Yiwu Airport

Yiwu Airport (IATA: YIW, ICAO: ZSYW) is a dual-use military and civil airport serving Yiwu, Jinhua in Zhejiang Province, China. It is located 5.5 kilometres (3.4 mi) northwest of the center of Yiwu and 51 km (32 mi) from the urban area of Jinhua.[1]

Yiwu Airport

义乌机场
Summary
Airport typePublic/Military
ServesYiwu and Jinhua
LocationYiwu, Zhejiang
Coordinates29°20′41″N 120°01′56″E
Map
YIW
Location of airport in Zhejiang
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
02/20 3,000 9,843 Concrete
Statistics (2018)
Passengers1,635,673
Aircraft movements12,558
Cargo (metric tons)8,800.1
Source: List of the busiest airports in the People's Republic of China
Domestic departure hall
Yiwu Airport
Simplified Chinese义乌机场
Traditional Chinese義烏機場

History

Yiwu airport was originally a military training airfield for the People's Liberation Army Navy. In 1988 the national government approved the conversion of the airfield to a dual-use military and civil airport. The airport was opened to civilian flights on 1 April 1991. In December 1993 the airport was closed for a 100-million yuan expansion, and reopened in December 1994. A second round of expansion began in 2006 with a total investment of 300 million yuan,[2] and a new terminal building was opened in April 2009.[3]

Facilities

Yiwu Airport had a runway that was 2,500 meters long and 45 meters wide, and an 18,000 square-meter terminal building. It is capable of handling 1 million passengers per year.[2] In 2015, construction began to extend the runway by 500 meters and to build a parallel taxiway. The new 3,000-meter runway was opened on 13 November 2017, making the airport class 4D.[4]

International terminal

On 6 January 2012, construction commenced for a new international terminal. The project includes a 13,436 square-meter terminal building, three additional aircraft parking bays, expansion of car park, and building of new roads and bridges.[5] The new terminal was opened in 2014.[6]

Airlines and destinations

AirlinesDestinations
9 Air Vladivostok[7]
Air China Beijing–Capital, Chengdu, Chongqing
China Eastern Airlines Kunming,[8] Qingdao, Xi'an[9]
China Express Airlines Tianjin
China Southern Airlines Beijing–Capital, Beijing–Daxing,[10] Changchun, Chongqing, Guangzhou, Guiyang, Hong Kong, Jieyang, Sanya, Shenyang, Shenzhen, Taipei–Taoyuan, Tianjin, Urumqi, Wuhan, Xi'an, Zhengzhou, Zhuhai
Donghai Airlines Dalian, Shenzhen
Sky Angkor Airlines Sihanoukville[11]
gollark: Not that it'll ever be used, but you know.
gollark: I'm going to work on a "safe mode" toggle for the network which switches security to maximum, shuts off wireless access, disconnects autocrafting, and cuts off the P2P controller, so it can only be accessed via the dedicated terminals.
gollark: You must have a really inefficient ME network, <@404656680496791554>.
gollark: Per tick or what?
gollark: Though admittedly in my game running the ME system alone costs 600RF/t.

See also

References

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