments around the airport, though there were no serious accidents.[17]

Overcrowding in the 1980s and 1990s Edit

The growth of Hong Kong also put a strain on the airport's capacity. Its usage was close to, and for some time exceeded, the designed capacity. The airport was designed to handle 24 million passengers per year, but in 1996, Kai Tak handled 29.5 million passengers, plus 1.56 million tonnes of freight, making it the third busiest airport in the world in terms of international passenger traffic, and busiest in terms of international cargo throughput.[2] Moreover, clearance requirements for aircraft takeoffs and landings made it necessary to limit the height of buildings that could be built in Kowloon. While Kai Tak was initially located far away from residential areas, the expansion of both residential areas and the airport resulted in Kai Tak being close to residential areas. This caused serious noise and engine pollution for nearby residents and put height restrictions, which were removed after Kai Tak closed.[19] A night curfew from 11:30 pm to 6:30 am in the early morning also hindered operations.[20]

 
Kowloon City, 1998. Prince Edward Road is the flyover in the photo. A China Airlines Boeing 747 is seen in the photo.

As a result, in the late 1980s, the Hong Kong Government began searching for alternative locations for a new airport in Hong Kong to replace the aging airport. After deliberating on a number of locations, including the south side of Hong Kong Island, the government decided to build the airport on the island of Chek Lap Kok off Lantau Island. The new airport is located far away from Hong Kong's main residential areas, conducive to minimising the dangers of a major crash and also reducing the nuisance of noise pollution.[17] A huge number of resources were mobilised to build this new airport, part of the ten programmes in Hong Kong's Airport Core Programme.

The Regal Meridien Hong Kong Airport Hotel (now the Regal Oriental Hotel), linked to the passenger terminal by a footbridge spanning Prince Edward Road, opened on 19 July 1982. This was Hong Kong's first airport hotel, and comprised 380 rooms including 47 suites.[21] The hotel still exists, but the footbridge (which was connected to the passenger terminal) has been demolished. It is one of the few remaining buildings related to Kai Tak Airport.

Closure and legacy of Kai Tak Airport Edit

The new airport officially opened on 6 July 1998 to replace the functions of Kai Tak Airport. All of the essential airport supplies and vehicles that were left in the old airport for operation (some of the non-essential ones had already been transported to the new airport) were transported to Chek Lap Kok in one early morning with a single massive move, with a police escort.

On 6 July 1998 at 01:28, after the final aircraft departed for Chek Lap Kok, Kai Tak was finally retired as an airport. The last flights were:

A ceremony celebrating the end of the airport was held inside the control tower after the final flight took off. Richard Siegel, then-director of civil aviation, gave a brief speech ending with the words "Goodbye Kai Tak, and thank you", before dimming the lights briefly and then turning them off.[22][23]

After the last plane or last commercial flight, a Cathay Pacific A340-300, took off from Kai Tak International Airport to the new Hong Kong International Airport at 01:28 HKT, Kai Tak was closed, transferring its ICAO and IATA airport codes to the replacement airport at Chek Lap Kok.

The new airport at Chek Lap Kok opened at 06:00 (6:00am) on 6 July 1998 with the arrival of Cathay Pacific Flight 889 (nicknamed Polar 1) from New York-JFK. The first week of operations was disrupted by a sequence of IT failures based around software bugs in the Flight Information Display System. This in turn disrupted baggage handling and airbridge allocation. But by the end of the first week these challenges, and other teething problems, were largely resolved, and the new airport was exceeding Kai Tak performance measures. The exception was the new airport's main air cargo terminal built and operated by HACTL as a franchisee. The terminal faced major difficulties in coming into operation on 6 July, such that it closed again on 7 July to enable the franchisee to implement a major recovery programme. The disruption this caused to air cargo operations at the new airport led the government to temporarily reactivate Kai Tak's cargo terminal for a month. During this period, the airport was given temporary ICAO code VHHX.

The Kai Tak passenger terminal later housed government offices, automobile dealerships and showrooms, gaming arcades, a mall, a go-kart racecourse, a bowling alley, a snooker hall, a mini-golf range and other recreational facilities. In the mid-2000s, the passenger terminal and hangars were demolished. Many aviation enthusiasts were upset at the demise of Kai Tak because of the unique runway 13 approach. As private aviation was no longer allowed at Chek Lap Kok (having moved to Sek Kong Airfield), some enthusiasts had lobbied to keep about 1 km (0.62 mi) of the Kai Tak runway for general aviation, but the suggestion was rejected as the Government had planned to build a new cruise terminal at Kai Tak.[24]

The Hong Kong stop of Celine Dion's Let's Talk About Love World Tour was held on the airport's apron on 25 January 1999.

Until its retirement in 2018, the name Kai Tak was one of the names used in the lists of tropical cyclone names in the northwest Pacific Ocean. Submitted by Hong Kong, it was used four times.

BMW used to test its hydrogen cars on the former Kai Tak apron area,[25] while a golf course was set up at the end of Runway 31.

Former airlines and destinations Edit

Passenger Edit

AirlinesDestinations
Aeroflot Moscow–Domodedovo, Moscow–Sheremetyevo[26]
Air Canada Vancouver[26]
Air China Beijing–Capital, Dalian, Shenyang, Taiyuan, Tianjin[26]
Air France Bangkok–Don Muang, Bombay, Manila, Paris–Charles de Gaulle, Paris–Orly, Taipei–Songshan, Taipei–Taoyuan[26][27]
Air France Asie Osaka–Itami, Paris–Charles de Gaulle, Taipei–Taoyuan
Air India Bangkok–Don Muang, Delhi, Osaka–Itami, Osaka–Kansai, Tokyo–Haneda, Tokyo–Narita[26][27]
Air Mauritius Mauritius[26]
Air New Zealand Auckland[26]
Air Niugini Manila, Port Moresby[27]
Air Siam Bangkok–Don Muang
Air Nauru Nauru
Air Vietnam Saigon
All Nippon Airways Tokyo–Narita
Alitalia Bangkok–Don Muang, Rome–Fiumicino, Tokyo–Narita[26][27]
Ansett Australia Sydney[26]
Asiana Airlines Seoul–Kimpo[26]
Biman Bangladesh Airlines Dhaka
British Airways Abu Dhabi, Bahrain, Bangkok–Don Muang, Bombay, Colombo–Ratmalana, London–Heathrow, Manila, Tokyo–Haneda, Tokyo–Narita[26][27]
British Asia Airways London–Heathrow, Taipei–Taoyuan
British Caledonian Dubai–International[citation needed], London–Gatwick[citation needed]
British Overseas Airways Corporation Bangkok–Don Muang, Bombay, Calcutta, Darwin, Delhi, Iwakuni, Karachi, Manila, Shanghai–Hongqiao, Singapore/Paya Lebar, Tokyo–Haneda[28][29]
CAAC Airlines Beijing–Capital, Chengdu, Guangzhou, Hangzhou, Kunming, Shanghai–Hongqiao, Shanghai–Jiangwan, Shanghai–Longhua, Tianjin, Xi'an–Xianyang, Xi'an–Xiguan[27]
CNAC Chungking-Kunming/Lashio-Rangoon, Chengdu-Jiating-Luchow-Suifu, Kweilin-Hong Kong
Canadian Airlines Bangkok–Don Muang, Manila, Vancouver[26]
Canadian Pacific Air Lines Tokyo–Haneda, Vancouver
Cathay Pacific Adelaide, Amsterdam, Anchorage, Auckland, Bahrain, Bangkok–Don Muang, Beijing–Capital, Brisbane, Cairns, Cebu, Denpasar/Bali, Frankfurt, Fukuoka, Jakarta–Kemayoran, Jakarta–Halim Perdanakusuma, Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta, Johannesburg–Jan Smuts, Kuala Lumpur/Subang, London-Gatwick, London–Heathrow, Los Angeles, Manila, Melbourne, Nagoya–Komaki, New York–JFK, Osaka–Itami, Osaka–Kansai, Paris–Charles de Gaulle, Paris–Orly, Penang, Perth, Port Moresby, Rome–Fiumicino, Sapporo–Chitose, Seoul–Kimpo, Shanghai–Hongqiao, Singapore/Changi, Singapore/Paya Lebar, Sydney, Taipei–Songshan, Taipei–Taoyuan, Tokyo–Haneda, Tokyo–Narita, Vancouver, Zürich[26][27]
China Airlines Bangkok–Don Muang, Jakarta–Kemayoran, Jakarta–Halim Perdanakusuma, Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta, Kaohsiung, Kuala Lumpur/Subang, Singapore/Changi, Singapore/Paya Lebar, Taipei–Songshan, Taipei–Taoyuan[26][27]
China Eastern Airlines Fuzhou–Changle, Fuzhou–Yixu, Hangzhou, Ningbo, Shanghai–Hongqiao[26]
China Northern Airlines Changchun, Harbin, Sanya, Shenyang[citation needed]
China Northwest Airlines Xi'an/Xianyang, Xi'an/Xiguan[citation needed]
China Southern Airlines Beijing–Capital, Guangzhou, Kunming, Shantou/Jieyang/Chaozhou, Shantou–Waisha, Xiamen, Zhengzhou/Dongjiao, Zhengzhou/Xinzheng[26]
China Southwest Airlines Chengdu, Chongqing/Baishiyi, Chongqing/Jiangbei[citation needed]
Continental Micronesia Guam, Saipan
Delta Air Lines Anchorage, Los Angeles
Dragonair Beijing–Capital, Changsha/Datuopu, Changsha/Huanghua, Chengdu, Chongqing/Baishiyi, Chongqing/Jiangbei, Dalian, Dhaka, Guilin/Liangjiang, Guilin/Qifengling, Haikou–Dayingshan, Hangzhou, Hiroshima, Kaohsiung, Kota Kinabalu, Kuching, Kunming, Nanjing–Dajiaochang, Nanjing–Lukou, Ningbo, Phnom Penh, Phuket, Qingdao, Sendai, Shanghai–Hongqiao, Tianjin, Xiamen, Xi'an/Xianyang, Xi'an/Xiguan[26]
El Al Tashkent, Tel Aviv[26]
Emirates Bangkok–Don Muang, Dubai–International, Manila
Eurasia Aviation Corporation Peking-Honan, Liangchou-Urumqi, Shanghai-Lanchow, Shanghai-Manzhouli
EVA Air Taipei–Taoyuan[26]
Grand Air Manila, Subic Bay
Garuda Indonesia Jakarta–Kemayoran, Jakarta–Halim Perdanakusuma, Jakarta–Soekarno–Hatta[27]
Gulf Air Abu Dhabi, Bahrain
Imperial Airways Zhanjiang,[30] Penang
Imperial Japanese Airways Guangzhou, Taipei–Songshan[31]
Japan Airlines / Japan Asia Airways Bangkok–Don Muang, Fukuoka, Kagoshima, Kaohsiung, Nagoya–Komaki, Okinawa, Osaka–Itami, Osaka–Kansai, Singapore/Changi, Singapore/Paya Lebar, Taipei–Songshan, Taipei–Taoyuan, Tokyo–Haneda, Tokyo–Narita[26][27]
Kampuchea Airlines Phnom Penh[citation needed]
KLM Amsterdam[26]
Korean Air Pusan, Seoul–Kimpo, Taipei–Taoyuan[27]
Lauda Air Bangkok–Don Muang, Vienna
LaTur Mexico City
Lufthansa Bangkok–Don Muang, Frankfurt, Karachi, Tokyo–Narita[27]
Malaysia Airlines Kota Kinabalu, Kuala Lumpur/Subang, Penang, Taipei–Songshan, Taipei–Taoyuan[27]
Malaysia–Singapore Airlines Kuala Lumpur/Simpang, Kuala Lumpur/Subang, Singapore/Kallang, Singapore/Paya Lebar, Singapore/Seletar, Taipei–Songshan
Mandarin Airlines Taipei–Taoyuan[citation needed]
Martinair Amsterdam
Northwest Airlines Minneapolis/St. Paul, New York–JFK, Seattle/Tacoma, Seoul–Kimpo, Tokyo–Haneda, Tokyo–Narita[26][27]
Pan American World Airways Bahrain, Bangkok–Don Muang, Bombay, Denpasar–Bali, Frankfurt, Istanbul-Atatürk, Karachi, London–Heathrow, Los Angeles, New Delhi, New York–JFK,[32] San Francisco, Shanghai–Hongqiao, Singapore/Changi, Singapore/Paya Lebar, Tokyo–Haneda, Tokyo–Narita[27]
Philippine Airlines Cebu, Manila[26][27]
Pakistan International Airlines Karachi
Qantas Bangkok–Don Muang, Brisbane, Manila, Melbourne, Sydney[27]
Qatar Airways Doha
Royal Air Cambodge Phnom Penh[27]
Royal Brunei Airlines Bandar Seri Begawan[27]
Royal Nepal Airlines Kathmandu
Scandinavian Airlines Copenhagen[27]
Shanghai Airlines Shanghai–Hongqiao[27]
Singapore Airlines Bangkok–Don Muang, Honolulu, San Francisco, Singapore/Changi, Singapore/Paya Lebar, Taipei–Songshan, Taipei–Taoyuan[27]
South African Airways Bangkok–Don Muang, Johannesburg-Jan Smuts[26][27]
Swissair Bangkok–Don Muang, Bombay, Karachi, Manila, Zürich
Trans World Airlines Bangkok–Don Muang, Guam, Honolulu, San Francisco, Naha, Los Angeles[33]
Transaero Moscow–Domodedovo, Saint Petersburg
Thai Airways Bangkok–Don Muang, Seoul–Kimpo, Taipei–Songshan, Taipei–Taoyuan, Tokyo–Haneda, Tokyo–Narita[27]
United Airlines Bangkok–Don Muang, Chicago–O'Hare, Delhi, Los Angeles, New York–JFK, San Francisco, Seattle/Tacoma, Singapore/Changi, Tokyo–Narita[26][27]
Varig Bangkok–Don Muang, Johannesburg–Jan Smuts, Rio de Janeiro–Galeão
Vietnam Airlines Hanoi, Saigon
Virgin Atlantic London–Heathrow
Xiamen Airlines Fuzhou–Changle, Fuzhou–Yixu, Quanzhou, Wuyishan, Xiamen

Cargo Destinations Edit

Operations Edit

 
Airport forecourt
 
Departure hall of Kai Tak Airport

Terminals and facilities Edit

The Kai Tak airport consisted of a linear passenger terminal building with a car park attached at the rear. There were eight boarding gates attached to the terminal building.[34]

A freight terminal was located on the south side of the east apron and diagonally from the passenger terminal building.

Due to the limited space, the fuel tank farm was located between the passenger terminal and HAECO maintenance facilities (hangar).

Companies based at Kai Tak Edit

 
Northwest Cargo 747-200F landing

Several airlines were based at Kai Tak:

Other tenants included:

Runway 13 approach Edit

 
Layout of Kai Tak Airport prior to its 1998 closure
 
An Air France Boeing 747-400 passing above the very crowded Kowloon City during its approach and landing
 
Cathay Pacific Boeing 777-200 (B-HNC) on final approach to Kai Tak runway 13, overflying Kowloon at low altitude
 
A Cathay Pacific Boeing 747-300 landing at Kai Tak Airport runway 13
 
"Checkerboard Hill", which was a major navigational aid for the Runway 13 approach, as seen from Kowloon Tsai Park

The landing approach for planes using runway 13 at Kai Tak was considered spectacular and was infamous, not just amongst aviation enthusiasts but amongst the general public as well. Flight sim charts, which are based on the real charts used on the airport, give an outline on the procedures used on approach into Kai Tak Airport.[35]

Checkerboard approach Edit

The Checkerboard approach (also spelled as Chequerboard approach) initially begins to the south-west of the airport, with aircraft flying westbound at a minimum altitude of 6000 feet. At this beginning stage of the approach, the aircraft should be passing above Cheung Chau – a small island just off Lantau Island. After that, the aircraft was required to proceed up to "Point Golf", which was on the south side of Lantau Island and directly south of the current Chek Lap Kok Airport. Approaching aircraft then had to make a right-hand U-turn in order to intercept the localiser for the Runway 13 IGS, which generally happened above the current Chek Lap Kok Airport site. The IGS was, in essence, a heavily modified Instrument landing system (ILS) system designed uniquely for Kai Tak Airport, otherwise functioning identical to a normal ILS. At roughly 2500 feet, the autopilot was disconnected, and the rest of the approach was flown manually. The aircraft then descended below 1000 feet and shortly afterwards reached Kowloon Tsai Park and its small hill (Checkerboard Hill). Upon reaching the small hill above Kowloon Tsai Park, which was painted with a large "aviation orange" and white checkerboard (22°20′06″N 114°11′04″E / 22.33500°N 114.18444°E / 22.33500; 114.18444 (Checkerboard Hill)), used as a visual reference point on the final approach (in addition to the middle marker on the Instrument Guidance System), the pilot needed to make a 47° visual right turn to line up with the runway and complete the final leg. The aircraft would be just 2 nautical miles (3.7 km) from touchdown, at a height of less than 1,000 feet (300 m) when the turn was made. Typically the plane would enter the final right turn at a height of about 650 feet (200 m) and exit it at a height of 140 feet (43 m) to line up with the runway. That demanding manoeuvre became known in the aviation community as the "Hong Kong Turn" or the "Checkerboard Turn". For many airline passengers on planes approaching and landing on Runway 13 at Kai Tak Airport, it became referred to as the "Kai Tak Heart Attack", because they were often frightened to be turning at such a close proximity to the ground, which, at less than 150 ft, or 45 metres, was generally less than even the Boeing 767's wingspan, which is considered a medium-size airliner. The turn was so low that passengers could see television sets running in people's residences near the airport.[36]

Handling the runway 13 approach was difficult enough with normal crosswinds because, even if the wind direction was constant, it was changing relative to the aircraft as the plane made the 47° visual right turn, meaning that what would be a headwind heading directly east on the IGS would become a crosswind and begin to push the aircraft over and off the runway alignment without correction. The landing would become even more challenging when crosswinds from the north-east were strong and gusty during typhoons. The mountain range north-east of the airport also made the wind vary greatly in both speed and direction. Watching large aircraft banking at low altitudes and taking big crab angles during their final approaches was popular with plane spotters. Despite the difficulty, the runway 13 approach was used most of the time due to the prevailing wind direction in Hong Kong.

Because of the turn required during final approach, ILS was not available for runway 13 and landings had to follow a visual approach. This made the approach unusable in low visibility conditions.

Stonecutters' Approach Edit

Alongside the Chequerboard approach, there was a lesser known approach into Kai Tak that led aircraft over the Stonecutters' NDB at a heading of 040 and led into a ~90° turn to line up on Runway 13. This approach was used extremely infrequently, since the Chequerboard approach had a localiser and glide slope to work with, and NDBs are very rarely used in commercial aviation today. It generally can be assumed this approach was used when the localiser and glide slope were offline for maintenance.

Runway 13 departure Edit

Runway 13 was the preferred departure runway for heavy aircraft due to the clear departure path, opposite that of the runway 31 departure. Heavy aircraft on departure using runway 13 would often need nearly the entire length of the runway, particularly during summer days due to the air temperature.

Runway 31 approach Edit

Runway 31 approaches and landings were similar to other airports in which ILS was available. Runways 13 and 31 are, in fact, the same physical runway, however if a flight is landing on Runway 13 that means that the aircraft is flying in on a south-easterly direction, while a flight landing on Runway 31 would be coming in a north-westerly direction. This applies for flights taking off on runways 13 and 31 – a flight departing from runway 13 would be heading south-east, and vice versa. This is because runways are named for their magnetic heading in decadegrees, which means that a runway oriented anywhere between 125° and 134° magnetic would be numbered 13, and vice versa. The path towards the runway passed within 300 metres (980 ft) to the north of Heng Fa Chuen on Hong Kong Island.

Runway 31 was also used for landing early in the morning for noise abatement.

Runway 31 departure Edit

When lined up for takeoff on runway 31, a range of hills including 1,500 feet (460 m) Beacon Hill would be right in front of the aircraft. The aircraft had to make a sharp 65-degree left turn soon after takeoff to avoid the hills (i.e. the reverse of a Runway 13 landing). If a runway change occurred due to wind change from runway 13 departures to runway 31 departures, planes that were loaded to maximum payload for runway 13 departures had to return to the terminal to offload some goods to provide enough climbing clearance over buildings during a runway 31 departure.

Private aviation Edit

 
Hong Kong Aviation Club building at the former Kai Tak Airport, with the headquarters of the Hong Kong Air Cadet Corps

The Hong Kong Aviation Club formerly held most of its activities at Kai Tak,[37] where it had hangars and other facilities.[38]

The club moved most of its aircraft to Shek Kong Airfield in 1994 after the hours for general aviation at Kai Tak were sharply reduced, to two hours per morning, as of 1 July that year.[37] Kai Tak closed to fixed-wing traffic in 1998.[38] The club ended its helicopter activities at Kai Tak on 9 July 2017.[39] The Kai Tak location, which it was able to use all days of the week, meant that helicopter training took less time compared to fixed-wing training, as usage at Shek Kong is restricted to weekends.[40]

Incidents and accidents Edit

 
China Airlines Flight 605 crashed into Victoria Harbour after it failed to stop on the runway during a typhoon.

Many planes crashed at Kai Tak due to poor weather and hard approaches:

  • On 25 January 1947, a Philippine Air Lines DC-3 aircraft crashed into Mount Parker, killing four crew members.[41][42]
  • On 21 December 1948, a China National Aviation Corporation Douglas DC-4 struck Basalt Island after a descent through clouds. 35 were killed.[43]
  • On 24 February 1949, a Cathay Pacific Douglas DC-3 crashed into a hillside near Braemar Reservoir after aborting an approach in poor visibility and attempting to go around. All 23 on board were killed.[44]
  • On 11 March 1951, a Pacific Overseas Airlines Douglas DC-4 crashed after takeoff into the hills between Mount Butler and Mount Parker on Hong Kong Island. The captain of the aircraft allegedly failed to execute the turn left operation after departure. 24 were killed.[45]
  • On 9 April 1951, a Siamese Airways Douglas DC-3 lost control on its turn while attempting a night-time visual approach. The captain allegedly allowed the aircraft to lose speed while attempting to turn quickly. 16 were killed.[46]
  • On 19 April 1961, a US military Douglas DC-3 (C-47 Skytrain) bound for Formosa crashed into Mount Parker after takeoff. Of the 16 on board, 15 were killed.[47][42]
  • On 24 August 1965, a United States Marine Corps C-130 Hercules crashed shortly after takeoff from runway 13, killing 59 of the 71 people on board. This was the deadliest accident at Kai Tak.[48]
  • On 30 June 1967, a Thai Airways International Sud Aviation SE-210 Caravelle III crashed into Victoria Harbour while trying to land during a torrential rainstorm. A typhoon was some 150 miles (240 km) NW of Hong Kong, but the colony was not closed down in preparation of the typhoon. The co-pilot, who was flying the aircraft and unable to see the runway due to the heavy rain, allegedly made an abrupt heading change, causing the aircraft to enter a high rate of descent and crash into the harbour to the right of the runway. The starboard wing snapped off on impact, and the aircraft rolled onto its starboard side, halving the number of escape routes. 24 were killed, but only 23 bodies were recovered at the scene. The final body was recovered after it was seen floating in the harbour six weeks later.[49]
  • On 2 September 1977, a Transmeridian Air Cargo Canadair CL-44 lost control and crashed into the Tathong Channel on fire shortly after takeoff. The no. 4 engine was said to have failed, causing an internal fire in the engine and the aircraft fuel system that eventually resulted in a massive external fire. Four were killed.[50][51]
  • On 9 March 1978,[52] a China Airlines Flight 831 was hijacked. The hijacker (the flight engineer of the flight) demanded to be taken to Mainland China (the airline was of the Republic of China on Taiwan, not the People's Republic of China, which controlled the mainland). The hijack lasted less than a day, and the hijacker was killed.[53]
  • On 7 February 1980, a China Airlines Boeing 747-200 B-1866 (later B-18255) had a tail-strike incident while landing at Kai Tak International Airport on route to Taipei from Stockholm Arlanda Airport via King Abdulaziz International Airport and Kai Tak. The aircraft was improperly repaired which caused it to break up in flight on 25 May 2002 while flying to Chek Lap Kok International Airport.
  • On 18 October 1983, a Lufthansa Boeing 747 freighter abandoned takeoff after engine no. 2 malfunctioned, probably at speed exceeding V1 (the takeoff/abort decision point). The aircraft overran the runway onto soft ground and sustained severe damage. The three crew on board suffered only minor injuries.[54]
  • On 31 August 1988, the right outboard flap of a CAAC Airlines Hawker Siddeley Trident operating Flight 301 hit approach lights of runway 31 while landing under rain and fog. The right main landing gear then struck a lip and collapsed, causing the aircraft to run off the runway and slip into the harbour. 7 were killed.[55]
  • On 4 November 1993, a China Airlines Boeing 747-400, operating Flight 605, overran the runway while landing during a typhoon. The wind was gusting to gale force at the time. Despite the plane's unstable approach, the captain did not go around. It touched down more than 2/3 down the runway and was unable to stop before the runway ended.[56] Although the aircraft ended up submerged beyond the end of the runway, there were only 23 minor injuries amongst the 396 passengers and crew.
  • On 23 September 1994, a Heavylift Cargo Airlines Lockheed L-100-30 Hercules lost control shortly after takeoff from runway 13. The pitch control system of one of its propellers was said to have failed. Six were killed.[57]

Redevelopment Edit

 
Aerial view of the Kai Tak Development site in 2017
 
Kai Ching Estate is the first housing estate to be built on the old Kai Tak Airport site. It is located on the north eastern side of the site, where the maintenance area was located.
 
Kai Tak Runway Park with its former runway number: 13

2002 blueprint Edit

In October 1998, the Government drafted a plan for the Kai Tak Airport site, involving the reclamation of 219 hectares (540 acres) of land. After receiving many objections, the Government scaled down the reclamation to 166 hectares (410 acres) in June 1999. The Territorial Development Department commenced a new study on the development of the area in November 1999, entitled "Feasibility Studies on the Revised Southeast Kowloon Development Plan", and a new public consultation exercise was conducted in May 2000, resulting in the land reclamation being further scaled down to 133 hectares (330 acres). The new plans based on the feasibility studies were passed by the chief executive in July 2002.[58] There were plans for the site of Kai Tak to be used for housing development, which was once projected to house around 240,000–340,000 residents. Due to calls from the public to protect the harbour and participate more deeply in future town planning, the scale and plan of the project were yet to be decided. There were also plans for a railway station and maintenance centre in the proposed plan for the Sha Tin to Central Link.

There were also proposals to dredge the runway to form several islands for housing, to build a terminal capable of accommodating cruise ships the size of Queen Mary 2, and more recently, to house the Hong Kong Sports Institute, as well as several stadiums, in the case that the institute was forced to move so that the equestrian events of the 2008 Summer Olympics could be held at its present site in Sha Tin.

On 9 January 2004, the Court of Final Appeal ruled that no reclamation plan for Victoria Harbour could be introduced unless it passed an "overriding public interest" test.[59] Subsequently, the Government abandoned these plans.

Kai Tak Planning Review Edit

The Government set up a "Kai Tak Planning Review" in July 2004 for further public consultation.[60] A number of plans were presented.

June 2006 blueprint Edit

A new plan for the redevelopment of Kai Tak was issued by the government in June 2006. Under these proposals, hotels would be scattered throughout the 328-hectare (810-acre) site, and flats aimed at housing 86,000 new residents were proposed.

Other features of the plan included two cruise terminals and a large stadium.

October 2006 blueprint Edit

The Planning Department unveiled a major reworking of its plans for the old Kai Tak airport site on 17 October 2006, containing "a basket of small measures designed to answer a bevy of concerns raised by the public".[61] The revised blueprint will also extend several "green corridors" from the main central park into the surrounding neighbourhoods of Kowloon City, Kowloon Bay and Ma Tau Kok.

The following features are proposed in the revised plan:

  • two cruise terminals, with a third terminal to be added if the need arises
  • a luxury hotel complex near the cruise terminals—the complex would sit about seven stories high, with hotel rooms atop commercial or tourist-related spaces
  • an eight-station monorail linking the tourist hub with Kwun Tong
  • a large stadium
  • a central park to provide green space
  • a 200-metre (660 ft) high public viewing tower near the tip of the runway
  • a new bridge, likely to involve further reclamation of Victoria Harbour

The following are major changes:

  • hotel spaces are to be centralised near the end of the runway, and will face into the harbour towards Central
  • a third cruise terminal could be added at the foot of the hotel cluster if the need arises
  • a second row of luxury residential spaces is to be added facing Kwun Tong, built on an elevated terrace or platform to preserve a view of the harbour

The government has promised that:

  • the total amount of housing and hotel space will remain the same as proposed in June 2006
  • plot ratios will be the same as before
  • the total commercial space on the site will also remain about the same

The new bridge proposed by the government, joining the planned hotel district at the end of the runway with Kwun Tong, could be a potential source of controversy. Under the Protection of the Harbour Ordinance, no harbour reclamation can take place unless the Government can demonstrate to the courts an "overriding public need".[62]

The new Kai Tak blueprint was presented to the Legislative Council on 24 October 2006 after review by the Town Planning Board.

 
Panorama of the former Kai Tak Airport Site (2010)

2011 onwards Edit

In 2011, with most of the former Kai Tak area still abandoned, ideas were floated to develop the area for commercial property, citing shortages of office space and rising property costs.[63] In June 2013, the Kai Tak Cruise Terminal was opened on the tip of the former runway.[64][65] Two public housing estates opened on the northeast area of the site in 2013, providing over 13,000 new rental flats. As of 2018, the public estates have been joined by some private residential developments, now nearing completion.

A small park and new hospital (Hong Kong Children's Hospital) have also opened.

A new Mass Transit Railway (MTR) station, Kai Tak, opened on the former airport land in early 2020. Another station, Sung Wong Toi, was opened in June 2021.

Construction of the Kai Tak Sports Park on the former airport land commenced in April 2019.[66] Once completed, Kai Tak Sports Park will be the largest sports venue in Hong Kong and will include a 50,000 seat Main Stadium, an Indoor Sports Center, a Public Sports Ground and multiple open spaces.[67]

Kai Tak Sky Garden, a massive elevated garden, opened in May 2021. It occupies part of the former runway and apron.[68]

See also Edit

References Edit

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External links Edit

airport, redirects, here, redevelopment, project, area, development, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, airport, thailand, iata, icao, vhhh, vhhx, international, airport, hong, kong, from, 1925, until, 1998, officially, known, hong, kong, internation. Kai Tak redirects here For the redevelopment project of the area see Kai Tak Development For other uses see Kai Tak disambiguation Not to be confused with Tak Airport in Thailand Kai Tak Airport IATA HKG ICAO VHHH VHHX was the international airport of Hong Kong from 1925 until 1998 Officially known as Hong Kong International Airport from 1954 to 6 July 1998 it is often referred to as Hong Kong International Airport Kai Tak 1 or simply Kai Tak and Kai Tak International Airport to distinguish it from its successor Chek Lap Kok International Airport built on reclaimed and levelled land around the islands of Chek Lap Kok and Lam Chau 30 kilometres 19 mi to the west 2 Kai Tak International Airport啟德機場Kai Tak Airport in 1998 the morning after its closureIATA HKGICAO VHHXSummaryAirport typeDefunctOwnerGovernment of Hong KongOperatorCivil Aviation DepartmentLocationKowloon Hong KongOpened25 January 1925 1925 01 25 Closed6 July 1998 1998 07 06 Hub forCathay Pacific 1954 1998 Elevation AMSL9 m 30 ftCoordinates22 19 43 N 114 11 39 E 22 32861 N 114 19417 E 22 32861 114 19417MapKai Tak International AirportLocation of Kai Tak Airport in Hong KongRunwaysDirection Length Surfacem ft13 31 3 390 11 122 Asphalt Closed Kai Tak AirportChinese nameTraditional Chinese啟德機場Simplified Chinese启德机场JyutpingKai2dak1 Gei1coeng4Cantonese YaleKaidak GeicheuhngHanyu PinyinQǐde JichǎngTranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinQǐde JichǎngWade GilesCh i3 te2 chi1 ch ang2Yue CantoneseYale RomanizationKaidak GeicheuhngJyutpingKai2dak1 Gei1coeng4Japanese nameKanji啓徳空港TranscriptionsRomanizationKaitakku kukōKeitoku kukōOfficially Kai Tak Airport held the ICAO code of VHHH but for logistical reasons during the transition to the new airport it also temporarily used the ICAO code of VHHX which is also the code used by the flight simulation community to virtually represent the airport Because of the geography of the area by which water was on three sides of the runway with Kowloon City s residential apartment complexes to the north west and 2 000 plus ft 610 m plus mountains to the north east of the airport aircraft could not fly over the mountains and quickly drop in for a final approach Instead aircraft had to fly above Victoria Harbour and Kowloon City passing north of Mong Kok s Bishop Hill After passing Bishop Hill pilots would see Checkerboard Hill with a large orange and white checkerboard pattern Once the pattern was sighted and identified aircraft made a low altitude sub 600 ft 180 m 47 degree right hand turn ending with a short final approach and touchdown For pilots this airport was technically demanding as the approach could not be flown by aircraft instruments but had to be flown visually because of the right hand turn required 3 The History Channel programme Most Extreme Airports ranked it as the sixth most dangerous airport in the world 4 The airport was home to Hong Kong s international carrier Cathay Pacific as well as regional carrier Dragonair since 2016 known as Cathay Dragon freight airline Air Hong Kong and Hong Kong Airways The airport was also home to the former RAF Kai Tak and the Hong Kong Aviation Club Contents 1 Geographic environment 2 History 2 1 1925 to 1930s 2 2 World War II 2 3 1945 to 1970s 2 4 Overcrowding in the 1980s and 1990s 2 5 Closure and legacy of Kai Tak Airport 3 Former airlines and destinations 3 1 Passenger 3 2 Cargo Destinations 4 Operations 4 1 Terminals and facilities 4 2 Companies based at Kai Tak 4 3 Runway 13 approach 4 3 1 Checkerboard approach 4 3 2 Stonecutters Approach 4 4 Runway 13 departure 4 5 Runway 31 approach 4 6 Runway 31 departure 4 7 Private aviation 5 Incidents and accidents 6 Redevelopment 6 1 2002 blueprint 6 2 Kai Tak Planning Review 6 2 1 June 2006 blueprint 6 2 2 October 2006 blueprint 6 3 2011 onwards 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksGeographic environment Edit nbsp The airport was surrounded by high rise buildings The airport car park is at the centre and offices are on the right of the photograph Kai Tak was located on the eastern side of Kowloon Bay in Kowloon Hong Kong The area is surrounded by rugged mountains Less than 4 km 2 5 mi to the north and northeast of the former runway 13 threshold is a range of hills reaching an elevation of 2 000 ft 610 m To the east of the former 31 threshold the hills are less than 3 km 1 9 mi away Immediately to the south of the airport is Victoria Harbour and farther south is Hong Kong Island with hills up to 2 100 ft 640 m When Kai Tak closed there was only one runway in use numbered 13 31 and oriented southeast northwest 134 314 degrees true 136 316 degrees magnetic The runway was made by reclaiming land from the harbour and was extended several times after its initial construction The runway was 2 529 m 8 297 ft when it was opened in 1958 and 3 390 m 11 120 ft long when the airport closed in 1998 During the period between 1945 and 1955 citation needed the airport used a different 13 31 alongside a crossing 07 25 These two runways were 1 450 by 70 m 4 756 by 231 ft and 1 652 by 61 m 5 420 by 201 ft 5 At the northern end of the runway at closure buildings rose up to six stories just across a major multi lane arterial road The other three sides of the runway were surrounded by Victoria Harbour The low altitude turning manoeuvre before the shortened final approach was so close to these buildings that passengers could spot television sets in the apartments as the plane banked sharply to the right for landing the people watching television in the nearby apartments seemed an unsettling arm s length away 6 History Edit1925 to 1930s Edit The story of Kai Tak started in 1912 when two businessmen Ho Kai and Au Tak formed the Kai Tak Investment Company to reclaim land in Kowloon for development 7 The land was acquired by the government for use as an airfield after the business plan failed 8 In 1924 Harry Abbott opened the Abbott School of Aviation on that piece of land 9 Soon it became a small grass strip runway airport used by the RAF and by several flying clubs which over time grew to include the Hong Kong Flying Club the Far East Flying Training School and the Aero Club of Hong Kong these exist today as an amalgamation known as the Hong Kong Aviation Club In 1928 a concrete slipway was built for seaplanes that used the adjoining Kowloon Bay 2 The first control tower and hangar at Kai Tak were built in 1935 In 1936 the first domestic airline in Hong Kong was established citation needed World War II Edit Hong Kong fell into the hands of the Japanese on December 12 1941 during World War II In 1942 the Japanese army expanded Kai Tak using many Allied prisoner of war POW labourers 10 building two concrete runways 13 31 and 07 25 Numerous POW diary entries exist recalling the gruelling work and long hours working on building Kai Tak 11 During the process the historic wall of the Kowloon Walled City and the 45 metre 148 ft tall Sung Wong Toi a memorial for the last Song dynasty emperor were destroyed for materials 12 A 2001 Environmental Study recommended that a new memorial be erected for the Sung Wong Toi rock and other remnants of the Kowloon area before Kai Tak 13 1945 to 1970s Edit nbsp Aerial view of the airport in 1971 three years before the 1974 extensionFrom September 1945 to August 1946 the airport was a Royal Navy shore base HMS Nabcatcher 14 the name previously attached to a Mobile Naval Air Base for the Fleet Air Arm On 1 April 1947 a Royal Naval Air Station HMS Flycatcher was commissioned there 15 A plan to turn Kai Tak into a modern airport was released in 1954 2 By 1957 runway 13 31 had been extended to 1 664 metres 5 459 ft while runway 7 25 remained 1 450 metres 4 760 ft long night operations were not allowed 16 Bristol Britannia 102s took over BOAC s London Tokyo flights in summer 1957 and were the largest airliners scheduled to the old airport Boeing Stratocruisers never flew there In 1958 the new NW SE 2 550 metre 8 350 ft runway extending into Kowloon Bay was completed by land reclamation The two old runways were removed with footprint used by apron and terminal building The passenger terminal was completed in 1962 2 The runway was extended in the mid 1970s to 3 390 metres 11 130 ft the final length 17 This extension was completed in June 1974 but the full length of the runway was not in use until 31 December 1975 as construction of the new Airport Tunnel had kept the northwestern end of the runway closed 18 In 1955 Kai Tak Airport featured in the film The Night My Number Came Up An Instrument Guidance System IGS was installed in 1974 to aid landing on runway 13 Use of the airport under adverse conditions was greatly increased In the 1970s an aircraft crash called attention to the potential loss of life in the high density residential developments around the airport though there were no serious accidents 17 Overcrowding in the 1980s and 1990s Edit The growth of Hong Kong also put a strain on the airport s capacity Its usage was close to and for some time exceeded the designed capacity The airport was designed to handle 24 million passengers per year but in 1996 Kai Tak handled 29 5 million passengers plus 1 56 million tonnes of freight making it the third busiest airport in the world in terms of international passenger traffic and busiest in terms of international cargo throughput 2 Moreover clearance requirements for aircraft takeoffs and landings made it necessary to limit the height of buildings that could be built in Kowloon While Kai Tak was initially located far away from residential areas the expansion of both residential areas and the airport resulted in Kai Tak being close to residential areas This caused serious noise and engine pollution for nearby residents and put height restrictions which were removed after Kai Tak closed 19 A night curfew from 11 30 pm to 6 30 am in the early morning also hindered operations 20 nbsp Kowloon City 1998 Prince Edward Road is the flyover in the photo A China Airlines Boeing 747 is seen in the photo As a result in the late 1980s the Hong Kong Government began searching for alternative locations for a new airport in Hong Kong to replace the aging airport After deliberating on a number of locations including the south side of Hong Kong Island the government decided to build the airport on the island of Chek Lap Kok off Lantau Island The new airport is located far away from Hong Kong s main residential areas conducive to minimising the dangers of a major crash and also reducing the nuisance of noise pollution 17 A huge number of resources were mobilised to build this new airport part of the ten programmes in Hong Kong s Airport Core Programme The Regal Meridien Hong Kong Airport Hotel now the Regal Oriental Hotel linked to the passenger terminal by a footbridge spanning Prince Edward Road opened on 19 July 1982 This was Hong Kong s first airport hotel and comprised 380 rooms including 47 suites 21 The hotel still exists but the footbridge which was connected to the passenger terminal has been demolished It is one of the few remaining buildings related to Kai Tak Airport Closure and legacy of Kai Tak Airport Edit The new airport officially opened on 6 July 1998 to replace the functions of Kai Tak Airport All of the essential airport supplies and vehicles that were left in the old airport for operation some of the non essential ones had already been transported to the new airport were transported to Chek Lap Kok in one early morning with a single massive move with a police escort On 6 July 1998 at 01 28 after the final aircraft departed for Chek Lap Kok Kai Tak was finally retired as an airport The last flights were The last arrival Dragonair KA841 from Chongqing Airbus A320 200 landed Runway 13 at 23 38 11 38pm The last scheduled commercial flight Cathay Pacific CX251 to London Heathrow Boeing 747 400 took off from Runway 13 at 00 02 12 02am The last departure Cathay Pacific CX3340 ferry flight to the new airport at Chek Lap Kok Airbus A340 300 took off from Runway 13 at 01 05 1 05am A ceremony celebrating the end of the airport was held inside the control tower after the final flight took off Richard Siegel then director of civil aviation gave a brief speech ending with the words Goodbye Kai Tak and thank you before dimming the lights briefly and then turning them off 22 23 After the last plane or last commercial flight a Cathay Pacific A340 300 took off from Kai Tak International Airport to the new Hong Kong International Airport at 01 28 HKT Kai Tak was closed transferring its ICAO and IATA airport codes to the replacement airport at Chek Lap Kok The new airport at Chek Lap Kok opened at 06 00 6 00am on 6 July 1998 with the arrival of Cathay Pacific Flight 889 nicknamed Polar 1 from New York JFK The first week of operations was disrupted by a sequence of IT failures based around software bugs in the Flight Information Display System This in turn disrupted baggage handling and airbridge allocation But by the end of the first week these challenges and other teething problems were largely resolved and the new airport was exceeding Kai Tak performance measures The exception was the new airport s main air cargo terminal built and operated by HACTL as a franchisee The terminal faced major difficulties in coming into operation on 6 July such that it closed again on 7 July to enable the franchisee to implement a major recovery programme The disruption this caused to air cargo operations at the new airport led the government to temporarily reactivate Kai Tak s cargo terminal for a month During this period the airport was given temporary ICAO code VHHX The Kai Tak passenger terminal later housed government offices automobile dealerships and showrooms gaming arcades a mall a go kart racecourse a bowling alley a snooker hall a mini golf range and other recreational facilities In the mid 2000s the passenger terminal and hangars were demolished Many aviation enthusiasts were upset at the demise of Kai Tak because of the unique runway 13 approach As private aviation was no longer allowed at Chek Lap Kok having moved to Sek Kong Airfield some enthusiasts had lobbied to keep about 1 km 0 62 mi of the Kai Tak runway for general aviation but the suggestion was rejected as the Government had planned to build a new cruise terminal at Kai Tak 24 The Hong Kong stop of Celine Dion s Let s Talk About Love World Tour was held on the airport s apron on 25 January 1999 Until its retirement in 2018 the name Kai Tak was one of the names used in the lists of tropical cyclone names in the northwest Pacific Ocean Submitted by Hong Kong it was used four times BMW used to test its hydrogen cars on the former Kai Tak apron area 25 while a golf course was set up at the end of Runway 31 Former airlines and destinations EditPassenger Edit AirlinesDestinationsAeroflotMoscow Domodedovo Moscow Sheremetyevo 26 Air CanadaVancouver 26 Air ChinaBeijing Capital Dalian Shenyang Taiyuan Tianjin 26 Air FranceBangkok Don Muang Bombay Manila Paris Charles de Gaulle Paris Orly Taipei Songshan Taipei Taoyuan 26 27 Air France AsieOsaka Itami Paris Charles de Gaulle Taipei TaoyuanAir IndiaBangkok Don Muang Delhi Osaka Itami Osaka Kansai Tokyo Haneda Tokyo Narita 26 27 Air MauritiusMauritius 26 Air New ZealandAuckland 26 Air NiuginiManila Port Moresby 27 Air SiamBangkok Don MuangAir NauruNauruAir VietnamSaigonAll Nippon AirwaysTokyo NaritaAlitaliaBangkok Don Muang Rome Fiumicino Tokyo Narita 26 27 Ansett AustraliaSydney 26 Asiana AirlinesSeoul Kimpo 26 Biman Bangladesh AirlinesDhakaBritish AirwaysAbu Dhabi Bahrain Bangkok Don Muang Bombay Colombo Ratmalana London Heathrow Manila Tokyo Haneda Tokyo Narita 26 27 British Asia AirwaysLondon Heathrow Taipei TaoyuanBritish CaledonianDubai International citation needed London Gatwick citation needed British Overseas Airways CorporationBangkok Don Muang Bombay Calcutta Darwin Delhi Iwakuni Karachi Manila Shanghai Hongqiao Singapore Paya Lebar Tokyo Haneda 28 29 CAAC AirlinesBeijing Capital Chengdu Guangzhou Hangzhou Kunming Shanghai Hongqiao Shanghai Jiangwan Shanghai Longhua Tianjin Xi an Xianyang Xi an Xiguan 27 CNACChungking Kunming Lashio Rangoon Chengdu Jiating Luchow Suifu Kweilin Hong KongCanadian AirlinesBangkok Don Muang Manila Vancouver 26 Canadian Pacific Air LinesTokyo Haneda VancouverCathay PacificAdelaide Amsterdam Anchorage Auckland Bahrain Bangkok Don Muang Beijing Capital Brisbane Cairns Cebu Denpasar Bali Frankfurt Fukuoka Jakarta Kemayoran Jakarta Halim Perdanakusuma Jakarta Soekarno Hatta Johannesburg Jan Smuts Kuala Lumpur Subang London Gatwick London Heathrow Los Angeles Manila Melbourne Nagoya Komaki New York JFK Osaka Itami Osaka Kansai Paris Charles de Gaulle Paris Orly Penang Perth Port Moresby Rome Fiumicino Sapporo Chitose Seoul Kimpo Shanghai Hongqiao Singapore Changi Singapore Paya Lebar Sydney Taipei Songshan Taipei Taoyuan Tokyo Haneda Tokyo Narita Vancouver Zurich 26 27 China AirlinesBangkok Don Muang Jakarta Kemayoran Jakarta Halim Perdanakusuma Jakarta Soekarno Hatta Kaohsiung Kuala Lumpur Subang Singapore Changi Singapore Paya Lebar Taipei Songshan Taipei Taoyuan 26 27 China Eastern AirlinesFuzhou Changle Fuzhou Yixu Hangzhou Ningbo Shanghai Hongqiao 26 China Northern AirlinesChangchun Harbin Sanya Shenyang citation needed China Northwest AirlinesXi an Xianyang Xi an Xiguan citation needed China Southern AirlinesBeijing Capital Guangzhou Kunming Shantou Jieyang Chaozhou Shantou Waisha Xiamen Zhengzhou Dongjiao Zhengzhou Xinzheng 26 China Southwest AirlinesChengdu Chongqing Baishiyi Chongqing Jiangbei citation needed Continental MicronesiaGuam SaipanDelta Air LinesAnchorage Los AngelesDragonairBeijing Capital Changsha Datuopu Changsha Huanghua Chengdu Chongqing Baishiyi Chongqing Jiangbei Dalian Dhaka Guilin Liangjiang Guilin Qifengling Haikou Dayingshan Hangzhou Hiroshima Kaohsiung Kota Kinabalu Kuching Kunming Nanjing Dajiaochang Nanjing Lukou Ningbo Phnom Penh Phuket Qingdao Sendai Shanghai Hongqiao Tianjin Xiamen Xi an Xianyang Xi an Xiguan 26 El AlTashkent Tel Aviv 26 EmiratesBangkok Don Muang Dubai International ManilaEurasia Aviation CorporationPeking Honan Liangchou Urumqi Shanghai Lanchow Shanghai ManzhouliEVA AirTaipei Taoyuan 26 Grand AirManila Subic BayGaruda IndonesiaJakarta Kemayoran Jakarta Halim Perdanakusuma Jakarta Soekarno Hatta 27 Gulf AirAbu Dhabi BahrainImperial AirwaysZhanjiang 30 PenangImperial Japanese AirwaysGuangzhou Taipei Songshan 31 Japan Airlines Japan Asia AirwaysBangkok Don Muang Fukuoka Kagoshima Kaohsiung Nagoya Komaki Okinawa Osaka Itami Osaka Kansai Singapore Changi Singapore Paya Lebar Taipei Songshan Taipei Taoyuan Tokyo Haneda Tokyo Narita 26 27 Kampuchea AirlinesPhnom Penh citation needed KLMAmsterdam 26 Korean AirPusan Seoul Kimpo Taipei Taoyuan 27 Lauda AirBangkok Don Muang ViennaLaTurMexico CityLufthansaBangkok Don Muang Frankfurt Karachi Tokyo Narita 27 Malaysia AirlinesKota Kinabalu Kuala Lumpur Subang Penang Taipei Songshan Taipei Taoyuan 27 Malaysia Singapore AirlinesKuala Lumpur Simpang Kuala Lumpur Subang Singapore Kallang Singapore Paya Lebar Singapore Seletar Taipei SongshanMandarin AirlinesTaipei Taoyuan citation needed MartinairAmsterdamNorthwest AirlinesMinneapolis St Paul New York JFK Seattle Tacoma Seoul Kimpo Tokyo Haneda Tokyo Narita 26 27 Pan American World AirwaysBahrain Bangkok Don Muang Bombay Denpasar Bali Frankfurt Istanbul Ataturk Karachi London Heathrow Los Angeles New Delhi New York JFK 32 San Francisco Shanghai Hongqiao Singapore Changi Singapore Paya Lebar Tokyo Haneda Tokyo Narita 27 Philippine AirlinesCebu Manila 26 27 Pakistan International AirlinesKarachiQantasBangkok Don Muang Brisbane Manila Melbourne Sydney 27 Qatar AirwaysDohaRoyal Air CambodgePhnom Penh 27 Royal Brunei AirlinesBandar Seri Begawan 27 Royal Nepal AirlinesKathmanduScandinavian AirlinesCopenhagen 27 Shanghai AirlinesShanghai Hongqiao 27 Singapore AirlinesBangkok Don Muang Honolulu San Francisco Singapore Changi Singapore Paya Lebar Taipei Songshan Taipei Taoyuan 27 South African AirwaysBangkok Don Muang Johannesburg Jan Smuts 26 27 SwissairBangkok Don Muang Bombay Karachi Manila ZurichTrans World AirlinesBangkok Don Muang Guam Honolulu San Francisco Naha Los Angeles 33 TransaeroMoscow Domodedovo Saint PetersburgThai AirwaysBangkok Don Muang Seoul Kimpo Taipei Songshan Taipei Taoyuan Tokyo Haneda Tokyo Narita 27 United AirlinesBangkok Don Muang Chicago O Hare Delhi Los Angeles New York JFK San Francisco Seattle Tacoma Singapore Changi Tokyo Narita 26 27 VarigBangkok Don Muang Johannesburg Jan Smuts Rio de Janeiro GaleaoVietnam AirlinesHanoi SaigonVirgin AtlanticLondon HeathrowXiamen AirlinesFuzhou Changle Fuzhou Yixu Quanzhou Wuyishan XiamenCargo Destinations Edit Airlines Destinations Time ServedAir France Cargo Taipei Taoyuan ParisAir Hong KongAmerican International Airways KalittaAtlas AirCathay Pacific CargoCargoluxChina Airlines CargoDHL AviationEvergreen International AirlinesEmery WorldwideFedEx ExpressFlying Tiger LineJAL CargoKorean Air CargoLufthansa CargoMartinair CargoNippon Cargo AirlinesNorthwest CargoPan Am CargoPacific East Asia Cargo AirlinesPolar Air CargoSeaboard World AirlinesSouthern Air TransportTransamerica AirlinesUPS AirlinesWorld AirwaysOperations Edit nbsp Airport forecourt nbsp Departure hall of Kai Tak AirportTerminals and facilities Edit The Kai Tak airport consisted of a linear passenger terminal building with a car park attached at the rear There were eight boarding gates attached to the terminal building 34 A freight terminal was located on the south side of the east apron and diagonally from the passenger terminal building Due to the limited space the fuel tank farm was located between the passenger terminal and HAECO maintenance facilities hangar Companies based at Kai Tak Edit nbsp Northwest Cargo 747 200F landingSeveral airlines were based at Kai Tak Cathay Pacific which operated a mixed Airbus Boeing and some Lockheed all widebody fleet of one hundred aircraft providing scheduled services to the rest of Asia Australia New Zealand the Middle East Europe South Africa and North America Dragonair Air Hong Kong Limited Hong Kong Airways Until Late 1950s when bought by Cathay Pacific British Asia Airways Due to relations between PRC and ROC Other tenants included Hong Kong Aviation Club Government Flying Service DFS Kai Tak Market Haagen Dazs Tin Tin Airport RestaurantRunway 13 approach Edit nbsp Layout of Kai Tak Airport prior to its 1998 closure nbsp An Air France Boeing 747 400 passing above the very crowded Kowloon City during its approach and landing nbsp Cathay Pacific Boeing 777 200 B HNC on final approach to Kai Tak runway 13 overflying Kowloon at low altitude nbsp A Cathay Pacific Boeing 747 300 landing at Kai Tak Airport runway 13 nbsp Checkerboard Hill which was a major navigational aid for the Runway 13 approach as seen from Kowloon Tsai ParkThe landing approach for planes using runway 13 at Kai Tak was considered spectacular and was infamous not just amongst aviation enthusiasts but amongst the general public as well Flight sim charts which are based on the real charts used on the airport give an outline on the procedures used on approach into Kai Tak Airport 35 Checkerboard approach Edit The Checkerboard approach also spelled as Chequerboard approach initially begins to the south west of the airport with aircraft flying westbound at a minimum altitude of 6000 feet At this beginning stage of the approach the aircraft should be passing above Cheung Chau a small island just off Lantau Island After that the aircraft was required to proceed up to Point Golf which was on the south side of Lantau Island and directly south of the current Chek Lap Kok Airport Approaching aircraft then had to make a right hand U turn in order to intercept the localiser for the Runway 13 IGS which generally happened above the current Chek Lap Kok Airport site The IGS was in essence a heavily modified Instrument landing system ILS system designed uniquely for Kai Tak Airport otherwise functioning identical to a normal ILS At roughly 2500 feet the autopilot was disconnected and the rest of the approach was flown manually The aircraft then descended below 1000 feet and shortly afterwards reached Kowloon Tsai Park and its small hill Checkerboard Hill Upon reaching the small hill above Kowloon Tsai Park which was painted with a large aviation orange and white checkerboard 22 20 06 N 114 11 04 E 22 33500 N 114 18444 E 22 33500 114 18444 Checkerboard Hill used as a visual reference point on the final approach in addition to the middle marker on the Instrument Guidance System the pilot needed to make a 47 visual right turn to line up with the runway and complete the final leg The aircraft would be just 2 nautical miles 3 7 km from touchdown at a height of less than 1 000 feet 300 m when the turn was made Typically the plane would enter the final right turn at a height of about 650 feet 200 m and exit it at a height of 140 feet 43 m to line up with the runway That demanding manoeuvre became known in the aviation community as the Hong Kong Turn or the Checkerboard Turn For many airline passengers on planes approaching and landing on Runway 13 at Kai Tak Airport it became referred to as the Kai Tak Heart Attack because they were often frightened to be turning at such a close proximity to the ground which at less than 150 ft or 45 metres was generally less than even the Boeing 767 s wingspan which is considered a medium size airliner The turn was so low that passengers could see television sets running in people s residences near the airport 36 Handling the runway 13 approach was difficult enough with normal crosswinds because even if the wind direction was constant it was changing relative to the aircraft as the plane made the 47 visual right turn meaning that what would be a headwind heading directly east on the IGS would become a crosswind and begin to push the aircraft over and off the runway alignment without correction The landing would become even more challenging when crosswinds from the north east were strong and gusty during typhoons The mountain range north east of the airport also made the wind vary greatly in both speed and direction Watching large aircraft banking at low altitudes and taking big crab angles during their final approaches was popular with plane spotters Despite the difficulty the runway 13 approach was used most of the time due to the prevailing wind direction in Hong Kong Because of the turn required during final approach ILS was not available for runway 13 and landings had to follow a visual approach This made the approach unusable in low visibility conditions Stonecutters Approach Edit Alongside the Chequerboard approach there was a lesser known approach into Kai Tak that led aircraft over the Stonecutters NDB at a heading of 040 and led into a 90 turn to line up on Runway 13 This approach was used extremely infrequently since the Chequerboard approach had a localiser and glide slope to work with and NDBs are very rarely used in commercial aviation today It generally can be assumed this approach was used when the localiser and glide slope were offline for maintenance Runway 13 departure Edit Runway 13 was the preferred departure runway for heavy aircraft due to the clear departure path opposite that of the runway 31 departure Heavy aircraft on departure using runway 13 would often need nearly the entire length of the runway particularly during summer days due to the air temperature Runway 31 approach Edit Runway 31 approaches and landings were similar to other airports in which ILS was available Runways 13 and 31 are in fact the same physical runway however if a flight is landing on Runway 13 that means that the aircraft is flying in on a south easterly direction while a flight landing on Runway 31 would be coming in a north westerly direction This applies for flights taking off on runways 13 and 31 a flight departing from runway 13 would be heading south east and vice versa This is because runways are named for their magnetic heading in decadegrees which means that a runway oriented anywhere between 125 and 134 magnetic would be numbered 13 and vice versa The path towards the runway passed within 300 metres 980 ft to the north of Heng Fa Chuen on Hong Kong Island Runway 31 was also used for landing early in the morning for noise abatement Runway 31 departure Edit When lined up for takeoff on runway 31 a range of hills including 1 500 feet 460 m Beacon Hill would be right in front of the aircraft The aircraft had to make a sharp 65 degree left turn soon after takeoff to avoid the hills i e the reverse of a Runway 13 landing If a runway change occurred due to wind change from runway 13 departures to runway 31 departures planes that were loaded to maximum payload for runway 13 departures had to return to the terminal to offload some goods to provide enough climbing clearance over buildings during a runway 31 departure Private aviation Edit nbsp Hong Kong Aviation Club building at the former Kai Tak Airport with the headquarters of the Hong Kong Air Cadet CorpsThe Hong Kong Aviation Club formerly held most of its activities at Kai Tak 37 where it had hangars and other facilities 38 The club moved most of its aircraft to Shek Kong Airfield in 1994 after the hours for general aviation at Kai Tak were sharply reduced to two hours per morning as of 1 July that year 37 Kai Tak closed to fixed wing traffic in 1998 38 The club ended its helicopter activities at Kai Tak on 9 July 2017 39 The Kai Tak location which it was able to use all days of the week meant that helicopter training took less time compared to fixed wing training as usage at Shek Kong is restricted to weekends 40 Incidents and accidents Edit nbsp China Airlines Flight 605 crashed into Victoria Harbour after it failed to stop on the runway during a typhoon Many planes crashed at Kai Tak due to poor weather and hard approaches On 25 January 1947 a Philippine Air Lines DC 3 aircraft crashed into Mount Parker killing four crew members 41 42 On 21 December 1948 a China National Aviation Corporation Douglas DC 4 struck Basalt Island after a descent through clouds 35 were killed 43 On 24 February 1949 a Cathay Pacific Douglas DC 3 crashed into a hillside near Braemar Reservoir after aborting an approach in poor visibility and attempting to go around All 23 on board were killed 44 On 11 March 1951 a Pacific Overseas Airlines Douglas DC 4 crashed after takeoff into the hills between Mount Butler and Mount Parker on Hong Kong Island The captain of the aircraft allegedly failed to execute the turn left operation after departure 24 were killed 45 On 9 April 1951 a Siamese Airways Douglas DC 3 lost control on its turn while attempting a night time visual approach The captain allegedly allowed the aircraft to lose speed while attempting to turn quickly 16 were killed 46 On 19 April 1961 a US military Douglas DC 3 C 47 Skytrain bound for Formosa crashed into Mount Parker after takeoff Of the 16 on board 15 were killed 47 42 On 24 August 1965 a United States Marine Corps C 130 Hercules crashed shortly after takeoff from runway 13 killing 59 of the 71 people on board This was the deadliest accident at Kai Tak 48 On 30 June 1967 a Thai Airways International Sud Aviation SE 210 Caravelle III crashed into Victoria Harbour while trying to land during a torrential rainstorm A typhoon was some 150 miles 240 km NW of Hong Kong but the colony was not closed down in preparation of the typhoon The co pilot who was flying the aircraft and unable to see the runway due to the heavy rain allegedly made an abrupt heading change causing the aircraft to enter a high rate of descent and crash into the harbour to the right of the runway The starboard wing snapped off on impact and the aircraft rolled onto its starboard side halving the number of escape routes 24 were killed but only 23 bodies were recovered at the scene The final body was recovered after it was seen floating in the harbour six weeks later 49 On 2 September 1977 a Transmeridian Air Cargo Canadair CL 44 lost control and crashed into the Tathong Channel on fire shortly after takeoff The no 4 engine was said to have failed causing an internal fire in the engine and the aircraft fuel system that eventually resulted in a massive external fire Four were killed 50 51 On 9 March 1978 52 a China Airlines Flight 831 was hijacked The hijacker the flight engineer of the flight demanded to be taken to Mainland China the airline was of the Republic of China on Taiwan not the People s Republic of China which controlled the mainland The hijack lasted less than a day and the hijacker was killed 53 On 7 February 1980 a China Airlines Boeing 747 200 B 1866 later B 18255 had a tail strike incident while landing at Kai Tak International Airport on route to Taipei from Stockholm Arlanda Airport via King Abdulaziz International Airport and Kai Tak The aircraft was improperly repaired which caused it to break up in flight on 25 May 2002 while flying to Chek Lap Kok International Airport On 18 October 1983 a Lufthansa Boeing 747 freighter abandoned takeoff after engine no 2 malfunctioned probably at speed exceeding V1 the takeoff abort decision point The aircraft overran the runway onto soft ground and sustained severe damage The three crew on board suffered only minor injuries 54 On 31 August 1988 the right outboard flap of a CAAC Airlines Hawker Siddeley Trident operating Flight 301 hit approach lights of runway 31 while landing under rain and fog The right main landing gear then struck a lip and collapsed causing the aircraft to run off the runway and slip into the harbour 7 were killed 55 On 4 November 1993 a China Airlines Boeing 747 400 operating Flight 605 overran the runway while landing during a typhoon The wind was gusting to gale force at the time Despite the plane s unstable approach the captain did not go around It touched down more than 2 3 down the runway and was unable to stop before the runway ended 56 Although the aircraft ended up submerged beyond the end of the runway there were only 23 minor injuries amongst the 396 passengers and crew On 23 September 1994 a Heavylift Cargo Airlines Lockheed L 100 30 Hercules lost control shortly after takeoff from runway 13 The pitch control system of one of its propellers was said to have failed Six were killed 57 Redevelopment Edit nbsp Aerial view of the Kai Tak Development site in 2017 nbsp Kai Ching Estate is the first housing estate to be built on the old Kai Tak Airport site It is located on the north eastern side of the site where the maintenance area was located nbsp Kai Tak Runway Park with its former runway number 13Main article Kai Tak Development 2002 blueprint Edit In October 1998 the Government drafted a plan for the Kai Tak Airport site involving the reclamation of 219 hectares 540 acres of land After receiving many objections the Government scaled down the reclamation to 166 hectares 410 acres in June 1999 The Territorial Development Department commenced a new study on the development of the area in November 1999 entitled Feasibility Studies on the Revised Southeast Kowloon Development Plan and a new public consultation exercise was conducted in May 2000 resulting in the land reclamation being further scaled down to 133 hectares 330 acres The new plans based on the feasibility studies were passed by the chief executive in July 2002 58 There were plans for the site of Kai Tak to be used for housing development which was once projected to house around 240 000 340 000 residents Due to calls from the public to protect the harbour and participate more deeply in future town planning the scale and plan of the project were yet to be decided There were also plans for a railway station and maintenance centre in the proposed plan for the Sha Tin to Central Link There were also proposals to dredge the runway to form several islands for housing to build a terminal capable of accommodating cruise ships the size of Queen Mary 2 and more recently to house the Hong Kong Sports Institute as well as several stadiums in the case that the institute was forced to move so that the equestrian events of the 2008 Summer Olympics could be held at its present site in Sha Tin On 9 January 2004 the Court of Final Appeal ruled that no reclamation plan for Victoria Harbour could be introduced unless it passed an overriding public interest test 59 Subsequently the Government abandoned these plans Kai Tak Planning Review Edit The Government set up a Kai Tak Planning Review in July 2004 for further public consultation 60 A number of plans were presented June 2006 blueprint Edit A new plan for the redevelopment of Kai Tak was issued by the government in June 2006 Under these proposals hotels would be scattered throughout the 328 hectare 810 acre site and flats aimed at housing 86 000 new residents were proposed Other features of the plan included two cruise terminals and a large stadium October 2006 blueprint Edit The Planning Department unveiled a major reworking of its plans for the old Kai Tak airport site on 17 October 2006 containing a basket of small measures designed to answer a bevy of concerns raised by the public 61 The revised blueprint will also extend several green corridors from the main central park into the surrounding neighbourhoods of Kowloon City Kowloon Bay and Ma Tau Kok The following features are proposed in the revised plan two cruise terminals with a third terminal to be added if the need arises a luxury hotel complex near the cruise terminals the complex would sit about seven stories high with hotel rooms atop commercial or tourist related spaces an eight station monorail linking the tourist hub with Kwun Tong a large stadium a central park to provide green space a 200 metre 660 ft high public viewing tower near the tip of the runway a new bridge likely to involve further reclamation of Victoria HarbourThe following are major changes hotel spaces are to be centralised near the end of the runway and will face into the harbour towards Central a third cruise terminal could be added at the foot of the hotel cluster if the need arises a second row of luxury residential spaces is to be added facing Kwun Tong built on an elevated terrace or platform to preserve a view of the harbourThe government has promised that the total amount of housing and hotel space will remain the same as proposed in June 2006 plot ratios will be the same as before the total commercial space on the site will also remain about the sameThe new bridge proposed by the government joining the planned hotel district at the end of the runway with Kwun Tong could be a potential source of controversy Under the Protection of the Harbour Ordinance no harbour reclamation can take place unless the Government can demonstrate to the courts an overriding public need 62 The new Kai Tak blueprint was presented to the Legislative Council on 24 October 2006 after review by the Town Planning Board nbsp Panorama of the former Kai Tak Airport Site 2010 2011 onwards Edit In 2011 with most of the former Kai Tak area still abandoned ideas were floated to develop the area for commercial property citing shortages of office space and rising property costs 63 In June 2013 the Kai Tak Cruise Terminal was opened on the tip of the former runway 64 65 Two public housing estates opened on the northeast area of the site in 2013 providing over 13 000 new rental flats As of 2018 the public estates have been joined by some private residential developments now nearing completion A small park and new hospital Hong Kong Children s Hospital have also opened A new Mass Transit Railway MTR station Kai Tak opened on the former airport land in early 2020 Another station Sung Wong Toi was opened in June 2021 Construction of the Kai Tak Sports Park on the former airport land commenced in April 2019 66 Once completed Kai Tak Sports Park will be the largest sports venue in Hong Kong and will include a 50 000 seat Main Stadium an Indoor Sports Center a Public Sports Ground and multiple open spaces 67 Kai Tak Sky Garden a massive elevated garden opened in May 2021 It occupies part of the former runway and apron 68 See also Edit nbsp Hong Kong portal nbsp Aviation portalKai Tak Sports Park List of buildings and structures in Hong Kong List of defunct international airports Lung Tsun Stone BridgeReferences Edit Photo of Kai Tak Airport shown the official name of the airport Archived 18 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e Kai Tak Airport 1925 1998 Civil Aviation Department Government of Hong Kong Archived from the original on 2 June 2012 Retrieved 25 January 2013 Wong Hiufu 12 June 2013 Breathtaking photos of Hong Kong airport glory days CNN Archived from the original on 1 January 2017 Retrieved 12 June 2013 Most Extreme Airports The History Channel 26 August 2010 Kai Tak map 1950 51 Gwulo Old Hong Kong Randy Harris 1999 The Year 2017 A Look at What s Coming in Asia iUniverse p 25 ISBN 978 1 58348 137 0 Kai Tak Airport History Archived 31 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine Hong Kong ATC history Munsang College history Archived 13 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine Excerpt on Sir Kai Ho Kai Blogthetalk com Archived from the original on 30 August 2012 Retrieved 25 January 2013 Hong Kong Aviation club Kai Tak History Hkaviationclub com hk Archived from the original on 1 April 2013 Retrieved 25 January 2013 Work on Kai Tak Airport 11 September 1942 Newspaper Clipping Archived 7 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine Harry Atkinson Archived 26 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine Thomas Smith Forsyth Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Bernard Castonguay Archived 6 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Garfield Loew Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine John McGee Archived 5 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Former POWs also recount their attempts to sabotage construction which included mixing large amounts of clay with the concrete for the runways Hong Kong Tourist Association A MONUMENT RECORDING HISTORY EMPEROR SUNG S TERRACE Discoverhongkong com 4 October 2012 Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Retrieved 25 January 2013 Kowloon Development Office PDF Archived PDF from the original on 26 June 2008 Retrieved 25 January 2013 Royal Navy Archive Archived 30 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine Kai Tak Helicopter Database Helis com Archived from the original on 11 September 2007 Retrieved 25 January 2013 The Aeroplane 2 August 1957 a b c Delang Claudio O Ng Yan 2009 Urban regeneration and heritage preservation with public participation the case of the Kai Tak runway in Hong Kong PDF The Open Geography Journal 2 2 35 64 doi 10 2174 1874453200902010035 S2CID 33781764 Archived from the original PDF on 6 March 2019 Full runway in use today South China Morning Post 31 December 1975 p 5 Aircraft Noise Comparison Between Kai Tak and the new Hong Kong International Airport HKIA Civil Aviation Department Government of Hong Kong Archived from the original on 5 April 2007 Retrieved 25 January 2013 Official Record of Proceedings Wednesday 19 April 1995 PDF Hong Kong Legislative Council Archived PDF from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 25 January 2013 HK s first airport hotel opens South China Morning Post 13 August 1982 Breathtaking photos of Hong Kong airport glory days CNN 12 June 2013 Archived from the original on 1 January 2017 Retrieved 13 December 2013 AP Archive 21 July 2015 Hong Kong Kai Tak airport closes archived from the original on 12 December 2021 retrieved 20 March 2017 Kai Tak Planning Review Report of Stage 2 Public Participation Outline Zone Plans PDF Planning Department the Government of HKSAR Archived from the original PDF on 9 March 2007 Retrieved 18 April 2007 Test drive BMW s car of the future it s a gas 24 October 2007 Archived from the original on 29 October 2021 Retrieved 12 October 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Airlines and Aircraft Serving Hong Kong Effective October 1 1996 www departedflights com Archived from the original on 7 November 2017 Retrieved 3 November 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Airlines and Aircraft Serving Hong Kong Effective July 1 1983 www departedflights com Archived from the original on 7 November 2017 Retrieved 3 November 2017 BOAC timetable 1948 Archived from the original on 7 November 2017 Retrieved 3 November 2017 BOAC route map 1971 Archived from the original on 7 November 2017 Retrieved 3 November 2017 Imperial Airways timetable 1938 Archived from the original on 2 June 2016 Retrieved 3 November 2017 大日本航空 1943 tt museum Archived from the original on 20 June 2014 Retrieved 3 November 2017 Pan American s Round the World Services JPB TRANS CONSULTING LLC Archived from the original on 19 April 2021 Retrieved 27 May 2021 1972 TWA International Network RoutesOnline 28 December 2009 Archived from the original on 7 July 2022 Retrieved 7 July 2022 Sung Hin lun A Hundred Years of Aviation in Hong Kong ISBN 962 04 2188 4 VHHX Kai Tak International Airport PDF Platinum Airways Hong Kong VACC 2 December 2009 Archived from the original PDF on 5 April 2016 Retrieved 23 August 2022 Steven K Bailey 2009 Exploring Hong Kong A Visitor s Guide to Hong Kong Island Kowloon and the New Territories ThingsAsian Press p 136 ISBN 978 1934159163 a b Aviation club takes off for Sek Kong South China Morning Post 22 August 1994 Archived from the original on 18 April 2018 Retrieved 18 April 2018 a b Wordie Jason 2002 Streets Exploring Hong Kong Island Hong Kong University Press p 242 ISBN 978 9 62 209563 2 Hong Kong Aviation Club responds to media enquiries Archived 18 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine Hong Kong Aviation Club 27 May 2017 Retrieved on 18 April 2018 Chinese version Archived 18 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine High flyers have licence to thrill South China Morning Post 26 June 2010 Archived from the original on 21 April 2018 Retrieved 21 April 2018 For anyone who has ever dreamt of flying the first step to getting your wings is to join the Hong Kong Aviation Club HKAC the city s only flight training centre The Shek Kong Airfield is used by the People s Liberation Army during the week with permission given to the club to use it during weekends PAL tragedy Manila officials here on investigations South China Morning Post 28 January 1947 p 7 a b Survivor s condition slightly improved South China Morning Post 21 April 1961 p 1 ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C 54B 5 DO N8342C Basalt Island Aviation Safety 21 December 1948 Archived from the original on 23 October 2012 Retrieved 25 January 2013 ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C 47A 90 DL VR HDG North Point Hong Kong Aviation Safety 24 February 1949 Archived from the original on 23 October 2012 Retrieved 25 January 2013 Accident Database Accident Synopsis 03111951 Airdisaster com 11 March 1951 Archived from the original on 3 January 2009 Retrieved 25 January 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Accident Database Accident Synopsis 04091951 Airdisaster com 9 April 1951 Archived from the original on 3 January 2009 Retrieved 25 January 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Plane crashes Shaukiwan hill Wreckage found after long and widespread search South China Morning Post 20 April 1961 p 1 ASN Aircraft accident Lockheed KC 130F Hercules 149802 Hong Kong Kai Tak International Airport HKG Aviation Safety 24 August 1965 Archived from the original on 23 October 2012 Retrieved 25 January 2013 Accident Database Accident Synopsis 06301967 Airdisaster com 30 June 1967 Archived from the original on 4 November 2012 Retrieved 25 January 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Four die as plane drops like a stone South China Morning Post 3 September 1977 p 1 Crash plane found South China Morning Post 14 September 1977 p 1 The Spokesman Review Google News Archive Search Archived from the original on 12 May 2017 Retrieved 8 October 2016 ASN Aircraft accident Boeing 737 281 B 1870 Hong Kong Aviation Safety Archived from the original on 12 December 2013 Retrieved 25 January 2013 ASN Aircraft accident Boeing 747 230F D ABYU Hong Kong Kai Tak International Airport HKG Aviation Safety Archived from the original on 23 October 2012 Retrieved 25 January 2013 ASN Aircraft accident Hawker Siddeley HS 121 Trident 2E B 2218 Hong Kong Kai Tak International Airport HKG Aviation Safety 31 August 1988 Archived from the original on 19 March 2011 Retrieved 25 January 2013 ASN Aircraft accident Boeing 747 409 B 165 Hong Kong Kai Tak International Airport HKG Aviation Safety Archived from the original on 12 January 2012 Retrieved 25 January 2013 ASN Aircraft accident Lockheed L 100 30 Hercules PK PLV Hong Kong Kai Tak International Airport HKG Aviation Safety Archived from the original on 23 October 2012 Retrieved 25 January 2013 Planning history of Kai Tak Archived 21 May 2007 at the Wayback Machine Judgement Town Planning Board v Society for the Protection of the Harbour PDF Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal Archived from the original PDF on 30 March 2007 Retrieved 20 October 2006 Kai Tak planning review Government of the Hong Kong SAR Archived from the original on 1 September 2006 Retrieved 20 October 2006 Cheng Jonathan 18 October 2006 Kai Tak blueprint redrawn The Standard Hong Kong Retrieved 20 October 2006 dead link Our Harbour Front Archived from the original on 13 February 2017 Retrieved 13 February 2017 Kelvin Wong 1 October 2011 Abandoned airport could solve office space dilemma The New Zealand Herald Archived from the original on 20 November 2012 Retrieved 11 July 2012 Wong Hiufu 14 June 2013 Breathtaking photos of Hong Kong airport glory days The Gateway CNN Archived from the original on 25 June 2013 Retrieved 26 June 2013 Kai Tak Cruise Terminal Archived from the original on 3 July 2013 Retrieved 26 June 2013 Sports park construction starts Hong Kong s Information Services Department in Chinese Hong Kong Archived from the original on 25 September 2021 Retrieved 19 August 2020 Government awards contract for Kai Tak Sports Park with photos www info gov hk Archived from the original on 21 October 2019 Retrieved 19 August 2020 The Kai Tak Sky Garden officially opens today Archived from the original on 19 November 2021 Retrieved 19 November 2021 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kai Tak Airport Airport Kai Tak Airport 1925 1998 Hong Kong Civil Aviation Department Archives of the Kai Tak webpage at Hong Kong Civil Aviation Department during the airport s operation Kai Tak Development official site Pictures from Kai Tak Airliners net Jetphotos net Historic photographs of Kai Tak An account by a Kai Tak Air Traffic Controller Phil Parker Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kai Tak Airport amp oldid 1181387720, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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