Incheon Airport's second terminal celebrates grand opening
By Won Ho-jungPublished : Jan. 12, 2018 - 17:42
Korea’s main gateway airport held a grand opening ceremony Friday for its second passenger terminal, set to open to the public on Thursday, three weeks ahead of the PyeongChang Winter Olympics.
President Moon Jae-in and Transport Minister Kim Hyun-mee, along with Incheon Airport‘s honorary spokesmodels, figure skater Kim Yu-na and actor Song Joong-ki, attended the event.
“An airport is a symbol of a nation’s power and its level of international exchanges,” President Moon said in a speech at the ceremony. “With the opening of the second terminal, Incheon Airport now has the ability to service 72 million passengers annually. It has grown to become the world’s fifth-most sought international gateway airport and has completed preparations for its second leap forward.”
Moon also promised continued support for expanding the airport moving forward.
“Incheon Airport must become a hub not only in East Asia, but for the world,” he said. “The Korean government will proactively support the airport so that it will be able to service 100 million passengers annually by 2023.”
The new terminal will house four airlines affiliated with the SkyTeam air alliance -- Korean Air, Delta, KLM and Air France.
“The opening of the second passenger terminal on Jan. 18 will be another turning point, as Incheon Airport strives to become the best,” said Chung Il-young, CEO of Incheon International Airport Corp.
“We will stabilize operations as soon as the airport opens to perfectly fulfill our role as Korea’s central airport, and will support the success of the PyeongChang Winter Olympics.”
The second terminal will open in time to serve athletes and Olympics officials who will begin entering Korea starting on Jan. 30 to prepare for the Winter Games. Those heading to PyeongChang can either take a transfer plane to Yangyang Airport or a KTX train from Incheon Airport.
The second terminal has a variety of information and communication technology solutions to allow better flow of traffic, including self-check-in and bag drop kiosks, robots that provide information about facilities and 360-degree body scanners.
Starting Saturday, the airport corporation will run a shuttle bus between the two terminals every five minutes to transport passengers who may have gone to the wrong terminal.
Construction of the 4.9 trillion-won ($4.6 billion) second passenger terminal at Incheon Airport began in June 2009.
By Won Ho-jung (hjwon@heraldcorp.com)