About Nelson Airport
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Nelson Airport (IATA: NSN, ICAO: NZNS) is located 6 km (3.7 mi) south-west
of central Nelson, New Zealand, in the suburb of Annesbrook. Approximately 1.2
million passengers and visitors use the airport terminal annually. Passenger
numbers for the 2017 financial year were 1,000,373, up from 865,203 in 2016.
It is the sixth-busiest airport in New Zealand by passenger numbers and seventh
by aircraft movements, as well as being the busiest New Zealand airport without
any scheduled international service. The Airport has an Air New
Zealand Regional Lounge.
Nelson airport is the home base of
Air Nelson operating under the
Air NZ Link banner, which operates a fleet of 23 Bombardier Dash 8 Q300s on
national air routes. Air New Zealand,
Air Nelson's parent airline,
recently expanded its Nelson base, investing 30 million dollars to develop the
engineering and technical workshops.
Air New Zealand then
announced the
Air Nelson maintenance
facility would also handle fellow subsidiary Mount Cook Airline's fleet of ATR
72-600 aircraft.
The airport has a single terminal building with 9 tarmac gates. A further 7
remote gates are located adjacent to the terminal.
In 2014, Nelson City Council deemed the main terminal of Nelson Airport an
earthquake risk and at fault of possible liquefaction. The Airport has been
granted 10 years to upgrade the terminal to meet current building standards. The
Nelson Airport management on 8 September 2015 have decided to rebuild the
terminal instead of renovating the existing complex as this will best meet the
growth needs in the future. It was also announced that due to increased airline
activity strong passenger growth could be expected over the next two years. It
is estimated that by the end of 2017 there could be more than 1 million
passengers per annum and over 300 flights per week at the airport.
On 6 December 2017, the airport inaugurated 270 new parking spaces and new exit
barrier arms (the latter located near
Air New Zealand's hangar
on Trent Drive) in order to help with traffic flow during the development and
expansion phase mentioned above.
Nelson Airport propose to extend the main runway to the north by 150m stating
that it's one of the shortest runways in the world for the type of aircraft
serving the airport and the current runway restricts payload on flights.
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