Suvarnabhumi Airport
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SUVARNABHUMI AIRPORT (BKK/VTBS) BANGKOK, THAILAND
The new Suvarnabhumi Airport, which is due to replace the
overloaded and unexpandable Bangkok International Airport
(Don Muang), was scheduled to open in June 2006. However,
this date has been delayed until 28th September 2006 for
testing and validation by ICAO.The airport was due to open in late 2005, but a series of
budget overruns, construction flaws, political interference
and allegations of corruption have caused problems for the
project.
Finally after much speculation the Prime Minister, Thaksin
Shinawatra, announced that the airport would be open by
September 2006 at the latest. Symbolic first test flights
involving two Thai Airways aircraft were held on 29
September 2005, which was a previously announced deadline
for opening.
At
one point, in September 2004, Thaksin Shinawatra and several
of his cabinet ministers even spent the night in tents at
the construction site in a move aimed at embarrassing
construction crews into speeding up their work.
The 'New Bangkok International Airport' (NBIA) company was
formed in 1996 but due to political and economic chaos it
took six years for construction to start. In 2005, the
construction supervision and management was transferred to
the Airports of Thailand PLC, while the NBIA company was
dissolved.
The new airport is located on a boggy, 3,100ha site in the
Samut Prakarn province of Thailand at Nong Ngu Hao
(translated as cobra swamp), 30km east of Bangkok.
Construction of Suvarnabhumi Airport began in January 2002.
The name Suvarnabhumi (pronounced su-wan-na-poom) was chosen
by His Majesty King Bhumibol Adulyadej and means 'the golden
land', specifically referring to continental Indochina.
OLD AIRPORT AND THE FUTURE -
Suvarnabhumi Airport Map
The older overloaded airport, Don Muang, will be relegated
to domestic-only status when the new airport opens. Don
Muang is currently the world's 22nd busiest airport and the
busiest in Southeast Asia, but it has already reached its
full capacity at over 37 million passengers per year.
Suvarnabhumi will be able to cope with 30 million passengers
per year when it first opens, a figure which will be
increased to 45 million within a short space of time.
Following further expansion phases, including two additional
runways, it will cater for over 100 million passengers per
year.
The airport has five main access routes, among these the
most convenient route is via the Bangkok-Chon Buri Motorway
(Highway No. 7). In addition to a new express rail link, 11
city bus routes operated by Bangkok Mass Transit Authority (BMTA)
will serve the airport.
NEW AIRPORT FACILITIES AND CAPACITY
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Suvarnabhumi Airport Map
Suvarnabhumi Airport will operate as many as 76 flights per
hour on two simultaneous runways; it will have 51 aircraft
stands and 69 remote parking bays for wide-bodied aircraft
and handle over three million tons of cargo annually.
Facilities to be completed in the first phase include:
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A 563,000m²
passenger terminal
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wo parallel
runways, each 60m wide, one 3,700m long and the other
4,000m long with a runway separation distance of 2,200m
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wo parallel
taxiways to facilitate simultaneous departures and
arrivals
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120 parking
bays (51 with contact gates and 69 remote gates) and
five of these capable of accommodating the Airbus A380
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32m air
traffic control tower (the tallest in Asia)
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Two
five-storey parking garages with a capacity for 5,000
cars
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190,000m²
cargo terminal
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ircraft
maintenance facilities: four fully equipped aircraft
hangars to service up to 12 aircraft simultaneously
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hree
separate catering facilities to cater for 65,000
airlines meals per day
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andside
road system: two two-lane roads inside the airport with
a total length of 36km
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tility
system: 40,000m³ water tank; water treatment system for
12,000m³ of water per day; main transformer station for
transforming electricity from 115kV to 24kV; eight
garbage collection stations; seven telephone exchanges
and two main exchanges
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lectrical
railway system: a future extension will swiftly
transport passengers to and from central Bangkok
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irst-class
hotel with 600 rooms operated by Accor Group under the
Novotel brand
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xpress
freight facilities: one warehouse, one office building
and12 aircraft stands
PASSENGER TERMINAL COMPLEX
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Suvarnabhumi Airport Map
Designed by the MJTA group of consultants, comprising
Murphy Jahn Architecture and TAMS consultant (USA) and ACT
Engineering consultant (Thailand), the passenger terminal
complex (comprising the terminal itself as well as the
concourse) covers an area of 182,000m².
Seven floors and a basement will give the terminal a total
floor area of over 563,000m², (six million ft²) making it
the largest in the world. An innovative roof trellis (one of
the largest in the world) designed to shade the building
against intense tropical sun and reduce the cost of air
conditioning, will also be the largest of its kind.
There will be 360 check-in counters on ten check-in islands,
all with connected baggage belts, and another 100 check-in
counters not connected to the baggage belt system.
The domestic and international halls are clearly separated
with the second floor as a dedicated arrival hall and the
fourth floor as a departure hall. The structure's main
materials are steel and glass.
MJTA's original design for the new terminal was criticised
by Thai architects over a lack of 'Thai characteristics'.
The government responded by forming a special committee to
ensure that these concerns were addressed and that the
building displayed evidence of the local cultural and
artistic heritage.
The contract for construction of the Suvarnabhumi Airport's
passenger terminal complex was awarded to Italian-Thai
Development (Ital-Thai) after a lengthy bidding period.
Other companies involved include Obayashi Corp, Takenaka
Corp, CM Kamchang and Freyssinet International.
The concourse, with an area of 381,000m² is 40m wide, 3,213m
long and 25m high. Its main structure is made of steel.
Enclosure materials are locally manufactured glass and
Teflon-coated fabric.
The construction of the City Airport Terminal in Makkasan
and a 28.6km high-speed rail link to the new airport started
in July 2005 and are planned for completion in November
2007, although this deadline, too, seems unlikely to be met.
The airport express, informally known as the Pink Line and
operated jointly with SRT's planned Red Line commuter
service, will connect with the BTS Sukhumvit Line and MRT
Blue Line at Phaya Thai and Phetchaburi stations
respectively, offering airport-bound passengers a fast
15-minute limited stop journey from the city.
ATC COMPLEX
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Suvarnabhumi Airport Map
Suvanabhumi Airport will have one of the tallest control
tower complexes in the world at 132m with 2,600m² of utility
space.
The ATC tower and complex is being constructed by
Aeronautical Radio of Thailand Co (Aerothai) who are
contracted to provide air traffic control services,
aeronautical telecommunication services, and air navigation
aids services. They, in turn, have subcontracted the
construction portion of the project to Siam Syntech-Unique
Engineering consortium. The project is worth THB574.8m and
is due for completion by late 2005.
The control tower, with an area of 60m², will be located in
the landside area, north of the passenger terminal complex.
The operational centre has been designed to provide
excellent visibility for air traffic controllers across the
north runway and taxiway, 4km away.
The elegant control tower will also be the major landmark of
the new airport. The ATC complex, which will house 300
engineers and support staff, has been designed as a square,
five-storey building, 22 m high, providing utility space of
4,200m².
This building will be the office of the aerodrome control
unit, and the base of the air traffic service engineering
systems, aeronautical telecommunications systems, airlines
and airport services as well as other support units at the
airport.
AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL SERVICE
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Suvarnabhumi Airport Map
In order to ensure the efficiency and safety of air traffic
control services at the second Bangkok International
Airport, Aerothai plans to centralise Bangkok approach
control at the control tower. Responsibility will be divided
between the East Sector; responsible for approach control
between bearing 031-210 and the West Sector; responsible for
approach control between bearing 211-030.
In order to achieve the most efficient air traffic control
services possible within the Bangkok Terminal Area (TMA),
Aerothai will also implement Standard Instrument Departure
(SID) and Standard Instrument Arrival Route (STAR) including
reporting points, and realign route structure.
Aerodrome control will be responsible for air traffic
control service within 5km of the airport including any
airside traffic such as on the runways, taxiways and bays.
Communication systems will include air / ground radio
systems via VHF and UHF and an Aeronautical Information
Service (AIS). Navigation and surveillance aids systems will
include:
Doppler Very High Frequency Omni Range / Distance Measuring
Equipment (DVOR/DME)
Instrument Landing System / Distance Measuring Equipment
(ILS/DME), eight sets at THB40m ($0.9m) each
Local Area Augmentation System (LAAS)
ATC radar system
Airport surface detection equipment
Automatic dependence surveillance
A fibre optics communication network will be provided as the
main media within the airport while communication with
public networks will be made through a digital data network.
These two networks allow the air traffic controllers to
communicate with related agencies efficiently, reliably and
speedily via voice, data or video. The total budget for the
construction and installation of systems is nearly THB3bn
($70m).
SECURITY INSTALLATIONS
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Suvarnabhumi Airport Map All 26 of the CTX 9000 explosive detection baggage scanning
devices and their accessories were installed at the new
airport by the end of 2005. The supplier for this equipment
is the US company GE-Invision, with a contract worth $65m.
There are concerns that there will not be enough X-ray
machines at the airport before it opens in late 2006, which
could lead to security queues. The International Air
Transport Association (IATA) will require more CTX
(computerised tomography) baggage X-ray machines installed
at the airport.
To satisfy demand it is thought another 20 CTX machines will
be required in order for bags to be processed quickly and
efficiently. IATA also wants passenger security screening to
be centralised at one or two locations, rather than at
multiple locations as currently planned.
The immigration information technology system was installed
and implemented by CDG Systems Ltd and Merlin's Solution
International Co Ltd. The project was completed by the start
of 2006.
The hold baggage in line screening system was completed by
the end of 2005 by the TCS Consortium: Dorsch Consult
Ingenieurgesellschaff mbH, Scott Wilson Kirkpatrick
(Thailand) Ltd, JAL Aviation Consulting Incorporated, Japan
Transport Engineering Corp (JTEC), Southeast Asia Technology
Co Ltd (SEATECH), TEAM Consulting Engineering and Management
Co Ltd, Project Planning Services Co Ltd and Santhaya &;38#
Associated. The installation of the baggage in line
screening system was carried out by Quatrotec Inc.
AIRPORT ACCESS
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Suvarnabhumi Airport Map Road access to the new airport will be provided by a series
of new highways connected to Bangkok's existing outer ring
road. The main access road is an elevated five-lane road
that leads from the passenger terminal through the northern
part of the site to the new Bangkok–Chonburi highway.
Construction of these link and access roads is due to be
complete by the final quarter of 2005.
There are proposed plans to extend the Skytrain from Onnui
to the new airport but nothing has been decided to date;
SRT's highspeed rail project from Huay-Kwang to Lad Krabang
to Chonburi will have a spur line connecting to the new
airport.
Airport roads to the front of the terminal building were
completed in mid 2005 by the NTM Consortium: Nippon Koei Co
Ltd, TESCO Ltd and MAA Consultant Ltd.
SITE UTILITIES
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Suvarnabhumi Airport Map The central utility system comprises a 40,000m³ water tank,
a water pumping station with pressure control system, a
12,200m³/d wastewater treatment system and a control
building. It is being built by Ital-Thai. The main
transformer station is being constructed by Mitsubishi
Corporation.
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