Jane Macartney in Beijing
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China offered a first glimpse into the world’s biggest airport terminal yesterday and admitted that the £1.8 billion colossus will soon be too small to cope with demand.
The new Terminal 3 will allow 90 million passengers to pass through Beijing Capital International Airport by 2012. That compares with the 67.7 million currently handled by Heathrow, the world’s busiest airport.
The building, designed by Lord Foster of Thames Bank, is on one of the largest construction sites on Earth. At the height of the project 50,000 workers were hammering and welding on site, pouring 1.8 million cubic metres (400 million gallons) of concrete and using half a million tonnes of steel.
The terminal’s soaring golden roofs, scattered with raised triangles to resemble a dragon’s scaly back, and monumental red pillars pay homage to Chinese imperial architecture. Its 790m-wide (2,600ft-wide) roof, Cana-dian-built automatic mass-transit system and 60km (40 miles) of baggage carriers are testimony to Beijing’s determination to have the most modern facilities – whatever the cost.
Terminal 3 has taken less than four years from start to finish – Britain needed more than that just to debate building Terminal 5 at Heathrow. It will cover nearly a million square metres (10.8 million square feet), dwarfing the 400,000 or so square metres of Terminal 5.
Yet, although it will reduce pressure on the limited resources of Beijing, it will not be enough. Zhang Zhizhong, general manager of Beijing Capital Airport Holdings, said that a working group had been set up last year to choose the site for a second airport for the city. It will be one of 48 being planned across the country.
He admitted that air traffic growth in China was rapidly outpacing forecasts of 14 to 15 per cent for the period from 2006 to 2010. In the first half of this year growth hit 19 per cent, and aviation authorities have raised safety concerns. Mr Zhang said: “The challenge we face for safety is rather big.”
Beijing airport has leapt from No 15 in the world, in terms of passengers, in 2005 to No 9 last year and is now in eighth position. Mr Zhang said: “We often hear people say that the civil aviation administration of China is lucky and we admit that, but we are making huge efforts and huge investment in safety.”
China has had no big accidents for three years, but in the previous few years reported several disasters. The civil administration said recently: “A major reason for having nine accidents between 1992 and 1994 was growth had been too rapid for the industry to cope with flight safety.”
In the four years to 2000, China pressed into service 111 new aircraft. Between 2001 and 2005 it added 336, and expects an increase of 725 by 2010 that will expand its fleet to nearly 2,000. Terminal 3 is scheduled to open in February. Officials said that it was too early to set a date for its first flight.
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Heathrow is the worlds busiest "international" airport. The American aiports rely mainly on domestic traffic to claim the title.
Stewart, Rotherham, England
J Simon - No. Heathrow is definitely this world's busiest airport. US airports don't count because, as most of us know, America is on a different planet.
Rick, London, UK
O'hare is the worlds busiest airport by air traffic.
Atlanta has a few more passengers, but less actual traffic.
Heathrow is third.
Mark W Macco, Ponte Vedra Beach, FL
Mr Simon, Heathrow is the world's busiest international airport - Heathrow doesn't do toy planes.
Name Withheld, Brisbane, Australia
As a Chinese living overseas it is nice to know that the once dubbed sleeping dragon has awakened and its economy is taking off in a big way. If the Chinese government has the resolve to eradicate corruption among the government officials and satisfy people's desire for real democracy then sky is the limit as far as improving the quality of life for ordinary people in China is concerned. Hopefully the right to freedom of speech and one man one vote will not be a long and winding road for the Chinese people.
Wing, Poole, UK
I agree, no matter whether Beijing ariport the busiest .It will only become larger and larger because of so many people there.
Pengfei, Beijing, China
J Simon - define "busiest". All flights? passenger flights? number of passengers? number of international passengers?All the airports you name "claim" to be the busiest, on difefrent bases.
Gerard Lincoln, Washington, DC
This country, in the 19th century, used to be like China is now. We were bold, visionary and at the forefront of the use of modern technology to build a strong and powerful nation. We also often ignored the day to day problems that this posed for individuals and the country in our search for a better world. We do need to look to how China progresses and re -learn some of the technique. Four years to build their new terminal compared to the farcical time for Terminal5 at Heathrow, we deserve our ever more speedy decline to the backwaters of power and influence.
mike gee, bournemouth, uk
Actually it's heavily contested with at least 7 airports claiming the title. There are probably a million ways to define "busiest" so they may all be right. Atlanta and Heathrow both have good reasons to claim the title. O'hare (to my surprise as well) is clearly a busy airport by anyone's standards but it seems the numbers have finally passed them up. Most likely due to the reduction of domestic air travel in the US for a variety of factors.
No matter which is busiest now, China is on course to pass them all up on every statistic soon. Personally I'm just glad it's not LAX.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World's_busiest_airport
josh, where the winds, take me
Atlanta Hartsfield-Jackson is the world's busiest airport, not Heathrow. (Chicago O'Hare is also busier)
J Simon, Brandon, USA