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Suvarnabhumi Airport

Suvarnabhumi Airport (Thai: ท่าอากาศยานสุวรรณภูมิ, RTGSTha-akatsayan Suwannaphum, pronounced [tʰâː.ʔāː.kàːt̚.sā.jāːn.sùʔ.wān.nā.pʰūːm] (listen);[3] from Sanskrit सुवर्णभूमि (Suvarṇabhūmi), literally 'golden land') (IATA: BKK, ICAO: VTBS), also known unofficially as Bangkok International Airport,[4][5] is one of two international airports serving the Bangkok Metropolitan Region, the other one being Don Mueang International Airport (DMK), which remains open as a low-cost carriers hub.[6][7] Suvarnabhumi Airport covers an area of 3,240 ha (32.4 km2; 8,000 acres), making it one of the biggest international airports in Southeast Asia and a regional hub for aviation. The airport is also a major Cargo Air Freight Hub (20th busiest in 2019), which has a designated Airport Free Zone, as well as road links to the Eastern Economic Corridor (EEC) on Motorway 7.[8]

Suvarnabhumi Airport

ท่าอากาศยานสุวรรณภูมิ
Summary
Airport typePublic
Owner/OperatorAirports of Thailand PCL (AOT)
ServesBangkok Metropolitan Region
LocationRacha Thewa, Bang Phli, Samut Prakan and Lat Krabang, Bangkok
Opened28 September 2006; 16 years ago (2006-09-28)
Hub for
Focus city for
Elevation AMSL5 ft / 2 m
Coordinates13°41′33″N 100°45′00″E / 13.69250°N 100.75000°E / 13.69250; 100.75000Coordinates: 13°41′33″N 100°45′00″E / 13.69250°N 100.75000°E / 13.69250; 100.75000
Websitesuvarnabhumi.airportthai.co.th
Maps
BKK
Location In Samut Prakan
BKK
Location in Thailand
BKK
Location in Southeast Asia
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
01R/19L 4,000 13,123 Asphalt concrete
01L/19R 3,700 12,139 Asphalt concrete
3rd runway (under construction) 4,000[1] 13,123 Asphalt concrete
Statistics (2019)
Total passengers65,424,564 3.2%
International passengers53,458,385 4.6%
Domestic passengers11,966,179 0.8%
Aircraft movements380,052 2.9%
Freight (tonnes)1,324,272 11.4%
Sources:AOT 2019[2]

Etymology

The name Suvarnabhumi is Sanskrit for "land of gold" (Devanagari:सुवर्णभूमि IAST: Suvarṇabhūmi; Suvarṇa[9] is "gold", Bhūmi[10] is 'land'; literally "golden land"). The name was chosen by the late King Bhumibol Adulyadej whose name includes Bhūmi, referring to the Buddhist golden kingdom, thought to have been to the east of the Ganges, possibly somewhere in Southeast Asia. In Thailand, government proclamations and national museums insist that Suvarnabhumi was somewhere on the coast of the central plains, near the ancient city of U Thong, which might be the origin of the Indianised Dvaravati culture.[11] Although the claims have not been substantiated, the Thai government named the new Bangkok airport Suvarnabhumi Airport, in celebration of this tradition.

 
A depiction of the "Churning of the Ocean of Milk", Samudra manthana, at the airport

History

 
Thai Airways aircraft parked at Bangkok Suvarnabhumi Airport
 
A Thai Airbus A340-500 (HS-TLA, Chiang Kham) at Suvarnabhumi Airport in 2008.

The airport is currently the main hub for Thai Airways International, Thai Smile and Bangkok Airways, as well as the operating base for Thai VietJet Air, Thai AirAsia and Thai AirAsia X. It also serves as regional gateway and connecting point for various foreign carriers connecting to Asia, Oceania, Europe and Africa.

Suvarnabhumi was officially opened for limited domestic flight service on 15 September 2006, and opened for most domestic and all international commercial flights on 28 September 2006.[12]

The airport is on what had formerly been known as Nong Nguhao (Cobra Swamp) in Racha Thewa in Bang Phli, Samut Prakan province as well as the districts of Bang Kapi, Lat Krabang, Bang Na and Prawet in the eastern side of Bangkok, about 25 kilometres (16 mi) from downtown. The terminal building was designed by Helmut Jahn of Murphy/Jahn Architects. It was constructed primarily by ITO JV. The airport had the world's tallest free-standing control tower (132.2 metres or 434 feet) from 2006 to 2014,[13] and the world's fourth largest single-building airport terminal (563,000 square metres or 6,060,000 square feet).

Suvarnabhumi is the 17th busiest airport in the world,[14] eleventh busiest airport in Asia, and the busiest in the country, having handled 60 million passengers in 2017,[14] and is also a major air cargo hub, with a total of 95 airlines. On social networks, Suvarnabhumi was the world's most popular site for taking Instagram photographs in 2012.[15]

Suvarnabhumi reassigned the IATA airport code, BKK, from Don Mueang after the previous airport ceased international commercial flights. Motorway 7 connects the airport, Bangkok, and the heavily industrial eastern seaboard of Thailand, where most export manufacturing takes place.

 
International check-in area in Suvarnabhumi Airport in Bangkok, seen from the upper level
 
Departure hall
 
A play area, entitled Wonder World, at the airport's departure lounge

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the airport was temporarily converted to a hospital[16] and vaccination centre.[17]

Land purchase, initial early phase of construction

The need for the new airport was recognized in 1973 when 8,000 acres of land was purchased 40 kilometres east of Bangkok. The site, known as Cobra Swamp, was drained and named Suvarnabhumi, meaning "realm of gold". On 14 October 1973, student-led protests led to the overthrow of the military government of Prime Minister Thanom Kittikachorn and the project was shelved.

After a series of ups and downs, the "New Bangkok International Airport" company (NBIA) was formed in 1996. Due to political and economic instabilities, notably the Asian financial crisis of 1997, construction did not begin until six years later in January 2002 by the government of Thaksin Shinawatra.

Airport tests, and official opening

The airport was due to open in late 2004, but a series of budget overruns, construction flaws, and allegations of corruption plagued the project.

A further delay was caused by the discovery that the airport had been built over an old graveyard. Superstitious construction workers claimed to have seen ghosts there. On 23 September 2005, the Thai airports authority held a ceremony where 99 Buddhist monks chanted to appease the spirits.[18]

Full tests of the airport took place on 3 and 29 July 2006. Six airlines — Thai Airways International, Nok Air, Thai AirAsia, Bangkok Airways, PBair, and One-Two-GO — used the airport as a base for twenty domestic flights.[19][20] The first international test flights were conducted on 1 September 2006. Two Thai Airways aircraft, a Boeing 747-400 and an Airbus A300-600, simultaneously departed the airport at 09:19 to Singapore and Hong Kong respectively. At 15:50 the same aircraft flew back and made simultaneous touchdowns on runways 19L and 19R. These test flights demonstrated the readiness of the airport to handle traffic.[citation needed]

On 15 September 2006, the airport started limited daily operations with Jetstar Asia Airways operating three Singapore to Bangkok flights. Bangkok Airways moved to the airport on 21 September. AirAsia and Thai AirAsia followed on 25 September and on 26 September Nok Air moved to Suvarnabhumi Airport. During this initial phase, as well as in the previous tests, the airport used the temporary IATA code NBK.[citation needed]

Suvarnabhumi officially opened at 03:00 on 28 September 2006, taking over all flights from Don Mueang. The first flight to arrive was a Lufthansa Cargo flight LH8442 from Mumbai at 03:05.[21] The first commercial arrival was Japan Airlines at 03:30. The first passenger arrival was Aerosvit flight VV171 from Kyiv at 04:30, and the first cargo departure was Saudi Arabian Airlines flight SV-984 to Riyadh at 05:00.[22] Aerosvit also had the first passenger departure (VV172 to Kyiv) around 05:30.[23]

Initial difficulties

Difficulties were reported in the first few days of the airport's operation. On the first day alone, sluggish luggage handling was common—the first passenger arrival by Aerosvit took an hour for the luggage to start coming out, and some flights did not have their luggage coming out even after four hours. Flights were delayed (Thai Airways claimed that 17 of 19 flights were delayed that day), and there were failures with the check-in system.[24][25] Subsequent problems included the failure of the cargo computer system, and the departure boards displaying the wrong information, resulting in confused passengers (especially as unlike Don Mueang, there were no "final calls" issued).[26]

Months after its opening, issues of congestion, construction quality, signage, provision of facilities, and soil subsidence continued to plague the project, prompting calls to reopen Don Mueang to allow for repairs to be made.[27] Expert opinions varied widely on the extent of Suvarnabhumi's problems as well as their root cause. Most airlines stated that damage to the airport was minimal.[28][29] Then Prime Minister Surayud Chulanont reopened Don Mueang for domestic flights on a voluntary basis on 16 February 2007, with 71 weekly flights moved back initially, but no international flights.[30]

Capacity and safety issues

Tarmac problems

In January 2007, ruts were discovered in the runways at Suvarnabhumi.[31] The east runway was scheduled to close for repairs. Expert opinions varied as to the cause of the ruts.[28] Airport authorities and airline representatives maintained that the airport was still safe and resisted suggestions that the airport should be completely closed and all flights moved back to Don Mueang.[32]

On 27 January 2007, the Department of Civil Aviation declined to renew the airport's safety certificate, which had expired the previous day. The ICAO requires that international airports hold aerodrome safety certificates, but Suvarnabhumi continued to operate because the ICAO requirement had yet to be adopted as part of Thai law.[33]

As of early 2016, tarmac problems persisted at Suvarnabhumi. Soft spots on the tarmac, taxiways, and apron area had not been permanently fixed. Aircraft were getting stuck on the soft surfaces that are the result of sub-standard materials. "The constant resurfacing of the tarmac, taxiways and apron area with asphalt is an unacceptable patchwork solution. We literally need a "concrete" solution", said Tony Tyler, IATA's director general and CEO.[34]

Plans to re-open Don Mueang for domestic flights

In January 2007, Thai Airways announced a plan to move some of its domestic operations back to Don Mueang International Airport due to overcrowding. Three days later, the Ministry of Transport recommended temporarily reopening Don Mueang while repair work on the runways at Suvarnabhumi proceeded. At that time, Thai Airways said it would shift most of its domestic flights back to Don Mueang while keeping flights with high international passenger connections such as Chiang Mai and Phuket at Suvarnabhumi. On 28 March 2009, Thai Airways discontinued all domestic flights from Don Mueang. Bangkok Airways and One-Two-GO Airlines had similar plans, but Bangkok Airways remained at Suvarnabhumi. Thai AirAsia said it would not move unless it could shift both its international and domestic operations, prompting them to stay at Suvarnabhumi for the time being. Nok Air and PBair were undecided, but Nok Air later relocated all flights to Don Mueang, where they operate today.[35][36] As of January 2010, only Nok Air and One-Two-GO operated domestic flights from Don Mueang Airport. PBair have ceased operations altogether. One-Two-GO was integrated into Orient Thai Airlines in July 2010, but continues to operate from Don Mueang Airport. As of 1 October 2012 Air Asia has moved all of its Bangkok operations to Don Mueang International Airport (DMK) from Suvarnabhumi Airport (BKK).[37]

Repair and upgrades

Airports of Thailand found that the cost of fixing 60 identified problems at the airport would be less than one percent of the total airline cost and the problems could be fixed in up to four to five years. Dr Narupol Chaiyut, a member of a committee overseeing service problems at the new airport, estimated that 70 percent of the problems would be fixed in 2007. Twenty of the 60 problems were successfully fixed by February 2007.[38]

Architectural design

 
Airport traffic control tower (ATCT) at Suvarnabhumi Airport, 132.2 meters tall - third Tallest ATC Tower[39]
 
Suvarnabhumi Concourse Architecture: 5-pin arch-truss-girders with glazed facades and a translucent fabric membrane set-up, spanning across to bridge the 27 m spacing between the glass facades

Suvarnabhumi Airport's main terminal roof is designed with structural elements and bays placed in a cantilevered, wavelike form to appear to "float" over the concourse beneath. This overall design principle was to express the former essence of the site, from which water had to be drained before construction could begin. The eight composite 2,710-ton trusses supporting the canopy of the main terminal are essentially diagrams of the bending moments acting on them, with the greatest depth at mid-span and over the supports.[40]

The result of Helmut Jahn's vision is a structure with performance materials serve in their total composition and in use more than in their conventional roles. This maximizes daylight use in comfort with substantial energy life-cycle cost savings. The installed cooling system reduced up to 50 percent compared to a conventional system. A translucent membrane with three layers was developed to mediate between the interior and exterior climate, dealing with noise and temperature transmission, while still allowing natural flow of daylight into building along with views of greenery outside.[41]

Airport ranking

The airport was ranked number 48 among the world's top 100 airports in 2020. Other ASEAN airports in 2020 were ranked: Singapore Changi Airport, 1; Kuala Lumpur International Airport, 63; Jakarta, 35; Hanoi, 87.[42] Suvarnabhumi was ranked 46 in 2019,[43] 38 in 2017[44] and 36 in 2016.[45] According to the Thailand Development Research Institute (TDRI) in 2018, the airport's ranking had not improved over the past six years. Customer complaints include: lengthy immigration waiting times; transit day room issues; insufficient numbers of chairs and phone charging points; insufficient English-speaking staff; and poor information displays.[46][47]

Events

On 25 January 2007, due to work upgrading the taxiways which suffered from small cracks, a few incoming flights were delayed and several flights were safely diverted to U-Tapao International Airport in Rayong Province.[48]

On 26 November 2008, an illegal occupation of the airport took place by People's Alliance for Democracy, closing the departure lounge and blocking exits and leaving almost 3,000 passengers stranded in the main terminal and another 350,000 stranded inside the country, as all flights were grounded. The People's Alliance for Democracy seized the control tower at 12:00.[49] On 2 December 2008, protesters agreed to leave the airport as they had been illegally protesting and permitted the resumption of flights. Security checks, clean-ups, and re-certification once the illegal occupation ended delayed the airport from being fully functional until 5 December 2008.[50]

In January 2021, a motorist drove his car through security gates and onto the tarmac at the airport while it was in use. It was later revealed that the driver had been under the influence of methamphetamine, which were also discovered in the trunk of the car. The driver claimed that he had taken a wrong turn.[51][52]

Predatory irregularities

Petty thieves and confidence men, the majority of them illegal taxi drivers or tour guides, are known to prey on tourists in the arrival hall. They belong to politically well connected criminal groups: Kamnan Samruay, Boonruang Srisang, Sak Pakphanang, the Pattaya Mafia and Phuyai Daeng.[53] Evicting them has proved difficult as they allegedly are well connected. (The head of the Pirap gang is supposedly related to an Airports of Thailand executive, while the Phuyai Daeng has ties to influential civil servants in Samut Prakan.[53])

On 1 October 2010, two hundred armed men occupied the airport's parking area for an hour, blocking the building's entrances and seizing ticket booths to collect fares from motorists.[54] Airport security personnel failed to respond, reportedly because of an internal dispute within the parking management company, the firm contracted to run the parking facilities.[54]

Airport terminal and future expansion

 
Airport Layout

Airport terminal

Costing an estimated 155 billion baht (US$5 billion), the airport has two parallel runways (60 m wide, 4,000 m and 3,700 m long) and two parallel taxiways to accommodate simultaneous departures and arrivals.[55] It has a total of 120 parking bays (51 with contact gates and 69 remote gates), with five of these capable of accommodating the Airbus A380. Suvarnabhumi Airport has 72 jet bridges and 69 non-jet bridges. Additionally, flights are able to park at remote locations on the ramp, from which airport buses transport passengers to and from the terminal. Suvarnabhumi Airport has 18 jet bridges and 6 non-jet bridges for Airbus A380.[citation needed]

The airport's two runways can accommodate 64 flights per hour. At peak times the runways average 63 flights per hour. In April 2019 the Thai cabinet approved a sum of 21.8 billion baht for the construction of a third runway. Construction will start in 2019 and be completed in 2021. The third runway will accommodate a maximum of 30 flights per hour. The project will be managed by Airports of Thailand (AOT).[56]

 
Concourse E
 
Arrivals Hall

The main passenger terminal building, with a capacity of handling 76 flight operations per hour, co-locates the international and domestic terminals, though assigning them to different parts of the concourse. In the initial phase of construction, it was capable of handling 45 million passengers and three million tonnes of cargo per year. Above the underground rail link station and in front of the passenger terminal building is a 600-room hotel operated by Accor Group under the Novotel brand. The airport's passenger terminal is the world's largest passenger terminal ever constructed in one phase at 563,000 square metres (6,060,000 sq ft), and is also currently the fourth biggest passenger terminal building in the world, after the Hong Kong International Airport (570,000 square metres or 6,100,000 square feet), Beijing Capital International Airport (990,000 square metres or 10,700,000 square feet), with the largest passenger terminal at Dubai International Airport (Terminal 3 is over 1,713,000 square metres or 18,440,000 square feet). The airport air-traffic control tower was the tallest in the world at 135 metres (443 ft) from 2006 to 2014.[13]

From the opening of Suvarnabhumi in 2006 to early 2017, eight people had fallen to their deaths from upper-floor walkways, prompting the airport to spend 33 million baht in 2013 building glass barriers to prevent people from falling and/or taking their lives.[57]

Future expansion

By mid-2015, the airport was handling more than 800 flights per day, higher than its 600-flight capacity. It has exceeded its capacity of 45 million passengers per year.[58]

Airports of Thailand (AOT) approved an investment budget for the expansion of Suvarnabhumi Airport and construction began in late 2016 and finish in 2021 or early 2022.[59][60] The plan was to strengthen Suvarnabhumi Airport's position as a regional aviation hub. Phase Two would raise the airport's capacity to 65 million passengers a year and would be undertaken in parallel with the construction of a new domestic terminal.[61] The new domestic terminal will be intended to accommodate more than 30 million passengers annually.[60]

The two expansion projects are part of the overall airport enlargement that would see Suvarnabhumi raise its annual passenger handling capacity to 125 million passengers, 90 million international and 35 million domestic passengers by 2024 at an estimated cost of 163 billion baht (US$5.25 billion/€3.62 billion). The expansion includes the construction of one additional runway, subsequent enlargement of domestic and international terminals, and improvements to parking bays, car parks, and other airport infrastructure.[62]

Once completed the expansion plans to increase passenger capacity of Suvarnabhumi Airport to 65 million per year. The new satellite passenger concourse will be linked to the current main terminal via an underground automated people mover (APM) system that was voted by the AOT board during a 17 May 2012 meeting. The new people mover is being provided by Siemens using the VAL technology.[63] Originally set to be completed by 2019/20, however due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the completion of the concourse terminal has now been set to 2021. The expansion also includes a plan to expand the airport parking garage as well as the expansion of the eastern end of the main passenger terminal by 135 metres (443 ft) along with the construction of a new airline office building. The expansion includes plans to construct a third runway of 3,700 metres (12,100 ft). According to the Bangkok Post, the new satellite terminal will have a total of 28 gates, with eight for the Airbus A380 super jumbo jet.[64]

The new passenger terminal will be used only by Bangkok Airways and flag carrier Thai Airways International (and its regional subsidiary Thai Smile). Upon completion of the satellite terminal, other Star Alliance members will be given the check-in concourse of Thai Airways.[65]

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

AirlinesDestinations
Aeroflot Irkutsk (begins 18 January 2023),[66] Moscow–Sheremetyevo[67]
Air Astana Almaty
Air Austral Saint–Denis de la Réunion
Air Busan Busan,[68] Seoul−Incheon[68]
Air Canada Seasonal: Vancouver[69]
Air China Beijing–Capital,[70] Hangzhou
Air France Paris–Charles de Gaulle
Air India Delhi, Mumbai
Air Macau Macau
All Nippon Airways Tokyo–Haneda, Tokyo–Narita
Asiana Airlines Seoul–Incheon
Austrian Airlines Vienna
Bamboo Airways Ho Chi Minh City[71]
Bangkok Airways Chiang Mai, Da Nang, Hat Yai,[72] Koh Samui, Krabi, Lampang, Luang Prabang, Malé, Phnom Penh, Phuket, Siem Reap, Sukhothai,[73] Trat,[73] Yangon
Biman Bangladesh Airlines Dhaka
Bhutan Airlines Kolkata, Paro
Seasonal: Gaya
Cambodia Airways Phnom Penh
Cathay Pacific Hong Kong
Cebu Pacific Manila
China Airlines Kaohsiung,[74] Taipei–Taoyuan
China Eastern Airlines Kunming, Shanghai–Pudong[75]
China Southern Airlines Guangzhou
Drukair Bagdogra, Dhaka, Guwahati, Kolkata, Paro
El Al Tel Aviv
Emirates Dubai–International, Hong Kong
Ethiopian Airlines Addis Ababa, Hong Kong
Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi
EVA Air Amsterdam, London–Heathrow, Taipei–Taoyuan, Vienna
Finnair Helsinki
Garuda Indonesia Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta
Go First[76] Delhi, Mumbai
Greater Bay Airlines Hong Kong[77]
Gulf Air Bahrain, Singapore[78]
Hebei Airlines Guiyang,[79] Lianyungang,[80] Shijiazhuang
HK Express Hong Kong
Hong Kong Airlines Hong Kong
IndiGo Bengaluru,[81] Delhi, Kolkata, Mumbai
Japan Airlines Osaka–Kansai, Tokyo–Haneda, Tokyo–Narita
JC International Airlines Phnom Penh, Sihanoukville
Jeju Air Busan, Jeju,[82] Seoul–Incheon
Jetstar Melbourne
Jetstar Asia Airways Singapore[83]
Jin Air Busan, Seoul–Incheon
Juneyao Airlines Shanghai–Pudong
Kenya Airways Guangzhou, Nairobi–Jomo Kenyatta
KLM Amsterdam
Korean Air Busan, Seoul–Incheon
Kunming Airlines Kunming
Kuwait Airways Kuwait City
Lanmei Airlines Phnom Penh, Siem Reap
Lao Airlines Luang Prabang, Pakse, Savannakhet, Vientiane
Lucky Air Chengdu–Shuangliu, Kunming, Zhengzhou
Lufthansa Frankfurt, Munich[84]
Mahan Air Tehran–Imam Khomeini
Malaysia Airlines Kuala Lumpur–International
Maldivian Malé
MIAT Mongolian Airlines Seasonal: Ulaanbaatar
Myanmar Airways International Mandalay, Yangon
Myanmar National Airlines Yangon
Nepal Airlines Kathmandu
Okay Airways Nanning, Tianjin, Xi'an
Oman Air Muscat
Pacific Airlines Hanoi,[85] Ho Chi Minh City
Peach Naha, Osaka–Kansai[86]
Philippine Airlines Cebu,[87] Manila
Qantas Sydney
Qatar Airways Doha
Rossiya Airlines Saint Petersburg (suspended)[88]
Royal Brunei Airlines Bandar Seri Begawan
Royal Jordanian Amman–Queen Alia, Hong Kong (resumes 28 March 2023)[89]
S7 Airlines Irkutsk,[90] Khabarovsk (suspended),[91] Krasnoyarsk–International (suspended), Moscow–Domodedovo (suspended), Novosibirsk (suspended), Ulan-Ude (suspended), Vladivostok (suspended)[88]
SalamAir Muscat[92]
Saudia Jeddah,[93] Riyadh[94]
Scoot Singapore
Shanghai Airlines Shanghai–Pudong[95]
Shenzhen Airlines Shenzhen
Sichuan Airlines Chengdu–Shuangliu[95]
Singapore Airlines Singapore
Sky Angkor Airlines Phnom Penh[96]
SpiceJet Chennai,[97] Delhi, Kolkata, Mumbai, Pune (ends 29 January 2023)[98][99]
Spring Airlines Nanchang, Nanning,[100] Shanghai–Pudong
SriLankan Airlines Colombo–Bandaranaike
Starlux Airlines Taipei–Taoyuan[101]
Swiss International Air Lines Zürich
Thai AirAsia Chiang Mai, Hat Yai,[102] Krabi, Kuala Lumpur–International,[103] Nakhon Si Thammarat,[102] Nan,[102] Phuket, Surat Thani
Thai AirAsia X Melbourne,[104] Osaka–Kansai, Sapporo–Chitose,[105] Seoul–Incheon, Sydney, Tbilisi,[106] Tokyo–Narita[107]
Thai Airways International Beijing–Capital, Bengaluru, Brussels, Chengdu–Shuangliu,[108] Chennai, Copenhagen, Delhi, Denpasar, Dhaka, Frankfurt, Fukuoka, Guangzhou, Hong Kong, Hyderabad,[109] Islamabad, Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta, Jeddah,[110] Karachi, Kolkata,[111] Kuala Lumpur–International, Kunming,[108] Lahore, London–Heathrow, Manila, Melbourne, Mumbai, Munich, Nagoya–Centrair, Osaka–Kansai, Paris–Charles de Gaulle, Sapporo–Chitose,[112] Seoul–Incheon, Shanghai–Pudong, Singapore, Stockholm–Arlanda, Sydney, Taipei–Taoyuan, Tokyo–Haneda, Tokyo–Narita, Zürich
Thai Smile Ahmedabad, Changsha, Chiang Mai, Chiang Rai, Chongqing, Hanoi,[113] Hat Yai, Ho Chi Minh City, Jaipur, Kaohsiung,[114] Khon Kaen, Krabi, Luang Prabang, Mandalay, Nakhon Si Thammarat, Nan, Narathiwat, Penang, Phnom Penh, Phuket, Roi Et, Siem Reap, Surat Thani, Ubon Ratchathani, Udon Thani, Vientiane, Xiamen,[115] Yangon, Zhengzhou
Seasonal: Gaya
Thai VietJet Air Chiang Mai, Chiang Rai, Da Lat,[116] Da Nang, Fukuoka,[117] Haikou,[118] Hat Yai,[119] Ho Chi Minh City,[120] Khon Kaen,[119] Krabi, Nakhon Si Thammarat, Nanjing,[121] Phnom Penh,[122] Phuket, Phu Quoc,[123] Singapore,[120] Surat Thani,[119] Taipei–Taoyuan, Ubon Ratchathani,[119] Udon Thani,[124] Zhengzhou[121]
Charter: Can Tho
Turkish Airlines Istanbul
T'way Air Daegu, Seoul–Incheon
Ural Airlines Irkutsk,[125] Moscow–Domodedovo, Ufa, Yekaterinburg
US-Bangla Airlines Dhaka
Uzbekistan Airways Tashkent (resumes 2 January 2023)[126]
VietJet Air Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City
Vietnam Airlines Da Nang,[127] Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City
Vietravel Airlines Hanoi[128]
Vistara Delhi, Mumbai[129]
XiamenAir Tianjin,[130] Xiamen
Zipair Tokyo Tokyo–Narita[131]

Cargo

AirlinesDestinations
Air Hong Kong Hong Kong
Air ACT Istanbul
AeroLogic Bengaluru, Frankfurt, Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta, Leipzig/Halle, Penang, Singapore
AirBridgeCargo Hong Kong, Moscow–Sheremetyevo (both suspended)
Atlas Air Anchorage, Hong Kong, Sydney
ANA Cargo Osaka–Kansai, Singapore, Taipei–Taoyuan, Tokyo–Narita
Asiana Cargo Seoul–Incheon
Air Belgium Cargo Liège[132]
Cardig Air Hong Kong, Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta, Singapore
Cargolux Amman–Queen Alia,[133] Bahrain, Baku, Ho Chi Minh City, Luxembourg, Shanghai–Pudong, Shenzhen, Xiamen, Zhengzhou[134]
Cargolux Italia Hong Kong,[135] Milan–Malpensa
Cathay Pacific Cargo Hong Kong, Penang, Singapore
China Airlines Cargo Amsterdam,[136] Chengdu–Tianfu , Taipei–Taoyuan
China Postal Airlines Kunming
China Cargo Airlines Shanghai–Pudong, Singapore
DHL Aviation Auckland,[137] Hong Kong, Leipzig/Halle ,[138] Penang
EVA Air Cargo Taipei–Taoyuan[139]
Emirates SkyCargo Dubai–Al Maktoum, Mumbai, Shanghai–Pudong
Ethiopian Cargo Addis Ababa
FedEx Express Guangzhou, Hanoi, Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta, Penang, Singapore
Garuda Cargo Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta
K-Mile Air Hanoi, Hong Kong, Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta, Phnom Penh, Singapore
Korean Air Cargo Chennai, Seoul–Incheon, Singapore
Lufthansa Cargo Bengaluru, Frankfurt, Mumbai, Sharjah
Longhao Airlines Nanning, Shenzhen
MASkargo Hong Kong,[140] Kuala Lumpur–International
Nippon Cargo Airlines Tokyo–Narita[141]
Polar Air Cargo Anchorage, Hong Kong, Sydney
Qantas Freight Avalon,[142] Kuala Lumpur–International,[143] Shanghai–Pudong, Sydney,
Raya Airways Hanoi[144]Kuala Lumpur–Subang
Singapore Airlines Cargo Shanghai–Pudong, Singapore
Suparna Airlines Shanghai–Pudong
Turkish Cargo[145] Almaty, Delhi, Islamabad, Istanbul, Lahore, Tashkent
UPS Airlines Beijing–Capital, Cologne/Bonn, Delhi, Mumbai, Shenzhen[146]

Passenger traffic and statistics

Top Routes

Busiest flights out of Suvarnabhumi Airport by flight per weekly, as of 3 August 2022.[147]
Rank Destinations Frequency (Weekly)
1   Phuket 189
2   Chiang Mai 143
3   Koh Samui 128
4   Singapore–Changi 89
5   Phnom Penh 87
6   Hat Yai 84
7   Seoul–Incheon 81
8   Hong Kong 75
9   Ho Chi Minh City 70
10   Yangon 62

Busiest international routes

Top 10 busiest international routes to and from Suvarnabhumi Airport by passenger volume (2019)[148]
Rank Airport Passengers
handled 2019
% Change
2018/19
1 Hong Kong 3,756,449   6.57
2 Singapore 3,258,422   3.04
3 Seoul–Incheon 2,689,306   4.93
4 Taipei–Taoyuan 1,928,536   3.58
5 Dubai–International 1,707,276   11.82
6 Shanghai–Pudong 1,600,930   7.18
7 Guangzhou 1,510,461   8.96
8 Ho Chi Minh City 1,238,942   2.52
9 Tokyo–Haneda 1,230,506   9.81
10 Manila 1,179,861   17.34
Top 10 busiest international routes to and from Suvarnabhumi Airport by cargo volume (2019)[148]
Rank Airport Tons of cargo
handled 2019
% Change
2018/19
1 Hong Kong 172,977   13.5
2 Singapore 99,397   9.29
3 Taipei–Taoyuan 92,475   11.61
4 Tokyo–Narita 61,431   15.68
5 Seoul–Incheon 50,125   6.47
6 Doha 46,884   7.86
7 Shanghai–Pudong 39,042   13.01
8 Tokyo–Haneda 39,042   13.8
9 Dubai–International 27,479   11.36
10 London–Heathrow 25,450   9.44

Traffic by calendar year

Suvarnabhumi accounted for the largest share of air traffic at Thailand's airports in 2015, handling 52.9 million passengers, up by nearly 14 percent from the previous year despite its passenger capacity of only 45 million a year. International passengers passing through Suvarnabhumi grew 15.9 percent to 44.2 million, while domestic volume edged up 4.87 percent to 8.68 million. Aircraft movements showed a 9.5 percent increase to 317,066, consisting of 247,584 international (up 11 percent) and 69,482 domestic (up 4.4 percent).[149]


Bangkok Suvarnabhumi Airport passenger totals. See Wikidata query.
Comparison of passenger volume, aircraft movements and cargo volume at Suvarnabhumi Airport, by year
Year Passengers Change from
previous year
Movements Cargo
(tons)
Notes
2008 38,603,490 1,173,084
2009 40,500,224  04.9% 1,045,194
2010 42,784,967  05.6% 1,310,146
2011 47,910,744  012.0% 299,566
2012 53,002,328  010.6% 312,493 Source: Airports Council International[150]
In 2012, the government enjoined all low-cost airlines to move their hubs to DMK in October.
2013 51,363,451  011.9% 288,004 1,236,223
2014 46,423,352  09.6% 289,568 1,234,176
2015 52,902,110  014.0% 317,066 1,230,563
2016 55,892,428  05.7% 336,354 1,306,435 [151]
2017 60,860,704  08.9% 350,508 1,439,913
2018 63,379,077  04.1% 369,476 1,494,599 [152]
2019 65,425,879  03.2% 380,051 1,324,268 [153]

Accidents and incidents

  • 8 September 2013: Thai Airways International Flight 679, an Airbus A330-300, (HS-TEF, Song Dao), arriving from Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport (CAN) had a runway excursion from runway 19L while landing in heavy rain with extensive damage to the airplane and the runway. All passengers and crew were evacuated with no serious injuries.[154] Preliminary investigation determined the cause of the incident to be the right landing gear collapsing as a result of a damaged bogie.[154] In the aftermath of the accident, Thai Airways had the logos of the aircraft painted over in black, prompting widespread criticism of attempted cover-up. An airline official initially said that the practice was part of the "crisis communication rule" recommended by Star Alliance. This was denied by the group, and Thai Airways later clarified that the "de-identifying" of aircraft was its own practice and not Star Alliance policy.[155][156] The controversy prompted discussion over the appropriateness and effectiveness of the practice as a brand-protection policy.[157] The aircraft was damaged beyond repair and written off as a hull loss.[158] The airframe has since been converted to a roadside attraction called Airways Land, featuring a cafe and event space, on Mittraphap Road in Sida District, Nakhon Ratchasima Province.[159]
  • 8 October 2018: Thai Airways International Flight 679, a Boeing 747-400 (HS-TGF, Sri Ubon) arriving from Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport (CAN), China, had a runway excursion from runway 19R while landing, causing damage to the airplane. No injuries were reported.[160] As of January 2020, the aircraft is being repaired at U-Tapao International Airport.[161]

Ground transportation

Airport Rail Link (ARL)

 
2021 Map of Bangkok Mass Transit (BTS) and (MRT) Lines. The (ARL) in dark red links Suvarnabhumi Airport to Downtown Bangkok

The 30 billion baht Suvarnabhumi Airport Link was opened on 23 August 2010,[162] after multiple delays. The Airport Rail Link (ARL) is operated by SRTET, a subsidiary company of the State Railway of Thailand. The standard gauge line is 28.6 kilometres (17.8 mi) long and is elevated for most of its length, running mostly above existing regional railway lines and parallel to Motorway 7 and Si Rat Expressway. There is a short at-grade/underground segment as the line approaches the passenger terminal building of Suvarnabhumi Airport.

The ARL Station is located on the Underground floor of Suvarnabhumi Airport which also links to the Airports' Novotel Hotel adjacent to the Main Terminal.

The ARL hours of service are 06:00 to 00:00.[163] The ARL has two interchange stations, namely Phaya Thai (changing for BTS Green Line services) and Makkasan (linking Phetchaburi station of the MRT Blue Line). In the future, the ARL will complement the SRT Red Line commuter service, which comprises two-meter gauge, dual-track lines. The ARL may also be extended from Phaya Thai to Don Mueang via Bang Sue Grand Station, given that the old Don Mueang International Airport has now been reopened for civil aviation under a dual-airport policy.

Regional train

Meanwhile, SRT provides a suburban commuter train service between Lad Krabang (the nearest station to Suvarnabhumi on the East line, one station from the airport by Airport Rail Link) and the northern suburban city of Rangsit via downtown Bangkok and the old Don Mueang Airport. The train also connects with BTS and MRT at Phaya Thai and Phetchaburi stations respectively. A shuttle bus service linking the airport with Hua Takhe railway station is provided by BMTA. The train service is currently not as popular as the bus service because it requires a shuttle bus connection. The service will be stopped when the Airport Express Link is completed.[citation needed]

Bus

 
Shuttle Bus to Downtown Bangkok

Northeast of the Airport is Suvarnabhumi Public Transport Center, which is the Airport's Main Bus Terminal.

A free bus service connecting Suvarnabhumi Airport and Don Mueang Airport operates from 05.00 until midnight. Three air-conditioned city bus routes are operated by Bangkok Mass Transit Authority (BMTA) serve the airport's dedicated bus terminal. There are also direct buses between the airports operated by Airport Shuttle Bus.

Taxi

 
Taxi stands are located outside the arrival hall on the same level

Located on Level 1 (Ground Level) are where the Public Taxis are located. A ticket printed from the ticket queue machine (located on the same floor) is required before queuing up for a taxi.

Car

 
Departure drop off curb
 
Main Multi-Storey Carpark Building (Zone 2 & 3)

The airport has five main access routes. Among these the most convenient route is via the Bangkok Chon Buri Motorway (Motorway 7). Another main airport entrance is in Samut Prakan Province via the expressway from Bang Na to Bang Pakong.

The Airport has 7 different car park zones, with zone 2 & 3 having direct access to the departure/arrival terminal. Located northeast of the airport is the Longterm Car Park Zone, next to the Bus Terminal.

The airport has provided five entrance routes. The main route is via the motorway in the north of Bangkok, directly connecting Bangkok's downtown and Chonburi Province, the industrial and harbor city in eastern Thailand. However, another main airport entrance is in Samut Prakan Province, connecting an elevated highway in the south of Bangkok from Bang Na to Bang Pakong.

Sky Lane Cycle Track

 
Sky Lane at Suvarnabhumi Airport

In December 2015, Airports of Thailand introduced Sky Lane (Thai: สกายเลน), a cycling track around the Suvarnabhumi airport perimeter. The entrance to Sky Lane is located in the northeastern corner of the airport area. Cyclists can bring their bicycles and bike here for free. The Sky Lane is a controlled-access, one-direction, two-lane track built only for cycling, so the riders can be ensured that they won't be bothered by any vehicle. The Sky Lane's length is 23.5 km, making it the longest in Asia.[164] Sky Lane's facilities, which are specially designed for cyclists, include medical facilities, shops, food & beverage, track, parking lot and a rest area. The entrance gate is open from 06:00 to 18:00.[165] On 23 November 2018, King Rama X presided over the official opening of cycling lane at Suvarnabhumi airport and denominated the track as Happy and Healthy Bike Lane.[166]

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External links

  Media related to Suvarnabhumi International Airport at Wikimedia Commons
  Suvarnabhumi Airport travel guide from Wikivoyage

  • Suvarnabhumi Airport, Official site
  • Airports of Thailand Public Company Limited and the
  • Project information from Airport Technology
  • Current weather for VTBS at NOAA/NWS

suvarnabhumi, airport, redirects, here, airport, which, held, this, code, until, 2006, mueang, international, airport, other, uses, disambiguation, thai, าอากาศยานส, วรรณภ, rtgs, akatsayan, suwannaphum, pronounced, tʰâː, ʔāː, kàːt, jāːn, sùʔ, wān, pʰūːm, liste. BKK redirects here For the airport which held this code until 2006 see Don Mueang International Airport For other uses see BKK disambiguation Suvarnabhumi Airport Thai thaxakasyansuwrrnphumi RTGS Tha akatsayan Suwannaphum pronounced tʰaː ʔaː kaːt sa jaːn suʔ wan na pʰuːm listen 3 from Sanskrit स वर णभ म Suvarṇabhumi literally golden land IATA BKK ICAO VTBS also known unofficially as Bangkok International Airport 4 5 is one of two international airports serving the Bangkok Metropolitan Region the other one being Don Mueang International Airport DMK which remains open as a low cost carriers hub 6 7 Suvarnabhumi Airport covers an area of 3 240 ha 32 4 km2 8 000 acres making it one of the biggest international airports in Southeast Asia and a regional hub for aviation The airport is also a major Cargo Air Freight Hub 20th busiest in 2019 which has a designated Airport Free Zone as well as road links to the Eastern Economic Corridor EEC on Motorway 7 8 Suvarnabhumi AirportthaxakasyansuwrrnphumiIATA BKKICAO VTBSWMO 48429SummaryAirport typePublicOwner OperatorAirports of Thailand PCL AOT ServesBangkok Metropolitan RegionLocationRacha Thewa Bang Phli Samut Prakan and Lat Krabang BangkokOpened28 September 2006 16 years ago 2006 09 28 Hub forThai Airways InternationalThai SmileBangkok AirwaysK Mile AirFocus city forChina Southern AirlinesEVA AirThai AirAsiaThai AirAsia XThai VietJet AirElevation AMSL5 ft 2 mCoordinates13 41 33 N 100 45 00 E 13 69250 N 100 75000 E 13 69250 100 75000 Coordinates 13 41 33 N 100 45 00 E 13 69250 N 100 75000 E 13 69250 100 75000Websitesuvarnabhumi wbr airportthai wbr co wbr thMapsBKKLocation In Samut PrakanShow map of BangkokBKKLocation in ThailandShow map of ThailandBKKLocation in Southeast AsiaShow map of Southeast AsiaRunwaysDirection Length Surfacem ft01R 19L 4 000 13 123 Asphalt concrete01L 19R 3 700 12 139 Asphalt concrete3rd runway under construction 4 000 1 13 123 Asphalt concreteStatistics 2019 Total passengers65 424 564 3 2 International passengers53 458 385 4 6 Domestic passengers11 966 179 0 8 Aircraft movements380 052 2 9 Freight tonnes 1 324 272 11 4 Sources AOT 2019 2 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Land purchase initial early phase of construction 2 2 Airport tests and official opening 2 3 Initial difficulties 2 4 Capacity and safety issues 2 4 1 Tarmac problems 2 4 2 Plans to re open Don Mueang for domestic flights 2 4 3 Repair and upgrades 3 Architectural design 4 Airport ranking 5 Events 6 Predatory irregularities 7 Airport terminal and future expansion 7 1 Airport terminal 7 2 Future expansion 8 Airlines and destinations 8 1 Passenger 8 2 Cargo 9 Passenger traffic and statistics 9 1 Top Routes 9 2 Busiest international routes 9 3 Traffic by calendar year 10 Accidents and incidents 11 Ground transportation 11 1 Airport Rail Link ARL 11 2 Regional train 11 3 Bus 11 4 Taxi 11 5 Car 12 Sky Lane Cycle Track 13 References 14 External linksEtymology EditThe name Suvarnabhumi is Sanskrit for land of gold Devanagari स वर णभ म IAST Suvarṇabhumi Suvarṇa 9 is gold Bhumi 10 is land literally golden land The name was chosen by the late King Bhumibol Adulyadej whose name includes Bhumi referring to the Buddhist golden kingdom thought to have been to the east of the Ganges possibly somewhere in Southeast Asia In Thailand government proclamations and national museums insist that Suvarnabhumi was somewhere on the coast of the central plains near the ancient city of U Thong which might be the origin of the Indianised Dvaravati culture 11 Although the claims have not been substantiated the Thai government named the new Bangkok airport Suvarnabhumi Airport in celebration of this tradition A depiction of the Churning of the Ocean of Milk Samudra manthana at the airportHistory Edit Thai Airways aircraft parked at Bangkok Suvarnabhumi Airport A Thai Airbus A340 500 HS TLA Chiang Kham at Suvarnabhumi Airport in 2008 The airport is currently the main hub for Thai Airways International Thai Smile and Bangkok Airways as well as the operating base for Thai VietJet Air Thai AirAsia and Thai AirAsia X It also serves as regional gateway and connecting point for various foreign carriers connecting to Asia Oceania Europe and Africa Suvarnabhumi was officially opened for limited domestic flight service on 15 September 2006 and opened for most domestic and all international commercial flights on 28 September 2006 12 The airport is on what had formerly been known as Nong Nguhao Cobra Swamp in Racha Thewa in Bang Phli Samut Prakan province as well as the districts of Bang Kapi Lat Krabang Bang Na and Prawet in the eastern side of Bangkok about 25 kilometres 16 mi from downtown The terminal building was designed by Helmut Jahn of Murphy Jahn Architects It was constructed primarily by ITO JV The airport had the world s tallest free standing control tower 132 2 metres or 434 feet from 2006 to 2014 13 and the world s fourth largest single building airport terminal 563 000 square metres or 6 060 000 square feet Suvarnabhumi is the 17th busiest airport in the world 14 eleventh busiest airport in Asia and the busiest in the country having handled 60 million passengers in 2017 14 and is also a major air cargo hub with a total of 95 airlines On social networks Suvarnabhumi was the world s most popular site for taking Instagram photographs in 2012 15 Suvarnabhumi reassigned the IATA airport code BKK from Don Mueang after the previous airport ceased international commercial flights Motorway 7 connects the airport Bangkok and the heavily industrial eastern seaboard of Thailand where most export manufacturing takes place International check in area in Suvarnabhumi Airport in Bangkok seen from the upper level Departure hall A play area entitled Wonder World at the airport s departure lounge During the COVID 19 pandemic the airport was temporarily converted to a hospital 16 and vaccination centre 17 Land purchase initial early phase of construction Edit The need for the new airport was recognized in 1973 when 8 000 acres of land was purchased 40 kilometres east of Bangkok The site known as Cobra Swamp was drained and named Suvarnabhumi meaning realm of gold On 14 October 1973 student led protests led to the overthrow of the military government of Prime Minister Thanom Kittikachorn and the project was shelved After a series of ups and downs the New Bangkok International Airport company NBIA was formed in 1996 Due to political and economic instabilities notably the Asian financial crisis of 1997 construction did not begin until six years later in January 2002 by the government of Thaksin Shinawatra Airport tests and official opening Edit The airport was due to open in late 2004 but a series of budget overruns construction flaws and allegations of corruption plagued the project A further delay was caused by the discovery that the airport had been built over an old graveyard Superstitious construction workers claimed to have seen ghosts there On 23 September 2005 the Thai airports authority held a ceremony where 99 Buddhist monks chanted to appease the spirits 18 Full tests of the airport took place on 3 and 29 July 2006 Six airlines Thai Airways International Nok Air Thai AirAsia Bangkok Airways PBair and One Two GO used the airport as a base for twenty domestic flights 19 20 The first international test flights were conducted on 1 September 2006 Two Thai Airways aircraft a Boeing 747 400 and an Airbus A300 600 simultaneously departed the airport at 09 19 to Singapore and Hong Kong respectively At 15 50 the same aircraft flew back and made simultaneous touchdowns on runways 19L and 19R These test flights demonstrated the readiness of the airport to handle traffic citation needed On 15 September 2006 the airport started limited daily operations with Jetstar Asia Airways operating three Singapore to Bangkok flights Bangkok Airways moved to the airport on 21 September AirAsia and Thai AirAsia followed on 25 September and on 26 September Nok Air moved to Suvarnabhumi Airport During this initial phase as well as in the previous tests the airport used the temporary IATA code NBK citation needed Suvarnabhumi officially opened at 03 00 on 28 September 2006 taking over all flights from Don Mueang The first flight to arrive was a Lufthansa Cargo flight LH8442 from Mumbai at 03 05 21 The first commercial arrival was Japan Airlines at 03 30 The first passenger arrival was Aerosvit flight VV171 from Kyiv at 04 30 and the first cargo departure was Saudi Arabian Airlines flight SV 984 to Riyadh at 05 00 22 Aerosvit also had the first passenger departure VV172 to Kyiv around 05 30 23 Initial difficulties Edit Difficulties were reported in the first few days of the airport s operation On the first day alone sluggish luggage handling was common the first passenger arrival by Aerosvit took an hour for the luggage to start coming out and some flights did not have their luggage coming out even after four hours Flights were delayed Thai Airways claimed that 17 of 19 flights were delayed that day and there were failures with the check in system 24 25 Subsequent problems included the failure of the cargo computer system and the departure boards displaying the wrong information resulting in confused passengers especially as unlike Don Mueang there were no final calls issued 26 Months after its opening issues of congestion construction quality signage provision of facilities and soil subsidence continued to plague the project prompting calls to reopen Don Mueang to allow for repairs to be made 27 Expert opinions varied widely on the extent of Suvarnabhumi s problems as well as their root cause Most airlines stated that damage to the airport was minimal 28 29 Then Prime Minister Surayud Chulanont reopened Don Mueang for domestic flights on a voluntary basis on 16 February 2007 with 71 weekly flights moved back initially but no international flights 30 Capacity and safety issues Edit Tarmac problems Edit In January 2007 ruts were discovered in the runways at Suvarnabhumi 31 The east runway was scheduled to close for repairs Expert opinions varied as to the cause of the ruts 28 Airport authorities and airline representatives maintained that the airport was still safe and resisted suggestions that the airport should be completely closed and all flights moved back to Don Mueang 32 On 27 January 2007 the Department of Civil Aviation declined to renew the airport s safety certificate which had expired the previous day The ICAO requires that international airports hold aerodrome safety certificates but Suvarnabhumi continued to operate because the ICAO requirement had yet to be adopted as part of Thai law 33 As of early 2016 tarmac problems persisted at Suvarnabhumi Soft spots on the tarmac taxiways and apron area had not been permanently fixed Aircraft were getting stuck on the soft surfaces that are the result of sub standard materials The constant resurfacing of the tarmac taxiways and apron area with asphalt is an unacceptable patchwork solution We literally need a concrete solution said Tony Tyler IATA s director general and CEO 34 Plans to re open Don Mueang for domestic flights Edit In January 2007 Thai Airways announced a plan to move some of its domestic operations back to Don Mueang International Airport due to overcrowding Three days later the Ministry of Transport recommended temporarily reopening Don Mueang while repair work on the runways at Suvarnabhumi proceeded At that time Thai Airways said it would shift most of its domestic flights back to Don Mueang while keeping flights with high international passenger connections such as Chiang Mai and Phuket at Suvarnabhumi On 28 March 2009 Thai Airways discontinued all domestic flights from Don Mueang Bangkok Airways and One Two GO Airlines had similar plans but Bangkok Airways remained at Suvarnabhumi Thai AirAsia said it would not move unless it could shift both its international and domestic operations prompting them to stay at Suvarnabhumi for the time being Nok Air and PBair were undecided but Nok Air later relocated all flights to Don Mueang where they operate today 35 36 As of January 2010 only Nok Air and One Two GO operated domestic flights from Don Mueang Airport PBair have ceased operations altogether One Two GO was integrated into Orient Thai Airlines in July 2010 but continues to operate from Don Mueang Airport As of 1 October 2012 Air Asia has moved all of its Bangkok operations to Don Mueang International Airport DMK from Suvarnabhumi Airport BKK 37 Repair and upgrades Edit Airports of Thailand found that the cost of fixing 60 identified problems at the airport would be less than one percent of the total airline cost and the problems could be fixed in up to four to five years Dr Narupol Chaiyut a member of a committee overseeing service problems at the new airport estimated that 70 percent of the problems would be fixed in 2007 Twenty of the 60 problems were successfully fixed by February 2007 38 Architectural design Edit Airport traffic control tower ATCT at Suvarnabhumi Airport 132 2 meters tall third Tallest ATC Tower 39 Suvarnabhumi Concourse Architecture 5 pin arch truss girders with glazed facades and a translucent fabric membrane set up spanning across to bridge the 27 m spacing between the glass facades Suvarnabhumi Airport s main terminal roof is designed with structural elements and bays placed in a cantilevered wavelike form to appear to float over the concourse beneath This overall design principle was to express the former essence of the site from which water had to be drained before construction could begin The eight composite 2 710 ton trusses supporting the canopy of the main terminal are essentially diagrams of the bending moments acting on them with the greatest depth at mid span and over the supports 40 The result of Helmut Jahn s vision is a structure with performance materials serve in their total composition and in use more than in their conventional roles This maximizes daylight use in comfort with substantial energy life cycle cost savings The installed cooling system reduced up to 50 percent compared to a conventional system A translucent membrane with three layers was developed to mediate between the interior and exterior climate dealing with noise and temperature transmission while still allowing natural flow of daylight into building along with views of greenery outside 41 Airport ranking EditThe airport was ranked number 48 among the world s top 100 airports in 2020 Other ASEAN airports in 2020 were ranked Singapore Changi Airport 1 Kuala Lumpur International Airport 63 Jakarta 35 Hanoi 87 42 Suvarnabhumi was ranked 46 in 2019 43 38 in 2017 44 and 36 in 2016 45 According to the Thailand Development Research Institute TDRI in 2018 the airport s ranking had not improved over the past six years Customer complaints include lengthy immigration waiting times transit day room issues insufficient numbers of chairs and phone charging points insufficient English speaking staff and poor information displays 46 47 Events EditOn 25 January 2007 due to work upgrading the taxiways which suffered from small cracks a few incoming flights were delayed and several flights were safely diverted to U Tapao International Airport in Rayong Province 48 On 26 November 2008 an illegal occupation of the airport took place by People s Alliance for Democracy closing the departure lounge and blocking exits and leaving almost 3 000 passengers stranded in the main terminal and another 350 000 stranded inside the country as all flights were grounded The People s Alliance for Democracy seized the control tower at 12 00 49 On 2 December 2008 protesters agreed to leave the airport as they had been illegally protesting and permitted the resumption of flights Security checks clean ups and re certification once the illegal occupation ended delayed the airport from being fully functional until 5 December 2008 50 In January 2021 a motorist drove his car through security gates and onto the tarmac at the airport while it was in use It was later revealed that the driver had been under the influence of methamphetamine which were also discovered in the trunk of the car The driver claimed that he had taken a wrong turn 51 52 Predatory irregularities EditPetty thieves and confidence men the majority of them illegal taxi drivers or tour guides are known to prey on tourists in the arrival hall They belong to politically well connected criminal groups Kamnan Samruay Boonruang Srisang Sak Pakphanang the Pattaya Mafia and Phuyai Daeng 53 Evicting them has proved difficult as they allegedly are well connected The head of the Pirap gang is supposedly related to an Airports of Thailand executive while the Phuyai Daeng has ties to influential civil servants in Samut Prakan 53 On 1 October 2010 two hundred armed men occupied the airport s parking area for an hour blocking the building s entrances and seizing ticket booths to collect fares from motorists 54 Airport security personnel failed to respond reportedly because of an internal dispute within the parking management company the firm contracted to run the parking facilities 54 Airport terminal and future expansion Edit Airport Layout Airport terminal Edit Costing an estimated 155 billion baht US 5 billion the airport has two parallel runways 60 m wide 4 000 m and 3 700 m long and two parallel taxiways to accommodate simultaneous departures and arrivals 55 It has a total of 120 parking bays 51 with contact gates and 69 remote gates with five of these capable of accommodating the Airbus A380 Suvarnabhumi Airport has 72 jet bridges and 69 non jet bridges Additionally flights are able to park at remote locations on the ramp from which airport buses transport passengers to and from the terminal Suvarnabhumi Airport has 18 jet bridges and 6 non jet bridges for Airbus A380 citation needed The airport s two runways can accommodate 64 flights per hour At peak times the runways average 63 flights per hour In April 2019 the Thai cabinet approved a sum of 21 8 billion baht for the construction of a third runway Construction will start in 2019 and be completed in 2021 The third runway will accommodate a maximum of 30 flights per hour The project will be managed by Airports of Thailand AOT 56 Concourse E Arrivals Hall The main passenger terminal building with a capacity of handling 76 flight operations per hour co locates the international and domestic terminals though assigning them to different parts of the concourse In the initial phase of construction it was capable of handling 45 million passengers and three million tonnes of cargo per year Above the underground rail link station and in front of the passenger terminal building is a 600 room hotel operated by Accor Group under the Novotel brand The airport s passenger terminal is the world s largest passenger terminal ever constructed in one phase at 563 000 square metres 6 060 000 sq ft and is also currently the fourth biggest passenger terminal building in the world after the Hong Kong International Airport 570 000 square metres or 6 100 000 square feet Beijing Capital International Airport 990 000 square metres or 10 700 000 square feet with the largest passenger terminal at Dubai International Airport Terminal 3 is over 1 713 000 square metres or 18 440 000 square feet The airport air traffic control tower was the tallest in the world at 135 metres 443 ft from 2006 to 2014 13 From the opening of Suvarnabhumi in 2006 to early 2017 eight people had fallen to their deaths from upper floor walkways prompting the airport to spend 33 million baht in 2013 building glass barriers to prevent people from falling and or taking their lives 57 Future expansion Edit By mid 2015 the airport was handling more than 800 flights per day higher than its 600 flight capacity It has exceeded its capacity of 45 million passengers per year 58 Airports of Thailand AOT approved an investment budget for the expansion of Suvarnabhumi Airport and construction began in late 2016 and finish in 2021 or early 2022 59 60 The plan was to strengthen Suvarnabhumi Airport s position as a regional aviation hub Phase Two would raise the airport s capacity to 65 million passengers a year and would be undertaken in parallel with the construction of a new domestic terminal 61 The new domestic terminal will be intended to accommodate more than 30 million passengers annually 60 The two expansion projects are part of the overall airport enlargement that would see Suvarnabhumi raise its annual passenger handling capacity to 125 million passengers 90 million international and 35 million domestic passengers by 2024 at an estimated cost of 163 billion baht US 5 25 billion 3 62 billion The expansion includes the construction of one additional runway subsequent enlargement of domestic and international terminals and improvements to parking bays car parks and other airport infrastructure 62 Once completed the expansion plans to increase passenger capacity of Suvarnabhumi Airport to 65 million per year The new satellite passenger concourse will be linked to the current main terminal via an underground automated people mover APM system that was voted by the AOT board during a 17 May 2012 meeting The new people mover is being provided by Siemens using the VAL technology 63 Originally set to be completed by 2019 20 however due to the COVID 19 pandemic the completion of the concourse terminal has now been set to 2021 The expansion also includes a plan to expand the airport parking garage as well as the expansion of the eastern end of the main passenger terminal by 135 metres 443 ft along with the construction of a new airline office building The expansion includes plans to construct a third runway of 3 700 metres 12 100 ft According to the Bangkok Post the new satellite terminal will have a total of 28 gates with eight for the Airbus A380 super jumbo jet 64 The new passenger terminal will be used only by Bangkok Airways and flag carrier Thai Airways International and its regional subsidiary Thai Smile Upon completion of the satellite terminal other Star Alliance members will be given the check in concourse of Thai Airways 65 Airlines and destinations EditPassenger Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message AirlinesDestinationsAeroflotIrkutsk begins 18 January 2023 66 Moscow Sheremetyevo 67 Air AstanaAlmatyAir AustralSaint Denis de la ReunionAir BusanBusan 68 Seoul Incheon 68 Air CanadaSeasonal Vancouver 69 Air ChinaBeijing Capital 70 HangzhouAir FranceParis Charles de GaulleAir IndiaDelhi MumbaiAir MacauMacauAll Nippon AirwaysTokyo Haneda Tokyo NaritaAsiana AirlinesSeoul IncheonAustrian AirlinesViennaBamboo AirwaysHo Chi Minh City 71 Bangkok AirwaysChiang Mai Da Nang Hat Yai 72 Koh Samui Krabi Lampang Luang Prabang Male Phnom Penh Phuket Siem Reap Sukhothai 73 Trat 73 YangonBiman Bangladesh AirlinesDhakaBhutan AirlinesKolkata ParoSeasonal GayaCambodia AirwaysPhnom PenhCathay PacificHong KongCebu PacificManilaChina AirlinesKaohsiung 74 Taipei TaoyuanChina Eastern AirlinesKunming Shanghai Pudong 75 China Southern AirlinesGuangzhouDrukairBagdogra Dhaka Guwahati Kolkata ParoEl AlTel AvivEmiratesDubai International Hong KongEthiopian AirlinesAddis Ababa Hong KongEtihad AirwaysAbu DhabiEVA AirAmsterdam London Heathrow Taipei Taoyuan ViennaFinnairHelsinkiGaruda IndonesiaJakarta Soekarno HattaGo First 76 Delhi MumbaiGreater Bay AirlinesHong Kong 77 Gulf AirBahrain Singapore 78 Hebei AirlinesGuiyang 79 Lianyungang 80 ShijiazhuangHK ExpressHong KongHong Kong AirlinesHong KongIndiGoBengaluru 81 Delhi Kolkata MumbaiJapan AirlinesOsaka Kansai Tokyo Haneda Tokyo NaritaJC International AirlinesPhnom Penh SihanoukvilleJeju AirBusan Jeju 82 Seoul IncheonJetstarMelbourneJetstar Asia AirwaysSingapore 83 Jin AirBusan Seoul IncheonJuneyao AirlinesShanghai PudongKenya AirwaysGuangzhou Nairobi Jomo KenyattaKLMAmsterdamKorean AirBusan Seoul IncheonKunming AirlinesKunmingKuwait AirwaysKuwait CityLanmei AirlinesPhnom Penh Siem ReapLao AirlinesLuang Prabang Pakse Savannakhet VientianeLucky AirChengdu Shuangliu Kunming ZhengzhouLufthansaFrankfurt Munich 84 Mahan AirTehran Imam KhomeiniMalaysia AirlinesKuala Lumpur InternationalMaldivianMaleMIAT Mongolian AirlinesSeasonal UlaanbaatarMyanmar Airways InternationalMandalay YangonMyanmar National AirlinesYangonNepal AirlinesKathmanduOkay AirwaysNanning Tianjin Xi anOman AirMuscatPacific AirlinesHanoi 85 Ho Chi Minh CityPeachNaha Osaka Kansai 86 Philippine AirlinesCebu 87 ManilaQantasSydneyQatar AirwaysDohaRossiya AirlinesSaint Petersburg suspended 88 Royal Brunei AirlinesBandar Seri BegawanRoyal JordanianAmman Queen Alia Hong Kong resumes 28 March 2023 89 S7 AirlinesIrkutsk 90 Khabarovsk suspended 91 Krasnoyarsk International suspended Moscow Domodedovo suspended Novosibirsk suspended Ulan Ude suspended Vladivostok suspended 88 SalamAirMuscat 92 SaudiaJeddah 93 Riyadh 94 ScootSingaporeShanghai AirlinesShanghai Pudong 95 Shenzhen AirlinesShenzhenSichuan AirlinesChengdu Shuangliu 95 Singapore AirlinesSingaporeSky Angkor AirlinesPhnom Penh 96 SpiceJetChennai 97 Delhi Kolkata Mumbai Pune ends 29 January 2023 98 99 Spring AirlinesNanchang Nanning 100 Shanghai PudongSriLankan AirlinesColombo BandaranaikeStarlux AirlinesTaipei Taoyuan 101 Swiss International Air LinesZurichThai AirAsiaChiang Mai Hat Yai 102 Krabi Kuala Lumpur International 103 Nakhon Si Thammarat 102 Nan 102 Phuket Surat ThaniThai AirAsia XMelbourne 104 Osaka Kansai Sapporo Chitose 105 Seoul Incheon Sydney Tbilisi 106 Tokyo Narita 107 Thai Airways InternationalBeijing Capital Bengaluru Brussels Chengdu Shuangliu 108 Chennai Copenhagen Delhi Denpasar Dhaka Frankfurt Fukuoka Guangzhou Hong Kong Hyderabad 109 Islamabad Jakarta Soekarno Hatta Jeddah 110 Karachi Kolkata 111 Kuala Lumpur International Kunming 108 Lahore London Heathrow Manila Melbourne Mumbai Munich Nagoya Centrair Osaka Kansai Paris Charles de Gaulle Sapporo Chitose 112 Seoul Incheon Shanghai Pudong Singapore Stockholm Arlanda Sydney Taipei Taoyuan Tokyo Haneda Tokyo Narita ZurichThai SmileAhmedabad Changsha Chiang Mai Chiang Rai Chongqing Hanoi 113 Hat Yai Ho Chi Minh City Jaipur Kaohsiung 114 Khon Kaen Krabi Luang Prabang Mandalay Nakhon Si Thammarat Nan Narathiwat Penang Phnom Penh Phuket Roi Et Siem Reap Surat Thani Ubon Ratchathani Udon Thani Vientiane Xiamen 115 Yangon ZhengzhouSeasonal GayaThai VietJet AirChiang Mai Chiang Rai Da Lat 116 Da Nang Fukuoka 117 Haikou 118 Hat Yai 119 Ho Chi Minh City 120 Khon Kaen 119 Krabi Nakhon Si Thammarat Nanjing 121 Phnom Penh 122 Phuket Phu Quoc 123 Singapore 120 Surat Thani 119 Taipei Taoyuan Ubon Ratchathani 119 Udon Thani 124 Zhengzhou 121 Charter Can ThoTurkish AirlinesIstanbulT way AirDaegu Seoul IncheonUral AirlinesIrkutsk 125 Moscow Domodedovo Ufa YekaterinburgUS Bangla AirlinesDhakaUzbekistan AirwaysTashkent resumes 2 January 2023 126 VietJet AirHanoi Ho Chi Minh CityVietnam AirlinesDa Nang 127 Hanoi Ho Chi Minh CityVietravel AirlinesHanoi 128 VistaraDelhi Mumbai 129 XiamenAirTianjin 130 XiamenZipair TokyoTokyo Narita 131 Cargo Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message AirlinesDestinationsAir Hong KongHong KongAir ACTIstanbulAeroLogicBengaluru Frankfurt Jakarta Soekarno Hatta Leipzig Halle Penang SingaporeAirBridgeCargoHong Kong Moscow Sheremetyevo both suspended Atlas AirAnchorage Hong Kong SydneyANA CargoOsaka Kansai Singapore Taipei Taoyuan Tokyo NaritaAsiana CargoSeoul IncheonAir Belgium CargoLiege 132 Cardig AirHong Kong Jakarta Soekarno Hatta SingaporeCargoluxAmman Queen Alia 133 Bahrain Baku Ho Chi Minh City Luxembourg Shanghai Pudong Shenzhen Xiamen Zhengzhou 134 Cargolux ItaliaHong Kong 135 Milan MalpensaCathay Pacific CargoHong Kong Penang SingaporeChina Airlines CargoAmsterdam 136 Chengdu Tianfu Taipei TaoyuanChina Postal AirlinesKunmingChina Cargo AirlinesShanghai Pudong SingaporeDHL AviationAuckland 137 Hong Kong Leipzig Halle 138 PenangEVA Air CargoTaipei Taoyuan 139 Emirates SkyCargoDubai Al Maktoum Mumbai Shanghai PudongEthiopian CargoAddis AbabaFedEx ExpressGuangzhou Hanoi Jakarta Soekarno Hatta Penang SingaporeGaruda CargoJakarta Soekarno HattaK Mile AirHanoi Hong Kong Jakarta Soekarno Hatta Phnom Penh SingaporeKorean Air CargoChennai Seoul Incheon SingaporeLufthansa CargoBengaluru Frankfurt Mumbai SharjahLonghao AirlinesNanning ShenzhenMASkargoHong Kong 140 Kuala Lumpur InternationalNippon Cargo AirlinesTokyo Narita 141 Polar Air CargoAnchorage Hong Kong SydneyQantas FreightAvalon 142 Kuala Lumpur International 143 Shanghai Pudong Sydney Raya AirwaysHanoi 144 Kuala Lumpur SubangSingapore Airlines CargoShanghai Pudong SingaporeSuparna AirlinesShanghai PudongTurkish Cargo 145 Almaty Delhi Islamabad Istanbul Lahore TashkentUPS AirlinesBeijing Capital Cologne Bonn Delhi Mumbai Shenzhen 146 Passenger traffic and statistics EditTop Routes Edit Busiest flights out of Suvarnabhumi Airport by flight per weekly as of 3 August 2022 147 Rank Destinations Frequency Weekly 1 Phuket 1892 Chiang Mai 1433 Koh Samui 1284 Singapore Changi 895 Phnom Penh 876 Hat Yai 847 Seoul Incheon 818 Hong Kong 759 Ho Chi Minh City 7010 Yangon 62Busiest international routes Edit Top 10 busiest international routes to and from Suvarnabhumi Airport by passenger volume 2019 148 Rank Airport Passengershandled 2019 Change2018 191 Hong Kong 3 756 449 6 572 Singapore 3 258 422 3 043 Seoul Incheon 2 689 306 4 934 Taipei Taoyuan 1 928 536 3 585 Dubai International 1 707 276 11 826 Shanghai Pudong 1 600 930 7 187 Guangzhou 1 510 461 8 968 Ho Chi Minh City 1 238 942 2 529 Tokyo Haneda 1 230 506 9 8110 Manila 1 179 861 17 34Top 10 busiest international routes to and from Suvarnabhumi Airport by cargo volume 2019 148 Rank Airport Tons of cargohandled 2019 Change2018 191 Hong Kong 172 977 13 52 Singapore 99 397 9 293 Taipei Taoyuan 92 475 11 614 Tokyo Narita 61 431 15 685 Seoul Incheon 50 125 6 476 Doha 46 884 7 867 Shanghai Pudong 39 042 13 018 Tokyo Haneda 39 042 13 89 Dubai International 27 479 11 3610 London Heathrow 25 450 9 44Traffic by calendar year Edit Suvarnabhumi accounted for the largest share of air traffic at Thailand s airports in 2015 handling 52 9 million passengers up by nearly 14 percent from the previous year despite its passenger capacity of only 45 million a year International passengers passing through Suvarnabhumi grew 15 9 percent to 44 2 million while domestic volume edged up 4 87 percent to 8 68 million Aircraft movements showed a 9 5 percent increase to 317 066 consisting of 247 584 international up 11 percent and 69 482 domestic up 4 4 percent 149 Bangkok Suvarnabhumi Airport passenger totals See Wikidata query Comparison of passenger volume aircraft movements and cargo volume at Suvarnabhumi Airport by year Year Passengers Change fromprevious year Movements Cargo tons Notes2008 38 603 490 1 173 0842009 40 500 224 0 4 9 1 045 1942010 42 784 967 0 5 6 1 310 1462011 47 910 744 0 12 0 299 566 2012 53 002 328 0 10 6 312 493 Source Airports Council International 150 In 2012 the government enjoined all low cost airlines to move their hubs to DMK in October 2013 51 363 451 0 11 9 288 004 1 236 2232014 46 423 352 0 9 6 289 568 1 234 1762015 52 902 110 0 14 0 317 066 1 230 5632016 55 892 428 0 5 7 336 354 1 306 435 151 2017 60 860 704 0 8 9 350 508 1 439 9132018 63 379 077 0 4 1 369 476 1 494 599 152 2019 65 425 879 0 3 2 380 051 1 324 268 153 Accidents and incidents Edit8 September 2013 Thai Airways International Flight 679 an Airbus A330 300 HS TEF Song Dao arriving from Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport CAN had a runway excursion from runway 19L while landing in heavy rain with extensive damage to the airplane and the runway All passengers and crew were evacuated with no serious injuries 154 Preliminary investigation determined the cause of the incident to be the right landing gear collapsing as a result of a damaged bogie 154 In the aftermath of the accident Thai Airways had the logos of the aircraft painted over in black prompting widespread criticism of attempted cover up An airline official initially said that the practice was part of the crisis communication rule recommended by Star Alliance This was denied by the group and Thai Airways later clarified that the de identifying of aircraft was its own practice and not Star Alliance policy 155 156 The controversy prompted discussion over the appropriateness and effectiveness of the practice as a brand protection policy 157 The aircraft was damaged beyond repair and written off as a hull loss 158 The airframe has since been converted to a roadside attraction called Airways Land featuring a cafe and event space on Mittraphap Road in Sida District Nakhon Ratchasima Province 159 8 October 2018 Thai Airways International Flight 679 a Boeing 747 400 HS TGF Sri Ubon arriving from Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport CAN China had a runway excursion from runway 19R while landing causing damage to the airplane No injuries were reported 160 As of January 2020 the aircraft is being repaired at U Tapao International Airport 161 Ground transportation EditAirport Rail Link ARL Edit Main article Airport Rail Link Bangkok 2021 Map of Bangkok Mass Transit BTS and MRT Lines The ARL in dark red links Suvarnabhumi Airport to Downtown Bangkok The 30 billion baht Suvarnabhumi Airport Link was opened on 23 August 2010 162 after multiple delays The Airport Rail Link ARL is operated by SRTET a subsidiary company of the State Railway of Thailand The standard gauge line is 28 6 kilometres 17 8 mi long and is elevated for most of its length running mostly above existing regional railway lines and parallel to Motorway 7 and Si Rat Expressway There is a short at grade underground segment as the line approaches the passenger terminal building of Suvarnabhumi Airport The ARL Station is located on the Underground floor of Suvarnabhumi Airport which also links to the Airports Novotel Hotel adjacent to the Main Terminal The ARL hours of service are 06 00 to 00 00 163 The ARL has two interchange stations namely Phaya Thai changing for BTS Green Line services and Makkasan linking Phetchaburi station of the MRT Blue Line In the future the ARL will complement the SRT Red Line commuter service which comprises two meter gauge dual track lines The ARL may also be extended from Phaya Thai to Don Mueang via Bang Sue Grand Station given that the old Don Mueang International Airport has now been reopened for civil aviation under a dual airport policy Regional train Edit Meanwhile SRT provides a suburban commuter train service between Lad Krabang the nearest station to Suvarnabhumi on the East line one station from the airport by Airport Rail Link and the northern suburban city of Rangsit via downtown Bangkok and the old Don Mueang Airport The train also connects with BTS and MRT at Phaya Thai and Phetchaburi stations respectively A shuttle bus service linking the airport with Hua Takhe railway station is provided by BMTA The train service is currently not as popular as the bus service because it requires a shuttle bus connection The service will be stopped when the Airport Express Link is completed citation needed Bus Edit Shuttle Bus to Downtown Bangkok Northeast of the Airport is Suvarnabhumi Public Transport Center which is the Airport s Main Bus Terminal A free bus service connecting Suvarnabhumi Airport and Don Mueang Airport operates from 05 00 until midnight Three air conditioned city bus routes are operated by Bangkok Mass Transit Authority BMTA serve the airport s dedicated bus terminal There are also direct buses between the airports operated by Airport Shuttle Bus Taxi Edit Taxi stands are located outside the arrival hall on the same level Located on Level 1 Ground Level are where the Public Taxis are located A ticket printed from the ticket queue machine located on the same floor is required before queuing up for a taxi Car Edit Departure drop off curb Main Multi Storey Carpark Building Zone 2 amp 3 The airport has five main access routes Among these the most convenient route is via the Bangkok Chon Buri Motorway Motorway 7 Another main airport entrance is in Samut Prakan Province via the expressway from Bang Na to Bang Pakong The Airport has 7 different car park zones with zone 2 amp 3 having direct access to the departure arrival terminal Located northeast of the airport is the Longterm Car Park Zone next to the Bus Terminal The airport has provided five entrance routes The main route is via the motorway in the north of Bangkok directly connecting Bangkok s downtown and Chonburi Province the industrial and harbor city in eastern Thailand However another main airport entrance is in Samut Prakan Province connecting an elevated highway in the south of Bangkok from Bang Na to Bang Pakong Sky Lane Cycle Track Edit Sky Lane at Suvarnabhumi Airport In December 2015 Airports of Thailand introduced Sky Lane Thai skayeln a cycling track around the Suvarnabhumi airport perimeter The entrance to Sky Lane is located in the northeastern corner of the airport area Cyclists can bring their bicycles and bike here for free The Sky Lane is a controlled access one direction two lane track built only for cycling so the riders can be ensured that they won t be bothered by any vehicle The Sky Lane s length is 23 5 km making it the longest in Asia 164 Sky Lane s facilities which are specially designed for cyclists include medical facilities shops food amp beverage track parking lot and a rest area The entrance gate is open from 06 00 to 18 00 165 On 23 November 2018 King Rama X presided over the official opening of cycling lane at Suvarnabhumi airport and denominated the track as Happy and Healthy Bike Lane 166 References Edit Fernquest Jon Suvarnabhumi New runway by 2018 Bangkok Post Retrieved 20 March 2019 Air transport statistic 2016 summary PDF Airports of Thailand PLC 23 January 2017 Suvarnabhumi Airport pronunciation How to pronounce Suvarnabhumi Airport in Thai Forvo com 20 January 2010 Retrieved 4 March 2017 Bangkok Airport BBC Three 2015 Retrieved 21 December 2017 Series in which young Brits pass through Bangkok Airport to embark on adventures of a lifetime Suvarnabhumi Airport BKK Official Airports of Thailand Bangkok Airport Retrieved 21 December 2017 Don Mueang to be city budget air hub Bangkok Post Retrieved 2 July 2013 AirAsia to shift to Don Mueang Archived from the original on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 2 July 2013 An Update on the Progress of the High Speed Railway connecting Three Airports Sanskrit Dictionary Sanskrit Dictionary Retrieved 5 October 2018 Sanskrit Dictionary Sanskrit Dictionary Retrieved 5 October 2018 Damrong Rachanubhab History of Siam in the Period Antecedent to the Founding of Ayuddhya by King Phra Chao U Thong Miscellaneous Articles Written for the Journal of the Siam Society by His late Royal Highness Prince Damrong Bangkok 1962 pp 49 88 p 54 Promsak Jermsawatdi Thai Art with Indian Influences New Delhi Abhinav Publications 1979 pp 16 24 William J Gedney A Possible Early Thai Route to the Sea Journal of the Siam Society Volume 76 1988 pp 12 16 1 Bangkok s new airport opens to first commercial flights USA Today 15 September 2006 a b Tallest Air Traffic Control Tower in the world klia2 info Retrieved 11 October 2017 a b 2017 Annual Airport Traffic Report PDF Port Authority of New York and New Jersey 10 April 2018 p 28 Retrieved 1 May 2018 Suvarnabhumi Paragon top Instagram places list Bangkok Post 29 December 2012 Thailand Builds COVID Hospital in Bangkok Airport Travel Radar Travel Radar Aviation News 29 July 2021 Retrieved 8 August 2021 With few travellers Thailand turns airport into vaccination centre Richard Lloyd Parry Poo Ming a blue ghost who haunts 4bn airport The Times 27 September 2006 Archived 10 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine ThaiDay THAI discounts tickets for historic test flights 1 July 2006 PM Thaksin says Suvarnabhumi Airport ready in two months MCOT 29 July 2006 Archived 13 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine Pennapa Hongthong Just listen to our noisy nightmare Archived 29 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine The Nation 28 September 2006 Petchanet Pratruangkrai Suchat Sritama Exporters pan new export fees Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Nation 27 September 2006 Kurt Hofmann LH Cargo set to be first into Suvarnabhumi ATW 28 September 2006 Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Suchat Sritma Touch down into chaos Archived 11 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine 29 September 2006 e Travel Blackboard Baggage ruffles up some feathers but Suvarnabhumi still a success 29 September 2006 Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine The Nation Airport shippers hit by computer failure Archived 4 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine 2 October 2006 Some flight services will likely return the Don Muang Airport The Nation 29 January 2007 Archived 4 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine a b The Nation Engineers unable to agree on root cause of airport cracks Archived 12 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine 10 February 2007 The Nation THAI baulks at moving to Don Muang 15 February 2007 Thailand backtracks on plan for second international airport Channel NewsAsia 16 February 2007 Archived 18 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine A Rough Takeoff for Bangkok s New Airport Time 25 January 2007 New airport s east runway to close for repairs return to Don Muang mooted Thai News Agency MCOT 27 January 2007 Archived 13 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine Bangkok airport officially unsafe CNN 27 January 2007 Archived 29 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine Thailand needs to do more for higher aviation competitiveness IATA The Nation 18 February 2016 Retrieved 18 February 2016 Use Don Muang during repairs 2 airlines Archived 2 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine The Nation 27 January 2007 Move to use 2 airports gets mixed reception Archived 2 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine The Nation 31 January 2007 AirAsia moves to Don Mueang Airport 1 October 2012 Air Asia 13 August 2012 Archived 15 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine B1bn needed to fix terminal problems over four to five years Bangkok Post 16 February 2007 dead link The World s Tallest Air Traffic Control Towers Simple Flying 23 November 2020 Retrieved 11 April 2021 Suvarnabhumi Airport September 2008 University of Cincinnati Archived 7 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine E Architect Suvarnabhumi Airport Bangkok 15 August 2008 The World s Top 100 Airports of 2020 Skytrax Retrieved 5 June 2020 World s Top 100 Airports 2019 Skytrax Retrieved 5 June 2020 World s Top 100 Airports 2017 Skytrax Retrieved 19 October 2018 World s Top 100 Airports in 2016 Skytrax Retrieved 19 October 2018 Wancharoen Supoj Raksaseri Kornchanok 19 October 2018 Poor service quality dogs airport ranking Bangkok Post Retrieved 19 October 2018 Limsamarnphun Nophakhun 19 October 2018 Planned airport terminal could cause chaos experts The Nation Retrieved 19 October 2018 Thongrung Watcharapong 26 January 2007 Minister Admits Some airlines afraid to use new airport The Nation Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 3 September 2016 Thai protesters shut down airport BBC News Asia Pacific Retrieved 3 June 2015 Agence France Presse 2 December 2008 Thai protesters agree to clear airport protest leader ABS CBN News Retrieved 3 June 2015 Man drives onto tarmac at Bangkok Airport after taking a wrong turn www 9news com au Retrieved 7 February 2021 khliprthhludwingrnewy thaxakasyansuwrrnphumi phbemaya khbekhaipimrutw a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b Crackdown fails to stop airport gangs Bangkok Post 6 September 2009 Archived 17 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine a b AoT orders firm to end dispute after car park seizure Bangkok Post 2 October 2010 New Bangkok Airport Now Aiming For July 2006 Opening 2005 Bangkok Post Archived 20 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine Third runway approved for main airport The Nation 18 April 2019 Retrieved 18 April 2019 Mahitthirook Amornrat Chayutworakan Suttiwit 31 March 2017 Foreign man falls to death at Suvarnabhumi Bangkok Post Retrieved 31 March 2017 Sritama Suchat 24 May 2015 Open sky policy must continue say airlines The Sunday Nation Retrieved 24 May 2015 Airports of Thailand approves B42bn for Suvarnabhumi expansion Bangkok Post 20 June 2018 Retrieved 1 September 2018 a b Phataranawik Phatarawadee 1 September 2018 Conflict of design The Nation Weekend Retrieved 1 September 2018 2nd phase development to be finished one year ahead The Nation 15 December 2011 Retrieved 3 June 2015 Bangkok Post Minister supports airport expansion 30 August 2011 Siemens builds fully automated people mover at Suvarnabhumi airport 17 July 2020 Retrieved 27 November 2020 Kositchotethana Boonsong 27 April 2012 Suvarnabhumi expansion advances Bangkok Post Retrieved 13 September 2016 Kositchotethana Boonsong 10 February 2015 2 Thai carriers to share new terminal Bangkok Post Retrieved 13 September 2016 Aeroflot to launch flights to Bangkok from Irkutsk in January ASEAN Briefing 25 December 2022 Retrieved 29 December 2022 Aeroflot tentatively resumes Bangkok service in 4Q22 AeroRoutes 19 September 2022 Retrieved 22 September 2022 a b Air Busan Plans Bnngkok Launch in Late July 2022 AeroRoutes 11 July 2022 Cripps Karla 5 December 2022 Air Canada launches North America s only nonstop flight to Bangkok CNN Travel Hong Kong Warner Bros Discovery Retrieved 7 December 2022 Air China NW22 International Operations 30 OCT22 AeroRoutes 31 October 2022 Retrieved 31 October 2022 Explore the world with Bamboo Airways Bamboo Airways in Vietnamese and English Retrieved 16 February 2022 Liu Jim Bangkok Airways schedules new domestic routes in W20 Routes Online a b Karnjana Karnjanatawe 29 April 2021 TAT Launches Entry to Thailand Platform Bangkok Post Bangkok Retrieved 17 May 2021 China Airlines Kaohsiung Bangkok 1Q23 Service Changes Aeroroutes 27 October 2022 China Eastern NW22 International Regional Operations 16Oct22 Aeroroutes Retrieved 22 October 2022 Budget airline GoAir rebrands as Go First Greater Bay Airlines to launch commercial flight to Bangkok South China Morning Post 17 June 2022 Retrieved 13 July 2022 via Bangkok Post Gulf Air returns to Singapore for the first time in 13 years Mainly Miles 24 February 2021 Hebei Airlines adds Guiyang Bangkok from late Oct 2018 Routes Online Retrieved 2 October 2018 Hebei Airlines adds Lianyungang Bangkok service in S19 Routes Online Retrieved 12 March 2019 Bengaluru Thailand flights resumes Retrieved 26 July 2022 Jeju Air adds Jeju Bangkok service from late July 2019 Routes Online Retrieved 23 September 2019 Staff writers 20 April 2020 Jetstar Asia to resume some flights to Manila Bangkok Kuala Lumpur CNA Mediacorp Retrieved 26 March 2021 Lufthansa Jetzt fur den Sommer buchen Lufthansa Group Retrieved 16 March 2022 Pacific Airlines Adds Hanoi Bangkok From mid Nov 2022 Aeroroutes Retrieved 3 November 2022 Peach Adds Osaka Bangkok Nonstop Flights From Dec 2022 Aeroroutes Retrieved 7 October 2022 Philippine Airlines to resume Cebu Bangkok route TTG Asia Singapore Retrieved 13 October 2022 a b Silk Robert 7 March 2022 Russian airlines suspend international flying Travel Weekly Secaucus Northstar Travel Group Retrieved 8 March 2022 Royal Jordanian Tentatively Resumes Hong Kong Service in NS23 Aeroroutes 25 November 2022 Retrieved 25 November 2022 S7 Airlines resumes Thailand service from Nov 2022 AeroRoutes 4 October 2022 Retrieved 4 October 2022 Liu Jim 22 July 2019 S7 Airlines resumes Khabarovsk Bangkok route from Nov 2019 Routes Online Retrieved 22 July 2019 SALAMAIR ADDS BANGKOK SERVICE IN LATE DEC 2022 Aeroroutes 30 November 2022 Retrieved 30 November 2022 Saudi flag carrier announces to launch 10 new global destinations including Beijing People s Daily Online People s Daily Riyadh Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party Xinhua 17 February 2022 Retrieved 16 March 2022 Almarzoogi Mai 28 February 2022 Saudia marks launch of direct flights to Thailand Arab News Riyadh Saudi Research and Media Group a b China Eastern NW22 International Regional Operations 16Oct22 Aeroroutes 19 October 2022 Retrieved 19 October 2022 Daily Flight between Cambodia and Thailand Sky Angkor Airlines official website Retrieved 23 April 2022 SPICEJET RESUMES CHENNAI BANGKOK SERVICE IN LATE DEC 2022 Aeroroutes Retrieved 5 December 2022 Jyotiraditya Scindia Inaugurates Direct Flight Between Pune and Bangkok News 18 13 November 2022 Retrieved 14 November 2022 SpiceJet Discontinues Pune Bangkok Service in January 2023 Aeroroutes Retrieved 28 December 2022 Spring Airlines NW22 International Network Additions Liu Jim Starlux Airlines schedules network expansion in Dec 2020 Routes Online Retrieved 26 October 2020 a b c Liu Jim Thai AirAsia W20 Bangkok Suvarnabhumi network adjustment Routes Online Retrieved 11 October 2020 Thai AirAsia to Operate Kuala Lumpur Flights from BKK and DMK Travel News Asia Retrieved 27 May 2022 Thai AirAsia X Resumes Australia Service From Dec 2022 Aeroroutes Retrieved 28 August 2022 Chua Alfred 26 April 2022 Thai AirAsia X marks return to service with Japan South Korea relaunch FlightGlobal Retrieved 30 November 2022 Thai AirAsia X to fly direct to Tbilisi Georgia 2 times a week from Oct 2022 Thai AirAsia X Moves Tokyo Resumption to July 2022 AeroRoutes 26 May 2022 Retrieved 26 May 2022 a b Thai Resumes Chengdu Kunming Service From Sep 2022 Aeroroutes Retrieved 13 September 2022 Thai Airways Timetable www thaiairways com Retrieved 23 August 2022 Thai Airways International Moves Jeddah Launch to Late August 2022 2022 05 26 https www ttrweekly com site 2022 10 thai expands flights to india text THAI 20presented 20its 20Winter 20Traffic Kolkata 20on 201 20January 202023 https www ttrweekly com site 2022 10 thai expands flights to india text THAI 20presented 20its 20Winter 20Traffic Kolkata 20on 201 20January 202023 Retrieved 30 December 2022 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a External link in code class cs1 code work code help Missing or empty title help Thai Airways International Resumes Sapporo Service in NW22 Aeroroutes Retrieved 30 June 2022 David Casey 2 February 2022 50 New Routes Starting In February 2022 Routes Thai Smile Resumes Kaohsiung Service From Dec 2022 Aeroroutes 12 October 2022 Retrieved 27 October 2022 Liu Jim 4 May 2020 Thai Smile files Xiamen schedule in S21 Routes Online Retrieved 26 March 2021 Thai VietJet Air to Resume Da Lat Service in Dec 2022 Aeroroutes 17 November 2022 Thai VietJet Air Schedules New International Service In July 2022 Aeroroutes Retrieved 1 April 2022 Liu Jim Thai VietJet Air plans Bangkok Haikou service from late Oct 2020 Routes Online Retrieved 13 April 2020 a b c d Liu Jim Thai VietJet Air schedules new domestic routes in 2H20 Routes Online Informa Markets Retrieved 23 June 2020 a b Dusida Worrachaddejchai 15 March 2022 Thai Vietjet eyes 8 new planes for fleet Bangkok Post Retrieved 15 March 2022 a b Thai VietJet Air Adds New Routes to China in late Sep 2022 Aeroroutes Retrieved 27 September 2022 Thai Vietjet resumes Phnom Penh flights TTR Weekly 2 February 2022 Thai VietJet Air Plans Phu Quoc Launch in Nov 2022 Aeroroutes Retrieved 14 June 2022 Liu Jim Thai VietJet Air adds Udon Thani service from Nov 2019 Routes Online Retrieved 21 October 2019 Liu Jim 22 August 2019 Ural Airlines adds nonstop Irkutsk Bangkok routing in W19 Routes Online Retrieved 22 August 2019 Uzbekistan Airways Tentatively Moves Bangkok Resumption to Jan 2023 Aeroroutes Vietnam Airlines expands SE Asia Network in W19 Routes Online Retrieved 23 September 2019 Vietravel Airlines Schedules Bangkok Debut in Dec 2022 Aeroroutes Retrieved 21 November 2022 Vistara to start Mumbai Bangkok flights from August 5 Another International Flight Returns This Time from Tianjin That s Magazine 19 October 2022 Retrieved 19 October 2022 ZIPAIR to Increase Bangkok Service to Daily From December 1st ZIPAIR Tokyo Retrieved 20 November 2020 flight KF661 clx7405 Amman Bangkok Ho Chi Minh Cargolux adds Shenzhen to its global network 18 September 2020 cargolux italia flight6158 flight CI5542 DHK002P 2013 summer schedule Aero Logic Retrieved 13 August 2013 Flight Timetable PDF EVA Airways Cargo MASKargo adds new intra Asia routing in S18 Routesonline com Retrieved 5 October 2018 Summer Schedule March 27 2022 October 29 2022 PDF Nippon Cargo Airlines Qantas Freight 7581 Avalon Kuala Lumpur Bangkok Qantas Freight 7581 Avalon Kuala Lumpur Bangkok Raya Airways Flight 4144 Turkish Airlines Cargo Winter Schedule Archived 4 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine UPS launches Bangkok to Shenzhen route 21 July 2022 Flightradar24 Flightradar24 com Live flight tracker Flightradar24 a b Annual Airport 2019 PDF Airports of Thailand PCL Retrieved 31 August 2020 Kositchotethana Boonsong 1 February 2016 AoT airports set new record in passenger traffic Bangkok Post Retrieved 1 February 2016 Passenger Traffic 2010 Final Airports Council International 1 August 2012 Archived from the original on 29 April 2012 Retrieved 29 April 2012 AOT Air Traffic Calendar Year 2016 Jan Dec 2016 PDF Airports of Thailand Archived from the original PDF on 17 November 2017 Retrieved 17 November 2017 Air Traffic Report 2018 PDF Airports of Thailand AOT 2019 p 1 Retrieved 27 February 2020 Air Traffic Report 2019 PDF Airports of Thailand AOT 2020 p 1 Retrieved 31 August 2020 a b Aircraft accident Airbus A330 321 HS TEF Bangkok Suvarnabhumi International Airport BKK Aviation Safety Network Archived from the original on 19 December 2013 Retrieved 19 December 2013 Busch Simon Thompson Chuck 10 September 2013 Thai Airways blacks out logos after accident CNN Archived from the original on 3 May 2019 Retrieved 3 May 2019 Dawson Alan 14 September 2013 The Big Issue The great airline cover up Bangkok Post Retrieved 3 May 2019 A crash course in PR Rule No 1 don t hide Bangkok Post 15 September 2013 Retrieved 3 May 2019 HS TEF Thai Airways International Airbus A330 321 cn 066 Planespotters Archived from the original on 19 December 2013 Retrieved 19 December 2013 Airways Land aednekhruxngbin aechachillchimrimthnn mitrphaph Korat Daily 26 30 April 2019 p 8 THAI jumbo flight TG 679 skids off Suvarnabhumi runway while landing The Nation 9 October 2018 Archived from the original on 29 August 2019 Retrieved 29 August 2019 Boon Tom 9 October 2018 Breaking Thai 747 Skids Off Runway In Bangkok Simple Flying Archived from the original on 24 February 2020 Retrieved 13 January 2020 Airport Link to start commercial operation Aug 23 Mcot net Archived from the original on 4 March 2012 Retrieved 10 February 2012 Airport Rail Link Suvarnabhumi Airport 15 January 2016 Archived from the original on 27 June 2015 Retrieved 4 March 2017 Thailand to get Longest bicycle lane in Asia by 2017 Bangkok Post Retrieved 16 April 2016 Official Website Sky Lane Thailand Archived from the original on 13 July 2016 Retrieved 31 January 2018 HM to open Suvarnabhumi airport bike track Bangkok Post Bangkokpost com Retrieved 23 September 2019 External links Edit Media related to Suvarnabhumi International Airport at Wikimedia Commons Suvarnabhumi Airport travel guide from Wikivoyage Suvarnabhumi Airport Official site Free Zone by Suvarnabhumi Airport Website Airports of Thailand Public Company Limited and the page of the Suvarnabhumi Airport Suvarnabhumi Airport Project information from Airport Technology Current weather for VTBS at NOAA NWSPortals Asia Thailand Aviation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Suvarnabhumi Airport amp oldid 1130858679, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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