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Haneda Airport

Haneda Airport (羽田空港, Haneda Kūkō), officially Tokyo International Airport (東京国際空港, Tōkyō Kokusai Kūkō), and sometimes referred to as Tokyo Haneda Airport or Haneda International Airport (IATA: HND, ICAO: RJTT), is one of two international airports serving the Greater Tokyo Area, the other one being Narita International Airport (NRT). It serves as the primary base of Japan's two major domestic airlines, Japan Airlines (Terminal 1) and All Nippon Airways (Terminal 2), as well as RegionalPlus Wings Corp. (Air Do and Solaseed Air), Skymark Airlines, and StarFlyer. It is located in Ōta, Tokyo, 15 kilometers (9.3 mi) south of Tokyo Station. The facility covers 1,522 hectares (3,761 acres) of land.[2]

Tokyo International Airport

東京国際空港

Tōkyō Kokusai Kūkō
Summary
Airport typePublic
Owner/OperatorMinistry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism
ServesGreater Tokyo Area
LocationŌta, Tokyo, Japan
Opened15 August 1931; 92 years ago (1931-08-15)
Hub for
Elevation AMSL6 m / 21 ft
Coordinates35°33′12″N 139°46′52″E / 35.55333°N 139.78111°E / 35.55333; 139.78111
Websitewww.tokyo-haneda.com/en
Maps
RJTT
Location in Japan
RJTT
RJTT (Japan)
RJTT
RJTT (Asia)
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
16R/34L 3,000 9,843 Asphalt concrete
16L/34R 3,360 11,024 Asphalt concrete
04/22 2,500 8,202 Asphalt concrete
05/23 2,500 8,202 Asphalt concrete
Statistics (2022)
Number of passengers64,203,600
Sources:[1]

Haneda was the primary international airport serving Tokyo until 1978; from 1978 to 2010, Haneda handled almost all domestic flights to and from Tokyo as well as "scheduled charter" flights to a small number of major cities in East and Southeast Asia, while Narita International Airport handled the vast majority of international flights from further locations. In 2010, a dedicated international terminal, currently Terminal 3, was opened at Haneda in conjunction with the completion of a fourth runway, allowing long-haul flights during night-time hours.[3] Haneda opened up to long-haul service during the daytime in March 2014, with carriers offering nonstop service to 25 cities in 17 countries.[4] Since the resuming of international flights, airlines in Japan strategize Haneda as "Hub of Japan": providing connections between intercontinental flights with Japanese domestic flights, while envisioning Narita as the "Hub of Asia" between intercontinental destinations with Asian destinations.[5]

The Japanese government encourages the use of Haneda for premium business routes and the use of Narita for leisure routes and by low-cost carriers. However, the major full-service carriers may have a choice to fly to both airports.[6] Haneda handled 87,098,683 passengers in 2018; by passenger throughput, it was the third-busiest airport in Asia and the fourth-busiest in the world, but was not in the top ten in 2022.[7] It is able to handle 90 million passengers per year following its expansion in 2018. With Haneda and Narita combined, Tokyo has the third-busiest city airport system in the world, after London and New York.

In 2020, Haneda was named the second-best airport after Singapore's Changi Airport[8] and the World's Best Domestic Airport.[9] As of 2021, Haneda was rated by Skytrax as the second Best Airport in-between Qatar's Hamad International Airport and Singapore's Changi Airport, and maintaining its best Domestic Airport title from the previous year.[10][11]

History edit

Before the construction of Haneda Airport, the area where Haneda Airport now sits was a prosperous resort centered around Anamori Inari Shrine, and Tokyo's primary airport was Tachikawa Airfield. It was the main operating base of Japan Air Transport, then the country's flag carrier. But as it was a military base and 35 kilometres (22 mi) away from central Tokyo, aviators in Tokyo used various beaches of Tokyo Bay as airstrips, including beaches near the current site of Haneda (Haneda was a town located on Tokyo Bay, which merged into the Tokyo ward of Kamata in 1932).[12] In 1930, the Japanese postal ministry purchased a 53-hectare (130-acre) portion of reclaimed land from a private individual in order to construct an airport.[13]

Empire/war era (1931–1945) edit

 
Apron and runway at Haneda Airfield in c1930
 
Haneda Airfield in 1937

Haneda Airfield (羽田飛行場, Haneda Hikōjō) first opened in 1931 on a small piece of reclaimed land at the west end of today's airport complex. A 300-metre (980 ft) concrete runway, a small airport terminal and 2 hangars were constructed. The first flight from the airport on August 25, 1931, carried a load of insects to Dalian.[13]

During the 1930s, Haneda handled flights to destinations in Japan mainland, Taiwan, Korea (both under Japanese rule) and Manchuria (ruled by Manchukuo).[14] The major Japanese newspapers also built their first flight departments at Haneda during this time, and Manchukuo National Airways began service between Haneda and Xinjing. JAT was renamed Imperial Japanese Airways following its nationalization in 1938.[13] Passenger and freight traffic grew dramatically in these early years. In 1939, Haneda's first runway was extended to 800 metres (2,600 ft) in length and a second 800-metre (2,600 ft) runway was completed.[15] The airport's size grew to 72.8 hectares (180 acres) using land purchased by the postal ministry from a nearby exercise ground.[13]

During World War II, both IJA and Haneda Airport shifted to almost exclusively military transport services. Haneda Airport was also used by the Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service for flight training during the war.[13]

In the late 1930s, the Tokyo government planned a new Tokyo Municipal Airport on an artificial island in Koto Ward. At 251 hectares (620 acres), the airport would have been five times the size of Haneda at the time, and significantly larger than Tempelhof Airport in Berlin, which was said to be the largest airport in the world at the time. The airport plan was finalized in 1938 and work on the island began in 1939 for completion in 1941, but the project fell behind schedule due to resource constraints during World War II. This plan was officially abandoned following the war, as the Allied occupation authorities favored expanding Haneda rather than building a new airport; the island was later expanded by dumping garbage into the bay, and is now known as Yumenoshima.[16]

U.S. occupation (1945–1952) edit

 
U.S. Air Force C-97 Stratofreighter at Haneda Army Air Base in 1952

On September 12, 1945, General Douglas MacArthur, Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers and head of the Occupation of Japan following World War II, ordered that Haneda be handed over to the occupation forces. On the following day, he took delivery of the airport, which was renamed Haneda Army Air Base, and ordered the eviction of many nearby residents in order to make room for various construction projects, including extending one runway to 1,650 metres (5,413 ft) and the other to 2,100 metres (6,890 ft). On the 21st, Anamori Inari Shrine and over 3,000 residents received orders to leave their homes within 48 hours. Many resettled on the other side of a river in the Haneda district of Ota, surrounding Anamoriinari Station, and some still live in the area today.[17] The expansion work commenced in October 1945 and was completed in June 1946, at which point the airport covered 257.4 hectares (636 acres). Haneda AAF was designated as a port of entry to Japan.[13]

Haneda was mainly a military and civilian transportation base used by the U.S. Army and Air Force as a stop-over for C-54 transport planes departing San Francisco, en route to the Far East and returning flights. A number of C-54s, based at Haneda AFB, participated in the Berlin Blockade airlift. These planes were specially outfitted for hauling coal to German civilians. Many of these planes were decommissioned after their participation due to coal dust contamination. Several US Army or Air Force generals regularly parked their personal planes at Haneda while visiting Tokyo, including General Ennis Whitehead. During the Korean War, Haneda was the main regional base for United States Navy flight nurses, who evacuated patients from Korea to Haneda for treatment at military hospitals in Tokyo and Yokosuka.[18] US military personnel based at Haneda were generally housed at the Washington Heights residential complex in central Tokyo (now Yoyogi Park).

Haneda Air Force Base received its first international passenger flights in 1947 when Northwest Orient Airlines began DC-4 flights across the North Pacific to the United States, and within Asia to China, South Korea, and the Philippines.[19] Pan American World Airways made Haneda a stop on its "round the world" route later in 1947, with westbound DC-4 service to Shanghai, Hong Kong, Kolkata, Karachi, Damascus, Istanbul, London and New York, and eastbound Constellation service to Wake Island, Honolulu and San Francisco.[20]

The U.S. military gave part of the base back to Japan in 1952; this portion became known as Tokyo International Airport. The US military maintained a base at Haneda until 1958 when the remainder of the property was returned to the Japanese government.[13]

International era (1952–1978) edit

 
1955 passenger terminal at Haneda
 
Japan Airlines flight attendants in 1951

Japan's flag carrier Japan Airlines began its first domestic operations from Haneda in 1951. For a few postwar years, Tokyo International Airport did not have a passenger terminal building. The Japan Airport Terminal Co., Ltd. TYO: 9706 was founded in 1953 to develop the first passenger terminal, which opened in 1955. An extension for international flights opened in 1963.[21] European carriers began service to Haneda in the 1950s. Air France arrived at Haneda for the first time in November 1952.[22] BOAC de Havilland Comet flights to London via the southern route began in 1953, and SAS DC-7 flights to Copenhagen via Anchorage began in 1957. JAL and Aeroflot began cooperative service from Haneda to Moscow in 1967. Pan Am and Northwest Orient used Haneda as a hub. The August 1957 Official Airline Guide shows 86 domestic and 8 international departures each week on Japan Air Lines. Other international departures per week: seven Civil Air Transport, three Thai DC4s, 2 Hong Kong Airways Viscounts (and maybe three DC-6Bs), two Air India and one QANTAS. Northwest had 16 departures a week, Pan Am had 12 and Canadian Pacific had four; Air France three, KLM three, SAS five, Swissair two and BOAC three. As of 1966, the airport had three runways: 15L/33R (10,335 by 200 feet (3,150 m × 61 m)), 15R/33L (9,850 by 180 feet (3,002 m × 55 m)) and 4/22 (5,150 by 150 feet (1,570 m × 46 m)).[23]

 
An aerial view of Haneda in 1965, showing three-runway configuration prior to the extension of Runway 4/22 and partial closure of Runway 15R/33L

The Tokyo Monorail opened between Haneda and central Tokyo in 1964, in time for the Tokyo Olympics. During 1964, Japan lifted travel restrictions on its citizens, causing passenger traffic at the airport to swell.[21] The introduction of jet aircraft in the 1960s followed by the Boeing 747 in 1970 also required various facility improvements at Haneda, including extending Runway 4/22 over the water and repurposing part of Runway 15R/33L as an airport apron.[13] A new international arrivals facility opened in June 1970.[24]

Around 1961, the government began considering further expansion of Haneda with a third runway and additional apron space, but forecast that the expansion would only meet capacity requirements for about ten years following completion. In 1966, the government decided to build a new airport for international flights. In 1978, Narita Airport opened, taking over almost all international service in the Greater Tokyo Area, and Haneda became a domestic airport.[13]

Domestic era (1978–2010) edit

 
An aerial view of Haneda in 1984 showing the 1970 terminal on the west side of the field, the site of which is now occupied by Terminal 3. The large area under reclamation to the east would become the site of today's Terminal 1 and Terminal 2.

While most international flights moved from Haneda to Narita in 1978, airlines of the Republic of China (Taiwan) continued to use Haneda Airport for many years due to the ongoing political conflict between Taiwan and the People's Republic of China (mainland China). China Airlines served Taipei and Honolulu from Haneda.

 
Terminal 1, completed in 1993, now houses Japan's flag carrier Japan Airlines and Skymark.
 
Terminal 2, completed in 2004, now houses All Nippon Airways, StarFlyer, Skynet Asia and Air Do.

The Transport Ministry released an expansion plan for Haneda in 1983 under which it would be expanded onto new landfill in Tokyo Bay with the aim of increasing capacity, reducing noise and making use of the large amount of garbage generated by Tokyo. In July 1988, a new 3,000-metre (9,800 ft) runway opened on the landfill. In September 1993, the old airport terminal was replaced by a new West Passenger Terminal, nicknamed "Big Bird", which was built farther out on the landfill. New runways 16L/34R (parallel) and 4/22 (cross) were completed in March 1997 and March 2000 respectively.[13]

A new international terminal opened next to the domestic terminal in March 1998. Taiwan's second major airline, EVA Air, joined CAL at Haneda in 1999. All Taiwan flights were moved to Narita in 2002, and Haneda-Honolulu services ceased. In 2003, JAL, ANA, Korean Air and Asiana began service to Gimpo Airport in Seoul, providing a "scheduled charter" city-to-city service.

In 2004, Terminal 2 opened at Haneda for ANA and Air Do; the 1993 terminal, now known as Terminal 1, became the base for JAL, Skymark and Skynet Asia Airways, and JAL expanded its footprint into the northern wing of the terminal.[25]

In October 2006, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao reached an informal agreement to launch bilateral talks regarding an additional city-to-city service between Haneda and Shanghai Hongqiao International Airport.[26] On 25 June 2007, the two governments concluded an agreement allowing for the Haneda-Hongqiao service to commence from October 2007.[27] Since August 2015, Haneda also began flight services to Shanghai's other airport, Shanghai Pudong International Airport (where most flights operate from Narita International Airport) which means there is no longer a city-to-city service between Tokyo and Hongqiao Airport as all flights from Haneda and Shanghai are focused at Pudong Airport.

In December 2007, Japan and the People's Republic of China reached a basic agreement on opening charter services between Haneda and Beijing Nanyuan Airport. However, because of difficulties in negotiating with the Chinese military operators of Nanyuan, the first charter flights in August 2008 (coinciding with the 2008 Summer Olympics) used Beijing Capital International Airport instead, as did subsequent scheduled charters to Beijing.[28]

In June 2007, Haneda gained the right to host international flights that depart between 8:30 pm and 11:00 pm and arrive between 6 am and 8:30 am. The airport allows departures and arrivals between 11 pm and 6 am, as Narita Airport is closed during these hours.[29][30]

Macquarie Bank and Macquarie Airports owned a 19.9% stake in Japan Airport Terminal until 2009, when they sold their stake back to the company.[31]

Expansion of international service (2010–2014) edit

 
Terminal 3, opened in October 2010

A third terminal for international flights was completed in October 2010. The cost to construct the five-story terminal building and attached 2,300-car parking deck was covered by a private finance initiative process, revenues from duty-free concessions and a facility use charge of ¥2,000 per passenger. Both the Tokyo Monorail and the Keikyū Airport Line added stops at the new terminal, and an international air cargo facility was constructed nearby.[32][33] The fourth runway (05/23), which is called D Runway,[34] was also completed in 2010, having been constructed via land reclamation to the south of the existing airfield. This runway was designed to increase Haneda's operational capacity from 285,000 movements to 407,000 movements per year, permitting increased frequencies on existing routes, as well as routes to new destinations.[32] In particular, Haneda would offer additional slots to handle 60,000 overseas flights a year (30,000 during the day and 30,000 during late night and early morning hours).[35][36]

In May 2008, the Japanese Ministry of Transport announced that international flights would be allowed between Haneda and any overseas destination, provided that such flights must operate between 11 pm and 7 am.[35] The Ministry of Transport originally planned to allocate a number of the newly available landing slots to international flights of 1,947 kilometres (1,210 mi) or less (the distance to Ishigaki, the longest domestic flight operating from Haneda).[32]

30,000 annual international slots became available upon the opening of the International Terminal, current Terminal 3, in October 2010, and were allocated to government authorities in several countries for further allocation to airlines. While service to Seoul, Taipei, Shanghai and other regional destinations continued to be allowed during the day, long-haul services were initially limited to overnight hours. Many long-haul services from Haneda struggled, such as British Airways service to London (temporarily suspended and then restored on a less than daily basis before becoming a daily daytime service) and Air Canada service to Vancouver (announced but never commenced until Air Canada began a code share on ANA's Haneda-Vancouver flight). Delta Air Lines replaced its initial service to Detroit with service to Seattle before cancelling the service entirely in favor of the daytime services to Los Angeles and Minneapolis (although both the Detroit and the Seattle services have since resumed as daytime services).[37] In October 2013, American Airlines announced the cancellation of its service between Haneda and New York JFK stating that it was "quite unprofitable" owing to the schedule constraints at Haneda.[38]

 
Interior of the International Terminal (Terminal 3) departure hall in 2020

Haneda Airport's new International Terminal has received numerous complaints from passengers using it during night hours. One of the complaints is the lack of amenities available in the building as most restaurants and shops are closed at night. Another complaint is that there is no affordable public transportation at night operating out of the terminals. The Keikyu Airport Line, Tokyo Monorail and most bus operators stop running services out of Haneda by midnight, and so passengers landing at night are forced to go by car or taxi to their destination. A Haneda spokesperson said that they would work with transportation operators and the government to improve the situation.[39]

Daytime international slots were allocated in October 2013. In the allocation among Japanese carriers, All Nippon Airways argued that it should receive more international slots than Japan Airlines due to JAL's recent government-supported bankruptcy restructuring, and ultimately won 11 daily slots to JAL's five.[37] Nine more daytime slot pairs were allocated for service to the United States in February 2016. They were intended to be allocated along with the other daytime slots, but allocation talks were stalled in 2014, leading the Japanese government to release these slots for charter services to other countries.[40] The new daytime slots led to increased flight capacity between Tokyo and many Asian markets, but did not have a major effect on capacity between Japan and Europe, as several carriers simply transferred flights from Narita to Haneda (most notably ANA and Lufthansa services to Germany, which almost entirely shifted to Haneda).[41] In an effort to combat this effect, the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport gave non-binding guidance to airlines that any new route at Haneda should not lead to the discontinuation of a route at Narita, although it was possible for airlines to meet this requirement through cooperation with a code sharing partner (for instance, ANA moved its London flight to Haneda while maintaining a code share on Virgin Atlantic's Narita-London flight).[42]

An expansion of the new international terminal was completed at the end of March 2014. The expansion includes a new 8-gate pier to the northwest of the existing terminal, an expansion of the adjacent apron with four new aircraft parking spots, a hotel inside the international terminal, and expanded check-in, customs/immigration/quarantine and baggage claim areas.[43]

In addition to its international slot restrictions, Haneda remains subject to domestic slot restrictions; domestic slots are reallocated by MLIT every five years, and each slot is valued at 2–3 billion yen in annual income.[44]

Future expansion plans (since 2014) edit

Haneda Airport Access Line edit

Following Tokyo's winning bid for the 2020 Summer Olympics, the Japanese government plans to increase the combined slot capacity of Haneda and Narita, and to construct a new railway line linking from Haneda Airport to Tokyo Station in approximately 18 minutes.[45]

JR East has considered extending an existing freight line from Tamachi Station on the Yamanote Line to create a third rail link to the airport,[46] which may potentially be connected to the Ueno–Tokyo Line to offer a through connection to Ueno and points on the Utsunomiya Line and Takasaki Line.[47] Although there had been discussion of completing this extension prior to the 2020 Olympics, the plan was indefinitely shelved in 2015.[48] However, in April 2023 JR East announced that it would build the rail line from Haneda Airport (at a location between the existing terminals) to Tamachi Station.[49] The construction groundbreaking ceremony is expected to take place in June 2023 with construction lasting until 2031.[49] Construction of the line officially began on 2 June 2023 with the aforementioned groundbreaking ceremony going ahead as scheduled.[50][51]

New road tunnel edit

The Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport is planning a new road tunnel between the domestic and international terminals in order to shorten minimum connecting times between the terminals from the current 60–80 minutes.[52]

Facilities edit

 
Airport Layout

Haneda has four runways, arranged in two parallel pairs.

Due to the airport's position between Yokota Air Base and NAF Atsugi to the west, Narita International Airport to the east, and densely populated areas of Tokyo and Kanagawa to the immediate north and west, most Haneda flights arrive and depart using circular routes over Tokyo Bay. During north wind operations (60% of the time), aircraft arrive from the south on 34L and 34R and depart to the east from 34R and 05. During south wind operations (40% of the time), aircraft depart to the south from 16L and 16R, as well as 22 between 15:00 and 18:00, and arrive either on a high-angle approach from the north on 16L and 16R over west-central Tokyo (15:00 to 18:00 only) or from the east on 22 and 23 over Tokyo Bay (all other times).[53]

 
A wide view of Haneda Airport's facilities and terminals. JAL and ANA cargo centers are on the far left. To the immediate right of the cargo centers is the Japan Meteorological Agency's Tokyo Airport Weather Observatory. To its right is the Tokyo International Airport Offices Building Two, and the tall white tower to its right is the airport's control tower. The Number Two Parking Area is to the right of the control tower, and Terminal 1 is to the right of the parking area. Terminal 2 is behind Terminal 1 and cannot be seen from this angle. To the right of Terminal 1 are JAL's maintenance centers, and on the far right of the photo are the international cargo facility and the international terminal.

Terminals edit

Haneda Airport has three passenger terminals. Terminal 1 and 2 are connected by an underground walkway. A free inter-terminal shuttle bus connects all terminals on the landside. Route A runs between Terminal 1 and 2 every four minutes and Route B runs oneway from Terminal 3, 2, 1, then back to Terminal 3 every four minutes.All three passenger terminals are managed and operated by private companies.

Haneda Airport is open 24 hours, although Terminal 1 and the domestic flight areas of Terminal 2 are only open from 5:00 am to 12:00 am. Terminal 3 and the international flight area of Terminal 2 are open 24 hours a day.

Terminal 1 and 2 are managed by Japan Airport Terminal Co., Ltd. (日本空港ビルディング株式会社, Nippon Kūkō Birudingu Kabushikigaisha), while Terminal 3 is managed by Tokyo International Air Terminal Corporation (東京国際空港ターミナル株式会社, Tōkyō Kokusai Kūkō Tāminaru Kabushikigaisha). The critical facilities of the airport such as runways, taxiways and aprons are managed by Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism.[54]

Terminal 1 edit

Terminal 1 called "Big Bird" opened in 1993, replacing the smaller 1970 terminal complex. It is exclusively used for domestic flights within Japan and is served by Japan Airlines, Skymark Airlines, and StarFlyer's routes.

The linear building features a six-story restaurant, shopping area and conference rooms in its center section and a large rooftop observation deck with open-air rooftop café. The terminal has gates 1 through 24 assigned for jet bridges and gates 31–40 and 84–90 assigned for ground boarding by bus.

Terminal 2 edit

Terminal 2 opened on December 1, 2004.[55] The construction of Terminal 2 was financed by levying a ¥170 (from 1 April 2011) passenger service facility charge on tickets, the first domestic Passenger Service Facilities Charge (PSFC) in Japan.

Terminal 2 is served by All Nippon Airways, Air Do, and Solaseed Air for their domestic flights. On March 29, 2020, some international flights operated by All Nippon Airways were relocated to Terminal 2 after the addition of international departure halls and CIQ facilities (Customs, Immigration, Quarantine) in preparation for 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo. However, the international departures and check-in hall was closed indefinitely on April 11, 2020, less than two weeks after its opening, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[56] International flights at Terminal 2 resumed from 19 July 2023 with the easing of COVID-19 restrictions and border controls.[57]

The terminal features an open-air rooftop restaurant, a six-story shopping area with restaurants[58] and the 387-room Haneda Excel Hotel Tokyu. The terminal has gates 51 through 73 assigned with jet bridges (gates 51 to 65 for domestic flights, gates 66 to 70 for domestic or international flights, gates 71 to 73 for international flights),[59] gates 46–48 in satellite, and gates 500 through 511 (for domestic flights) and gates 700 through 702 (for international flights) assigned for ground boarding by bus.

Terminal 3 edit

Terminal 3, formerly known as the International Terminal, opened on October 21, 2010, replacing the much smaller 1998 International Terminal adjacent to Terminal 2. The terminal serves most of the airport's international flights, with the exception of some All Nippon Airways flights departing from Terminal 2. The first two long-haul flights were scheduled to depart after midnight on October 31, 2010, from the new terminal, but both flights departed ahead of schedule before midnight on October 30.[60]

Terminal 3 has airline lounges operated by oneworld members Japan Airlines & Cathay Pacific, Star Alliance member All Nippon Airways, [61] and SkyTeam member Delta Air Lines.[62] The terminal has gates 105–114 and 140–149 assigned with jet bridges and gates 131 through 139 assigned for ground boarding by bus.

The International Terminal was renamed to Terminal 3 on March 14, 2020, as Terminal 2 began handling some international flights operated by All Nippon Airways from March 29, 2020.[63]

Airlines and destinations edit

Passenger edit

AirlinesDestinations
AirAsia X Kuala Lumpur–International
Air Canada Toronto–Pearson
Air China Beijing–Capital[64]
Air Do Asahikawa, Hakodate, Kushiro, Memanbetsu, Obihiro, Sapporo–Chitose
Air France Paris–Charles de Gaulle[65]
All Nippon Airways Akita, Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi, Beijing–Capital, Chicago–O'Hare, Delhi,[66] Frankfurt, Fukuoka, Guangzhou, Hachijojima, Hakodate, Hiroshima, Ho Chi Minh City,[66] Hong Kong, Honolulu, Houston–Intercontinental,[67] Ishigaki, Iwakuni, Iwami, Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta, Kagoshima, Kobe, Kōchi-Ryoma, Komatsu, Kuala Lumpur–International, Kumamoto, Kushiro, London–Heathrow, Los Angeles, Manila, Matsuyama, Miyako, Miyazaki, Monbetsu, Munich,[68][69] Nagasaki, Naha, Nakashibetsu, New York–JFK, Odate–Noshiro, Ōita, Okayama, Osaka–Itami, Osaka–Kansai, Paris–Charles de Gaulle, Qingdao,[66] Saga, San Francisco,[70] Sapporo–Chitose, Seattle/Tacoma,[66] Seoul–Gimpo, Shanghai–Hongqiao, Shanghai–Pudong, Shenzhen,[71] Shonai, Singapore, Sydney, Taipei–Songshan, Takamatsu, Tokushima, Tottori, Toyama, Ube, Vancouver, Vienna (resumes 1 August 2024),[72] Wajima, Wakkanai, Washington–Dulles,[67] Yonago
American Airlines Dallas/Fort Worth, Los Angeles
ANA Wings Nagoya–Centrair
Asiana Airlines Seoul–Gimpo,[73] Seoul–Incheon[74]
British Airways London–Heathrow[75]
Cathay Pacific Hong Kong
China Airlines Taipei–Songshan
China Eastern Airlines Beijing–Daxing,[76] Shanghai–Hongqiao,[64] Shanghai–Pudong[77]
China Southern Airlines Beijing–Daxing,[78] Guangzhou[79]
Delta Air Lines Atlanta,[80] Detroit, Honolulu,[81] Los Angeles,[82] Minneapolis/St. Paul,[83] Seattle/Tacoma[84]
Emirates Dubai–International[85]
EVA Air Taipei–Songshan
Finnair Helsinki[86]
Garuda Indonesia Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta
Hawaiian Airlines Honolulu,[87] Kailua-Kona (resumes 1 March 2024)[88]
HK Express Hong Kong[89]
ITA Airways Rome–Fiumicino[90]
Japan Airlines Akita, Amami Ōshima, Aomori, Asahikawa, Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi, Beijing–Capital, Chicago–O'Hare,[91] Dalian,[92] Dallas/Fort Worth,[91] Delhi,[93] Doha (begins 31 March 2024),[94] Fukuoka, Guangzhou, Hakodate, Helsinki,[95] Hiroshima, Ho Chi Minh City, Hong Kong, Honolulu,[91] Ishigaki, Izumo, Kagoshima, Kitakyūshū, Kōchi-Ryoma, Komatsu, Kumamoto, Kushiro, London–Heathrow, Los Angeles,[91] Manila, Matsuyama, Memanbetsu, Misawa, Miyako, Miyazaki, Nagasaki, Nagoya–Centrair, Naha, New York–JFK, Obihiro, Ōita, Okayama, Osaka–Itami, Osaka–Kansai, Paris–Charles de Gaulle, San Francisco, Sapporo–Chitose, Seoul–Gimpo, Shanghai–Hongqiao, Shanghai–Pudong, Shirahama, Singapore, Sydney,[95] Taipei–Songshan, Takamatsu, Tokushima, Ube, Yamagata
Juneyao Air Shanghai–Pudong
Korean Air Seoul–Gimpo,[96] Seoul–Incheon[74]
Lufthansa Frankfurt, Munich
Malaysia Airlines Kuala Lumpur–International[97]
Peach Seoul–Incheon, Shanghai–Pudong,[98] Taipei–Taoyuan
Philippine Airlines Manila
Qantas Sydney[99]
Qatar Airways Doha (ends 30 March 2024)[100][101]
Scandinavian Airlines Copenhagen[102]
Shanghai Airlines Shanghai–Hongqiao,[103] Shanghai–Pudong
Singapore Airlines Singapore
Skymark Airlines Fukuoka, Kagoshima, Kobe, Naha, Sapporo–Chitose, Shimojishima[104]
Solaseed Air Kagoshima, Kumamoto, Miyazaki, Nagasaki, Naha, Ōita
Spring Airlines Shanghai–Pudong[105]
StarFlyer Fukuoka, Kitakyūshū, Osaka–Kansai, Ube
Thai Airways International Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi
Tianjin Airlines Tianjin[64]
Tigerair Taiwan Taipei–Taoyuan
Turkish Airlines Istanbul[106]
United Airlines Chicago–O'Hare, Los Angeles, Newark, San Francisco, Washington–Dulles
VietJet Air Da Nang, Ho Chi Minh City[107]
Vietnam Airlines Hanoi
Virgin Australia Cairns[108]

Statistics edit

 
Multiple Japan Airlines aircraft parked at Terminal 1

Source: Japanese Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism[109][110][111]

Busiest domestic routes (2018) edit

Rank Airport Passengers
1. Sapporo–Chitose 9,007,372
2. Fukuoka 8,647,386
3. Naha 5,919,365
4. Osaka–Itami 5,496,982
5. Kagoshima 2,506,276
6. Kumamoto 1,971,891
7. Hiroshima 1,878,286
8. Nagasaki 1,764,870
9. Matsuyama 1,563,870
10. Miyazaki 1,423,200
11. Osaka–Kansai 1,258,675
12. Takamatsu 1,252,568

Number of landings edit

50,000
100,000
150,000
200,000
250,000
300,000
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
  •   Domestic
  •   International

Number of passengers edit

Annual passenger traffic at HND airport. See Wikidata query.

Cargo volume (tonnes) edit

250,000
500,000
750,000
1,000,000
1,250,000
1,500,000
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
  •   Domestic
  •   International

On-time performance edit

In 2022, Haneda Airport was the most on-time international airport with the fewest delays. Flights departing Haneda had a 90.3% on-time departure rate across 373,264 total flights according to aviation analytics firm Cirium.[112]

Ground transportation edit

Rapid transit edit

 
Tokyo monorail Terminal 3 Station
 
Keikyu Airport Line station

Haneda Airport is served by the Keikyu Airport Line and Tokyo Monorail. In addition, East Japan Railway Company (JR East) has proposed building a new Haneda Airport Access Line connecting directly to central Tokyo by 2029. For both the monorail and Keikyu railway, the Terminal 3 Station was renamed from International Terminal Station in March 2020.[113] The Keikyu Domestic Terminal station was renamed to the Terminal 1·2 Station.

Railways edit

Keikyū operates a single station between the Terminals 1 and 2 (Terminal 1·2 Station) and a stop at Terminal 3.

Airport Limited Express trains operated by Keikyu make the non-stop run from Haneda Airport to Shinagawa Station in 11 minutes. In addition to Shinagawa, certain through services operate on the Toei Asakusa Line, which make several stops in eastern Tokyo. Some Keikyū trains also run through to the Keisei Oshiage Line and Keisei Main Line, forming a rail link to Narita International Airport.

Monorail edit

The monorail has three dedicated stations at the Terminal 1, Terminal 2 and Terminal 3.

Haneda Express trains make the non-stop run from Haneda Airport to Hamamatsuchō Station in approximately 18 to 19 minutes, where passengers can connect to the Yamanote Line to reach other points in Tokyo, or Keihin Tohoku Line to Saitama, and have a second access option to Narita Airport via the Narita Express or Sōbu Line (Rapid) trains at Tokyo Station. Hamamatsuchō Station is also located adjacent to the Toei Ōedo Line Daimon station.

Road edit

The airport is bisected by the Shuto Expressway Bayshore Route and Japan National Route 357, while Shuto Expressway Route 1 and Tokyo Metropolitan Route 311 (Kampachi-dori Ave) runs on the western perimeter. Tamagawa Sky Bridge connects the airport with Japan National Route 409 and Shuto Expressway Route K6 to the southwest across Tama River.

The airport has five parkades with P1 and P2 parkades serving Terminal 1, P3 and P4 serving Terminal 2, and P5 serving Terminal 3.

Bus edit

Scheduled bus service to various points in the Kanto region is provided by Airport Transport Service (Airport Limousine) and Keihin Kyuko Bus. Tokyo City Air Terminal, Shinjuku Expressway Bus Terminal and Yokohama City Air Terminal are major limousine bus terminals. Emirates operates bus services to Shinagawa Station and Tokyo Station.[114]

Transfer to/from Narita Airport edit

Haneda Airport is approximately 1.5 to 2 hours from Narita Airport by rail or bus. Keisei runs direct suburban trains (called "Access Express") between Haneda and Narita in 93 minutes for ¥1800 as of February 2019.[115] There are also direct buses between the airports operated by Airport Limousine Bus. The journey takes 65–85 minutes or longer depending on traffic.[116]

Accidents and incidents edit

  • August 24, 1938: two civilian aircraft [ja] originating from Haneda, one operated by Japan Air Transport and another by Japan Flight School, collided into each other mid-air. All 5 crews of both aircraft died as well as 80 people on the ground in the Ōmori area of Tokyo.
  • In the span of a month in 1966, three accidents occurred at, or on flights inbound to or outbound from, Haneda.
    • February 4, 1966: All Nippon Airways Flight 60, a Boeing 727-81, crashed into Tokyo Bay about 10.4 kilometres (6.5 mi) from Haneda in clear weather conditions while on an evening approach. All 133 passengers and crew were killed. The accident held the death toll record for a single-plane accident until 1969.
    • March 4, 1966: Canadian Pacific Air Lines Flight 402, a Douglas DC-8-43 registered CF-CPK, descended below the glide path and struck the approach lights and a seawall during a night landing attempt in poor visibility. The flight had departed Hong Kong Kai Tak Airport and had almost diverted to Taipei due to the poor weather at Haneda. Of the 62 passengers and 10 crew, only 8 passengers survived.
    • On March 5, 1966, less than 24 hours after the Canadian Pacific crash, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707–436 registered G-APFE, broke up in flight en route from Haneda Airport to Hong Kong Kai Tak Airport, on a segment of an around-the-world flight. The bad weather that had caused the Canadian Pacific crash the day before also caused exceptionally strong winds around Mt. Fuji, and the BOAC jet encountered severe turbulence that caused the aircraft to break up in mid-air near the city of Gotemba, Shizuoka Prefecture at an altitude of 16,000 feet (4,900 m), killing all 113 passengers and 11 crew. The debris field was over 16 kilometres (10 mi) long. Although there was not a cockpit voice recorder on this aircraft or any distress calls made by the crew, the investigators did find an 8mm film shot by one of the passengers that, when developed, confirmed the accident was consistent with an in-flight breakup and loss of control due to severe turbulence. There is a famous photo of the BOAC plane taxiing past the still smouldering wreckage of the Canadian Pacific DC-8 as it taxied out to the runway for its last ever takeoff.
  • August 26, 1966: A Japan Air Lines Convair 880, leased from Japan Domestic Airlines on a training flight, crashed after takeoff when after the nose lifted off, the aircraft yawed to the left. At 1,600 metres (5,200 ft) after the plane went off the runway and all the engines separated as well as the nose and left main gear. The aircraft caught fire. All five occupants died. Cause of left yaw unknown.[117]
  • March 17, 1977: All Nippon Airways Flight 817 [ja], a Boeing 727–81 flight departing from Haneda to Sendai, was hijacked by a yakuza shortly after takeoff. The aircraft quickly returned to the airport due to the hijacker firing his pistol. The hijacker locked himself inside the aircraft toilet before killing himself.
  • February 9, 1982: Japan Airlines Flight 350, a McDonnell Douglas DC-8-61, crashed on approach in shallow water 300 metres (980 ft; 330 yd) short of the runway when the captain, experiencing some form of a mental aberration, deliberately engaged the thrust-reversers for two of the four engines. Twenty-four passengers were killed.
  • August 12, 1985: Japan Airlines Flight 123, a Boeing 747SR, lost control and suffered rapid decompression 12 minutes after takeoff due to improper maintenance, leading to the aircraft having a fatal collision with Mount Takamagahara. Out of all 524 people on the flight, only four survived the crash. One of the casualties was famous Japanese singer Kyu Sakamoto. It is the deadliest single-aircraft accident in aviation history.
  • July 23, 1999: All Nippon Airways Flight 61 was hijacked shortly after takeoff. The hijacker killed the captain before he was subdued; the aircraft landed safely.
  • May 27, 2016: Korean Air Flight 2708, a Boeing 777-3B5 bound for Gimpo Airport, suffered an engine fire as it was taking off Haneda's Runway 34R. The takeoff was aborted and all passengers and crew aboard were swiftly evacuated. Investigations later determined the cause of the engine fire as an uncontained engine failure caused by maintenance crew oversight.
  • January 2, 2024: a runway collision occurred between an Airbus A350-941 from Sapporo–Chitose and a Japan Coast Guard De Havilland Canada DHC-8-315. All 379 occupants aboard the Japan Airlines flight were evacuated, while five of the six occupants aboard the Coast Guard aircraft were killed. Both aircraft were destroyed.[118]

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External links edit

  • Haneda Tokyo International Airport Website (in English)
  • Tokyo International Air Terminal Corporation (in English)

haneda, airport, haneda, redirects, here, neighborhood, Ōta, tokyo, haneda, Ōta, tokyo, surname, haneda, surname, tokyo, international, airport, redirects, here, tokyo, other, international, airport, narita, international, airport, 羽田空港, haneda, kūkō, official. Haneda redirects here For the neighborhood of Ōta Tokyo see Haneda Ōta Tokyo For the surname see Haneda surname Tokyo International Airport redirects here For Tokyo s other international airport see Narita International Airport Haneda Airport 羽田空港 Haneda Kukō officially Tokyo International Airport 東京国際空港 Tōkyō Kokusai Kukō and sometimes referred to as Tokyo Haneda Airport or Haneda International Airport IATA HND ICAO RJTT is one of two international airports serving the Greater Tokyo Area the other one being Narita International Airport NRT It serves as the primary base of Japan s two major domestic airlines Japan Airlines Terminal 1 and All Nippon Airways Terminal 2 as well as RegionalPlus Wings Corp Air Do and Solaseed Air Skymark Airlines and StarFlyer It is located in Ōta Tokyo 15 kilometers 9 3 mi south of Tokyo Station The facility covers 1 522 hectares 3 761 acres of land 2 Tokyo International Airport東京国際空港Tōkyō Kokusai KukōIATA HNDICAO RJTTWMO 47671SummaryAirport typePublicOwner OperatorMinistry of Land Infrastructure Transport and TourismServesGreater Tokyo AreaLocationŌta Tokyo JapanOpened15 August 1931 92 years ago 1931 08 15 Hub forJapan AirlinesAll Nippon AirwaysSkymark AirlinesAir DoSolaseed AirStarFlyerElevation AMSL6 m 21 ftCoordinates35 33 12 N 139 46 52 E 35 55333 N 139 78111 E 35 55333 139 78111Websitewww wbr tokyo haneda wbr com wbr enMapsRJTTLocation in JapanShow map of TokyoRJTTRJTT Japan Show map of JapanRJTTRJTT Asia Show map of AsiaRunwaysDirection Length Surfacem ft16R 34L 3 000 9 843 Asphalt concrete16L 34R 3 360 11 024 Asphalt concrete04 22 2 500 8 202 Asphalt concrete05 23 2 500 8 202 Asphalt concreteStatistics 2022 Number of passengers64 203 600Sources 1 Haneda was the primary international airport serving Tokyo until 1978 from 1978 to 2010 Haneda handled almost all domestic flights to and from Tokyo as well as scheduled charter flights to a small number of major cities in East and Southeast Asia while Narita International Airport handled the vast majority of international flights from further locations In 2010 a dedicated international terminal currently Terminal 3 was opened at Haneda in conjunction with the completion of a fourth runway allowing long haul flights during night time hours 3 Haneda opened up to long haul service during the daytime in March 2014 with carriers offering nonstop service to 25 cities in 17 countries 4 Since the resuming of international flights airlines in Japan strategize Haneda as Hub of Japan providing connections between intercontinental flights with Japanese domestic flights while envisioning Narita as the Hub of Asia between intercontinental destinations with Asian destinations 5 The Japanese government encourages the use of Haneda for premium business routes and the use of Narita for leisure routes and by low cost carriers However the major full service carriers may have a choice to fly to both airports 6 Haneda handled 87 098 683 passengers in 2018 by passenger throughput it was the third busiest airport in Asia and the fourth busiest in the world but was not in the top ten in 2022 7 It is able to handle 90 million passengers per year following its expansion in 2018 With Haneda and Narita combined Tokyo has the third busiest city airport system in the world after London and New York In 2020 Haneda was named the second best airport after Singapore s Changi Airport 8 and the World s Best Domestic Airport 9 As of 2021 Haneda was rated by Skytrax as the second Best Airport in between Qatar s Hamad International Airport and Singapore s Changi Airport and maintaining its best Domestic Airport title from the previous year 10 11 Contents 1 History 1 1 Empire war era 1931 1945 1 2 U S occupation 1945 1952 1 3 International era 1952 1978 1 4 Domestic era 1978 2010 1 5 Expansion of international service 2010 2014 1 6 Future expansion plans since 2014 1 6 1 Haneda Airport Access Line 1 6 2 New road tunnel 2 Facilities 2 1 Terminals 2 1 1 Terminal 1 2 1 2 Terminal 2 2 1 3 Terminal 3 3 Airlines and destinations 3 1 Passenger 4 Statistics 4 1 Busiest domestic routes 2018 4 2 Number of landings 4 3 Number of passengers 4 4 Cargo volume tonnes 4 5 On time performance 5 Ground transportation 5 1 Rapid transit 5 1 1 Railways 5 1 2 Monorail 5 2 Road 5 3 Bus 5 4 Transfer to from Narita Airport 6 Accidents and incidents 7 References 8 External linksHistory editBefore the construction of Haneda Airport the area where Haneda Airport now sits was a prosperous resort centered around Anamori Inari Shrine and Tokyo s primary airport was Tachikawa Airfield It was the main operating base of Japan Air Transport then the country s flag carrier But as it was a military base and 35 kilometres 22 mi away from central Tokyo aviators in Tokyo used various beaches of Tokyo Bay as airstrips including beaches near the current site of Haneda Haneda was a town located on Tokyo Bay which merged into the Tokyo ward of Kamata in 1932 12 In 1930 the Japanese postal ministry purchased a 53 hectare 130 acre portion of reclaimed land from a private individual in order to construct an airport 13 Empire war era 1931 1945 edit nbsp Apron and runway at Haneda Airfield in c1930 nbsp Haneda Airfield in 1937Haneda Airfield 羽田飛行場 Haneda Hikōjō first opened in 1931 on a small piece of reclaimed land at the west end of today s airport complex A 300 metre 980 ft concrete runway a small airport terminal and 2 hangars were constructed The first flight from the airport on August 25 1931 carried a load of insects to Dalian 13 During the 1930s Haneda handled flights to destinations in Japan mainland Taiwan Korea both under Japanese rule and Manchuria ruled by Manchukuo 14 The major Japanese newspapers also built their first flight departments at Haneda during this time and Manchukuo National Airways began service between Haneda and Xinjing JAT was renamed Imperial Japanese Airways following its nationalization in 1938 13 Passenger and freight traffic grew dramatically in these early years In 1939 Haneda s first runway was extended to 800 metres 2 600 ft in length and a second 800 metre 2 600 ft runway was completed 15 The airport s size grew to 72 8 hectares 180 acres using land purchased by the postal ministry from a nearby exercise ground 13 During World War II both IJA and Haneda Airport shifted to almost exclusively military transport services Haneda Airport was also used by the Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service for flight training during the war 13 In the late 1930s the Tokyo government planned a new Tokyo Municipal Airport on an artificial island in Koto Ward At 251 hectares 620 acres the airport would have been five times the size of Haneda at the time and significantly larger than Tempelhof Airport in Berlin which was said to be the largest airport in the world at the time The airport plan was finalized in 1938 and work on the island began in 1939 for completion in 1941 but the project fell behind schedule due to resource constraints during World War II This plan was officially abandoned following the war as the Allied occupation authorities favored expanding Haneda rather than building a new airport the island was later expanded by dumping garbage into the bay and is now known as Yumenoshima 16 U S occupation 1945 1952 edit nbsp U S Air Force C 97 Stratofreighter at Haneda Army Air Base in 1952On September 12 1945 General Douglas MacArthur Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers and head of the Occupation of Japan following World War II ordered that Haneda be handed over to the occupation forces On the following day he took delivery of the airport which was renamed Haneda Army Air Base and ordered the eviction of many nearby residents in order to make room for various construction projects including extending one runway to 1 650 metres 5 413 ft and the other to 2 100 metres 6 890 ft On the 21st Anamori Inari Shrine and over 3 000 residents received orders to leave their homes within 48 hours Many resettled on the other side of a river in the Haneda district of Ota surrounding Anamoriinari Station and some still live in the area today 17 The expansion work commenced in October 1945 and was completed in June 1946 at which point the airport covered 257 4 hectares 636 acres Haneda AAF was designated as a port of entry to Japan 13 Haneda was mainly a military and civilian transportation base used by the U S Army and Air Force as a stop over for C 54 transport planes departing San Francisco en route to the Far East and returning flights A number of C 54s based at Haneda AFB participated in the Berlin Blockade airlift These planes were specially outfitted for hauling coal to German civilians Many of these planes were decommissioned after their participation due to coal dust contamination Several US Army or Air Force generals regularly parked their personal planes at Haneda while visiting Tokyo including General Ennis Whitehead During the Korean War Haneda was the main regional base for United States Navy flight nurses who evacuated patients from Korea to Haneda for treatment at military hospitals in Tokyo and Yokosuka 18 US military personnel based at Haneda were generally housed at the Washington Heights residential complex in central Tokyo now Yoyogi Park Haneda Air Force Base received its first international passenger flights in 1947 when Northwest Orient Airlines began DC 4 flights across the North Pacific to the United States and within Asia to China South Korea and the Philippines 19 Pan American World Airways made Haneda a stop on its round the world route later in 1947 with westbound DC 4 service to Shanghai Hong Kong Kolkata Karachi Damascus Istanbul London and New York and eastbound Constellation service to Wake Island Honolulu and San Francisco 20 The U S military gave part of the base back to Japan in 1952 this portion became known as Tokyo International Airport The US military maintained a base at Haneda until 1958 when the remainder of the property was returned to the Japanese government 13 International era 1952 1978 edit nbsp 1955 passenger terminal at Haneda nbsp Japan Airlines flight attendants in 1951Japan s flag carrier Japan Airlines began its first domestic operations from Haneda in 1951 For a few postwar years Tokyo International Airport did not have a passenger terminal building The Japan Airport Terminal Co Ltd TYO 9706 was founded in 1953 to develop the first passenger terminal which opened in 1955 An extension for international flights opened in 1963 21 European carriers began service to Haneda in the 1950s Air France arrived at Haneda for the first time in November 1952 22 BOAC de Havilland Comet flights to London via the southern route began in 1953 and SAS DC 7 flights to Copenhagen via Anchorage began in 1957 JAL and Aeroflot began cooperative service from Haneda to Moscow in 1967 Pan Am and Northwest Orient used Haneda as a hub The August 1957 Official Airline Guide shows 86 domestic and 8 international departures each week on Japan Air Lines Other international departures per week seven Civil Air Transport three Thai DC4s 2 Hong Kong Airways Viscounts and maybe three DC 6Bs two Air India and one QANTAS Northwest had 16 departures a week Pan Am had 12 and Canadian Pacific had four Air France three KLM three SAS five Swissair two and BOAC three As of 1966 the airport had three runways 15L 33R 10 335 by 200 feet 3 150 m 61 m 15R 33L 9 850 by 180 feet 3 002 m 55 m and 4 22 5 150 by 150 feet 1 570 m 46 m 23 nbsp An aerial view of Haneda in 1965 showing three runway configuration prior to the extension of Runway 4 22 and partial closure of Runway 15R 33LThe Tokyo Monorail opened between Haneda and central Tokyo in 1964 in time for the Tokyo Olympics During 1964 Japan lifted travel restrictions on its citizens causing passenger traffic at the airport to swell 21 The introduction of jet aircraft in the 1960s followed by the Boeing 747 in 1970 also required various facility improvements at Haneda including extending Runway 4 22 over the water and repurposing part of Runway 15R 33L as an airport apron 13 A new international arrivals facility opened in June 1970 24 Around 1961 the government began considering further expansion of Haneda with a third runway and additional apron space but forecast that the expansion would only meet capacity requirements for about ten years following completion In 1966 the government decided to build a new airport for international flights In 1978 Narita Airport opened taking over almost all international service in the Greater Tokyo Area and Haneda became a domestic airport 13 Domestic era 1978 2010 edit nbsp An aerial view of Haneda in 1984 showing the 1970 terminal on the west side of the field the site of which is now occupied by Terminal 3 The large area under reclamation to the east would become the site of today s Terminal 1 and Terminal 2 While most international flights moved from Haneda to Narita in 1978 airlines of the Republic of China Taiwan continued to use Haneda Airport for many years due to the ongoing political conflict between Taiwan and the People s Republic of China mainland China China Airlines served Taipei and Honolulu from Haneda nbsp Terminal 1 completed in 1993 now houses Japan s flag carrier Japan Airlines and Skymark nbsp Terminal 2 completed in 2004 now houses All Nippon Airways StarFlyer Skynet Asia and Air Do The Transport Ministry released an expansion plan for Haneda in 1983 under which it would be expanded onto new landfill in Tokyo Bay with the aim of increasing capacity reducing noise and making use of the large amount of garbage generated by Tokyo In July 1988 a new 3 000 metre 9 800 ft runway opened on the landfill In September 1993 the old airport terminal was replaced by a new West Passenger Terminal nicknamed Big Bird which was built farther out on the landfill New runways 16L 34R parallel and 4 22 cross were completed in March 1997 and March 2000 respectively 13 A new international terminal opened next to the domestic terminal in March 1998 Taiwan s second major airline EVA Air joined CAL at Haneda in 1999 All Taiwan flights were moved to Narita in 2002 and Haneda Honolulu services ceased In 2003 JAL ANA Korean Air and Asiana began service to Gimpo Airport in Seoul providing a scheduled charter city to city service In 2004 Terminal 2 opened at Haneda for ANA and Air Do the 1993 terminal now known as Terminal 1 became the base for JAL Skymark and Skynet Asia Airways and JAL expanded its footprint into the northern wing of the terminal 25 In October 2006 Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao reached an informal agreement to launch bilateral talks regarding an additional city to city service between Haneda and Shanghai Hongqiao International Airport 26 On 25 June 2007 the two governments concluded an agreement allowing for the Haneda Hongqiao service to commence from October 2007 27 Since August 2015 Haneda also began flight services to Shanghai s other airport Shanghai Pudong International Airport where most flights operate from Narita International Airport which means there is no longer a city to city service between Tokyo and Hongqiao Airport as all flights from Haneda and Shanghai are focused at Pudong Airport In December 2007 Japan and the People s Republic of China reached a basic agreement on opening charter services between Haneda and Beijing Nanyuan Airport However because of difficulties in negotiating with the Chinese military operators of Nanyuan the first charter flights in August 2008 coinciding with the 2008 Summer Olympics used Beijing Capital International Airport instead as did subsequent scheduled charters to Beijing 28 In June 2007 Haneda gained the right to host international flights that depart between 8 30 pm and 11 00 pm and arrive between 6 am and 8 30 am The airport allows departures and arrivals between 11 pm and 6 am as Narita Airport is closed during these hours 29 30 Macquarie Bank and Macquarie Airports owned a 19 9 stake in Japan Airport Terminal until 2009 when they sold their stake back to the company 31 Expansion of international service 2010 2014 edit nbsp Terminal 3 opened in October 2010A third terminal for international flights was completed in October 2010 The cost to construct the five story terminal building and attached 2 300 car parking deck was covered by a private finance initiative process revenues from duty free concessions and a facility use charge of 2 000 per passenger Both the Tokyo Monorail and the Keikyu Airport Line added stops at the new terminal and an international air cargo facility was constructed nearby 32 33 The fourth runway 05 23 which is called D Runway 34 was also completed in 2010 having been constructed via land reclamation to the south of the existing airfield This runway was designed to increase Haneda s operational capacity from 285 000 movements to 407 000 movements per year permitting increased frequencies on existing routes as well as routes to new destinations 32 In particular Haneda would offer additional slots to handle 60 000 overseas flights a year 30 000 during the day and 30 000 during late night and early morning hours 35 36 In May 2008 the Japanese Ministry of Transport announced that international flights would be allowed between Haneda and any overseas destination provided that such flights must operate between 11 pm and 7 am 35 The Ministry of Transport originally planned to allocate a number of the newly available landing slots to international flights of 1 947 kilometres 1 210 mi or less the distance to Ishigaki the longest domestic flight operating from Haneda 32 30 000 annual international slots became available upon the opening of the International Terminal current Terminal 3 in October 2010 and were allocated to government authorities in several countries for further allocation to airlines While service to Seoul Taipei Shanghai and other regional destinations continued to be allowed during the day long haul services were initially limited to overnight hours Many long haul services from Haneda struggled such as British Airways service to London temporarily suspended and then restored on a less than daily basis before becoming a daily daytime service and Air Canada service to Vancouver announced but never commenced until Air Canada began a code share on ANA s Haneda Vancouver flight Delta Air Lines replaced its initial service to Detroit with service to Seattle before cancelling the service entirely in favor of the daytime services to Los Angeles and Minneapolis although both the Detroit and the Seattle services have since resumed as daytime services 37 In October 2013 American Airlines announced the cancellation of its service between Haneda and New York JFK stating that it was quite unprofitable owing to the schedule constraints at Haneda 38 nbsp Interior of the International Terminal Terminal 3 departure hall in 2020Haneda Airport s new International Terminal has received numerous complaints from passengers using it during night hours One of the complaints is the lack of amenities available in the building as most restaurants and shops are closed at night Another complaint is that there is no affordable public transportation at night operating out of the terminals The Keikyu Airport Line Tokyo Monorail and most bus operators stop running services out of Haneda by midnight and so passengers landing at night are forced to go by car or taxi to their destination A Haneda spokesperson said that they would work with transportation operators and the government to improve the situation 39 Daytime international slots were allocated in October 2013 In the allocation among Japanese carriers All Nippon Airways argued that it should receive more international slots than Japan Airlines due to JAL s recent government supported bankruptcy restructuring and ultimately won 11 daily slots to JAL s five 37 Nine more daytime slot pairs were allocated for service to the United States in February 2016 They were intended to be allocated along with the other daytime slots but allocation talks were stalled in 2014 leading the Japanese government to release these slots for charter services to other countries 40 The new daytime slots led to increased flight capacity between Tokyo and many Asian markets but did not have a major effect on capacity between Japan and Europe as several carriers simply transferred flights from Narita to Haneda most notably ANA and Lufthansa services to Germany which almost entirely shifted to Haneda 41 In an effort to combat this effect the Ministry of Land Infrastructure and Transport gave non binding guidance to airlines that any new route at Haneda should not lead to the discontinuation of a route at Narita although it was possible for airlines to meet this requirement through cooperation with a code sharing partner for instance ANA moved its London flight to Haneda while maintaining a code share on Virgin Atlantic s Narita London flight 42 An expansion of the new international terminal was completed at the end of March 2014 The expansion includes a new 8 gate pier to the northwest of the existing terminal an expansion of the adjacent apron with four new aircraft parking spots a hotel inside the international terminal and expanded check in customs immigration quarantine and baggage claim areas 43 In addition to its international slot restrictions Haneda remains subject to domestic slot restrictions domestic slots are reallocated by MLIT every five years and each slot is valued at 2 3 billion yen in annual income 44 Future expansion plans since 2014 edit Haneda Airport Access Line edit See also Haneda Airport Access Line Following Tokyo s winning bid for the 2020 Summer Olympics the Japanese government plans to increase the combined slot capacity of Haneda and Narita and to construct a new railway line linking from Haneda Airport to Tokyo Station in approximately 18 minutes 45 JR East has considered extending an existing freight line from Tamachi Station on the Yamanote Line to create a third rail link to the airport 46 which may potentially be connected to the Ueno Tokyo Line to offer a through connection to Ueno and points on the Utsunomiya Line and Takasaki Line 47 Although there had been discussion of completing this extension prior to the 2020 Olympics the plan was indefinitely shelved in 2015 48 However in April 2023 JR East announced that it would build the rail line from Haneda Airport at a location between the existing terminals to Tamachi Station 49 The construction groundbreaking ceremony is expected to take place in June 2023 with construction lasting until 2031 49 Construction of the line officially began on 2 June 2023 with the aforementioned groundbreaking ceremony going ahead as scheduled 50 51 New road tunnel edit The Ministry of Land Infrastructure and Transport is planning a new road tunnel between the domestic and international terminals in order to shorten minimum connecting times between the terminals from the current 60 80 minutes 52 Facilities edit nbsp Airport LayoutHaneda has four runways arranged in two parallel pairs Due to the airport s position between Yokota Air Base and NAF Atsugi to the west Narita International Airport to the east and densely populated areas of Tokyo and Kanagawa to the immediate north and west most Haneda flights arrive and depart using circular routes over Tokyo Bay During north wind operations 60 of the time aircraft arrive from the south on 34L and 34R and depart to the east from 34R and 05 During south wind operations 40 of the time aircraft depart to the south from 16L and 16R as well as 22 between 15 00 and 18 00 and arrive either on a high angle approach from the north on 16L and 16R over west central Tokyo 15 00 to 18 00 only or from the east on 22 and 23 over Tokyo Bay all other times 53 nbsp A wide view of Haneda Airport s facilities and terminals JAL and ANA cargo centers are on the far left To the immediate right of the cargo centers is the Japan Meteorological Agency s Tokyo Airport Weather Observatory To its right is the Tokyo International Airport Offices Building Two and the tall white tower to its right is the airport s control tower The Number Two Parking Area is to the right of the control tower and Terminal 1 is to the right of the parking area Terminal 2 is behind Terminal 1 and cannot be seen from this angle To the right of Terminal 1 are JAL s maintenance centers and on the far right of the photo are the international cargo facility and the international terminal Terminals edit Haneda Airport has three passenger terminals Terminal 1 and 2 are connected by an underground walkway A free inter terminal shuttle bus connects all terminals on the landside Route A runs between Terminal 1 and 2 every four minutes and Route B runs oneway from Terminal 3 2 1 then back to Terminal 3 every four minutes All three passenger terminals are managed and operated by private companies Haneda Airport is open 24 hours although Terminal 1 and the domestic flight areas of Terminal 2 are only open from 5 00 am to 12 00 am Terminal 3 and the international flight area of Terminal 2 are open 24 hours a day Terminal 1 and 2 are managed by Japan Airport Terminal Co Ltd 日本空港ビルディング株式会社 Nippon Kukō Birudingu Kabushikigaisha while Terminal 3 is managed by Tokyo International Air Terminal Corporation 東京国際空港ターミナル株式会社 Tōkyō Kokusai Kukō Taminaru Kabushikigaisha The critical facilities of the airport such as runways taxiways and aprons are managed by Ministry of Land Infrastructure Transport and Tourism 54 Terminal 1 edit Terminal 1 called Big Bird opened in 1993 replacing the smaller 1970 terminal complex It is exclusively used for domestic flights within Japan and is served by Japan Airlines Skymark Airlines and StarFlyer s routes The linear building features a six story restaurant shopping area and conference rooms in its center section and a large rooftop observation deck with open air rooftop cafe The terminal has gates 1 through 24 assigned for jet bridges and gates 31 40 and 84 90 assigned for ground boarding by bus Terminal 1 nbsp Terminal 1 nbsp Departure lounge south nbsp Market place nbsp Concourse nbsp Control tower Terminal 2 edit Terminal 2 opened on December 1 2004 55 The construction of Terminal 2 was financed by levying a 170 from 1 April 2011 passenger service facility charge on tickets the first domestic Passenger Service Facilities Charge PSFC in Japan Terminal 2 is served by All Nippon Airways Air Do and Solaseed Air for their domestic flights On March 29 2020 some international flights operated by All Nippon Airways were relocated to Terminal 2 after the addition of international departure halls and CIQ facilities Customs Immigration Quarantine in preparation for 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo However the international departures and check in hall was closed indefinitely on April 11 2020 less than two weeks after its opening due to the COVID 19 pandemic 56 International flights at Terminal 2 resumed from 19 July 2023 with the easing of COVID 19 restrictions and border controls 57 The terminal features an open air rooftop restaurant a six story shopping area with restaurants 58 and the 387 room Haneda Excel Hotel Tokyu The terminal has gates 51 through 73 assigned with jet bridges gates 51 to 65 for domestic flights gates 66 to 70 for domestic or international flights gates 71 to 73 for international flights 59 gates 46 48 in satellite and gates 500 through 511 for domestic flights and gates 700 through 702 for international flights assigned for ground boarding by bus Terminal 2 nbsp Terminal 2 nbsp Departure lounge nbsp Market place nbsp Observation deck Terminal 3 edit Terminal 3 formerly known as the International Terminal opened on October 21 2010 replacing the much smaller 1998 International Terminal adjacent to Terminal 2 The terminal serves most of the airport s international flights with the exception of some All Nippon Airways flights departing from Terminal 2 The first two long haul flights were scheduled to depart after midnight on October 31 2010 from the new terminal but both flights departed ahead of schedule before midnight on October 30 60 Terminal 3 has airline lounges operated by oneworld members Japan Airlines amp Cathay Pacific Star Alliance member All Nippon Airways 61 and SkyTeam member Delta Air Lines 62 The terminal has gates 105 114 and 140 149 assigned with jet bridges and gates 131 through 139 assigned for ground boarding by bus The International Terminal was renamed to Terminal 3 on March 14 2020 as Terminal 2 began handling some international flights operated by All Nippon Airways from March 29 2020 63 Terminal 3 nbsp Terminal 3 nbsp Departure level nbsp Departure counters nbsp Check in area nbsp Edo Koji shopping areaAirlines and destinations editPassenger edit AirlinesDestinationsAirAsia XKuala Lumpur InternationalAir CanadaToronto PearsonAir ChinaBeijing Capital 64 Air DoAsahikawa Hakodate Kushiro Memanbetsu Obihiro Sapporo ChitoseAir FranceParis Charles de Gaulle 65 All Nippon AirwaysAkita Bangkok Suvarnabhumi Beijing Capital Chicago O Hare Delhi 66 Frankfurt Fukuoka Guangzhou Hachijojima Hakodate Hiroshima Ho Chi Minh City 66 Hong Kong Honolulu Houston Intercontinental 67 Ishigaki Iwakuni Iwami Jakarta Soekarno Hatta Kagoshima Kobe Kōchi Ryoma Komatsu Kuala Lumpur International Kumamoto Kushiro London Heathrow Los Angeles Manila Matsuyama Miyako Miyazaki Monbetsu Munich 68 69 Nagasaki Naha Nakashibetsu New York JFK Odate Noshiro Ōita Okayama Osaka Itami Osaka Kansai Paris Charles de Gaulle Qingdao 66 Saga San Francisco 70 Sapporo Chitose Seattle Tacoma 66 Seoul Gimpo Shanghai Hongqiao Shanghai Pudong Shenzhen 71 Shonai Singapore Sydney Taipei Songshan Takamatsu Tokushima Tottori Toyama Ube Vancouver Vienna resumes 1 August 2024 72 Wajima Wakkanai Washington Dulles 67 YonagoAmerican AirlinesDallas Fort Worth Los AngelesANA WingsNagoya CentrairAsiana AirlinesSeoul Gimpo 73 Seoul Incheon 74 British AirwaysLondon Heathrow 75 Cathay PacificHong KongChina AirlinesTaipei SongshanChina Eastern AirlinesBeijing Daxing 76 Shanghai Hongqiao 64 Shanghai Pudong 77 China Southern AirlinesBeijing Daxing 78 Guangzhou 79 Delta Air LinesAtlanta 80 Detroit Honolulu 81 Los Angeles 82 Minneapolis St Paul 83 Seattle Tacoma 84 EmiratesDubai International 85 EVA AirTaipei SongshanFinnairHelsinki 86 Garuda IndonesiaJakarta Soekarno HattaHawaiian AirlinesHonolulu 87 Kailua Kona resumes 1 March 2024 88 HK ExpressHong Kong 89 ITA AirwaysRome Fiumicino 90 Japan AirlinesAkita Amami Ōshima Aomori Asahikawa Bangkok Suvarnabhumi Beijing Capital Chicago O Hare 91 Dalian 92 Dallas Fort Worth 91 Delhi 93 Doha begins 31 March 2024 94 Fukuoka Guangzhou Hakodate Helsinki 95 Hiroshima Ho Chi Minh City Hong Kong Honolulu 91 Ishigaki Izumo Kagoshima Kitakyushu Kōchi Ryoma Komatsu Kumamoto Kushiro London Heathrow Los Angeles 91 Manila Matsuyama Memanbetsu Misawa Miyako Miyazaki Nagasaki Nagoya Centrair Naha New York JFK Obihiro Ōita Okayama Osaka Itami Osaka Kansai Paris Charles de Gaulle San Francisco Sapporo Chitose Seoul Gimpo Shanghai Hongqiao Shanghai Pudong Shirahama Singapore Sydney 95 Taipei Songshan Takamatsu Tokushima Ube YamagataJuneyao AirShanghai PudongKorean AirSeoul Gimpo 96 Seoul Incheon 74 LufthansaFrankfurt MunichMalaysia AirlinesKuala Lumpur International 97 PeachSeoul Incheon Shanghai Pudong 98 Taipei TaoyuanPhilippine AirlinesManilaQantasSydney 99 Qatar AirwaysDoha ends 30 March 2024 100 101 Scandinavian AirlinesCopenhagen 102 Shanghai AirlinesShanghai Hongqiao 103 Shanghai PudongSingapore AirlinesSingaporeSkymark AirlinesFukuoka Kagoshima Kobe Naha Sapporo Chitose Shimojishima 104 Solaseed AirKagoshima Kumamoto Miyazaki Nagasaki Naha ŌitaSpring AirlinesShanghai Pudong 105 StarFlyerFukuoka Kitakyushu Osaka Kansai UbeThai Airways InternationalBangkok SuvarnabhumiTianjin AirlinesTianjin 64 Tigerair TaiwanTaipei TaoyuanTurkish AirlinesIstanbul 106 United AirlinesChicago O Hare Los Angeles Newark San Francisco Washington DullesVietJet AirDa Nang Ho Chi Minh City 107 Vietnam AirlinesHanoiVirgin AustraliaCairns 108 Statistics edit nbsp Multiple Japan Airlines aircraft parked at Terminal 1Source Japanese Ministry of Land Infrastructure Transport and Tourism 109 110 111 Busiest domestic routes 2018 edit Rank Airport Passengers1 Sapporo Chitose 9 007 3722 Fukuoka 8 647 3863 Naha 5 919 3654 Osaka Itami 5 496 9825 Kagoshima 2 506 2766 Kumamoto 1 971 8917 Hiroshima 1 878 2868 Nagasaki 1 764 8709 Matsuyama 1 563 87010 Miyazaki 1 423 20011 Osaka Kansai 1 258 67512 Takamatsu 1 252 568Number of landings edit 50 000 100 000 150 000 200 000 250 000 300 000 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Domestic International 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 HND airport See Wikidata query Cargo volume tonnes edit 250 000 500 000 750 000 1 000 000 1 250 000 1 500 000 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Domestic International On time performance edit In 2022 Haneda Airport was the most on time international airport with the fewest delays Flights departing Haneda had a 90 3 on time departure rate across 373 264 total flights according to aviation analytics firm Cirium 112 Ground transportation editRapid transit edit nbsp Tokyo monorail Terminal 3 Station nbsp Keikyu Airport Line stationHaneda Airport is served by the Keikyu Airport Line and Tokyo Monorail In addition East Japan Railway Company JR East has proposed building a new Haneda Airport Access Line connecting directly to central Tokyo by 2029 For both the monorail and Keikyu railway the Terminal 3 Station was renamed from International Terminal Station in March 2020 113 The Keikyu Domestic Terminal station was renamed to the Terminal 1 2 Station Railways edit Keikyu operates a single station between the Terminals 1 and 2 Terminal 1 2 Station and a stop at Terminal 3 Airport Limited Express trains operated by Keikyu make the non stop run from Haneda Airport to Shinagawa Station in 11 minutes In addition to Shinagawa certain through services operate on the Toei Asakusa Line which make several stops in eastern Tokyo Some Keikyu trains also run through to the Keisei Oshiage Line and Keisei Main Line forming a rail link to Narita International Airport Monorail edit The monorail has three dedicated stations at the Terminal 1 Terminal 2 and Terminal 3 Haneda Express trains make the non stop run from Haneda Airport to Hamamatsuchō Station in approximately 18 to 19 minutes where passengers can connect to the Yamanote Line to reach other points in Tokyo or Keihin Tohoku Line to Saitama and have a second access option to Narita Airport via the Narita Express or Sōbu Line Rapid trains at Tokyo Station Hamamatsuchō Station is also located adjacent to the Toei Ōedo Line Daimon station Road edit The airport is bisected by the Shuto Expressway Bayshore Route and Japan National Route 357 while Shuto Expressway Route 1 and Tokyo Metropolitan Route 311 Kampachi dori Ave runs on the western perimeter Tamagawa Sky Bridge connects the airport with Japan National Route 409 and Shuto Expressway Route K6 to the southwest across Tama River The airport has five parkades with P1 and P2 parkades serving Terminal 1 P3 and P4 serving Terminal 2 and P5 serving Terminal 3 Bus edit Scheduled bus service to various points in the Kanto region is provided by Airport Transport Service Airport Limousine and Keihin Kyuko Bus Tokyo City Air Terminal Shinjuku Expressway Bus Terminal and Yokohama City Air Terminal are major limousine bus terminals Emirates operates bus services to Shinagawa Station and Tokyo Station 114 Transfer to from Narita Airport edit Haneda Airport is approximately 1 5 to 2 hours from Narita Airport by rail or bus Keisei runs direct suburban trains called Access Express between Haneda and Narita in 93 minutes for 1800 as of February 2019 115 There are also direct buses between the airports operated by Airport Limousine Bus The journey takes 65 85 minutes or longer depending on traffic 116 Accidents and incidents editAugust 24 1938 two civilian aircraft ja originating from Haneda one operated by Japan Air Transport and another by Japan Flight School collided into each other mid air All 5 crews of both aircraft died as well as 80 people on the ground in the Ōmori area of Tokyo In the span of a month in 1966 three accidents occurred at or on flights inbound to or outbound from Haneda February 4 1966 All Nippon Airways Flight 60 a Boeing 727 81 crashed into Tokyo Bay about 10 4 kilometres 6 5 mi from Haneda in clear weather conditions while on an evening approach All 133 passengers and crew were killed The accident held the death toll record for a single plane accident until 1969 March 4 1966 Canadian Pacific Air Lines Flight 402 a Douglas DC 8 43 registered CF CPK descended below the glide path and struck the approach lights and a seawall during a night landing attempt in poor visibility The flight had departed Hong Kong Kai Tak Airport and had almost diverted to Taipei due to the poor weather at Haneda Of the 62 passengers and 10 crew only 8 passengers survived On March 5 1966 less than 24 hours after the Canadian Pacific crash BOAC Flight 911 a Boeing 707 436 registered G APFE broke up in flight en route from Haneda Airport to Hong Kong Kai Tak Airport on a segment of an around the world flight The bad weather that had caused the Canadian Pacific crash the day before also caused exceptionally strong winds around Mt Fuji and the BOAC jet encountered severe turbulence that caused the aircraft to break up in mid air near the city of Gotemba Shizuoka Prefecture at an altitude of 16 000 feet 4 900 m killing all 113 passengers and 11 crew The debris field was over 16 kilometres 10 mi long Although there was not a cockpit voice recorder on this aircraft or any distress calls made by the crew the investigators did find an 8mm film shot by one of the passengers that when developed confirmed the accident was consistent with an in flight breakup and loss of control due to severe turbulence There is a famous photo of the BOAC plane taxiing past the still smouldering wreckage of the Canadian Pacific DC 8 as it taxied out to the runway for its last ever takeoff August 26 1966 A Japan Air Lines Convair 880 leased from Japan Domestic Airlines on a training flight crashed after takeoff when after the nose lifted off the aircraft yawed to the left At 1 600 metres 5 200 ft after the plane went off the runway and all the engines separated as well as the nose and left main gear The aircraft caught fire All five occupants died Cause of left yaw unknown 117 March 17 1977 All Nippon Airways Flight 817 ja a Boeing 727 81 flight departing from Haneda to Sendai was hijacked by a yakuza shortly after takeoff The aircraft quickly returned to the airport due to the hijacker firing his pistol The hijacker locked himself inside the aircraft toilet before killing himself February 9 1982 Japan Airlines Flight 350 a McDonnell Douglas DC 8 61 crashed on approach in shallow water 300 metres 980 ft 330 yd short of the runway when the captain experiencing some form of a mental aberration deliberately engaged the thrust reversers for two of the four engines Twenty four passengers were killed August 12 1985 Japan Airlines Flight 123 a Boeing 747SR lost control and suffered rapid decompression 12 minutes after takeoff due to improper maintenance leading to the aircraft having a fatal collision with Mount Takamagahara Out of all 524 people on the flight only four survived the crash One of the casualties was famous Japanese singer Kyu Sakamoto It is the deadliest single aircraft accident in aviation history July 23 1999 All Nippon Airways Flight 61 was hijacked shortly after takeoff The hijacker killed the captain before he was subdued the aircraft landed safely May 27 2016 Korean Air Flight 2708 a Boeing 777 3B5 bound for Gimpo Airport suffered an engine fire as it was taking off Haneda s Runway 34R The takeoff was aborted and all passengers and crew aboard were swiftly evacuated Investigations later determined the cause of the engine fire as an uncontained engine failure caused by maintenance crew oversight January 2 2024 a runway collision occurred between an Airbus A350 941 from Sapporo Chitose and a Japan Coast Guard De Havilland Canada DHC 8 315 All 379 occupants aboard the Japan Airlines flight were evacuated while five of the six occupants aboard the Coast Guard aircraft were killed Both aircraft were destroyed 118 References edit stats Haneda Airport Facts dobohaku com August 2016 Retrieved October 17 2023 Tokyo Haneda s new runway and terminal welcome more international services almost 50 domestic routes served anna aero airline route news amp analysis 20 October 2010 Archived from the original on 7 November 2010 Retrieved 4 November 2010 羽田空港の国際線拡大 欧州 東南アジア便が就航 Nihon Keizai Shimbun 30 March 2014 Archived from the original on 15 December 2018 Retrieved 31 March 2014 藤中 潤 2019 11 20 羽田発着枠拡大 ハワイ路線移管のJALが意識するANAの好調 in Japanese Nikkei Business Peach to offer Tokyo Taipei service out of Haneda Airport Nikkei 16 January 2015 Archived from the original on 20 January 2015 Retrieved 19 January 2015 The transport ministry s strategy has been to steer budget carriers used mainly for leisure travel toward Narita Airport Major airlines used chiefly for business trips are encouraged to fly out of Haneda ACI reveals the world s busiest passenger and cargo airports 2018 Airports Council International 9 April 2018 Archived from the original on 23 April 2019 2022 data The World s Best Airports in 2020 are announced Skytrax 2020 05 11 Archived from the original on 2020 05 22 Retrieved 2020 05 15 Cripps Karla The world s best airports for 2020 according to Skytrax CNN Archived from the original on 2020 05 14 Retrieved 2020 05 15 The World s Best Airports in 2020 are announced Skytrax 2021 08 05 Archived from the original on 2021 09 08 Retrieved 2021 09 08 Cripps Karla The world s best airports for 2020 according to Skytrax CNN Archived from the original on 2020 05 14 Retrieved 2020 05 15 大田区ホームページ 大田区のプロフィール www city ota tokyo jp in Japanese Archived from the original on 2014 07 01 Retrieved 2017 03 15 a b c d e f g h i j Imoto Keisuke 羽田空港の歴史 Japan Science and Technology Agency Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 28 November 2013 1938 JAT timetable Archived from the original on 2013 12 03 Retrieved 2013 10 11 羽田空港の歴史 in Japanese Ministry of Land Infrastructure Transport and Tourism Archived from the original on 2007 09 15 Retrieved 2020 01 13 東京 夢の島 名前の由来は海水浴場 空港計画も The Nikkei 15 November 2013 Archived from the original on 16 November 2013 Retrieved 15 November 2013 喜多 祐介 13 August 2012 羽田空港 米軍基地の記憶 NHK Archived from 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Tokyo Shanghai shuttle flights Archived 2007 03 11 at the Wayback Machine Kyodo October 10 2006 Shuttle flights to connect Tokyo Shanghai in October Archived 2007 06 28 at the Wayback Machine Channel NewsAsia 25 June 2007 国交省 羽田 北京間にチャーター便 北京五輪の8月に Mainichi Shimbun in Japanese 2008 06 12 permanent dead link Boeing Narita Airport Noise Regulations Archived from the original on May 23 2009 ANA to start Haneda Hong Kong route in April Archived 2008 01 24 at the Wayback Machine Daily Yomiuri Online Japan Airport Rises on Plan to Buy Macquarie Shares Bloomberg News May 20 2009 a b c 羽田空港再拡張及び首都圏第3空港について in Japanese Ministry of Land Infrastructure and Transport Archived from the original on 2007 02 07 Retrieved 2007 03 14 Nagata Kazuaki Haneda new old kid on the block Archived 2010 10 23 at the Wayback Machine Japan Times 20 October 2010 p 3 Hnneda D Runway Report No 5 To The Nex Stage Archived 2011 10 08 at the Wayback Machine Haneda Airport Construction Office MLIT Japan September 2009 a b Japan to Double Haneda Airport Overseas Flight Slots Bloomberg net May 20 2008 International Haneda flights to double by 10 Archived 2009 09 15 at the Wayback Machine The Japan Times May 21 2008 a b CAPA Profiles Japan awards international Tokyo Haneda Airport slots but Narita Airport remains the main hub CAPA 9 October 2013 Archived from the original on 9 October 2013 Retrieved 21 October 2013 Mutzabaugh Ben 18 October 2013 AA to drop JFK Haneda route juggle Heathrow flights USA Today Archived from the original on 15 November 2013 Retrieved 21 October 2013 Fukada Takahiro 7 January 2011 Haneda s nighttime services falling short with travelers The Japan Times Retrieved 7 January 2011 Gov t to give slots to int l charter flights at Haneda airport Kyodo News 7 January 2014 Archived from the original on 17 January 2014 Retrieved 15 January 2014 Tokyo Haneda slot allocations fail to generate new flights as Europeans replace Narita operations CAPA Archived from the original on 21 March 2015 Retrieved 29 December 2014 Watanabe Jun 3 October 2014 Expanded Haneda slots creates problem for Narita airlines Nikkei Asian Review Archived from the original on 27 October 2014 Retrieved 29 December 2014 報道発表資料 東京国際空港国際線旅客ターミナル拡張について 国土交通省 in Japanese Ministry of Land Infrastructure Transport and Tourism Archived from the original on 8 October 2014 Retrieved 4 June 2015 スカイマークに羽田36枠 国交省が発表 The Nikkei 26 December 2014 Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 29 December 2014 羽田 成田発着を拡大 五輪へインフラ整備急ぐ The Nikkei 10 September 2013 Archived from the original on 11 September 2013 Retrieved 10 September 2013 羽田 都心の新路線 JR東日本検討 五輪で利用増予想 Asahi Shimbun in Japanese 9 November 2013 Archived from the original on 9 November 2013 Retrieved 11 November 2013 JR東 羽田新路線を北関東と直結 東北縦貫線との接続検討 SankeiBiz in Japanese 10 January 2014 Archived from the original on 10 January 2014 Retrieved 17 January 2014 東京五輪 羽田への鉄道新線はなし 国交省 既存路線で対応 Nihon Keizai Shimbun 1 July 2015 Archived from the original on 1 July 2015 Retrieved 2 July 2015 a b JR East pushes back planned opening of new Haneda Airport line by two years The Japan Times 5 April 2023 Archived from the original on 5 April 2023 Retrieved 5 April 2023 羽田空港アクセス線 起工式 東京 羽田が18分 31年度開業へ 朝日新聞デジタル Haneda Airport Access Line Groundbreaking Ceremony Tokyo to Haneda Airport in 18 minutes with a 2031 completion Asahi Shimbun Digital in Japanese 2 June 2023 Archived from the original on 2 June 2023 Retrieved 3 June 2023 JR東日本 羽田空港アクセス線の起工式 31年度開業 JR East groundbreaking ceremony for Haneda Airport access line services to begin in 2031 Nihon Keizai Shimbun Online in Japanese 2 June 2023 Archived from the original on 2 June 2023 Retrieved 3 June 2023 羽田 国内 国際線をトンネル接続 乗り継ぎ改善 The Nikkei 22 September 2013 Archived from the original on 23 September 2013 Retrieved 24 September 2013 Haneda Airport for Tomorrow PDF Ministry of Land Infrastructure and Transport Retrieved 2023 12 17 Case Study on Commercialization Privatization and Economic Oversight of Airports and Air Navigation Services Providers Archived 2014 08 11 at the Wayback Machine Air Transport Bureau Economic Analysis and Policy EAP Section ICAO 31 January 2012 Haneda Airport History Enjoy Haneda Airport Haneda Airport Domestic Terminal www tokyo airport bldg co jp Archived from the original on 2018 04 23 Retrieved 2018 04 22 羽田空港 第2ターミナル国際線施設閉鎖へ 減便相次ぎ NHK News Web in Japanese NHK 2020 04 10 Archived from the original on 2021 02 01 Retrieved 2021 01 28 Terminal 2 area for international flights to reopen at Haneda The Asahi Shimbun 2023 05 23 Retrieved 2023 05 28 Tokyo International Haneda Airport terminal 2 Interactive Google Street View photo and map Geographic org streetview Archived from the original on 2016 05 08 Retrieved 2016 05 02 3F T2 Terminal 2 Floor Guide Haneda Airport Passenger Terminal Haneda Airport Passenger Terminal Blogs Archived from the original on 18 May 2013 Retrieved 4 June 2015 Free Lounges Pay Lounges and Conference Rooms Tokyo International Air Terminal Corporation Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 30 November 2015 Newest Delta Sky Club brings signature lounge experience to Haneda Airport Delta Air Lines 29 July 2022 Retrieved 29 July 2022 Notice on Terminal Name Change and Terminal 2 International Flight Launch 14 March 2020 Archived from the original on 20 March 2020 Retrieved 5 August 2019 a b c Mainland Chinese Carriers N23 Japan Operation 02APR23 Aeroroutes Retrieved 4 April 2023 Liu Jim Air France July October 2020 Intercontinetnal network as of 12JUL20 Airlineroute Archived from the original on 15 July 2020 Retrieved 14 July 2020 a b c d ANA to Elevate the Global Network by Adding 5 Cities to its International Service Press Release ANA Group Corp s Information Archived from the original on 2021 12 31 Retrieved 2019 11 22 a b Airoldi Donna August 30 2022 ANA to resume expand select U S routes Business Travel News Secaucus Northstar Travel Group Retrieved August 30 2022 ANA connects Tokyo with Munich again in German ANA To Resume Brussels And Munich Services Liu Jim ANA S20 International service changes as of 10FEB20 Routesonline Archived from the original on 13 February 2020 Retrieved 11 February 2020 ANA 2Q23 Mainland China Service Restorations 24APR23 Aeroroutes Retrieved 25 April 2023 ANA connects Tokyo with Vienna again PDF Liu Jim 11 August 2022 Asiana Airlines September 2022 Japan Operation Changes a b Korean Air Asiana Airlines Resumes Seoul Incheon Tokyo Haneda Route in NS23 Aeroroutes Retrieved 28 February 2023 Joe Ellison 2022 08 26 British Airways to restart Heathrow to Tokyo flights from November The Points Guy UK London Red Ventures Europe Retrieved 2022 08 30 China Eastern Adds Beijing Tokyo Service From Dec 2023 Aeroroutes Retrieved 3 November 2023 东航7月国际及地区航班计划出炉 Retrieved 10 July 2023 China Southern Adds Beijing Tokyo Service From May 2023 Aeroroutes Retrieved 21 April 2023 Mainland Chinese Carriers NS23 International Regional Network 23APR23 Aeroroutes Retrieved 24 April 2023 Liu Jim Delta NS20 Inter continental operations as of 05JUL20 Airlineroute Archived from the original on 8 July 2020 Retrieved 10 July 2020 Delta Air Lines to join competition on Honolulu Tokyo Haneda route Aviation Week August 30 2023 Retrieved August 30 2023 Silk Robert August 16 2022 Delta is restarting LAX Tokyo Haneda flights Travel Weekly Secaucus Northstar Travel Group Retrieved August 17 2022 Potter Kyle August 15 2022 Delta delays several nonstop Tokyo flights until Spring 2023 Thrifty Traveler Retrieved September 8 2022 Delta expands Tokyo Haneda service from late March 2020 RoutesOnline 8 September 2019 Archived from the original on 7 October 2019 Retrieved 8 September 2019 Emirates NS23 Network Changes 28DEC22 AeroRoutes 29 December 2022 Retrieved 29 December 2022 Finnair continues to grow in Japan with daily flights to Haneda Airport as of March 2020 finnair com 7 October 2019 Archived from the original on 31 December 2021 Retrieved 7 October 2019 Casey David 30 May 2022 Hawaiian Set To Increase Japan Connectivity Routes London Informa Markets Retrieved 30 May 2022 Hawaiian Airlines Kona Tokyo Booking Updates 06SEP23 Aeroroutes Retrieved 7 September 2023 HK Express 4Q22 Japan Operations 05OCT22 Aeroroutes 6 October 2022 ITA Airways revises Tokyo service launch in Nov 2022 AeroRoutes 8 September 2022 Retrieved 8 September 2022 a b c d Japan Airlines Adds Six Haneda Flights To The US 19 November 2019 Archived from the original on 13 March 2020 Retrieved 15 February 2020 Liu Jim JAL S20 China service changes Routesonline Archived from the original on 13 January 2020 Retrieved 13 January 2020 JAL files additional S20 Tokyo Haneda International routes Routesonline Archived from the original on 2019 12 04 Retrieved 2019 12 04 Japan Airlines Relaunches Middle East Service with Tokyo Doha in NS24 AeroRoutes 8 December 2023 Retrieved 13 January 2024 a b Liu Jim 2019 12 04 JAL files additional S20 Tokyo Haneda International routes Routes 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Skymark Airlines adds Shimojishima service from late Oct 2020 Routesonline Archived from the original on 20 August 2020 Retrieved 19 August 2020 Mainland Chinese Carriers NS23 International Regional Network 14MAY23 Aeroroutes Retrieved 16 May 2023 Turkish Airlines adds Tokyo Haneda service in S20 Routesonline Archived from the original on 2019 10 18 Retrieved 2019 10 17 VietJet Air Adds Tokyo Haneda Service From late April 2023 Aeroroutes Retrieved 7 March 2023 VIRGIN AUSTRALIA ADDS CAIRNS TOKYO HANEDA SERVICE FROM JUN 2023 Aeroroutes 13 December 2022 Retrieved 13 December 2022 For 2006 to 2015 暦年 年度別空港管理状況調書 Yearly airport management statistics report PDF in Japanese Ministry of Land Infrastructure Transport and Tourism 17 August 2016 p 6 Archived from the original PDF on 21 October 2016 Retrieved 13 October 2016 For 2003 to 2012 暦年 年度別空港管理状況調書 PDF in Japanese Ministry of Land Infrastructure and Transport Archived from the original PDF on 1 November 2013 Retrieved 1 April 2014 航空輸送統計調査 速報 暦年 平成28年分 PDF in Japanese Ministry of Land Infrastructure Transport and Tourism Archived PDF from the original on 2017 12 15 Retrieved 2017 06 27 Most On Time Airlines and Airports of 2022 Unveiled by Cirium Cirium Retrieved 2023 02 23 Buildings at Haneda Airport to Be Renamed in March 2020 Archived 2019 12 08 at the Wayback Machine Japan Airport Terminal Co Ltd February 26 2019 Emirates Adds Shinagawa Tokyo Station Bus Service From Sep 2023 Aeroroutes Retrieved 12 September 2023 How do I get to Haneda Airport Keisei Electric Railway Archived from the original on 25 June 2012 Retrieved 28 May 2012 Haneda Narita timetable Airport Limousine Bus Archived from the original on 22 June 2012 Retrieved 28 May 2012 Accident description for JA8030 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on August 26 2021 Japan Airlines plane on fire after possible crash with Coast Guard aircraft The Economic Times 2024 01 02 ISSN 0013 0389 Retrieved 2024 01 02 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tokyo International Airport nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Tokyo Haneda Airport Haneda Tokyo International Airport Website in English Tokyo International Air Terminal Corporation in English Portals nbsp Aviation nbsp Tokyo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Haneda Airport amp oldid 1198239706, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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