Nanyang Jiangying Airport

Nanyang Jiangying Airport (Chinese: 南阳姜营机场) (IATA: NNY, ICAO: ZHNY) is an airport serving the city of Nanyang in Henan Province, China. It is located near Jiangying, in Wancheng District, 12 km (7.5 mi) east of the city center. The airport was opened in October 1992 and expanded in 1998.[3] It is currently undergoing another phase of expansion.[4]

Nanyang Jiangying Airport

南阳姜营机场

Nányáng Jiāngyíng Jīchǎng
Summary
Airport typePublic
ServesNanyang, Henan, China
LocationJiangying, Wancheng District
Elevation AMSL125 m / 411 ft
Coordinates32°58′42″N 112°36′48″E
Websitenyfjch.com
Map
NNY is located in Henan
NNY
NNY
Location of airport in Henan
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
05/23 2,800 9,186 Concrete
Statistics (2021)
Passengers1,067,753
Aircraft movements53,774
Cargo (metric tons)861.5
Source: CAAC[1][2]

Facilities

The airport has one runway that is 2,800 meters (9,200 ft) long and 50 meters (160 ft) wide (class 4D), and an 8,262-square-metre (88,930 sq ft) terminal building.[3]

History

The original Nanyang Airport was built in April 1934 and occupied by the Japanese during World War II. After the war it was used as a military airport with some civil flights. In October 1992 the new Jiangying Airport was built at the current location with an investment of 77 million yuan, and the old airport was closed. The new runway was 1,800 m (5,900 ft) long and 45 m (148 ft) wide. In 1998 the airport was expanded at a cost of 22.8 million yuan, lengthening the runway to 2,300 m (7,500 ft). Scheduled flights to Guangzhou, Shanghai, and Beijing started in 2004.[5]

Airlines and destinations

AirlinesDestinations
China Express Airlines Chengdu–Tianfu,[6] Fuzhou,[7] Guiyang, Wenzhou,[8] Wuhu[9]
China Southern Airlines Guangzhou, Jieyang,[10] Shanghai–Pudong, Shenzhen, Urumqi, Zhuhai[11]
China United Airlines Beijing–Daxing, Foshan,[12] Guilin,[12] Ordos[6]
GX Airlines Nanning, Tianjin
Hainan Airlines Hangzhou, Taiyuan,[11] Zhuhai[11]
Jiangxi Air Nanchang[6]
Loong Air Ningbo, Yinchuan[13]
Qingdao Airlines Qingdao, Urumqi[14]
Ruili Airlines Harbin,[15] Kunming[15]
Spring Airlines Lanzhou, Shanghai–Pudong, Shenzhen, Xiamen
Tianjin Airlines Haikou

See also

References

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