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Auckland Airport 7 m (23 ft) 3,535 m (11,598 ft) ... List of airports by ICAO code: N#NZ - New Zealand; ... Map of airports in New Zealand with scheduled air services ...
A USAF C-141 at Pago Pago International Airport in July 1968. An Air New Zealand DC-8 is loading passengers in the background. South Pacific jet services between Sydney (Australia), Auckland (New Zealand), Honolulu (Hawaii) and Papeete (Tahiti) were first offered by Pan American World Airways in 1964 using Boeing 707 aircraft.
The island lies roughly 530 km (330 mi) north of Niue and roughly 580 km (360 mi) south of Tokelau and roughly 100 km (62 mi) southeast of the Samoan island of Upolu. [15] Tutuila is a fairly small and narrow island, measuring roughly 33 km (21 mi) across and little more than 3 mi (4.8 km) from north to south at its widest point. [16]
Auckland Airport [5] (IATA: AKL, ICAO: NZAA) is an international airport serving Auckland, the most populous city of New Zealand. It is the largest and busiest airport in the country , with over 16 million passengers served in the year ended August 2023. [ 6 ]
Also see airport category and list.. NFTE (EUA) – ʻEua Airport (Kaufana Airport) – ʻEua NFTF (TBU) – Fuaʻamotu International Airport – Nukuʻalofa, Tongatapu NFTL (HPA) – Lifuka Island Airport (Salote Pilolevu Airport) – Lifuka, Ha'apai
Faleolo International Airport (IATA: APW, ICAO: NSFA) is an airport located 40 kilometres (25 mi) west of Apia, the capital of Samoa. Until 1984, Faleolo could not accommodate jets larger than a Boeing 737. Services to the United States, Australia, or New Zealand, could only land at Pago Pago International Airport in American Samoa. Since the ...
Chatham Islands / Tuuta Airport (IATA: CHT, ICAO: NZCI) is an airport 10.5 nautical miles (19.4 km; 12.1 mi) northeast of Waitangi Township on the Chatham Islands, New Zealand. The airport, in part named in honour of the Chatham islander, Inia William Tuuta, who gifted the land for the airport, [3] was completed in 1982 to replace a compacted ...
Wellington International Airport [4] (IATA: WLG, ICAO: NZWN) — formerly known as Rongotai Aerodrome or Rongotai Airport, or simply Wellington Airport — is an international airport located in the suburb of Rongotai in Wellington, the capital of New Zealand. It lies 5.5 km (3.0 nmi; 3.4 mi) south-east from the city centre.