Nantong Xingdong International Airport

Nantong Xingdong International Airport (IATA: NTG, ICAO: ZSNT) is an international airport serving the city of Nantong in Jiangsu Province. It is located in the town of Xingdong in Tongzhou District, 9.8 kilometres (6.1 mi) northeast of Nantong and 120 km (75 mi) from Shanghai. Construction started in 1990 and flights commenced in 1993. In 2016 the airport handled 1,538,158 passengers and 35,371.1 tons of cargo.[2]

Nantong Xingdong International Airport

南通兴东国际机场
Summary
ServesNantong, Jiangsu
LocationXingdong Subdistrict, Tongzhou District, Nantong
Opened24 August 1993 (1993-08-24)
Elevation AMSL16 ft / 5 m
Coordinates32°04′15″N 120°58′32″E
Websitentcaac.com
Map
NTG is located in Jiangsu
NTG
NTG
Location in Jiangsu
NTG is located in China
NTG
NTG
NTG (China)
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
18/36 3,400 11,155 concrete
Statistics (2021)
Passengers2,525,426
Aircraft movements27,294
Cargo (metric tons)53,021.7
Source: CAAC[1][2]
Nantong Xingdong International Airport
Simplified Chinese南通国际机场
Traditional Chinese南通興東國際機場

Facilities

The airport has one runway which is 3,400 metres (11,155 ft) long.[2]

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

AirlinesDestinations
9 Air Guiyang
Air China Beijing–Capital, Beijing–Daxing
Air Macau Macau
Air Travel Kunming
China Eastern Airlines Changsha, Xi'an[3]
China Southern Airlines Guangzhou
Colorful Guizhou Airlines Guiyang, Huangshan
Donghai Airlines Changchun,[4] Changsha, Chengdu–Tianfu,[5] Chongqing, Haikou, Kunming,[5] Quanzhou, Sanya,[5] Shenzhen, Xining, Yichang, Zhuhai
Fuzhou Airlines Fuzhou
Hebei Airlines Beijing–Daxing,[6] Fuzhou, Shijiazhuang
Juneyao Airlines Dalian, Wenzhou
Kunming Airlines Kunming[7]
Ruili Airlines Dalian,[8] Kunming, Nanning,[9] Shenyang, Xishuangbanna
Shenzhen Airlines Beijing–Capital, Chengdu–Shuangliu, Chongqing, Dalian, Guangzhou, Guilin, Harbin, Hong Kong,[10] Huizhou (begins 1 June 2024),[11] Nanning,[9] Qingdao, Quanzhou, Sanya, Shenyang, Shenzhen, Taiyuan, Tianjin, Xiamen, Yantai,[11] Yinchuan, Zhuhai
Sichuan Airlines Chengdu–Tianfu,[12] Wuhan
Spring Airlines Jieyang, Yantai
Tianjin Airlines Urumqi,[13] Yinchuan[13]
Tibet Airlines Xi'an[14]
XiamenAir Fuzhou,[15] Hohhot[15]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.