Taipei Songshan Airport

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Taipei International Airport (Taipei Songshan Airport)
台北國際航空站
台北松山機場

Táiběi Guójì Hángkōngzhàn
Táiběi Sōngshān Jīchǎng
Taipei Songshan Airport 1st Terminal Building 20090926.JPG
IATA: TSAICAO: RCSS
TSA is located in Taiwan
TSA
TSA
Location of airport in Taiwan
Summary
Airport type Public & Military
Operator Civil Aeronautics Administration
Ministry of National Defense
Serves Taipei
Location Songshan District, Taipei, Taiwan
Hub for
Focus city for
Elevation AMSL 5 m / 18 ft
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Website Taipei Songshan Airport
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
10/28 2,605 8,547 Paved
Statistics (2013)
Number of passengers 6,111,776
Aircraft movement 61,929
Total Cargo (metric tonnes) 43,528.4
Sources: Civil Aeronautics Ministry[1]
Taipei Songshan Airport
Traditional Chinese 台北松山機場
Simplified Chinese 台北松山机场

Taipei Songshan Airport (IATA: TSAICAO: RCSS) (Chinese: 台北松山機場; pinyin: Táiběi Sōngshān Jīchǎng) is a mid-size commercial airport and military airbase located in Songshan, Taipei, Taiwan. The airport covers an area of 182 hectares (1.82 km2).[2]

The civilian section of Songshan Airport, officially Taipei International Airport (Chinese: 台北國際航空站; pinyin: Táiběi Gúojì Hángkōngzhàn), has scheduled flights serving domestically in Taiwan, and also to Mainland China, South Korea and Japan, with the vast majority of international flights out of the Taipei area served by Taoyuan International Airport.

Songshan Airport is also the base of certain Republic of China Air Force units as part of the Songshan Air Force Base (Chinese: 空軍松山基地; pinyin: Kōngjūn Sōngshān Jīdì). The Songshan Base Command's main mission is to serve the President and Vice President of the Republic of China (Taiwan).

History

File:Ldsungshan23a.jpg
Civil Air Transport flight at Songshan Airport in 1966.

The airport was built in 1936 with its origins as a Japanese military airbase, the Matsuyama Airdrome, during Japanese rule. After World War II, in 1946, it was taken over by the Republic of China Air Force.[3] Before the end of the Chinese Civil War and the establishment of the People's Republic of China, the airport provided flight routes between Shanghai and Taipei, occasionally via Fuzhou.[3]

Shared military and civilian use—both domestic and international—began on 16 April 1950[4] in the reconstructed Civil Aeronautics Administration Taipei Airport (Chinese: 交通部民用航空局台北航空站).[3] Domestic destinations have been Kaohsiung, Hualien, Taichung, Makung, and Tainan. The first international destinations were Seattle, Tokyo, Pusan, Manila, Bangkok, and Hong Kong.[3] The first international airlines included Northwest Airlines, Pan American Airlines, and Hong Kong Airways (now Cathay Pacific). Later, the airport became too small to handle an increased number of passengers, even after a series of expansions. This later worsened when new wide-body jets became common at the airport.[3] Therefore, all international activities were relocated to Chiang Kai-shek International Airport after its inauguration on 26 February 1979.[3][5] Consequently, the passenger load at the airport dropped from 6.2 million in 1978 to 2.9 million in 1979 (a 53% decrease).[6] At its peak in 1997, the airport handled over 15.3 million passengers annually.

Service to Taichung and Chiayi was stopped in mid-2007 after the load factor dropped significantly due to Taiwan High Speed Rail start of revenue service in January 2007. Passenger volume decreased from 6.7 million in 2006 to 4.4 million in 2007 (a 34% decrease).[6] Also due to the opening of the high speed rail line, on 1 March 2008, Uni Air suspended its service to Kaohsiung, while Far Eastern Air Transport suspended its service to Tainan.[7] TransAsia Airways decided to stop flights to Tainan and Kaohsiung after 1 August 2008.[8][9]

In early 1999 when the construction of Taipei 101 had just started, Taiwan's Civil Aeronautics Administration changed this airport's certain SID and STAR procedures to avoid possible collision with the building. The 677-meter Fuxing North Road Underground Passage (復興北路車行地下道) was constructed between 1997 and 2006 under this airport's runway to link the north and south side of this airport.[10]

Regular cross-strait charter flights to mainland China started on 4 July 2008, with Songshan receiving the majority of flights.[11] Direct flights to mainland China were an issue of contention. Then-mayor Ma Ying-jeou had been pressing to make Songshan Airport Taipei's main cross-strait terminal, citing that its location close to the city center would make it preferable for business travelers. However, building height restrictions around the airport raised concerns about flight safety, blocking of radio communications, noise pollution, and a reduced number of flights.[12]

The adjacent, unused Terminal 2 was refurbished to accommodate arriving flights while the main Terminal, now Terminal 1, was rearranged to handle increased passenger traffic.[11] On 29 March 2011, the renovated Terminal 2 was re-opened to handle domestic flights.[13]

International potential

Songshan Airport is seen to have the potential to attract business travelers within Pacific Asia due to its location in downtown Taipei. Flights to Bangkok-Don Mueang, Jakarta-Halim Perdanakusuma, Kuala Lumpur-Subang, Nagoya-Komaki, Osaka-Itami, Seoul-Gimpo,[14] Shanghai-Hongqiao, and Tokyo-Haneda[14] are especially attractive since these airports are also in the central areas of their respective cities, and all these cities have larger far flung international airports. The airport is currently in the process of expansion to better accommodate international flights.[15] This kind of "city-to-city" flights have already been established between Seoul-Gimpo and Tokyo-Haneda, and between Shanghai-Hongqiao and Tokyo-Haneda.

On 6 March 2009, Japan and Taiwan signed a Memorandum of Understanding on the revision of Taiwan-Japan bilateral traffic. Four carriers (EVA Air, China Airlines, Japan Airlines, and ANA) would be able to operate from Songshan Airport to Tokyo-Haneda.[citation needed] In December 2009, an affirmative schedule for the route between Tokyo-Haneda and Taipei-Songshan was announced.[16] Starting in October 2010, EVA Air, China Airlines, Japan Airlines, and ANA each operates two flights a day from Taipei-Songshan to Tokyo-Haneda,[16] with China Airlines and EVA Air both utilizing the A330-300 on the route. Japan Airlines and ANA began this route with the Boeing 767. ANA replaced one daily flight with the Boeing 787-8 since 1 June 2013.

On 14 June 2010, direct flights between Taipei-Songshan and Shanghai-Hongqiao began.[17] Each week has 28 flights, served by China Eastern Airlines, Shanghai Airlines, Air China, China Airlines, EVA Air, and TransAsia Airways. The airport will undergo upgrades to its runway and reduce its jet bridges from eight to six to accommodate wider contemporary aircraft such as the Airbus A330 and Boeing 767.[18]

File:TSA Panorama.JPG
Songshan Airport exterior panorama

Proposal to close the airport

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The continuing growth of Taipei City means that Songshan airport is nowadays situated in the heart of downtown. Compared to Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport, Songshan Airport saves travelers about 30 minutes due to its location inside Taipei City's central business district, but the city suffers from the noise, pollution, restrictions on urban planning, and traffic congestion the airport brings about. In the 2002 and 2006 Taipei Mayor Election DPP candidates Lee Ying-yuan and Frank Hsieh both proposed the plan to close Songshan Airport, and developed its land into road, huge park, detention basin and sports arena, since the Taiwan High Speed Rail could quickly take up the traffic load between Taipei and western Taiwan cities, and the remaining service to outlying islands and eastern Taiwan could be easily taken over by the Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport after the completion of Taoyuan International Airport Access MRT System in December 2015. Also, the MRT system will make the international potential of Songshan airport less attractive.

The Songshan Airport closing proposal was deferred under the Taipei City Government which has long been dominated by the Pan-Blue Coalition, who prefers the downtown airport connection concept with Shanghai, Seoul, and Tokyo.

Airlines and destinations

File:ANA Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner.JPG
ANA Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner
File:China Airlines Airbus A330-300.JPG
China Airlines Airbus A330-300
File:EVA Air Airbus A330-300.JPG
EVA Air Airbus A330-300
Airlines Destinations Terminal
Air China Shanghai-Hongqiao, Tianjin International
All Nippon Airways Tokyo-Haneda International
China Airlines Seoul-Gimpo, Shanghai-Hongqiao, Tokyo-Haneda
Charter: Matsuyama[19]
International
China Eastern Airlines Shanghai-Hongqiao International
Eastar Jet Seoul-Gimpo International
EVA Air Seoul-Gimpo, Shanghai-Hongqiao, Tokyo-Haneda International
Far Eastern Air Transport Kinmen, Magong Domestic
Far Eastern Air Transport Nanning, Taiyuan, Tianjin International
Japan Airlines Tokyo-Haneda International
Mandarin Airlines Kinmen, Magong, Taitung Domestic
Mandarin Airlines Fuzhou, Wenzhou International
Shanghai Airlines Shanghai-Hongqiao, Shanghai-Pudong International
Sichuan Airlines Chengdu, Chongqing International
TransAsia Airways Chongqing, Fuzhou, Hangzhou, Hefei, Shanghai-Hongqiao, Shanghai-Pudong, Tianjin, Wuhan International
TransAsia Airways Hualien, Kinmen, Magong Domestic
T'way Airlines Seoul-Gimpo International
Uni Air Hengchun, Kinmen, Magong, Matsu-Beigan, Matsu-Nangan, Taitung Domestic
Uni Air Shanghai-Pudong, Xiamen International
Xiamen Airlines Fuzhou, Xiamen International

Traffic and statistics

In 2014, Songshan Airport handled 6,111,776 passengers and 43,528.4 tons of cargo.[1] The route between Taipei Songshan Airport and Kinmen Airport is the busiest domestic route in Taiwan, with 1,243,385 travelers in 2014.[20]

In 2014, the ten routes with the largest number of passengers are as follows:

Busiest routes from Taipei-Songshan (2014)[21]
Rank Airport Category Passengers 2014 Carriers
1 Tokyo-Haneda International 1,417,641 All Nippon Airways, China Airlines, EVA Air, Japan Airlines
2 Kinmen Domestic 1,243,385 Far Eastern Air Transport, Mandarin Airlines, Transasia Airways, Uni Air
3 Makung Domestic 876,291 Far Eastern Air Transport, Mandarin Airlines, Transasia Airways, Uni Air
4 Shanghai-Hongqiao Cross-Strait 710,882 Air China, China Airlines, China Eastern, EVA Air, Transasia Airways, Shanghai Airlines
5 Taitung Domestic 270,085 Mandarin Airlines, Uni Air
6 Seoul-Gimpo International 234,580 China Airlines, Easter Jet, EVA Air, T'way Airlines
7 Shanghai-Pudong Cross-Strait 209,448 Shanghai Airlines, Transasia Airways, Uni Air
8 Matsu-Nangan Domestic 202,068 Uni Air
9 Fuzhou Cross-Strait 166,702 Mandarin Airlines, Transasia Airways, Xiamen Airlines
10 Xiamen Cross-Strait 142,811 Uni Air, Xiamen Airlines

Ground Transportation

Accidents and incidents

  • On 20 February 1970, Douglas DC-3 B-243 of Far Eastern Air Transport crashed into a mountain shortly after take-off. The aircraft was operating a cargo flight, both crew were killed.[23]
  • On 7 October 1974, a Vickers Viscount of Far Eastern Air Transport was the subject of an attempted hijacking. The hijacker was overpowered and the aircraft landed at its intended destination of Taipei Songshan Airport.[24]
  • On 1 February 1975, Vickers Viscount PK-RVM of Mandala Airlines was damaged beyond economic repair when it overran the runway.[25]
  • On 31 July 1975, Vickers Viscount B-2029 of Far Eastern Air Transport crashed killing 27 of the 75 people on board.[26]
  • On 10 October 1997, a Republic of China Air Force C-130 Hercules 1310, c/n 5067, delivered October 1986, same August 1996. The aircraft crashed during an attempted go-around killing all 5 on board.
  • On February 4, 2015, TransAsia Airways Flight 235, an ATR 72-600 (B-22816), crashed shortly after takeoff from Taipei Songshan Airport, first clipping a taxi and then crashing into Keelung River near Taipei. Of the 53 passengers and 5 crew members, 43 were killed.[27]

Future Developments

Due to the introduction of cross-strait flights and future international potential, the airport is undergoing extensive renovations, the first phase of which is expected to be completed by October 2010.[28] The second and third phase renovations are expected to be completed by March and October 2011, respectively. However, as of November 2011 renovations are still in progress. A new international cargo terminal is being built in anticipation of a new air route between Taiwan and Japan.[29]

See also

References

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External links