Hello..
back again on my blog now i will tell you about one of amazing structure.That's also as The biggest airport in the world.Do you know what is that? yup... you are right that is AL-Maktoum International Airport located in Dubai.Well...umm actualy I never go to this airport so I got the information from internet.
Now enjoy and read it....
Dubai World Central - Al Maktoum
International Airport
Dubai World Central - Al Maktoum International Airport
(IATA: DWC, ICAO: OMDW) is the official name of a major international airport
in Jebel Ali, 20 nautical miles (37 km; 23 mi) south west of Dubai, United Arab
Emirates that opened on 27 June 2010.Previous working names have included
"Jebel Ali International Airport", "Jebel Ali Airport
City", and "Dubai World Central International Airport". It has
been named after the late Sheikh Maktoum bin Rashid Al Maktoum, the former
ruler of Dubai. It will be the main part of Dubai World Central, a planned
residential, commercial and logistics complex scheme. World Central is the
world's first truly integrated logistics platform, with most transport modes,
logistics and value-added services, including manufacturing and assembly, in a
single free economic zone.The new airport will cover an area of 55,000 acres
(220 km2). The airport is referred to as "the world’s first
purpose-built aerotropolis",with a projected annual capacity of 12 million
tonnes (12,000,000 long tons; 13,000,000 short tons) of freight and between 160
million and 260 million passengers, an ambitious goal that is twice the
capacity of any other planned development worldwide. Currently, however, only a
handful of airlines operate out of Al Maktoum International Airport in terms of
passenger services, which just recently began in late 2013.
History
Construction
The 4,900 m × 60 m (16,080 ft × 200
ft) runway was completed within its projected 600 day construction period and
subsequently underwent tests over the following six to eight months in order to
fulfil its CAT III-C requirements. Construction of the airport's cargo
terminal, the Al Maktoum Airport Cargo Gateway, which cost around US$75
million, was 50% complete by the end of 2008.
During the first phase of the
project, the airport is planned to handle around 200,000 t (200,000 long tons;
220,000 short tons) of cargo per year, with the possibility of increasing to
800,000 t (790,000 long tons; 880,000 short tons). The passenger terminal at
this phase is designed to have a capacity of 5 million passengers per year. By
2013, it is planned to be the largest airport in the world in terms of freight
handled, moving up to 12 million tonnes (12,000,000 long tons; 13,000,000 short
tons) per year.
The project was originally expected
to be fully operational by 2017, although the 2007–2012 global financial crisis
subsequently postponed the completion of the complex to 2027.
Operations
- Al Maktoum International Airport opened on 27
June 2010 with one runway and only cargo flights.
- The first flight into the airport occurred on 20
June 2010, when an Emirates SkyCargo Boeing 777F landed after a flight from
Hong Kong. The flight served as a test for various functions such as air
traffic control, movement of aircraft on the ground, and security. According to
Emirates, the flight was an "unmitigated success".
- On 24 February 2011, the airport was certified
to handle passenger aircraft with up to 60 passengers, though according to
Dubai Airports Company, Al Maktoum's operator, regular passenger flights were
not expected to begin until late 2011.
- The first passenger aircraft touched down on 28
February 2011, an Airbus A319CJ.
- The airport officially opened for passenger
flights on 26 October 2013 with Nas Air and Wizz Air as the two carriers to
operate from the airport.
In the first quarter of 2014,
102,000 passengers went through the airport.
Airlines and destinations
At the time of its opening, three cargo service airlines
served Al Maktoum International Airport, including RUS Aviation, Aerospace
Consortium and European Cargo Services. Fifteen additional airlines have signed
a contract to operate flights to the airport.
Passenger
Destinations |
Condor | Charter: Düsseldorf, Frankfurt |
Gulf Air | Bahrain |
Jazeera Airways | Kuwait |
Jet Time | Seasonal Charter: Copenhagen, Stockholm-Arlanda |
Kyrgyzstan Air Company | Bishkek |
Neos Air | Seasonal Charter: Bari, Bologna, Catania, Milan-Malpensa, Naples, Rome-Fiumicino, Verona |
Qatar Airways | Doha |
TUIfly | Charter: Hannover |
VIM Airlines | Charter: Makhachkala |
Wizz Air | Bucharest, Budapest, Sofia |
Cargo
Destinations |
Cathay Pacific Cargo | Amsterdam, Hong Kong, London Heathrow, Milan Malpensa, Paris-Charles de Gaulle |
Emirates SkyCargo | Abidjan, Accra, Addis Ababa, Algiers, Amsterdam, Bahrain, Basel, Beirut, Cairo, Campinas, Chennai,Chicago, Chittagong, Copenhagen, Dakar, Dammam, Dhaka, Djibouti, Eldoret, Entebbe, Frankfurt,Guangzhou, Hanoi, Hong Kong, Houston-Intercontinental, Kano, Khartoum, Lagos, Lilongwe, Los Angeles,Mexico City, Milan Malpensa, Moscow-Domodedovo, Mumbai, Nairobi, Quito, Sana'a, Seoul-Incheon,Shanghai-Pudong, Singapore, Sydney, Tunis, Zaragoza |
Etihad Cargo | Abu Dhabi, Chittagong, Hong Kong, Kabul, Shanghai, Tbilisi |
Kalitta Air | Amsterdam, Bahrain, Kandahar, Hong Kong |
Martinair Cargo2 | Amsterdam, Bahrain, Chennai, Hong Kong |
MASkargo | Amsterdam, Kuala Lumpur |
Turkish Airlines Cargo | Istanbul-Atatürk |
Overview
At the heart
of this huge new community is the Al Maktoum International Airport, planned as
the world's largest passenger and cargo hub, spans over 220 square kilometres
(85 sq mi), is ten times larger than Dubai International Airport which covers
an area of 34 square kilometres (13 sq mi) and Dubai Cargo Village combined.
If completed
as planned, the airport will have an annual cargo capacity of 12 million tonnes
(12,000,000 long tons; 13,000,000 short tons), and a passenger capacity of up
to 160 million people per year— which would be more than Hartsfield-Jackson
Atlanta International Airport, which handled 94,956,643 million people in 2012,
and is currently the world's busiest passenger airport.
Designed for
the future, Al Maktoum International Airport proposes to handle all
next-generation aircraft, including the Airbus A380 super-jumbo.Up to four
aircraft will be able to land simultaneously, 24 hours a day, minimizing in-air
queuing.
The airport
will include:
·
Five
parallel runways, 4,900 m (16,100 ft) in length, each separated by a distance
of 800 m (2,600 ft). Six runways were originally planned, but the number was
reduced to five in April 2009
-
· Three
passenger terminals, including two luxury facilities; one dedicated to airlines
of The Emirates Group, the second to other carriers, and the third dedicated to
low-cost carriers.
·
Multiple
concourses
·
Sixteen
cargo terminals with a 12-million tonne capacity
·
Executive
and royal jet centres
·
Hotels
and shopping malls
·
Support
and maintenance facilities: the region's only hub for A-, B-, and C-Checks on
all aircraft up to A380 specifications
·
Over
100,000 parking spaces (probably underground) for airport staff and passengers
·
Al
Maktoum International Airport and the existing Dubai International Airport will
be linked by a proposed high-speed express rail system
·
Al
Maktoum International Airport will also be served by the Dubai Metro and a
dedicated Dubai World Central light railway.
Facilities
The airport is planned to have five 4,900 m (16,100 ft)
parallel runways, with a large passenger complex in the middle. Three runways
would straddle at one side of the complex while two more would be located at
the other side. Furthermore, each runway would have extended asphalted pathways
on either side which would allow aircraft to by-pass other runways and taxiways
without disturbing aircraft movements of these runways and taxiways. The
airport is the largest component of Dubai World Central. If completed as
planned, it will be the world’s largest airport, with 160 million passenger per
year capacity and a cargo capacity of 12 million tonnes (12,000,000 long tons;
13,000,000 short tons) per year. Its large runways and the distance between
them would allow simultaneous takeoffs and landings.
Dubai expectations of an exponential rise in passenger
traffic over its skies is built on the presumption that it would become the
ideal air hub for transiting travellers from the Asia-Pacific Region, South
Asia, Greater Middle-east, Africa, Europe, and Australia (for the Kangaroo
route, i.e., Australia to Britain and vice versa).
Upon completion it will be the second largest airport in land
area (physical size). Only two other airports are/were larger than Dubai World
Central:
1.King Fahd International Airport in Dammam, Saudi Arabia:
780 km2 (300 sq mi) of physical land area
2.Montréal-Mirabel
International Airport in Montreal, Canada: (392 km2 (151 sq mi) as originally
planned in 1969, but as of December 2006, only about 50 km2 (19 sq mi))
The facility, however, will initially service cargo airlines.
Several large warehouses and hangars line the westernmost part of the airport.
These interlinked hangars will stretch from end-to-end of the westernmost
runway. Each of these is capable of housing A380 aircraft.
The airport will complement Dubai International Airport, some
40 km (25 mi) away. The airport itself is surrounded by a large logistics hub,
a luxurious golf resort, an expansive trade and exhibition facility (3 million
square metres of exhibition space, making it the world's largest), a massive
commercial district, and a spacious residential area.
Due to the massive physical scale of the masterplan, some
claim that the Al Maktoum International Airport is be the most ambitious
airport ever envisioned. The latest estimates by the government amount to an
$82 billion price tag.
Parking
Dubai World
Central—the whole complex, not just the international airport—will have a total
of 100,000 parking slots for automobile vehicles for its employees, Dubai
residents, tourists, and other users.
Okay...... That's all about The Biggest Airport in the world AL-Maktoum International Airport in Dubai.I hope I can visit that airport.Okay thank's for reading my blog. see you again in my next post ....good bye :)
(Source:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dubai_World_Central_-_Al_Maktoum_International_Airport)