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Tan Son Nhat International Airport

Tân Sơn Nhất International Airport (IATA: SGN, ICAO: VVTS) is an international airport serving Ho Chi Minh City, the largest city of Vietnam. It serves Tan Binh District, where the airport is located in the Ho Chi Minh City metropolitan area, as well as the rest of southeastern Vietnam. It is the busiest and largest airport in Vietnam, with 32.5 million passengers in 2016,[2] 38.5 million passengers in 2018,[3] and about 41 million passengers in 2023.[4] As of December 2023, it is the 50th-busiest airport in the world, and the second-busiest in Southeast Asia.[5] As of April 2024, it has a total capacity of only around 30 million passengers,[6] which has caused constant and increasing traffic and congestion, hence it has sparked debates for expanding or building a new airport, of which the plan of the new airport as an alternative is under construction since 2021, and will be completed by 2025.[7][8]

Tân Sơn Nhất International Airport

Sân bay Quốc tế Tân Sơn Nhất
Summary
Airport typePublic / Military
Owner/OperatorAirports Corporation of Vietnam
ServesHo Chi Minh City metropolitan area
LocationTan Binh District, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
Hub for
Operating base for
Elevation AMSL10 m / 33 ft
Coordinates10°49′08″N 106°39′07″E / 10.81889°N 106.65194°E / 10.81889; 106.65194
Websitewww.vietnamairport.vn/tansonnhatairport/en
Maps
SGN/VVTS
Location of the airport in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
SGN/VVTS
SGN/VVTS (Vietnam)
SGN/VVTS
SGN/VVTS (Southeast Asia)
SGN/VVTS
SGN/VVTS (Asia)
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
07L/25R 3,048 10,000 Concrete
07R/25L 3,800 12,467 Concrete
Statistics (2023)
Passengers40.738.295 ( 18.85%)

Of the routes the airport offers, the domestic Ho Chi Minh City–Hanoi route is the busiest in Southeast Asia and the fourth-busiest in the world, serving around 11 million passengers in 2023.[9] Its IATA airport code, SGN, is derived from the city's former name of Saigon.

History edit

Tan Son Nhat International Airport has its origins in the early 1930s when the French colonial government constructed a small airport with unpaved runways, known as Tân Sơn Nhứt Airfield near the village of Tan Son Nhut. By mid-1956, with U.S. aid, a 7,200-foot (2,190 m) runway had been built; the airfield near Saigon became known as South Vietnam's principal international gateway. During the Vietnam War (or Second Indochina War), Tan Son Nhut Air Base (then using the alternative spelling Tân Sơn Nhứt) was an important facility for both the U.S. Air Force and the Republic of Vietnam Air Force. Between 1968 and 1974, Tan Son Nhut Airport was one of the busiest military airbases in the world. Pan Am schedules from 1973 show that during the last days of South Vietnam, Boeing 747 service was being operated four times a week to San Francisco via Guam and Manila.[10] Continental Airlines operated up to 30 Boeing 707 military charters per week to and from Tan Son Nhut Airport during the 1968–74 period.[11]

 
Board of welcoming at Tan Son Nhat International Airport, 1967

Post-war era edit

On 9 December 2004, United Airlines became the first U.S. airline to fly to Vietnam since Pan Am's last flight during the Fall of Saigon in April 1975. Flight UA 869, operated using a Boeing 747-400 landed at Ho Chi Minh City, the terminus of the flight that originated from San Francisco via Hong Kong. On 29 October 2006, this service was switched from San Francisco to Los Angeles with a stop in Hong Kong, operating as UA 867 (also using a 747–400). In 2009, the service UA 869 has resumed once again from San Francisco via Hong Kong International Airport.[12] United ended the route to San Francisco via Hong Kong on 30 October 2011. The airline resumed the route from Ho Chi Minh City to Hong Kong after its merger with Continental Airlines. The flight until suspended, no longer made a stop at San Francisco and was flown on a Boeing 777-200ER instead of the 747-400.

In 2006, Tan Son Nhat International Airport served approximately 8.5 million passengers (compared with 7 million in 2005) with 64,000 aircraft movements.[13] It has recently accounted for nearly two-thirds of the arrivals and departures at Vietnam's international gateway airports.[14][15] Due to increasing demand (about 15–20% per annum), the airport has been continuously expanded by the Southern Airports Corporation.[15]

In 2010, Tan Son Nhat domestic terminal handled 8 million passengers, its maximum capacity. The airport reached its full capacity of 20 million passengers in 2013, two years earlier than predicted. Both domestic and international terminal are being expanded to meet the increasing demand. In December 2014, expansion for the domestic terminal was finished, boosting the terminal's capacity to 13 million passengers per annum.[16] In September 2017, People's Army of Vietnam ceded 21 hectare of military land in the vicinity of the airport to Airports Corporation of Vietnam for civil use. This gave way for the construction of 21 new aircraft parking spaces, expected to be completed by Tet holidays in 2018. Tan Son Nhat will then have 72 parking spaces for airplanes.[17]

Of the routes the airport offers, the Ho Chi Minh City – Hanoi route is the busiest in Southeast Asia and the seventh busiest in the world, serving 6,769,823 customers in 2017.[18]

Passenger terminals and facilities edit

Following the opening of its new international terminal in September 2007, Tan Son Nhat has two major terminal buildings with separate sections for international and domestic flights.

The Prime Minister of Vietnam, by Decision 1646/TTg-NN, has approved the addition of 40 hectares (99 acres) of the adjacent area to extend the apron and to build a cargo terminal to handle the rapid increase of passenger (expected to reach 17 million in 2010, compared to 7 million and 8.5 million in 2005 and 2006 respectively) and cargo volume at the airport.[14][19]

Domestic terminal (T1) edit

Until the opening of the International Terminal in 2007, the domestic terminal was the sole civilian terminal of the airport. The French Indochinese administration built the original terminal. It initially covered an area of 1,800 m2 (19,000 sq ft). Between 1954 and 1975 when the airport quickly became one of the busiest airports in the world, it was expanded 4 more times: in 1956, 1960, 1963 (which was handled by the contractor RMK-BRJ[20]), and 1969.[21] By 1972, the terminal grew to 10,800 m2 (116,000 sq ft) in space[21] with a capacity of 1.5 million passengers a year.[22]

In recent history, after years of constant expansion to meet growing traffic, the terminal's handling capacity increased tenfold to 15 million passengers a year as of 2023. It has a floor area of 40,948 m2 (440,760 sq ft) with 20 boarding gates (4 aerobridge gates and 16 remote gates).[6]

The terminal has two lounges: Lotus Lounge and Le Saigonnais Lounge.

International terminal (T2) edit

A new international terminal, constructed by a consortium of four Japanese contractors (KTOM, abbreviation of four contractors' names: KajimaTaiseiObayashiMaeda), opened in December 2007 with an initial designed capacity of 10 million passengers a year. The terminal was funded by Japanese official development assistance at a cost of 219 million USD.[23]

In 2014, the terminal served over 9 million international passengers[24] and a demand of an expansion to the terminal was in sight. Plan for a 109 million-USD expansion of the international terminal was approved in August 2014.[25] The first phase of an urgent expansion to the terminal was finished in December 2016 with the addition of 2 new jet bridges and other facilities.[26] Upon the completion of phase two in 2018, the terminal has a floor area of 115,834 m2 (1,246,830 sq ft)[27] and 26 boarding gates, and can handle 13 million passengers annually.[28]

There are a total of five passenger lounges situated in the International Terminal: Lotus Lounge 1 and 2, Le Saigonnais, Orchid Lounge, and Rose Business Lounge.

Terminal 3 edit

A new passenger terminal for the airport broke ground on 24 December 2022. The new terminal will include 27 gates (13 jetbridges and 14 remote gates) for an annual handling capacity of 20 million passengers. The terminal building will have a total floor area of 112,500 m2 (1,211,000 sq ft), and will be connected with a new 130,000 m2 (1,400,000 sq ft) non-aviation services and parking complex by footbridges.[29] The project has a budget of 10,986 billion VND (US$467.6 million)[30] and wa projected to be completed by the end of 2024, which is now slated to be completed by April 2025.[31] Upon completion, the terminal will serve domestic flights to support the current domestic terminal.[29]

Cargo terminal edit

Tan Son Nhat Airport currently has three cargo terminals. Two of them (Air Freight Terminal 1 and 2) are operated by Tan Son Nhat Cargo Services (TCS) and the other one is operated by Saigon Cargo Services Corporation (SCSC). These facilities have a handling capacity of 700,000 tonnes of cargo per year combined.

TCS's Air Freight Terminal 1 was the first cargo terminal at the airport. It was inaugurated on January 1, 1997.[32] In May 2012, Air Freight Terminal 2 was opened after 20 months of construction. The latter was built at a cost of $15 million and covers an area of 13,700 m2 (147,000 sq ft).[33]

The SCSC cargo terminal was constructed from March 2009 to December 2010 at a cost of $50 million.[34] The cargo handling area consists of a 26,670 m2 (287,100 sq ft) cargo terminal, 52,421 m2 (564,250 sq ft) of apron area, and 64,000 m2 (690,000 sq ft) of warehouse and other facilities.[35]

Runways and air control edit

The airport has two parallel runways, namely 07L/25R, and 07R/25L. Since the runways are only 365 meters apart, they are operated dependently. Due to the maximum processing capacity of the passenger terminals (about 3,600 passengers/hour), the runway system's capacity is capped at 44 operations per hour.[36]

The original air traffic control tower is situated between present-day taxiway Y1 and S5. It was originally built in 1949 before being rebuilt in 1959.[37] During the Tet Offensive in 1968, the tower was damaged by a rocket[38] and a new tower was built in June 1969.[37]

A new 70-meter (230-feet) tall air control tower was put into use in 2013.[39] The new airport control tower is situated in the corner area between the Domestic Terminal and the International Terminal.

There were four USAF ATRC facilities in Viet Nam in the 1960-1973 era. The one located on Tan son Nhut was designated Paris ATRC. Patty was located down in the Delta, there was one in Da Nang, and Pyramid was in the highlands. Paris operated on the top Dias inside the radar facility located mid-base with the US Army's Recovery and ground radio operations. The USAF 2027th Communications Squadron staffed the air traffic controllers that operate the scopes and handle all non-civilian in-country fixed wing radar traffic 24-7. Once Tan Son Nhut radar traffic got within 15 miles of the base it was normally handed off to Approach Control for sequencing and landing, which operated inside the air control tower. Usually none of the local helicopter traffic was under radar control; it was basically flown VFR and was based at Hotel 3. There was too much air traffic for controllers to be able to handle anything but fixed wing. In 70-71 VNAF controllers were introduced to work alongside the 2027th squadron's controllers to help with communication with pilots who did not speak English.[citation needed]

Airlines and destinations edit

Passenger edit

AirlinesDestinations
Aeroflot Moscow–Sheremetyevo[40]
AirAsia Johor Bahru, Kuala Lumpur–International, Penang
Air China Beijing–Capital, Chongqing[41]
Air France Paris–Charles de Gaulle
Air India Delhi (begins 1 June 2024)[42]
All Nippon Airways Tokyo–Haneda,[43][44][45] Tokyo–Narita
Asiana Airlines Seoul–Incheon
Bamboo Airways Da Nang, Hai Phong, Hanoi, Hue, Nha Trang, Quy Nhon, Thanh Hoa, Vinh
Cambodia Airways Phnom Penh
Cambodia Angkor Air Phnom Penh, Siem Reap,[46] Sihanoukville
Cathay Pacific Hong Kong
Cebu Pacific Manila
China Airlines Taipei–Taoyuan
China Eastern Airlines Kunming,[47] Shanghai–Pudong
China Southern Airlines Changsha, Guangzhou,[48] Shanghai–Pudong, Shenzhen, Wuhan[49]
Emirates Dubai–International
EVA Air Taipei–Taoyuan
Hainan Airlines Haikou[50]
IndiGo Kolkata[51]
Japan Airlines Tokyo–Haneda, Tokyo–Narita
Jeju Air Seoul–Incheon
Jetstar Melbourne, Sydney
Korean Air Seoul–Incheon
Lao Airlines Pakse, Vientiane
Malaysia Airlines Kuala Lumpur–International
Mandarin Airlines Taichung[52]
MIAT Mongolian Airlines Seasonal: Ulaanbaatar[53]
Myanmar Airways International Yangon[54]
Pacific Airlines Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi, Buon Ma Thuot, Chu Lai, Da Lat, Da Nang, Dong Hoi, Hai Phong, Hanoi, Hue, Nha Trang, Phu Quoc, Pleiku, Quy Nhon, Singapore, Thanh Hoa, Tuy Hoa, Vinh
Philippine Airlines Manila
Qatar Airways Doha, Phnom Penh[55]
Royal Brunei Airlines Bandar Seri Begawan
Ruili Airlines Lijiang,[56] Xishuangbanna[57]
Scoot Singapore
Shenzhen Airlines Shenzhen[58]
Sichuan Airlines Chengdu–Tianfu,[59] Nanning
Singapore Airlines Singapore
Spring Airlines Shanghai–Pudong (begins 6 July 2024)[60]
Starlux Airlines Taipei–Taoyuan[61]
Thai AirAsia Bangkok–Don Mueang
Thai Airways International Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi
Thai VietJet Air Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi[62]
Turkish Airlines Istanbul[63]
Turkmenistan Airlines Ashgabat[64]
T'way Air Seoul–Incheon
VietJet Air Adelaide,[65] Ahmedabad,[66] Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi, Buon Ma Thuot, Brisbane,[67] Busan,[68] Chengdu–Tianfu, Chu Lai, Da Lat, Da Nang, Delhi,[69] Denpasar,[70] Dien Bien Phu,[71] Dong Hoi, Hai Phong, Ha Long, Hanoi, Hong Kong, Hue, Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta,[72] Kaohsiung, Kochi,[73] Kuala Lumpur–International,[74] Melbourne,[75] Mumbai,[76] Nha Trang, Osaka–Kansai,[77] Perth,[78] Phuket, Phu Quoc, Pleiku, Qui Nhon, Seoul–Incheon, Shanghai–Pudong,[79] Singapore,[80] Sydney,[81] Taichung,[82] Taipei–Taoyuan, Thanh Hoa, Tokyo–Haneda,[83] Tokyo–Narita,[84] Tuy Hoa, Vientiane,[85] Vinh, Xi'an,[86] Zhangjiajie[87]
Vietnam Airlines Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi, Beijing–Daxing,[88] Buon Ma Thuot, Busan, Chu Lai, Da Lat, Da Nang, Delhi, Dong Hoi, Frankfurt, Fukuoka, Guangzhou, Haikou,[89] Hai Phong, Ha Long,[90] Hangzhou,[91] Hanoi, Hue, Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta, Kaohsiung, Kuala Lumpur–International, Kunming,[92] London–Heathrow, Manila (resumes 17 June 2024),[93] Melbourne, Mumbai,[94] Munich (begins 2 October 2024),[95] Nagoya–Centrair, Nha Trang, Osaka–Kansai, Paris–Charles de Gaulle, Penang, Perth, Phnom Penh, Phuket,[96] Phu Quoc, Pleiku, Qui Nhon, San Francisco,[97] Seoul–Incheon, Shanghai–Pudong, Shenzhen,[98] Siem Reap,[99] Singapore, Sydney, Taipei–Taoyuan, Thanh Hoa, Tokyo–Narita, Tuy Hoa,[100] Vientiane, Vinh, Yangon
Vietnam Airlines
operated by VASCO
Ca Mau, Con Dao, Rach Gia
Vietravel Airlines Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi,[101] Hanoi
Charter: Nha Trang, Phu Quoc, Quy Nhon
XiamenAir Xiamen
 
Check-in desks at Terminal 2, Tan Son Nhat International Airport
 
A Vietnam Airlines Boeing 787-10 taxiing at the airport
 
A Malaysia Airlines Boeing 737-800 on its final approach to the airport

Cargo edit

AirlinesDestinations
Aerotranscargo Delhi, Hong Kong[102]
Air Hong Kong Hong Kong
Air Premia Seoul–Incheon[103] (suspended)
AeroLogic Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi, Frankfurt
AirBridgeCargo Hong Kong, Moscow–Sheremetyevo (both suspended)
Asiana Cargo Seoul–Incheon, Singapore
Cardig Air Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta, Shenzhen
Cargolux Bahrain, Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi, Hong Kong, Luxembourg
Cathay Cargo[104] Hanoi, Hong Kong
Central Airlines Nanning
China Airlines Cargo Hanoi, Taipei–Taoyuan
China Southern Cargo Guangzhou, Hanoi
DHL Aviation
operated by Air Hong Kong
Hong Kong, Penang
Emirates SkyCargo Dubai–Al Maktoum
EVA Air Cargo Taipei–Taoyuan[105]
FedEx Express Guangzhou, Hanoi, Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta
Garuda Cargo Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta
DHL Aviation
operated by Kalitta Air
Cincinnati, Hong Kong, Nagoya–Centrair, Singapore
Korean Air Cargo Seoul–Incheon
Longhao Airlines Nanning, Shenzhen
MASkargo Kuala Lumpur–International
My Indo Airlines Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta, Singapore
Qatar Cargo Doha
Raya Airways Kuala Lumpur–Subang, Labuan
Tianjin Air Cargo Nanning
Tri-MG Intra Asia Airlines Singapore[106]
Turkish Cargo Istanbul, Kuala Lumpur–International
UPS Airlines Shenzhen,[107] Honolulu, Anchorage, Louisville

Statistics edit

Busiest international flights out of Tan Son Nhat International Airport by frequency (2018–present)
Rank Destinations Frequency (weekly)
1   Singapore 103
2   Bangkok (Don Mueang + Suvarnabhumi) 102
3   Seoul–Incheon 81
4   Kuala Lumpur–International 77
5   Taipei-Taoyuan 63
6   Tokyo (Haneda + Narita) 42
7   Siem Reap 42
8   Guangzhou 42
9   Hong Kong 39
10   Phnom Penh 35
Busiest domestic flights out of Tan Son Nhat International Airport by frequency
Rank Destinations Frequency (weekly)
1 Hanoi 596
2 Da Nang 226
3 Nha Trang 111
4 Phu Quoc 107
5 Hai Phong 94
6 Vinh 92
7 Hue 91
8 Con Dao 64
9 Thanh Hoa 63
10 Da Lat 48

Aircraft movement edit

50,000
100,000
150,000
200,000
250,000
300,000
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2022
2023

Number of passengers edit

Annual passenger traffic at SGN airport. See Wikidata query.

Cargo volume (tons) edit

2000-2019 edit

100,000
200,000
300,000
400,000
500,000
600,000
700,000
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019

2020-present edit

100,000
200,000
300,000
400,000
500,000
600,000
700,000
2020
2021
2022

Source: Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam,[24][2][108][109] Port Authority of New York and New Jersey[5][110][111]

Ground transportation edit

Bus and shuttle edit

A bus station is situated in front of the international terminal and is served by Ho Chi Minh City Bus. It is connected to the city center by bus line 109 and 152 as well as shuttle bus line 49. Connecting the airport to Vung Tau and other cities in Mekong Delta are express minibus services as well as bus line 119 (via Mien Tay Bus Station).[112]

Metro edit

The airport is expected to be served by Ho Chi Minh City Metro Line 4B, connected to Line 4 and 5 with services to the southern and eastern area of the city. However, it is currently not known when the line will be constructed.[113]

Taxi edit

There are several options for getting a taxi from the airport to the city

  • Main taxi queue. Traditional taxi brands such as Vinasun and Mai Linh operate at the airport alongside Grab, a ridesharing company.[114]
  • Other taxi counters are also available in the terminal building, including SASCO, ACV Unico, Song Viet.

Road edit

Until 2016, the airport only had one main access route via Truong Son Street, which caused chronic congestion for traffic going in and out of the airport. As an effort to ease traffic bottleneck, in August 2016, Pham Van Dong Boulevard officially opened and connected the airport to National Route 1 in an intersection east of the airport.[115]

Accidents and incidents edit

Throughout its history there have been several incidents that happened at the airport, some of the most notable are summarized below:

  • On 4 April 1975, a Lockheed C-5A Galaxy, operated by the United States Air Force as part of Operation Babylift en route to Clark Air Base in the Philippines, crashed on approach during an emergency landing. Out of 328 people on board (311 passengers and 17 crew members), 155 were killed.[116]
  • On 12 January 1991, a Vietnam Airlines-operated Tupolev Tu-134, registration VN-A126, with 76 passengers on board crashed on final approach to Ho Chi Minh City. At 30 ft (9.1 m), the Tupolev suddenly lost height and landed hard, touched down with the left main gear first. There were no casualties but the aircraft was written off due to substantial damage.[117]
  • On 4 September 1992, Vietnam Airlines Flight 850, an Airbus A310-300 en route from Bangkok to Ho Chi Minh City, was hijacked by Ly Tong, a former pilot in the Republic of Vietnam Air Force. Tong proceeded to drop anti-communist leaflets over Ho Chi Minh City before parachuting out of an emergency exit. Vietnamese security forces arrested him on the ground two hours later. The aircraft landed safely, and no one on board was injured.[118]
  • On 20 November 2014, the 3-unit uninterruptible power supply of Ho Chi Minh City Area Air Control Center went offline, causing a blackout to the center that oversees air traffic from and to Tan Son Nhat from 11:05 AM to 12:19 PM. This incident also disabled the radar system, halting air traffic control capabilities. Overall, 92 flights were affected; 54 of them were within Ho Chi Minh flight information region and 8 were preparing to land at Tan Son Nhat at the time of the incident. No air traffic accident occurred and operations fully resumed by noon the next day.[119]
  • On 22 April 2017, Tan Son Nhat International Airport was the site of an alleged terrorist attack. Two remotely controlled petrol bombs were planted at the airport, one in the International Terminal while the other was placed in the airport's parking garage. The bomb in the terminal failed to detonate due to internal sabotage. The bomb in the garage initially also failed to detonate because the activator was out of range. It was subsequently moved and set off in the International Terminal's departure hall where the first bomb was originally placed. No one was injured nor killed in the attack. A total of 15 people were arrested for involvement in the attack, according to the Vietnamese state media.[120]

Future plans edit

New airport edit

Tan Son Nhat International Airport is located inside the crowded urban core of Ho Chi Minh City, making expansions difficult. In a report submitted to the Vietnamese National Assembly in 2015, legislators deemed continued expansion of Tan Son Nhat problematic in five aspects. Firstly, it would be more economically viable to build a new airport rather than extensively upgrade Tan Son Nhat. An estimated US$9.1 billion was reportedly needed for a new 4,000 m runway, a new passenger terminal and other facilities at Tan Son Nhat. Secondly, Tan Son Nhat airspace overlaps with that of Bien Hoa Airport, which is currently reserved for national defense purpose. A reduction in military activities in Bien Hoa is considered to be temporary and unsustainable. At the same time, Tan Son Nhat also acts as a strategic location in national defense; therefore, the airport cannot be used entirely for civic air transport. Additionally, due to its urban location, aside from increasing ground traffic stress in its access points, the airport cannot operate between midnight and 5AM in accordance to the International Civil Aviation Organization sustainable development goals, further limiting its capability.[121]

However, Ho Chi Minh City People's Assembly believed that building a new airport can be impractical and unrealistic, giving that the numbers supporting the new airport are "wrong calculations, magical stats" to "trick others with a purpose of serving their own designs."[122] The cost of construction is too high in the midst of already-suppressed national debt, stressing the people without fully-diagnosed value. It is believed that the delay of the expansion is due to the military-run golf course at the north of the airport, where the land is listed as "defense land." Ho Chi Minh City hired an independent French consultant firm ADPi to evaluate the suggestions. The firm supported the idea of expansion at first, but then called off and delayed its final statement, and finally released a report to support the new airport proposition. The city's Assembly responded that the report was rigged.

Following Decision 703/QĐ-TTg by the Vietnamese Prime Minister in July 2005, a new airport—Long Thanh International Airport—was planned to replace Tan Son Nhat airport for international departure use.[123] The initial master plan for the new airport was publicly announced in December 2006.[124] The new airport will be built in Long Thành District, Đồng Nai Province, about 40 km (25 mi) east of Ho Chi Minh City and 65 km (40 mi) north of the petroleum-focused city of Vung Tau, near Highway 51A.

According to the approved modified plan in 2011, Long Thanh International Airport will be constructed on an area of 50 square kilometers (19 sq mi), and will have four runways (4,000 m x 60 m or 13,100 ft x 200 ft) and be capable of receiving the Airbus A380. The project will be divided in three stages. Stage One calls for the construction of two parallel runways and a terminal with a capacity of 25 million passengers per year, due to be completed in 2020. Stage Two is scheduled for completion in 2030, giving the airport three runways, two passenger terminals and a cargo terminal designed to receive 1.5 million metric tons of cargo and 50 million passengers per year. The final stage is scheduled to be initiated after 2035, envisioned to handle 100 million passengers, 5 million metric tons of cargo annually on an infrastructure of 4 runways and 4 passenger terminals. The total budget for the first stage alone was estimated to be US$6.7 billion.[123]

After the opening of Long Thanh International Airport edit

In accordance with the master planning of Vietnam's network of airports, Tan Son Nhat will continue to operate after the opening of Long Thanh International Airport. In the feasibility report for Long Thanh, Airports Corporation of Vietnam proposed that, for international carriers, only low-cost carriers would fly out of Tan Son Nhat; while for Vietnamese carriers, only short-haul international flights and selected domestic routes would be operated out of the airport. In another report, the Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam presented a different approach to the division of flights between the two airports. As such, Tan Son Nhat would only serve flights under 1000 km operated by Code C aircraft or smaller.[125]

Expansion edit

Because Long Thanh will not be ready for service until at least 2025, Tan Son Nhat must expand to meet the increasing demand. In January 2017, Airport Design and Construction Consultancy (ADCC) presented 3 proposals to expand the airport. Vietnam's Deputy Prime Minister Trịnh Đình Dũng agreed to proceed a US$860 million upgrade proposal for final review before submitting to the government. Under the chosen proposal, there would be a new mixed-use Terminal 3 and a civil-use Terminal 4 (to be built on the south side of the airport), a parallel taxiway between the existing runways and technical hangars on the northeast. The estimated time to complete the upgrade would be 3 years and the airport would then have a capacity of 43–45 million passengers annually.[126] The decision was controversial due to the fact that the golf course immediately north of SGN would remain untouched despite the urgent need of airport expansion.[127] The Minister of Transport Trương Quang Nghĩa explained that the airport could not be expanded northward due to costs and environmental impact.[128] On 12 June 2017, Prime Minister Nguyễn Xuân Phúc requested the Ministry of Transport to research the prospect of constructing a third runway at Tan Son Nhut International Airport. The French consulting company ADP Ingénierie (ADPi) was subsequently hired to provide a second opinion for the project.

In March 2018, ADPi presented their plan for the expansion. The firm advised against the construction of a third runway and supported a southward expansion plan. Without a new runway, Tan Son Nhat has a maximum capacity of 51 million passengers per year – a number ADPi predicted SGN to reach in 2025, in time for the opening of Long Thanh.[129] However, an independent consultancy of Ho Chi Minh City believed it could reach up to 80 million by the time Long Thanh was supposed to open, in accordance with reports by Boeing or the International Air Transport Association. As such, they proposed a three-phase northward expansion plan that would see a new runway and two new terminals to increase the airport's capacity to 70 million passengers per year.[130]

On 28 March 2018, Prime Minister Nguyễn Xuân Phúc ultimately selected the ADPi proposal as the basis for the expansion of the airport. This proposal includes a new Terminal 3 with a designed capacity of 20 million passengers per year south of Runway 07R/25L, additional facilities in the north area where a golf court currently occupies as well as improvements and constructions of access points for the airport.[131]

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ a b "ACV: Hội nghị tổng kết công tác năm 2016 và triển khai kế hoạch năm 2017". ACV. 20 January 2017. Retrieved 25 January 2017.
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  4. ^ "Tan Son Nhat applies a new 'super-cool' operating process, reducing Tet peak delays". Vn.vn. 30 January 2023. Retrieved 30 January 2024.
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  8. ^ "Thủ tướng phê duyệt Dự án Sân bay Long Thành giai đoạn 1 trị giá 4,664 tỷ USD (PM approved the project first phase costed US $4.664 billion)". Vietnam Investment Review. 12 November 2020. Retrieved 12 November 2020.
  9. ^ "Busiest Flight Routes in the World 2023 – OAG". OAG. Retrieved 10 April 2024.
  10. ^ "PA042973p30". www.departedflights.com.
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External links edit

  • Tan Son Nhut Airport official website (holding page as of 2017.11.09)
  • Tan Son Nhut Airport on City Government website (in Vietnamese, not updated since ~2011)
  • Tan Son Nhut Airport unofficial website
  • Southern Airports Corporation Official Website (SAC)
  • Southern Airports Services Joint Stock Company Official Website (SASCO)
  • Sasco Travel, a subsidiary of SASCO
  • Tan Son Nhut Airport Transfer
  • Tan Son Nhut airport – Terminals

nhat, international, airport, iata, airport, code, tianjin, binhai, international, airport, military, this, facility, during, after, vietnam, wars, nhut, base, minh, airport, saigon, airport, redirect, here, airport, under, construction, long, thanh, internati. For the IATA airport code TSN see Tianjin Binhai International Airport For the military use of this facility during and after the Vietnam Wars see Tan Son Nhut Air Base Ho Chi Minh Airport and Saigon Airport redirect here For the new airport under construction see Long Thanh International Airport Tan Sơn Nhất International Airport IATA SGN ICAO VVTS is an international airport serving Ho Chi Minh City the largest city of Vietnam It serves Tan Binh District where the airport is located in the Ho Chi Minh City metropolitan area as well as the rest of southeastern Vietnam It is the busiest and largest airport in Vietnam with 32 5 million passengers in 2016 2 38 5 million passengers in 2018 3 and about 41 million passengers in 2023 4 As of December 2023 it is the 50th busiest airport in the world and the second busiest in Southeast Asia 5 As of April 2024 it has a total capacity of only around 30 million passengers 6 which has caused constant and increasing traffic and congestion hence it has sparked debates for expanding or building a new airport of which the plan of the new airport as an alternative is under construction since 2021 and will be completed by 2025 7 8 Tan Sơn Nhất International AirportSan bay Quốc tế Tan Sơn NhấtIATA SGNICAO VVTSSummaryAirport typePublic MilitaryOwner OperatorAirports Corporation of VietnamServesHo Chi Minh City metropolitan areaLocationTan Binh District Ho Chi Minh City VietnamHub forVietnam AirlinesVASCOOperating base forBamboo AirwaysPacific AirlinesVietJet AirVietravel AirlinesElevation AMSL10 m 33 ftCoordinates10 49 08 N 106 39 07 E 10 81889 N 106 65194 E 10 81889 106 65194Websitewww wbr vietnamairport wbr vn wbr tansonnhatairport wbr enMapsSGN VVTSLocation of the airport in Ho Chi Minh City VietnamShow map of Ho Chi Minh CitySGN VVTSSGN VVTS Vietnam Show map of VietnamSGN VVTSSGN VVTS Southeast Asia Show map of Southeast AsiaSGN VVTSSGN VVTS Asia Show map of AsiaRunwaysDirection Length Surface m ft 07L 25R 3 048 10 000 Concrete 07R 25L 3 800 12 467 ConcreteStatistics 2023 Passengers40 738 295 18 85 Source Airports Corporation of Vietnam ACV 1 Of the routes the airport offers the domestic Ho Chi Minh City Hanoi route is the busiest in Southeast Asia and the fourth busiest in the world serving around 11 million passengers in 2023 9 Its IATA airport code SGN is derived from the city s former name of Saigon Contents 1 History 1 1 Post war era 2 Passenger terminals and facilities 2 1 Domestic terminal T1 2 2 International terminal T2 2 3 Terminal 3 2 4 Cargo terminal 2 5 Runways and air control 3 Airlines and destinations 3 1 Passenger 3 2 Cargo 4 Statistics 4 1 Aircraft movement 4 2 Number of passengers 4 3 Cargo volume tons 4 3 1 2000 2019 4 3 2 2020 present 5 Ground transportation 5 1 Bus and shuttle 5 2 Metro 5 3 Taxi 5 4 Road 6 Accidents and incidents 7 Future plans 7 1 New airport 7 1 1 After the opening of Long Thanh International Airport 7 2 Expansion 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory editSee also Tan Son Nhut Air Base Tan Son Nhat International Airport has its origins in the early 1930s when the French colonial government constructed a small airport with unpaved runways known as Tan Sơn Nhứt Airfield near the village of Tan Son Nhut By mid 1956 with U S aid a 7 200 foot 2 190 m runway had been built the airfield near Saigon became known as South Vietnam s principal international gateway During the Vietnam War or Second Indochina War Tan Son Nhut Air Base then using the alternative spelling Tan Sơn Nhứt was an important facility for both the U S Air Force and the Republic of Vietnam Air Force Between 1968 and 1974 Tan Son Nhut Airport was one of the busiest military airbases in the world Pan Am schedules from 1973 show that during the last days of South Vietnam Boeing 747 service was being operated four times a week to San Francisco via Guam and Manila 10 Continental Airlines operated up to 30 Boeing 707 military charters per week to and from Tan Son Nhut Airport during the 1968 74 period 11 nbsp Board of welcoming at Tan Son Nhat International Airport 1967 Post war era edit On 9 December 2004 United Airlines became the first U S airline to fly to Vietnam since Pan Am s last flight during the Fall of Saigon in April 1975 Flight UA 869 operated using a Boeing 747 400 landed at Ho Chi Minh City the terminus of the flight that originated from San Francisco via Hong Kong On 29 October 2006 this service was switched from San Francisco to Los Angeles with a stop in Hong Kong operating as UA 867 also using a 747 400 In 2009 the service UA 869 has resumed once again from San Francisco via Hong Kong International Airport 12 United ended the route to San Francisco via Hong Kong on 30 October 2011 The airline resumed the route from Ho Chi Minh City to Hong Kong after its merger with Continental Airlines The flight until suspended no longer made a stop at San Francisco and was flown on a Boeing 777 200ER instead of the 747 400 In 2006 Tan Son Nhat International Airport served approximately 8 5 million passengers compared with 7 million in 2005 with 64 000 aircraft movements 13 It has recently accounted for nearly two thirds of the arrivals and departures at Vietnam s international gateway airports 14 15 Due to increasing demand about 15 20 per annum the airport has been continuously expanded by the Southern Airports Corporation 15 In 2010 Tan Son Nhat domestic terminal handled 8 million passengers its maximum capacity The airport reached its full capacity of 20 million passengers in 2013 two years earlier than predicted Both domestic and international terminal are being expanded to meet the increasing demand In December 2014 expansion for the domestic terminal was finished boosting the terminal s capacity to 13 million passengers per annum 16 In September 2017 People s Army of Vietnam ceded 21 hectare of military land in the vicinity of the airport to Airports Corporation of Vietnam for civil use This gave way for the construction of 21 new aircraft parking spaces expected to be completed by Tet holidays in 2018 Tan Son Nhat will then have 72 parking spaces for airplanes 17 Of the routes the airport offers the Ho Chi Minh City Hanoi route is the busiest in Southeast Asia and the seventh busiest in the world serving 6 769 823 customers in 2017 18 Passenger terminals and facilities editFollowing the opening of its new international terminal in September 2007 Tan Son Nhat has two major terminal buildings with separate sections for international and domestic flights The Prime Minister of Vietnam by Decision 1646 TTg NN has approved the addition of 40 hectares 99 acres of the adjacent area to extend the apron and to build a cargo terminal to handle the rapid increase of passenger expected to reach 17 million in 2010 compared to 7 million and 8 5 million in 2005 and 2006 respectively and cargo volume at the airport 14 19 Domestic terminal T1 edit Until the opening of the International Terminal in 2007 the domestic terminal was the sole civilian terminal of the airport The French Indochinese administration built the original terminal It initially covered an area of 1 800 m2 19 000 sq ft Between 1954 and 1975 when the airport quickly became one of the busiest airports in the world it was expanded 4 more times in 1956 1960 1963 which was handled by the contractor RMK BRJ 20 and 1969 21 By 1972 the terminal grew to 10 800 m2 116 000 sq ft in space 21 with a capacity of 1 5 million passengers a year 22 In recent history after years of constant expansion to meet growing traffic the terminal s handling capacity increased tenfold to 15 million passengers a year as of 2023 It has a floor area of 40 948 m2 440 760 sq ft with 20 boarding gates 4 aerobridge gates and 16 remote gates 6 The terminal has two lounges Lotus Lounge and Le Saigonnais Lounge International terminal T2 edit A new international terminal constructed by a consortium of four Japanese contractors KTOM abbreviation of four contractors names Kajima Taisei Obayashi Maeda opened in December 2007 with an initial designed capacity of 10 million passengers a year The terminal was funded by Japanese official development assistance at a cost of 219 million USD 23 In 2014 the terminal served over 9 million international passengers 24 and a demand of an expansion to the terminal was in sight Plan for a 109 million USD expansion of the international terminal was approved in August 2014 25 The first phase of an urgent expansion to the terminal was finished in December 2016 with the addition of 2 new jet bridges and other facilities 26 Upon the completion of phase two in 2018 the terminal has a floor area of 115 834 m2 1 246 830 sq ft 27 and 26 boarding gates and can handle 13 million passengers annually 28 There are a total of five passenger lounges situated in the International Terminal Lotus Lounge 1 and 2 Le Saigonnais Orchid Lounge and Rose Business Lounge Terminal 3 edit A new passenger terminal for the airport broke ground on 24 December 2022 The new terminal will include 27 gates 13 jetbridges and 14 remote gates for an annual handling capacity of 20 million passengers The terminal building will have a total floor area of 112 500 m2 1 211 000 sq ft and will be connected with a new 130 000 m2 1 400 000 sq ft non aviation services and parking complex by footbridges 29 The project has a budget of 10 986 billion VND US 467 6 million 30 and wa projected to be completed by the end of 2024 which is now slated to be completed by April 2025 31 Upon completion the terminal will serve domestic flights to support the current domestic terminal 29 Cargo terminal edit Tan Son Nhat Airport currently has three cargo terminals Two of them Air Freight Terminal 1 and 2 are operated by Tan Son Nhat Cargo Services TCS and the other one is operated by Saigon Cargo Services Corporation SCSC These facilities have a handling capacity of 700 000 tonnes of cargo per year combined TCS s Air Freight Terminal 1 was the first cargo terminal at the airport It was inaugurated on January 1 1997 32 In May 2012 Air Freight Terminal 2 was opened after 20 months of construction The latter was built at a cost of 15 million and covers an area of 13 700 m2 147 000 sq ft 33 The SCSC cargo terminal was constructed from March 2009 to December 2010 at a cost of 50 million 34 The cargo handling area consists of a 26 670 m2 287 100 sq ft cargo terminal 52 421 m2 564 250 sq ft of apron area and 64 000 m2 690 000 sq ft of warehouse and other facilities 35 Runways and air control edit The airport has two parallel runways namely 07L 25R and 07R 25L Since the runways are only 365 meters apart they are operated dependently Due to the maximum processing capacity of the passenger terminals about 3 600 passengers hour the runway system s capacity is capped at 44 operations per hour 36 The original air traffic control tower is situated between present day taxiway Y1 and S5 It was originally built in 1949 before being rebuilt in 1959 37 During the Tet Offensive in 1968 the tower was damaged by a rocket 38 and a new tower was built in June 1969 37 A new 70 meter 230 feet tall air control tower was put into use in 2013 39 The new airport control tower is situated in the corner area between the Domestic Terminal and the International Terminal There were four USAF ATRC facilities in Viet Nam in the 1960 1973 era The one located on Tan son Nhut was designated Paris ATRC Patty was located down in the Delta there was one in Da Nang and Pyramid was in the highlands Paris operated on the top Dias inside the radar facility located mid base with the US Army s Recovery and ground radio operations The USAF 2027th Communications Squadron staffed the air traffic controllers that operate the scopes and handle all non civilian in country fixed wing radar traffic 24 7 Once Tan Son Nhut radar traffic got within 15 miles of the base it was normally handed off to Approach Control for sequencing and landing which operated inside the air control tower Usually none of the local helicopter traffic was under radar control it was basically flown VFR and was based at Hotel 3 There was too much air traffic for controllers to be able to handle anything but fixed wing In 70 71 VNAF controllers were introduced to work alongside the 2027th squadron s controllers to help with communication with pilots who did not speak English citation needed nbsp The air traffic control tower in background in 1964 nbsp Former air control tower in use 1969 2013 nbsp The current air traffic control tower of Tan Son Nhat AirportAirlines and destinations editPassenger edit AirlinesDestinationsAeroflotMoscow Sheremetyevo 40 AirAsiaJohor Bahru Kuala Lumpur International PenangAir ChinaBeijing Capital Chongqing 41 Air FranceParis Charles de GaulleAir IndiaDelhi begins 1 June 2024 42 All Nippon AirwaysTokyo Haneda 43 44 45 Tokyo NaritaAsiana AirlinesSeoul IncheonBamboo AirwaysDa Nang Hai Phong Hanoi Hue Nha Trang Quy Nhon Thanh Hoa VinhCambodia AirwaysPhnom PenhCambodia Angkor AirPhnom Penh Siem Reap 46 SihanoukvilleCathay PacificHong KongCebu PacificManilaChina AirlinesTaipei TaoyuanChina Eastern AirlinesKunming 47 Shanghai PudongChina Southern AirlinesChangsha Guangzhou 48 Shanghai Pudong Shenzhen Wuhan 49 EmiratesDubai InternationalEVA AirTaipei TaoyuanHainan AirlinesHaikou 50 IndiGoKolkata 51 Japan AirlinesTokyo Haneda Tokyo NaritaJeju AirSeoul IncheonJetstarMelbourne SydneyKorean AirSeoul IncheonLao AirlinesPakse VientianeMalaysia AirlinesKuala Lumpur InternationalMandarin AirlinesTaichung 52 MIAT Mongolian AirlinesSeasonal Ulaanbaatar 53 Myanmar Airways InternationalYangon 54 Pacific AirlinesBangkok Suvarnabhumi Buon Ma Thuot Chu Lai Da Lat Da Nang Dong Hoi Hai Phong Hanoi Hue Nha Trang Phu Quoc Pleiku Quy Nhon Singapore Thanh Hoa Tuy Hoa VinhPhilippine AirlinesManilaQatar AirwaysDoha Phnom Penh 55 Royal Brunei AirlinesBandar Seri BegawanRuili AirlinesLijiang 56 Xishuangbanna 57 ScootSingaporeShenzhen AirlinesShenzhen 58 Sichuan AirlinesChengdu Tianfu 59 NanningSingapore AirlinesSingaporeSpring AirlinesShanghai Pudong begins 6 July 2024 60 Starlux AirlinesTaipei Taoyuan 61 Thai AirAsiaBangkok Don MueangThai Airways InternationalBangkok SuvarnabhumiThai VietJet AirBangkok Suvarnabhumi 62 Turkish AirlinesIstanbul 63 Turkmenistan AirlinesAshgabat 64 T way AirSeoul IncheonVietJet AirAdelaide 65 Ahmedabad 66 Bangkok Suvarnabhumi Buon Ma Thuot Brisbane 67 Busan 68 Chengdu Tianfu Chu Lai Da Lat Da Nang Delhi 69 Denpasar 70 Dien Bien Phu 71 Dong Hoi Hai Phong Ha Long Hanoi Hong Kong Hue Jakarta Soekarno Hatta 72 Kaohsiung Kochi 73 Kuala Lumpur International 74 Melbourne 75 Mumbai 76 Nha Trang Osaka Kansai 77 Perth 78 Phuket Phu Quoc Pleiku Qui Nhon Seoul Incheon Shanghai Pudong 79 Singapore 80 Sydney 81 Taichung 82 Taipei Taoyuan Thanh Hoa Tokyo Haneda 83 Tokyo Narita 84 Tuy Hoa Vientiane 85 Vinh Xi an 86 Zhangjiajie 87 Vietnam AirlinesBangkok Suvarnabhumi Beijing Daxing 88 Buon Ma Thuot Busan Chu Lai Da Lat Da Nang Delhi Dong Hoi Frankfurt Fukuoka Guangzhou Haikou 89 Hai Phong Ha Long 90 Hangzhou 91 Hanoi Hue Jakarta Soekarno Hatta Kaohsiung Kuala Lumpur International Kunming 92 London Heathrow Manila resumes 17 June 2024 93 Melbourne Mumbai 94 Munich begins 2 October 2024 95 Nagoya Centrair Nha Trang Osaka Kansai Paris Charles de Gaulle Penang Perth Phnom Penh Phuket 96 Phu Quoc Pleiku Qui Nhon San Francisco 97 Seoul Incheon Shanghai Pudong Shenzhen 98 Siem Reap 99 Singapore Sydney Taipei Taoyuan Thanh Hoa Tokyo Narita Tuy Hoa 100 Vientiane Vinh YangonVietnam Airlines operated by VASCOCa Mau Con Dao Rach GiaVietravel AirlinesBangkok Suvarnabhumi 101 HanoiCharter Nha Trang Phu Quoc Quy NhonXiamenAirXiamen nbsp Check in desks at Terminal 2 Tan Son Nhat International Airport nbsp A Vietnam Airlines Boeing 787 10 taxiing at the airport nbsp A Malaysia Airlines Boeing 737 800 on its final approach to the airport Cargo edit AirlinesDestinationsAerotranscargoDelhi Hong Kong 102 Air Hong KongHong KongAir PremiaSeoul Incheon 103 suspended AeroLogicBangkok Suvarnabhumi FrankfurtAirBridgeCargoHong Kong Moscow Sheremetyevo both suspended Asiana CargoSeoul Incheon SingaporeCardig AirJakarta Soekarno Hatta ShenzhenCargoluxBahrain Bangkok Suvarnabhumi Hong Kong LuxembourgCathay Cargo 104 Hanoi Hong KongCentral AirlinesNanningChina Airlines CargoHanoi Taipei TaoyuanChina Southern CargoGuangzhou HanoiDHL Aviation operated by Air Hong KongHong Kong PenangEmirates SkyCargoDubai Al MaktoumEVA Air CargoTaipei Taoyuan 105 FedEx ExpressGuangzhou Hanoi Jakarta Soekarno HattaGaruda CargoJakarta Soekarno HattaDHL Aviation operated by Kalitta AirCincinnati Hong Kong Nagoya Centrair SingaporeKorean Air CargoSeoul IncheonLonghao AirlinesNanning ShenzhenMASkargoKuala Lumpur InternationalMy Indo AirlinesJakarta Soekarno Hatta SingaporeQatar CargoDohaRaya AirwaysKuala Lumpur Subang LabuanTianjin Air CargoNanningTri MG Intra Asia AirlinesSingapore 106 Turkish CargoIstanbul Kuala Lumpur InternationalUPS AirlinesShenzhen 107 Honolulu Anchorage LouisvilleStatistics editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2012 Learn how and when to remove this message Busiest international flights out of Tan Son Nhat International Airport by frequency 2018 present Rank Destinations Frequency weekly 1 nbsp Singapore 103 2 nbsp Bangkok Don Mueang Suvarnabhumi 102 3 nbsp Seoul Incheon 81 4 nbsp Kuala Lumpur International 77 5 nbsp Taipei Taoyuan 63 6 nbsp Tokyo Haneda Narita 42 7 nbsp Siem Reap 42 8 nbsp Guangzhou 42 9 nbsp Hong Kong 39 10 nbsp Phnom Penh 35 Busiest domestic flights out of Tan Son Nhat International Airport by frequency Rank Destinations Frequency weekly 1 Hanoi 596 2 Da Nang 226 3 Nha Trang 111 4 Phu Quoc 107 5 Hai Phong 94 6 Vinh 92 7 Hue 91 8 Con Dao 64 9 Thanh Hoa 63 10 Da Lat 48 Aircraft movement edit 50 000 100 000 150 000 200 000 250 000 300 000 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2022 2023 Number of passengers edit Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Annual passenger traffic at SGN airport See Wikidata query Cargo volume tons edit 2000 2019 edit 100 000 200 000 300 000 400 000 500 000 600 000 700 000 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 present edit 100 000 200 000 300 000 400 000 500 000 600 000 700 000 2020 2021 2022 Source Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam 24 2 108 109 Port Authority of New York and New Jersey 5 110 111 Ground transportation editBus and shuttle edit A bus station is situated in front of the international terminal and is served by Ho Chi Minh City Bus It is connected to the city center by bus line 109 and 152 as well as shuttle bus line 49 Connecting the airport to Vung Tau and other cities in Mekong Delta are express minibus services as well as bus line 119 via Mien Tay Bus Station 112 Metro edit The airport is expected to be served by Ho Chi Minh City Metro Line 4B connected to Line 4 and 5 with services to the southern and eastern area of the city However it is currently not known when the line will be constructed 113 Taxi edit There are several options for getting a taxi from the airport to the city Main taxi queue Traditional taxi brands such as Vinasun and Mai Linh operate at the airport alongside Grab a ridesharing company 114 Other taxi counters are also available in the terminal building including SASCO ACV Unico Song Viet Road edit Until 2016 the airport only had one main access route via Truong Son Street which caused chronic congestion for traffic going in and out of the airport As an effort to ease traffic bottleneck in August 2016 Pham Van Dong Boulevard officially opened and connected the airport to National Route 1 in an intersection east of the airport 115 Accidents and incidents editThroughout its history there have been several incidents that happened at the airport some of the most notable are summarized below On 4 April 1975 a Lockheed C 5A Galaxy operated by the United States Air Force as part of Operation Babylift en route to Clark Air Base in the Philippines crashed on approach during an emergency landing Out of 328 people on board 311 passengers and 17 crew members 155 were killed 116 On 12 January 1991 a Vietnam Airlines operated Tupolev Tu 134 registration VN A126 with 76 passengers on board crashed on final approach to Ho Chi Minh City At 30 ft 9 1 m the Tupolev suddenly lost height and landed hard touched down with the left main gear first There were no casualties but the aircraft was written off due to substantial damage 117 On 4 September 1992 Vietnam Airlines Flight 850 an Airbus A310 300 en route from Bangkok to Ho Chi Minh City was hijacked by Ly Tong a former pilot in the Republic of Vietnam Air Force Tong proceeded to drop anti communist leaflets over Ho Chi Minh City before parachuting out of an emergency exit Vietnamese security forces arrested him on the ground two hours later The aircraft landed safely and no one on board was injured 118 On 20 November 2014 the 3 unit uninterruptible power supply of Ho Chi Minh City Area Air Control Center went offline causing a blackout to the center that oversees air traffic from and to Tan Son Nhat from 11 05 AM to 12 19 PM This incident also disabled the radar system halting air traffic control capabilities Overall 92 flights were affected 54 of them were within Ho Chi Minh flight information region and 8 were preparing to land at Tan Son Nhat at the time of the incident No air traffic accident occurred and operations fully resumed by noon the next day 119 On 22 April 2017 Tan Son Nhat International Airport was the site of an alleged terrorist attack Two remotely controlled petrol bombs were planted at the airport one in the International Terminal while the other was placed in the airport s parking garage The bomb in the terminal failed to detonate due to internal sabotage The bomb in the garage initially also failed to detonate because the activator was out of range It was subsequently moved and set off in the International Terminal s departure hall where the first bomb was originally placed No one was injured nor killed in the attack A total of 15 people were arrested for involvement in the attack according to the Vietnamese state media 120 Future plans editNew airport edit Main article Long Thanh International Airport Tan Son Nhat International Airport is located inside the crowded urban core of Ho Chi Minh City making expansions difficult In a report submitted to the Vietnamese National Assembly in 2015 legislators deemed continued expansion of Tan Son Nhat problematic in five aspects Firstly it would be more economically viable to build a new airport rather than extensively upgrade Tan Son Nhat An estimated US 9 1 billion was reportedly needed for a new 4 000 m runway a new passenger terminal and other facilities at Tan Son Nhat Secondly Tan Son Nhat airspace overlaps with that of Bien Hoa Airport which is currently reserved for national defense purpose A reduction in military activities in Bien Hoa is considered to be temporary and unsustainable At the same time Tan Son Nhat also acts as a strategic location in national defense therefore the airport cannot be used entirely for civic air transport Additionally due to its urban location aside from increasing ground traffic stress in its access points the airport cannot operate between midnight and 5AM in accordance to the International Civil Aviation Organization sustainable development goals further limiting its capability 121 However Ho Chi Minh City People s Assembly believed that building a new airport can be impractical and unrealistic giving that the numbers supporting the new airport are wrong calculations magical stats to trick others with a purpose of serving their own designs 122 The cost of construction is too high in the midst of already suppressed national debt stressing the people without fully diagnosed value It is believed that the delay of the expansion is due to the military run golf course at the north of the airport where the land is listed as defense land Ho Chi Minh City hired an independent French consultant firm ADPi to evaluate the suggestions The firm supported the idea of expansion at first but then called off and delayed its final statement and finally released a report to support the new airport proposition The city s Assembly responded that the report was rigged Following Decision 703 QĐ TTg by the Vietnamese Prime Minister in July 2005 a new airport Long Thanh International Airport was planned to replace Tan Son Nhat airport for international departure use 123 The initial master plan for the new airport was publicly announced in December 2006 124 The new airport will be built in Long Thanh District Đồng Nai Province about 40 km 25 mi east of Ho Chi Minh City and 65 km 40 mi north of the petroleum focused city of Vung Tau near Highway 51A According to the approved modified plan in 2011 Long Thanh International Airport will be constructed on an area of 50 square kilometers 19 sq mi and will have four runways 4 000 m x 60 m or 13 100 ft x 200 ft and be capable of receiving the Airbus A380 The project will be divided in three stages Stage One calls for the construction of two parallel runways and a terminal with a capacity of 25 million passengers per year due to be completed in 2020 Stage Two is scheduled for completion in 2030 giving the airport three runways two passenger terminals and a cargo terminal designed to receive 1 5 million metric tons of cargo and 50 million passengers per year The final stage is scheduled to be initiated after 2035 envisioned to handle 100 million passengers 5 million metric tons of cargo annually on an infrastructure of 4 runways and 4 passenger terminals The total budget for the first stage alone was estimated to be US 6 7 billion 123 After the opening of Long Thanh International Airport edit In accordance with the master planning of Vietnam s network of airports Tan Son Nhat will continue to operate after the opening of Long Thanh International Airport In the feasibility report for Long Thanh Airports Corporation of Vietnam proposed that for international carriers only low cost carriers would fly out of Tan Son Nhat while for Vietnamese carriers only short haul international flights and selected domestic routes would be operated out of the airport In another report the Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam presented a different approach to the division of flights between the two airports As such Tan Son Nhat would only serve flights under 1000 km operated by Code C aircraft or smaller 125 Expansion edit Because Long Thanh will not be ready for service until at least 2025 Tan Son Nhat must expand to meet the increasing demand In January 2017 Airport Design and Construction Consultancy ADCC presented 3 proposals to expand the airport Vietnam s Deputy Prime Minister Trịnh Đinh Dũng agreed to proceed a US 860 million upgrade proposal for final review before submitting to the government Under the chosen proposal there would be a new mixed use Terminal 3 and a civil use Terminal 4 to be built on the south side of the airport a parallel taxiway between the existing runways and technical hangars on the northeast The estimated time to complete the upgrade would be 3 years and the airport would then have a capacity of 43 45 million passengers annually 126 The decision was controversial due to the fact that the golf course immediately north of SGN would remain untouched despite the urgent need of airport expansion 127 The Minister of Transport Trương Quang Nghĩa explained that the airport could not be expanded northward due to costs and environmental impact 128 On 12 June 2017 Prime Minister Nguyễn Xuan Phuc requested the Ministry of Transport to research the prospect of constructing a third runway at Tan Son Nhut International Airport The French consulting company ADP Ingenierie ADPi was subsequently hired to provide a second opinion for the project In March 2018 ADPi presented their plan for the expansion The firm advised against the construction of a third runway and supported a southward expansion plan Without a new runway Tan Son Nhat has a maximum capacity of 51 million passengers per year a number ADPi predicted SGN to reach in 2025 in time for the opening of Long Thanh 129 However an independent consultancy of Ho Chi Minh City believed it could reach up to 80 million by the time Long Thanh was supposed to open in accordance with reports by Boeing or the International Air Transport Association As such they proposed a three phase northward expansion plan that would see a new runway and two new terminals to increase the airport s capacity to 70 million passengers per year 130 On 28 March 2018 Prime Minister Nguyễn Xuan Phuc ultimately selected the ADPi proposal as the basis for the expansion of the airport This proposal includes a new Terminal 3 with a designed capacity of 20 million passengers per year south of Runway 07R 25L additional facilities in the north area where a golf court currently occupies as well as improvements and constructions of access points for the airport 131 See also edit nbsp Vietnam portal nbsp Aviation portal Bombing of Tan Son Nhut Air Base Da Nang International Airport Noi Bai International Airport List of airports in VietnamReferences edit Hội nghị tổng kết cong tac an toan đường cất hạ canh tại Cảng HKQT Tan Sơn Nhất năm 2023 in Vietnamese a b ACV Hội nghị tổng kết cong tac năm 2016 va triển khai kế hoạch năm 2017 ACV 20 January 2017 Retrieved 25 January 2017 Tan Sơn Nhất khong lo san đỗ chỉ sợ tắc đường Tan Son Nhat will have no problem with the apron capacity only with the congested roads surrounding the airport in Vietnamese bao giao thong Transport News 8 January 2018 Retrieved 8 January 2018 Tan Son Nhat applies a new super cool operating process reducing Tet peak delays Vn vn 30 January 2023 Retrieved 30 January 2024 a b 2022 Airport Traffic Report PDF Port Authority of New York and New Jersey April 2023 p 52 a b Cơ sở hạ tầng kỹ thuật Airports Corporation of Vietnam Retrieved 22 April 2023 Work begins on passenger terminal of Long Thanh airport project The Saigon Times 30 March 2022 Retrieved 31 March 2022 Thủ tướng phe duyệt Dự an San bay Long Thanh giai đoạn 1 trị gia 4 664 tỷ USD PM approved the project first phase costed US 4 664 billion Vietnam Investment Review 12 November 2020 Retrieved 12 November 2020 Busiest Flight Routes in the World 2023 OAG OAG Retrieved 10 April 2024 PA042973p30 www departedflights com Christian J Scott former Continental employee and manager Bring Songs to the Sky Recollections of Continental Airlines 1970 1986 Quadran Press 1998 United Airlines Flight Timetables Download to PC PDA or Blackberry Archived from the original on 27 September 2011 Retrieved 13 April 2009 Cum cang hang khong Mien Nam Tan Son Nhat www tsnairport hochiminhcity gov vn Archived from the original on 16 February 2009 Retrieved 23 March 2007 a b Two more Hanoi lt gt Saigon flights per day for Pacific Airlines vietnamnet net in Vietnamese Retrieved 11 November 2007 a b News about Tan Son Nhat International Airport on Official Website of Ministry of Transport of Vietnam 12 November 2007 Vietnamese Archived from the original on 12 November 2007 Thai Phương 4 January 2015 San bay Tan Sơn Nhất tăng năng lực phục vụ nld com vn Người Lao Động Retrieved 7 January 2015 Tan Sơn Nhất sắp co them 21 chỗ đậu may bay VNExpress Retrieved 2 November 2017 These are the top 100 busiest routes on earth RoutesOnline September 2018 Two more Hanoi Saigon flights per day for Pacific Airlines on Vietnamnet net access date 11 November 2007 VietNamNet Two more Hanoi HCM City flights Archived from the original on 16 December 2007 Retrieved 16 December 2007 Tregaskis Richard 1975 Southeast Asia Building the Bases the History of Construction in Southeast Asia Superintendent of Documents U S Government Printing Office p 44 a b Tan Sơn Nhất Phi trường nhộn nhịp hang đầu thế giới Tuổi Trẻ Online 25 February 2017 Retrieved 29 May 2023 Lịch sử hinh thanh va phat triển san bay Tan Sơn Nhất Airports Corporation of Vietnam Retrieved 29 May 2023 Le Nam 19 December 2007 Khanh thanh nha ga san bay Tan Sơn Nhất Tuoi Tre Online Retrieved 28 May 2023 a b 2005 2014 Statistics of Tan Son Nhat Intl Airport Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam Archived from the original on 18 April 2015 Retrieved 2 November 2017 Đầu tư mở rộng Nha ga quốc tế T2 San bay Tan Sơn Nhất Tin nhanh chứng khoan 4 August 2014 Retrieved 28 May 2023 Dinh Tuan Nha ga quốc tế Tan Sơn Nhất mở rộng 8 780 m2 Vietnamnet Retrieved 2 November 2017 Đưa vao khai thac giai đoạn 2 dự an Mở rộng nha ga quốc tế T2 Cảng HKQT Tan Sơn Nhất Airports Corporation of Vietnam Retrieved 22 April 2023 2 300 tỷ đồng mở rộng ga quốc tế san bay Tan Sơn Nhất VNExpress Retrieved 2 November 2017 a b Khởi cong dự an Xay dựng Nha ga hanh khach T3 Cảng hang khong quốc tế Tan Sơn Nhất Airports Corporation of Vietnam Retrieved 22 April 2023 Le Hữu Việt 12 April 2023 Ly do dự an xay dựng nha ga T3 san bay Tan Sơn Nhất chậm chạp Tiền Phong in Vietnamese Retrieved 22 April 2023 Terminal T3 of Tan Son Nhat airport will be completed in April 4 2025 Vietnam VN 13 February 2024 Retrieved 12 April 2024 Lịch sử hinh thanh Tan Son Nhat Cargo Services Retrieved 5 June 2023 Tổ chức trang trọng Lễ khanh thanh Nha ga hang hoa giai đoạn 2 AFT2 Sai Gon Giải Phong Online 21 May 2012 Retrieved 5 June 2023 Company Profile Saigon Cargo Services Corporation Retrieved 5 June 2023 Cảng hang hoa hang khong Gemadept Retrieved 5 June 2023 Tăng tối đa slot tại Tan Sơn Nhất Cục Hang khong đề nghị cac hang tăng chuyến Tuổi Trẻ Online 24 December 2022 Retrieved 27 May 2023 a b Mua đất mở rộng phi trường Tan Sơn Nhất Tuổi Trẻ Online 26 February 2017 Retrieved 5 June 2023 Control Tower at Tan Son Nhut Air Base in Saigon after the Tet Offensive Vietnam Center amp Sam Johnson Vietnam Archive 20 January 2017 Retrieved 5 June 2023 Hoan thanh Đai Kiểm soat khong lưu Cảng hang khong quốc tế Tan Sơn Nhất một trong những đai kiểm soat khong lưu hiện đại nhất Đong Nam A Vietnam Air Traffic Management Corporation Retrieved 5 June 2023 Aeroflot Moves Ho Chi Minh City Service Resumption to 1Q24 AeroRoutes 19 December 2023 Retrieved 19 December 2023 Air China NW22 International Operations 30OCT22 Aeroroutes Retrieved 31 October 2022 Air India to start Delhi Ho Chi Minh City flights from June 1 The Indian Express 10 April 2024 Retrieved 10 April 2024 ANA will fly to five new cities from Haneda Airport starting in summer 2020 Business Traveller Tore Ozgur 19 November 2019 ANA to fly Istanbul Milan Moscow Shenzhen and Stockholm in 2020 ftnnews com ANA to Elevate the Global Network by Adding 5 Cities to its International Service Press Release ANA Group Corp s Information www anahd co jp CAMBODIA ANGKOR AIR FILES SIEM REAP ANGKOR INTERNATIONAL SCHEDULE IN NS24 Aeroroutes Retrieved 14 August 2023 China Eastern NW22 International Regional Operations 16OCT22 Aeroroutes China Southern Xiamen Airlines NW22 International Regional Operations 16OCT22 Aeroroutes China Southern Resumes Wuhan Ho Chi Minh City in 1Q24 Aeroroutes Retrieved 3 January 2024 Hainan Airlines Adds Haikou Ho Chi Minh City From mid Jan 2024 Aeroroutes Retrieved 2 January 2024 IndiGo to start Kolkata Ho Chi Minh City flight from October 18 India Today Retrieved 6 September 2019 MANDARIN AIRLINES RESUMES TAICHUNG HO CHI MINH CITY SERVICE IN MID NOV 2022 Aeroroutes 16 September 2022 Retrieved 17 September 2022 MIAT Adds Ulaanbaatar Ho Chi Minh City Service From late Dec 2023 Aeroroutes Retrieved 4 December 2023 Hang hang khong tư nhan lớn nhất Myanmar sắp co mặt tại Việt Nam Myanmar s largest private airline is coming to Vietnam soon Bao Giao Thong in Vietnamese 19 August 2022 Qatar Airways confirms major network expansion and resumption of flights to 11 cities Aviacionline 7 March 2023 Ruili Airlines Schedules Lijiang Ho Chi Minh City Service from May 2024 AeroRoutes 1 May 2024 Retrieved 1 May 2024 夏秋换季 从云南出发 邂逅东南亚 Retrieved 11 May 2024 Shenzhen Airlines Adds Ho Chi Minh City Service From May 2023 Aeroroutes Retrieved 29 March 2023 Chengdu Tianfu NS23 International Network 21MAR23 Aeroroutes Retrieved 21 March 2023 Spring Airlines Adds Ho Chi Minh City Service From July 2024 Aeroroutes Retrieved 13 May 2024 STARLUX will expand network to Ho Chi Minh City www starlux airlines com en US 24 March 2021 Retrieved 25 March 2021 Dusida Worrachaddejchai 15 March 2022 Thai Vietjet eyes 8 new planes for fleet Bangkok Post Retrieved 15 March 2022 Istanbul NEW Airport Review I One Mile At A Time One Mile at a Time 9 April 2019 Turkmenistan Airlines 1Q24 network additions aeroroutes com 26 December 2023 VIETJET ADDS ADELAIDE TO ITS NETWORK airlineratings 30 September 2023 Retrieved 1 October 2023 Flights from Ho Chi Minh City to Ahmedabad VietJet VIETJET AIR ADDS BRISBANE SERVICE FROM JUNE 2023 Aeroroutes Retrieved 16 March 2023 VietJet Air Boosts Busan Service in late July 2022 Aeroroutes Retrieved 5 July 2022 VietJet launches flights to Delhi from Hanoi amp Ho Chi Minh City Network Thoughts 13 August 2019 Retrieved 13 August 2019 Vietjet mở đường bay thẳng Thanh phố Hồ Chi Minh đi Bali Giao thong Vietnam VietnamPlus VietnamPlus 13 April 2019 VietJet Air Adds Ho Chi Minh City Dien Bien Phu Service From Dec 2023 Aeroroutes Retrieved 15 November 2023 VIETJET AIR ADDS JAKARTA SERVICE FROM AUGUST 2023 Aeroroutes Retrieved 13 June 2023 VIETJET AIR EXPANDS INDIA NETWORK IN AUGUST 2023 Aeroroutes Retrieved 22 May 2023 VietJet launches its newest international route connecting Ho Chi Minh City Vietnam with Kuala Lumpur Malaysia www vietjetair com Ashton Chris 11 January 2023 Vietjet launching Melbourne to Ho Chi Minh City flights Executive Traveller Retrieved 12 January 2023 VietJet Air S20 India service expansion Airlineroute Retrieved 27 January 2020 Vietjet Air adds Ho Chi Minh City Osaka route from Dec 2018 routesonline Retrieved 25 July 2018 Vietjet Launches Airbus A330 Perth Route With 0 Airfares Simple Flying 8 August 2023 Retrieved 9 August 2023 VietJet Air Schedules Additional Routes Addition in Dec 2023 Aeroroutes Retrieved 3 November 2023 Enjoy free flights to Ho Chi Minh City on VietJet and wow gifts every day www vietjetair com Vietjet opens HCM City Sydney route Vietnam 14 February 2023 Retrieved 20 February 2023 VietJet Air Dec 2022 Taiwan Service Adjustment Aeroroutes 22 November 2022 Retrieved 22 November 2022 VietJet Air Adds Tokyo Haneda Service From late April 2023 Aeroroutes Retrieved 7 March 2023 Vietjet Air adds Ho Chi Minh City Tokyo service from July 2019 Routesonline VietJet Air Adds Vientiane Service From late Feb 2024 Aeroroutes Retrieved 18 December 2023 Vietjet adds new flight route from Ho Chi Minh City with Xi an Travel And Tour World Retrieved 5 April 2024 10月29日起 张家界机场将执行冬春航班计划 Retrieved 29 October 2023 Vietnam Airlines adds Beijing Daxing service from July 2020 routesonline Retrieved 28 April 2020 Vietnam Airlines adds Ho Chi Minh Haikou from Aug 2019 Routesonline Vietnam Airlines opens HCMC Van Don route Vietnam Airlines opens HCMC Van Don route News from Saigon Times english thesaigontimes vn Archived from the original on 16 November 2022 Retrieved 7 December 2018 Vietnam Airlines plans Hangzhou service from July 2020 Routesonline Vietnam Airlines NW23 International Network Overview Changes 08OCT23 Aeroroutes Retrieved 9 October 2023 Vietnam Airlines to launch direct flights from Hanoi HCM City to Manila VietnamPlus 8 April 2024 Retrieved 8 April 2024 Vietnam Airlines Adds Mumbai from May 2023 Aeroroutes Retrieved 21 March 2023 https www aerotelegraph com vietnam airlines kommt mit boeing 787 nach muenchen Vietnam Airlines expands SE Asia Network in W19 Routesonline Vietnam Airlines direct flight to US takes off next week VN Express Retrieved 16 November 2021 Vietnam Airlines adds Shenzhen service from late Nov 2019 Routesonline Transferring to Siem Reap Angkor International Airport Vietnam Airlines Retrieved 16 October 2023 Vietnam Airlines đồng loạt mở them nhiều đường bay nội địa mới Vietnam Airlines in Vietnamese Retrieved 1 June 2020 Vietravel Airlines Begins Ho Chi Minh City Bangkok Flights in Feb 2023 Aeroroutes Retrieved 10 February 2023 Home Aerotranscargo Air Premia opens cargo flights to Vietnam Yonhap News Agency 12 January 2022 Cathay Cargo Freighter Service returns to Ho Chi Minh City Aviation Source News 11 April 2024 Retrieved 13 April 2024 Flight Timetable PDF EVA Air Cargo Archived from the original PDF on 20 January 2022 Retrieved 4 January 2022 Flight history for Tri MG Intra Asia Airlines flight GM502 Flightradar24 UPS Airlines Announces First Flights to Vietnam AirlineGeeks com AirlineGeeks com LIVE LOVE AVIATION 19 September 2020 Cảng HKQT Tan Sơn Nhất Top 10 san bay với năng lực phục vụ 30 40 triệu khach năm tốt nhất thế giới Airports Corporation of Vietnam in Vietnamese Archived from the original on 16 June 2018 Retrieved 24 March 2018 Hồng Ha 23 March 2018 Hỡi nạn nhan của may bay chậm chuyến bạn co biết những con số nay soha vn in Vietnamese Retrieved 24 March 2018 2021 Airport Traffic Report PDF Port Authority of New York and New Jersey April 2022 p 52 2020 Airport Traffic Report PDF Port Authority of New York and New Jersey July 2021 p 50 Retrieved 26 September 2021 Mở mới tuyến xe buyt San bay Tan Sơn Nhất Bến xe Miền Tay buyttphcm com vn Trung tam Quản ly giao thong cong cộng Thanh phố Hồ Chi Minh Retrieved 7 March 2018 Metro Line 4B Management Authority for Urban Railways Retrieved 14 May 2018 Hồng Chau 14 December 2017 Trận chiến san bay của taxi truyền thống va Uber Grab VNExpress net Retrieved 7 March 2018 Quoc Hung 31 August 2016 Entire route of Pham Van Dong Street opens to traffic SGGP English Edition Retrieved 7 March 2018 Accident description for 68 0218 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 3 June 2018 Accident description for VN A126 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 3 June 2018 Accident description for VN850 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 3 June 2018 UPS failure behind blackout at Vietnam s biggest airport official Tuoi Tre News 17 April 2014 Retrieved 3 June 2018 Vietnam tries plotters of Tan Son Nhat bomb attack for terrorism Tuổi Trẻ Online 26 December 2017 Retrieved 3 June 2018 Report 886 BC UBTVQH13 in Vietnamese Ministry of Justice Vietnam 2 June 2015 Retrieved 3 June 2018 Cử tri TP HCM phản đối dự an đầu tư san bay Long Thanh Giao dục Việt Nam 18 September 2013 a b Decision 909 QD TTg PDF VGP News in Vietnamese Government Online News Portal of Vietnam Archived from the original PDF on 17 October 2021 Retrieved 3 June 2018 Minh Kham 25 December 2006 Cong bố quy hoạch cảng Hang khong Long Thanh Tuoi Tre Online in Vietnamese Retrieved 3 June 2018 San bay Tan Sơn Nhất hoạt động ra sao khi co Long Thanh Bao Giao Thong in Vietnamese 21 November 2018 Retrieved 22 April 2023 Vietnam puts 860 million upgrade plan at Saigon airport on the runway VNExpress International Retrieved 7 March 2018 Thanh Bui 11 June 2017 Từ chuyện san bay san golf Cai gi nặng hơn long dan Tuổi Trẻ Online in Vietnamese Retrieved 7 March 2018 Thu Hằng Hồng Nhi Mở rộng Tan Sơn Nhất về phia bắc Hoan toan khong khả thi Vietnamnet in Vietnamese Retrieved 7 March 2018 Planning row engulfs expansion of Vietnam s largest airport VNExpress International Retrieved 7 March 2018 Mai Ha 28 February 2018 Mở rộng Tan Sơn Nhất Tư vấn TP HCM ngược chiều tư vấn Phap Thanh Nien in Vietnamese Retrieved 7 March 2018 Anh Duy Hoang Thuỳ Hữu Cong Thủ tướng quyết phương an mở rộng Tan Sơn Nhất về phia nam VNExpress net in Vietnamese Retrieved 14 May 2018 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tan Son Nhat International Airport Tan Son Nhut Airport official website holding page as of 2017 11 09 Tan Son Nhut Airport on City Government website in Vietnamese not updated since 2011 Tan Son Nhut Airport unofficial website Southern Airports Corporation Official Website SAC Southern Airports Services Joint Stock Company Official Website SASCO Sasco Travel a subsidiary of SASCO Tan Son Nhut Airport Transfer Saigon Ground Services official website a subsidiary of SAC Tan Son Nhut International Airport Ground Services TIAGS official website a subsidiary of Vietnam Airlines Tan Son Nhut airport Terminals News Item on Fire at Airport on Monday 27 October 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tan Son Nhat International Airport amp oldid 1223671732, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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