Gimhae International Airport

Gimhae International Airport (IATA: PUS, ICAO: RKPK) is located on the western end of Busan, South Korea. Opened in 1976, the airport is named after the nearby city of Gimhae. A new international terminal opened on October 31, 2007.[3] Gimhae International Airport is the main hub for Air Busan, and a focus city for Jeju Air, Jin Air and Korean Air. Runway 18L/36R is used for military purposes only for Gimhae Air Base, but due to increasing traffic, there are plans to open the runway for airliners.[citation needed] In 2018, 17,064,613 passengers used the airport.

Gimhae International Airport

김해국제공항
Gimhae International Airport in 2011
Summary
Airport typePublic / Military
OwnerMinistry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport
Operator
ServesBusan–Gyeongnam Area and Gyeongsangdo
LocationGangseo District, Busan, South Korea
Opened1 August 1976; 47 years ago (1976-08-01)
Hub forAir Busan
Focus city for
Elevation AMSL6 ft / 2 m
Coordinates35°10′46″N 128°56′18″E / 35.17944°N 128.93833°E / 35.17944; 128.93833
Websitewww.airport.co.kr/gimhaeeng
Map
PUS/RKPK is located in South Korea
PUS/RKPK
PUS/RKPK
Location of airport in South Korea
Runways
DirectionLengthSurface
mft
18L/36R2,7439,007Concrete
18R/36L3,20010,499Concrete
Statistics (2023)
Aircraft movements82,185
International Passengers6,521,513
Domestic Passengers7,173,197
Total Passengers13,694,710
Sources: World Aero Data[1]
Korea Airports Corporation[2]
Gimhae International Airport
Hangul
김해국제공항
Hanja
金海國際空港
Revised RomanizationGimhae Gukje Gonghang
McCune–ReischauerKimhae Kukche Konghang

As the airport is now beyond its design capacity and surrounded by mountains, buildings and other objectives, a new airport is currently being built on Gadeokdo to meet growing demand.[4][5] Because the airport is shared with military facilities, photography and video of the apron, runway, and military stations are prohibited according to the airport website.[6]

Inside Gimhae International Airport (International terminal)
International terminal departure hall in 2018

History edit

In August 1976, Gimhae Airport opened, and commercial air traffic shifted there from the old airport. A new domestic terminal was completed in May 1983.[7] Korean Air launched a route to Honolulu in October 1992.[8] In April 2002, Northwest Airlines began service to its hub at Tokyo's Narita Airport, where people could board connecting flights to the United States.[9][10] In March 2007, Lufthansa inaugurated service to Munich via Seoul. This was the first route between Busan and Europe.[11][12] President Roh Moo-hyun opened a new international terminal seven months later.[13] Delta Air Lines, which had merged with Northwest, ended the Tokyo link in May 2012.[9][11] Lufthansa terminated its flight to Busan in March 2014.[14]

Airlines and destinations edit

AirlinesDestinations
Air Busan Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi,[15] Chiang Mai,[16] Da Nang, Fukuoka, Haikou,[17] Jeju, Jinan, Kaohsiung, Kota Kinabalu,[18] Macau, Matsuyama, Nha Trang,[19] Osaka–Kansai, Qingdao, Sanya, Sapporo–Chitose, Seoul–Gimpo, Tagbilaran, Taipei–Taoyuan,[20] Tokyo–Narita, Toyama, Ulaanbaatar, Vientiane, Xi'an, Yanji, Zhangjiajie
Air China Beijing–Capital[21]
China Airlines Taipei–Taoyuan
China Eastern Airlines Shanghai–Pudong[22]
China Southern Airlines Shenyang[22]
HK Express Hong Kong[23]
Jeju Air Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi, Cebu, Da Nang, Fukuoka, Guam, Jeju, Osaka–Kansai, Saipan,[24] Seoul–Gimpo, Shijiazhuang, Singapore,[25] Tagbilaran,[26] Taipei–Taoyuan,[27] Tokyo–Narita, Ulaanbaatar,[28] Zhangjiajie
Jin Air Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi, Cebu, Clark, Da Nang, Fukuoka, Guam, Jeju, Naha,[29] Nha Trang, Osaka–Kansai, Sapporo–Chitose,[30] Seoul–Gimpo,[31] Taipei–Taoyuan,[32] Tokyo–Narita
Seasonal: Kota Kinabalu
Korean Air Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi,[33] Fukuoka,[34] Jeju, Nagoya–Centrair,[34] Seoul–Gimpo, Seoul–Incheon,[35] Shanghai–Pudong,[36] Taipei–Taoyuan, Tokyo–Narita
MIAT Mongolian Airlines Ulaanbaatar
Philippine Airlines Manila
Shanghai Airlines Shanghai–Pudong
Singapore Airlines Singapore[37]
Tigerair Taiwan Taichung, Taipei–Taoyuan[38]
T'way Air Hong Kong, Nha Trang, Osaka–Kansai,[39] Vientiane
VietJet Air Da Lat,[40] Da Nang,[41] Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City,[41] Nha Trang,[42] Phu Quoc[43]
Vietnam Airlines Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, Nha Trang[44]

Traffic and statistics edit

Passengers edit

Annual passenger traffic at PUS airport.See Wikidata query.
Air traffic statistics
Aircraft operationsPassenger volumeCargo tonnage
200161,2429,168,089203,335
200260,0909,173,288204,464
200358,6008,782,835185,372
200452,2127,674,153175,850
200550,7357,045,806152,407
200652,9357,071,037135,607
200758,1197,403,262126,947
200859,5757,202,117113,710
200961,1716,870,157105,320
201062,2258,160,546119,390
201166,5258,749,153126,710
201271,7139,196,090121,256
201377,6659,671,381116,185
201478,64610,378,867123,242
201587,70912,382,150146,694
201699,35814,900,815185,472
2017107,36316,403,541186,471
2018110,92417,064,613183,507
2019111,27616,931,023171,953
202053,1507,235,65248,250
202157,6948,859,30436,010
202261,73310,027,09755,555
202382,18513,694,710113,703
Source: Korea Airports Corporation Traffic Statistics[45]
International terminal facade
Gimhae Airport in 2012

Top carriers edit

In 2023, the ten carriers with the largest percentage of passengers flying into, out of, or through Gimhae International Airport are as follows:

Top carriers (2023)
RankCarrierDomestic
passengers
International
passengers
Total%
1 Air Busan2,673,2262,215,3554,888,58135.69%
2 Jeju Air1,181,2561,540,5662,721,82219.87%
3 Korean Air1,893,205363,0692,256,27416.48%
4 Jin Air764,035800,4811,564,51611.42%
5 T'way Air605,581136,044741,6255.42%
6 VietJet Air591,285591,2854.32%
7 Vietnam Airlines319,960319,9602.34%
8 Philippine Airlines128,063128,0631.06%
9 China Airlines80,30380,3030.09%
10 Tigerair Taiwan79,30379,3030.06%

Top destinations edit

Busiest domestic routes (2023)
RankAirportPassengers 2023FlightTop carriers
1 Jeju3,579,94620,198Air Busan, Jeju Air, Jin Air, Korean Air
2 Seoul–Gimpo3,275,77421,146Air Busan, Air Seoul, Jeju Air, Jin Air, Korean Air, T'way Air
3 Seoul–Incheon317,4772,552Air Busan, Jeju Air, Korean Air
Busiest international routes (2023)
RankAirportPassengers 2023FlightTop carriers
1 Fukuoka992,6025,375Air Busan, Jeju Air, Jin Air, Korean Air
2 Osaka–Kansai896,8824,748Air Busan, Jeju Air, Korean Air, T'way Air
3 Tokyo–Narita551,8993,410Air Busan, Jeju Air, Jin Air, Korean Air
4 Taipei–Taoyuan541,1083,502Air Busan, China Airlines, Tigerair Taiwan, Jeju Air, Jin Air, Korean Air
5 Da Nang493,7502,882Air Busan, VietJet Air, Vietnam Airlines, Jeju Air, Jin Air
6 Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi391,1972,143Air Busan, Jeju Air, Jin Air
7 Nha Trang307,3131,625Air Busan, Jeju Air, VietJet Air
8 Ho Chi Minh City295,3561,449VietJet Air, Vietnam Airlines
9 Hanoi291,8211,460VietJet Air, Vietnam Airlines
10 Cebu250,7681,465Air Busan, Jeju Air, Jin Air
11 Sapporo–Chitose166,137961Air Busan, Jin Air
12 Guam138,773961Jeju Air, Jin Air
13 Manila116,274696Philippine Airlines
14 Clark108,564824Air Busan, Jin Air, Philippine Airlines
15 Singapore103,090722Jeju Air, Singapore Airlines

Ground transportation edit

Metro edit

Gimhae International Airport Station
Busan-Gimhae LRT train.

Bus edit

Busan Expressbus 201

Airport Limousine Bus edit

  • Gimhae International Airport (from Airport to Busan station) International Terminal - Domestic Terminal - Paik Hospital intersection - Gaya Homeplus mart - Gaya Hyudai apt - Seomyeon (Lotte Hotel Busan) - Seomyeon, Busan - Beomil (Hyundai dep. store) - Jin market - Busanjin station (Busan Metro) - Busan station - Toyoko inn Hotel - Jungang - Guangbokdong Lotte dep. store - Nampo - Jagalchi (Chungmudong)
  • Gimhae International Airport (from Busan Station to Airport) Jagalchi (Chungmudong) - Nampo - Guangbokdong Lotte dep. store - Jungang - Yeongjudong - Busan station - Busanjin station (Busan Metro) - Beomil (Hyundai dep. store) -Seomyeon, Busan (Judies Taehwa) - Seomyeon (Lotte Hotel Busan) - Gaya Hyudai apt - Gaya Homeplus mart - Paik Hospital intersection - Airport (International Terminal)
  • Gimhae International Airport (International Terminal) - Domestic Terminal - Namcheon (Namcheondong) - Gwangan (Gwangandong) - Suyeong (Suyeong Intersection) - Millak (Suyeong Hyudai apt) - Centum City (Centum hotel) - Bexco - Olympic intersection - Gyeongnam Marina apt - Hyundai park hiatt hotel - Hanhwa resort - Hyperion - Westin Chosun Hotel - Grand Hotel - Novotel Ambassador - Paradise Hotel - Mipo, moon-ten road - Remian Haeundae apt - Hyundai ipark apt - Jangsan - Haeundae Paik Hospital - Dongbu apartment - Daelim 1cha apt - Yangwoon high school - Yangwoon middle school - Yangwoon high school - Daedong apt - Dongbu apartment - Haeundae Paik Hospital - Jangsan Station - Hyundai ipark apt - Remian Haeundae apt - Mipo, moon-ten road - Novotel Ambassador - Paradise Hotel - Seacloud hotel - Grand Hotel - Westin Chosun Hotel - Hyperion - Hanhwa resort - Hyundai park hiatt hotel - Gyeongnam Marina apt - Olympic intersection - Homeplus mart - Centum City (Centum hotel) - Millak (Suyeong Hyudai apt) - Suyeong (Suyeong Intersection) - Gwangan (Gwangandong) - Namcheon (Namcheondong) - Airport (International Terminal, Departure) - Domestic Terminal, Arrival - the bus operates from 06:50 to 22:00, every 15~20 minutes

Express Bus edit

  • 1009 : Geumgok-dong ↔ Deokcheon stationGupo stationGangseo-gu OfficeGimhae Airport ↔ Myeongji ↔ Noksan indus. complex ↔ Busan New Port ↔ Gadeok-do Sunchang The bus operates from 05:20 to 20:50, every 40 minutes (Depart from Geumgok)

City Bus edit

Village Bus edit

Intercity Bus edit

Masan, Changwon, Jinhae, Jangyu, Gimhae, Pohang, Gyeongju, Gumi, Dongdaegu, Ulsan, Eonyang, Yangsan, Gohyeon, Okpo, Jangseungpo

Incidents and accidents edit

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ Kac 한국공항공사. Archived from the original on 2015-12-20. Retrieved 2016-03-18.
  3. ^ 김해국제공항 '하늘길 두 배로'. Archived from the original on 2012-06-30. Retrieved 2007-11-06.
  4. ^ "(LEAD) Gov't committee virtually scraps new Gimhae airport project". Yonhap News Agency. 17 November 2020. Retrieved 22 November 2020.
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  39. ^ T'Way Air NW22 Japan Operations – 27OCT22 Aeroroutes. 27 October 2022.
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External links edit