The airport comprises four terminals: one international terminal, two domestic terminals and one budget domestic terminal. It is 18 kilometres (11 miles) northwest of the
city centre, adjacent to the suburb of
Tullamarine. The airport has its own suburb with its own postcode—
Melbourne Airport, Victoria, 3045 respectively.[6] The facility presently covers 2,741
hectares (6,773
acres) of airport property, making MEL among the largest airports in Australia in terms of land area.[7]
In 2016–17 around 25 million domestic passengers and 10 million international passengers used the airport.[8] The airport features
direct flights to 33 domestic destinations and to destinations in the Pacific, Europe, Asia, North America and South America. Melbourne Airport is the number one arrival/departure point for the airports of four of Australia's
seven other capital cities.[a] Melbourne serves as a major hub for
Qantas and
Virgin Australia, while
Jetstar utilises the airport as home base. Domestically, Melbourne serves as headquarters for
Team Global Express and handles more domestic freight than any other airport in the nation.[10]
History
Establishment
Before the opening of Melbourne Airport, Melbourne's main airport was
Essendon Airport, which was officially designated an international airport in 1950. In the mid-1950s, over 10,000 passengers were using Essendon Airport, and its limitations were beginning to become apparent. Essendon's facilities were insufficient to meet the increasing demand for air travel; the runways were too short to handle large jets, and the terminals failed to handle the increase in passengers. By the mid-1950s, an international overflow terminal was built in a new northern hangar. The airport could not be expanded, as it had become surrounded by residential districts.
The search for a replacement for Essendon commenced in February 1958, when a panel was appointed to assess Melbourne's civil aviation needs.[11] Alternative sites considered were Tullamarine (9 miles (14.5 km) from Melbourne), Whittlesea (22 miles (35.4 km)), Hastings (37 miles (59.5 km)), Port Melbourne (3 miles (4.8 km)), Werribee (20 miles (32.2 km)),
Laverton (12 miles (19.3 km)),
Avalon (34 miles (54.7 km)) and
Moorabbin (12 miles (19.3 km)).[12] Considerations such as superior proximity to Melbourne and lower development costs narrowed the choice to either Tullamarine or Laverton, with Laverton eventually eliminated in part due to issues coordinating both military and civil activities that could not guarantee the degree of safety demanded, and that traffic coordination would be easier with the shorter distance between Essendon and Tullamarine.[12]
In 1959, the
Commonwealth Government acquired 5,300 ha (13,000 acres) of grassland in then-rural Tullamarine.[13]
In May 1959 it was announced that a new airport would be built at Tullamarine, with Prime Minister
Robert Menzies announcing on 27 November 1962 a five-year plan to provide Melbourne with a A$45 million "jetport" by 1967.[14][15][16][17] The first sod at Tullamarine was turned two years later in November 1964.[11] In line with the five-year plan, the runways at Essendon were expanded to handle larger aircraft, with
Ansett Australia launching the
Boeing 727 there in October 1964, the first jet aircraft used for domestic air travel in Australia.[18][14]
On 1 July 1970, Prime Minister
John Gorton opened Melbourne Airport to international operations ending Essendon's near two decade run as Melbourne's international airport.[19] Essendon still was home to domestic flights for one year, until they transferred to Melbourne Airport on 26 June 1971, with the first arrival of a
Boeing 747 occurring later that year.[20][21] In the first year of operations, Melbourne handled six international airlines and 155,275 international passengers.[21]
Melbourne Airport was originally called 'Melbourne International Airport'. It is at Tullamarine, a name derived from the
indigenous name
Tullamareena.[18] Locally, the airport is commonly referred to as Tullamarine or simply as Tulla to distinguish the airport from the other three Melbourne airports:
Avalon,
Essendon and
Moorabbin.[22][23]
On opening, Melbourne Airport consisted of three connected terminals: International in the centre, with
Ansett to the South and
Trans Australia Airlines to the North. The design capacity of the airport was eight
Boeing 707s at a rate of 500 passengers per hour, with minor expansion works completed in 1973 allowing
Boeing 747s to serve the airport.[24] By the late 1980s peak passenger flows at the airport had reached 900 per hour, causing major congestion.[24]
In late 1989, Federal Airports Corporation Inspector A. Rohead was put in charge of a bicentennial project to rename streets in Melbourne Airport to honour the original inhabitants, European pioneers and aviation history. Information on the first two categories was provided by Ian Hunter, Wurundjeri researcher, and Ray Gibb, local historian. The project was completed but was shelved, with the only suggested name, Gowrie Park Drive, being allocated, named after the farm at the heart of the airport. During the 1920s, the farm had been used as a landing site for aircraft, which were parked at night during
World War II in case Essendon Aerodrome was bombed.[25]
Expansion and privatisation
In 1988, the Australian Government formed the
Federal Airports Corporation (FAC), placing Melbourne Airport under the operational control of the new corporation along with 21 other airports around the nation.[21]
The FAC undertook a number of upgrades at the airport. The first major upgrades were carried out at the domestic terminals,[21] with an expansion of the Ansett domestic terminal approved in 1989 and completed in 1991, adding a second pier for use by smaller regional airlines.[26][27] Work on an upgrade of the international terminal commenced in 1991, with the 'SkyPlaza' retail complex completed in late 1993 on a site flanking the main international departure gates.[21] The rest of the work was completed in 1995, when the new three-level satellite concourse was opened at the end of the existing concourse. Diamond shaped and measuring 80 m (260 ft) on each side, the additional 10 aerobridges provided by the expansion doubled the international passenger handing capacity at Melbourne Airport.[28]
In April 1994, the Australian Government announced that all airports operated by FAC would be privatized in several phases.[29] Melbourne Airport was included in the first phase, being acquired by the newly formed
Australia Pacific Airports Corporation for $1.3 billion.[21] The transfer was completed on 30 June 1997 on a 50-year long-term lease, with the option for a further 49 years.[30] Melbourne Airport is categorized as a Leased Commonwealth Airport.[31]
Since privatization, further improvements to infrastructure have begun at the airport, including expansion of runways, car parks and terminals. The multi-storey carpark outside the terminal was completed between 1995 and August 1997 at a cost of $49 million, providing 3,100 parking spaces, the majority undercover.[21] This initially four-level structure replaced the previous open air carpark outside the terminal. Work commenced on the six-story 276-room Hilton Hotel (now Parkroyal) above the carpark in January 1999, which was completed in mid-2000 at a cost of $55 million. Expansion of the Qantas domestic terminal was completed in 1999, featuring a second pier and 9 additional aircraft stands.[32]
In December 2000, a fourth passenger terminal opened: the Domestic Express Terminal, located to the south of the main terminal building at a cost of $9 million. It was the first passenger terminal facility to be built at Melbourne Airport since 1971.[33]
Expansion of carparks has also continued with a $40 million project commenced in 2004, doubling the size of the short term carpark with the addition of 2,500 spaces over six levels, along with 1,200 new spaces added to the 5,000 already available in the long term carpark.[34] Revenue from retail operations at Melbourne Airport broke the $100 million mark for the first time in 2004, this being a 100 per cent increase in revenue since the first year of privatization.[34]
In 2005, the airport undertook construction works to prepare the airport for the arrival of the double-decker
Airbus A380. The main work was the widening of the main north–south runway by 15 m (49 ft), which was completed over a 29-day period in May 2005.[35] The improvements also included the construction of dual airbridges (Gates 9 and 11) with the ability to board both decks simultaneously to reduce turnaround times, the extension of the international terminal building by 20 m (66 ft) to include new penthouse airline lounges, and the construction of an additional baggage carousel in the arrivals hall. As a result, the airport was the first in Australia to be capable of handling the A380.[36] The A380 made its first test flight into the airport on 14 November 2005.[37] On 15 May 2008, the A380 made its first passenger flight into the airport when a
Singapore Airlines Sydney-bound flight was diverted from Sydney Airport because of fog.[38] Beginning services in October 2008,
Qantas was the first airline to operate the A380 from the airport, flying nonstop to
Los Angeles International Airport twice a week. This was the inaugural route for the Qantas A380.[39]
In March 2006, the airport undertook a 5,000 m2 (54,000 sq ft) expansion of Terminal 2, and the construction of an additional level of airline lounges above the terminal.[40] In 2008 a further 25,000 m2 (270,000 sq ft) expansion of Terminal 2 commenced, costing $330 million with completion in 2011. The works added 5 additional aerobridges on a new passenger concourse, and a new 5,000 m2 (54,000 sq ft) outbound passenger security and customs processing zone.[41]
In 2017, Melbourne Airport international passenger movements exceeded 10 million annual travellers.[42] In the Financial Year of 2022/2023, international passenger movements exceeded 8 million travellers, up 330% post-COVID.[43]
Terminals
Melbourne Airport's terminals have 68 gates: 53 domestic and 15 international.[44] There are five dedicated freighter parking positions on the Southern Freighter Apron.[45] The current terminal numbering system was introduced in July 2005; they were previously known as Qantas Domestic, International, and South (formerly Ansett Domestic).[46]
Terminal 1
Terminal 1 hosts Qantas and QantasLink domestic flights
The second pier at Terminal 1 was built in 1999.
Terminal 1 hosts domestic and regional services for Qantas Group airlines,
Qantas and
QantasLink (which is located to the northern end of the building). Departures are located on the first floor, while arrivals are located on the ground floor. The terminal has 16 parking bays served by aerobridges; 12 are served by single aerobridges whilst four are served by double aerobridges. There are another five non-aerobridge gates, which are used by QantasLink.
Opened with Melbourne Airport in 1970 for
Trans Australia Airlines, the terminal passed to Qantas in 1992 when it acquired the airline. Work on improving the original terminal commenced in October 1997 and was completed in late 1999 at a cost of $50 million, featuring a second pier, stands for 9 additional aircraft, an extended access roadway and the expansion of the terminal.[32][21]
Today, a wide range of shops and food outlets are situated at the end of the terminal near the entrance into Terminal 2.
Qantas has a
Qantas Club, Business Class and a chairman's lounge in the terminal.[47][48]
Terminal 2
Terminal 2 handles all international, and limited domestic flights out of Melbourne Airport, and opened in 1970. The terminal has 20 gates with aerobridges.
Cathay Pacific,
Qantas (which includes two lounges in Terminal 2, a First lounge, and a Business lounge/Qantas Club),
Singapore Airlines,
Air New Zealand and
Emirates all operate airline lounges in the terminal.[48][49]
A $330 million expansion programme for Terminal 2 was announced in 2007 and completed in 2012. The objectives of this project included new lounges and retail facilities, a new satellite terminal, increased luggage capacity and a redesign of customs and security areas.[51] A new satellite terminal was also constructed as part of the project, featuring floor-to-ceiling windows which offer views of the North-South runway. The new concourse also includes three double-decker aerobridges, each of which can accommodate an A380 or two smaller aircraft and one single aerobridge. The baggage handling capacity was also increased, and two new
baggage carousels were built to cater to increased A380 traffic.[52]
Although described as a satellite terminal, the terminal building is connected by an above-ground corridor to Terminal 2. Departures take place on the lower deck (similar to the A380 boarding lounges currently in use at Gates 9 and 11), with arrivals streamed on to the first floor to connect with the current first floor arrivals deck.
Terminal 3
Terminal 3 opened with the airport as the
Ansett Australia terminal, but is now owned by Melbourne Airport. Terminal 3 is currently home to
Virgin Australia. It has eleven parking bays served by single aerobridges and eight parking bays not equipped with aerobridges.
An expansion of the terminal was approved in 1989 and completed in 1991 when a second pier was added by Ansett to the south for use by smaller regional airline
Kendell, which Ansett owned.[26][27] The terminal was used exclusively by the
Ansett Group for all its domestic activities until its collapse in 2001. It was intended to be used by the "new
Ansett", under ownership of Tesna; however, following the Tesna group's withdrawal of the purchase of Ansett in 2002, the terminal was sold back to Melbourne Airport by
Ansett's administrators. As a result, Melbourne Airport undertook a major renovation and facelift of the terminal, following which
Virgin Australia (then Virgin Blue) moved in from what was then called Domestic Express (now Terminal 4),[53] and has since begun operating The Lounge in the terminal, using the former Ansett Australia Golden Wing Lounge area.[48][54] Rex also operates an airline lounge in the terminal.[55]
Terminal 4
Terminal 4 – originally called the Domestic Express or South Terminal – is dedicated to budget airlines and is the first facility of its kind at a conventional airport in Australia. It was originally constructed for
Virgin Blue (
Virgin Australia) and
Impulse Airlines. Virgin Blue eventually moved into Terminal 3 following the demise of Ansett.[56] A$5 million refit began in June 2007[57] along the lines of the budget terminal model at
Singapore Changi Airport and
Kuala Lumpur International Airport. Lower
landing and airport handling fees are charged to airlines due to the basic facilities, lack of
jet bridges, and fewer amenities and retail outlets compared to a conventional terminal. However, the terminal is located next to the main terminal building, unlike in Singapore and Kuala Lumpur. The terminal was rebuilt by Tiger Airways Australia, which had used it as its main hub since it operated its first domestic flight on 23 November 2007.[58]
Jetstar confirmed its involvement in discussions with Melbourne Airport regarding the expansion of terminal facilities to accommodate for the growth of domestic low-cost services. The expansion of Terminal 4 includes infrastructure to accommodate
Tigerair Australia and
Jetstar flights. The development cost hundreds of millions of dollars.[23] In March 2012, airport officials would break ground that October and they expected completion in July 2014, however, they pushed that date to late August 2015. The facility opened on 18 August 2015 with Jetstar first utilising the terminal. The new T4 terminal is 35,000 m2 (380,000 sq ft) and linked "under one roof" with T3. Terminal 4 is currently used by
Rex Airlines, Jetstar,
Airnorth, and
Bonza.
Tigerair Australia formerly also used Terminal 4 before going into administration.
The terminal has Rex Airlines,
Bonza and Jetstar check-ins, baggage claim and bag drop on ground floor whilst the food court, shops and lounges are located on the first floor, which lead to the departure/arrival zone.
Rex Airlines and Bonza currently use the jet bridge equipped section of Terminal 4 for operations, while Jetstar uses the non-jet bridge equipped section of Terminal 4 for operations. Additionally. some Virgin Australia departures and arrivals use the Terminal 4 gates. Currently
Airnorth does not operate any services to Melbourne, however still retains their check-in/baggage check-in desks.
Southern Freighter Apron
The Southern Freighter Apron has five dedicated freighter parking positions which host 21 dedicated freighter operations a week.[45] In August 1997, the fifth freighter parking position and the apron was extended.[21]
Other facilities
Melbourne Airport is served by four hotels. A
Parkroyal Hotel is located 100 m (330 ft) from Terminal 2 atop the multi-level carpark. Work commenced on the six-story 280-room hotel in January 1999 and was completed in mid-2000.[32] The hotel was originally a
Hilton but was relaunched as the Parkroyal on 4 April 2011.[59]Holiday Inn has an outlet located 400 m (1,300 ft) from the terminal precinct.
Ibis Budget offers lodgings located 600 m (2,000 ft) from the terminals. Mantra Tullamarine opened in 2009, 2 km (1.2 mi) from the terminal precinct.[60]
Operations
Overview
Melbourne is the second busiest airport in Australia. The airport is
curfew-free and operates 24 hours a day, although between 2 am and 4 am, freight aircraft are more prevalent than passenger flights.[61] In 2004, the environmental management systems were accredited
ISO 14001, the world's best practice standard, making it the first airport in Australia to receive such accreditation.[62]
Runways
Melbourne Airport has two intersecting runways: one 3,657 m (11,998 ft) north–south and one 2,286 m (7,500 ft) east–west. Due to increasing traffic, several runway expansions are planned, including an 843 m (2,766 ft) extension of the north-south runway to lengthen it to 4,500 m (14,764 ft), and a 1,214 m (3,983 ft) extension of the east–west runway to a total of 3,500 m (11,483 ft). Two new runways are also planned: a 3,000 m (9,843 ft) runway parallel to the current north–south runway and a 3,000 m (9,843 ft) runway south of the current east–west runway.[63] The current east west runway extension and new third runway were expected to cost $500–750 million with major construction originally set to begin around 2019 and be complete by 2022.[64] However, in 2019 following an extensive consultation period, Melbourne Airport unexpectedly dropped plans for a new east-west runway in favour of constructing a new parallel north-south runway to the west of the airport, citing aircraft noise concerns for residents in nearby suburbs of
Gladstone Park,
Westmeadows,
Attwood and
Jacana.[65] Although there is an additional 12–24 months of planning, Melbourne Airport Corporation anticipates the new north-south runway will be operational by 2025, with the potential to include the extension of the existing east-west runway.[66] Traffic movement was expected to reach 248,000 per annum by 2017, and existing runway capacity is expected by 2023, necessitating a third runway.[67]
On 5 June 2008, it was announced that the airport would install a
Category III landing system, allowing planes to land in low visibility conditions, such as fog. This system was the first of its kind in Australia, and was commissioned March 2010 at a cost of $10 million.[68][11]
Melbourne Airspace Control Centre
In addition to the onsite control tower, the airport is home to
Melbourne Centre, an
air traffic control facility that is responsible for the separation of aircraft in Australia's busiest
flight information region (FIR), Melbourne FIR. Melbourne FIR monitors airspace over Victoria, Tasmania, southern New South Wales, most of South Australia, the southern half of Western Australia and airspace over the
Indian and
Southern Ocean. In total, the centre controls 6% of the world's airspace.[69] The airport is also the home of the
Canberra, Adelaide and Melbourne approach facilities, which provide control services to aircraft arriving and departing at those airports.
^Some Qatar Airways flights make an intermediate stop in Adelaide en route to the listed destination. However, the airline has no
eighth freedom rights to carry passengers solely between Melbourne and Adelaide.
Traffic and statistics
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. There is more info on
Phabricator and on
MediaWiki.org.
Annual (civil years) traffic on Tullamarine.
See
Wikidata query.
In 2016–17 Melbourne Airport recorded around 25 million
domestic passenger movements and around 10 million international passenger movements.[8] In that year there were 239,466 aircraft movements in total.[139] Melbourne Airport was tipped to record 47 million passengers in the year to June 30, 2020, before the pandemic hit, but instead recorded 27.2 million as state and international borders were closed.[140] Melbourne is the
second busiest airport in Australia for passenger movements, behind
Sydney and ahead of
Brisbane.
Total
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. There is more info on
Phabricator and on
MediaWiki.org.
Annual passenger traffic at MEL airport.
See
Wikidata query.
Annual passenger statistics for Melbourne Airport[141]
Year
Domestic
International
Total
Change
1998
11,429,141
2,489,132
13,918,273
1.8%
1999
11,900,956
2,654,807
14,555,763
4.1%
2000
12,933,747
3,043,629
15,977,376
8.7%
2001
13,265,849
3,315,572
16,581,421
2.6%
2002
12,883,149
3,313,751
16,196,900
-2.9%
2003
14,021,489
3,199,534
17,221,023
8.8%
2004
15,812,950
3,936,435
19,749,385
12.8%
2005
16,505,127
4,224,635
20,729,762
4.4%
2006
17,276,578
4,291,290
21,567,868
4.7%
2007
18,185,325
4,565,084
22,750,409
5.3%
2008
19,835,386
4,732,544
24,567,930
9.1%
2009
19,755,218
5,130,352
24,885,570
-0.4%
2010
21,522,253
5,872,511
27,394,764
8.9%
2011
21,206,546
6,460,958
27,667,504
-1.5%
2012
22,098,350
6,819,242
28,917,592
4.2%
2013
22,908,284
7,312,143
30,220,427
3.7%
2014
23,364,327
8,022,466
31,386,793
2.0%
2015
23,930,897
8,859,316
32,790,213
2.4%
2016
24,732,603
9,642,586
34,375,189
3.4%
2017
25,235,738
10,323,782
35,559,520
2.0%
2018
25,692,745
11,223,884
36,916,629
1.8%
2019
25,815,647
11,318,644
37,134,291
0.5%
2020
6,462,941
2,434,451
8,897,392
-75.0%
2021
6,763,686
396,590
7,160,276
4.7%
2022
20,309,831
5,381,023
25,690,854
200.3%
Busiest international freight routes into and out of Melbourne Airport (year ending 31 December 2021)[142]
Melbourne Airport is 23 km (14 mi) from the
city centre and is accessible via the
Tullamarine Freeway. One freeway offramp runs directly into the airport grounds, and a second to the south serves freight transport, taxis, buses and airport staff.[145] In June 2015, the
Airport Drive extension was completed, creating a second major link to the airport. The link starts at the
M80 Ring Road and provides direct access to Melrose Drive 1.5 kilometres from the terminal area.[146] As of late 2018 the Tullamarine Freeway was widened.[147] In mid-2023, a new exit was constructed specifically for Terminal 4, omitting the other exits in favour of an elevated off-ramp.
Melbourne Airport has five car parks, all of which operate 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. The short-term, multi-level long-term, business and express carparks are covered, while the long-term parking is not.[148] The main multi-level carpark in front of the terminal was built in the late 1990s, replacing the pre-existing ground-level car parking,[32] progressively expanded ever since.
Melbourne Airport recorded more than 2.2 million taxi movements in the year to 30 June 2017.[149]
The
Andrews government commenced construction on Melbourne Airport Rail (SRL Airport) in 2022 and the rail link was set to open by 2029.[159] Currently construction has been halted as ex-Premier Daniel Andrews ordered for construction to halt. It is unknown when construction will resume, or if it will ever resume. The 27 km link will run via
Sunshine station in Melbourne's west into the central city via the under-construction
Metro Tunnel. The link will connect to western
regional rail services at Sunshine and to other services on the
Metropolitan rail network at Sunshine,
Footscray, and
State Library and
Town Hall in the CBD. The link will be the first direct rail connection to the Airport.
Constructing a rail link has been discussed in Victorian politics since Melbourne Airport opened. Connecting the Broadmeadows line (now the
Craigieburn line) to the airport was debated in the 1960s under the
Bolte state government, but with insufficient support in parliament, the rail project was abandoned in 1965.[160]
In 2001, the
Bracks State Government investigated the construction of a heavy rail link to the Airport under the Linking Victoria programme. Two options were considered; the first branched off the Craigieburn Suburban Line to the east, and the second branched off the
Albion Goods Line, which passes close to the airport's boundary to the south. The second option was preferred.[161] Market research concluded most passengers preferred travelling to the airport by taxi or car, and poor patronage of similar links in
Sydney and
Brisbane cast doubt on the viability of the project.[162] This led to the project being deferred until at least 2012. On 21 July 2008, the
Premier of Victoria reaffirmed the government's commitment to a rail link and said that it would be considered within three to five years.[163] To maximise future development options, the airport lobbied for the on-grounds section of the railway to be underground.[63][164]
In 2010,
Martin Pakula of the Labor Party, newly appointed State Minister for Public Transport, announced that the rail link had been taken off the agenda with new freeway options being explored instead.[160][165] A change of government at the
2010 Victorian State Election to renewed focus on the link, with a promise by the incoming Coalition government to undertake planning for its construction.[166] Proposals in January 2013 to improve the bus service to the airport involving turning emergency lanes into bus lanes on the freeway and the Bolte Bridge and putting SkyBus on a myki fare, were challenged by
CityLink operator
Transurban because it would limit its toll revenue, and by Melbourne Airport, because it would reduce its car parking profits.[167]
On 13 March 2013, the Victorian Liberal government under then Premier,
Denis Napthine, announced that the Melbourne Airport Rail Link (MARL) would be constructed around 2015/16 running from the CBD via
Sunshine Station and the
Albion–Jacana railway line.[168] This proposal was shelved after the Napthine Government lost office to the
Labor Party at the
2014 state election.
After initially rejecting the project, the Andrews Government announced in May 2017 that it would spend $10 million along with the
Turnbull government's $30 million to devise a rail link planning study. On 23 November 2017, Premier Daniel Andrews told business groups that construction on a rail link between the airport and Melbourne's
Southern Cross station via
Sunshine station would begin construction within the next 10 years.[169]
On 12 April 2018, then-Prime Minister
Malcolm Turnbull pledged $5 billion in federal funding for a rail link between the Airport and the Melbourne CBD, provided the Victoria state government match the funding.[170][171] On 22 July 2018, the state government announced that it would provide $5 billion to match federal government funding for the airport rail link.[172] The Sunshine route was chosen, with Sunshine station to be upgraded for easier interchange for metropolitan and regional passengers onto Airport services and the link confirmed to run through the Metro Tunnel.[173]
The business case was released in 2022 and it was announced that the
Melbourne Airport station would be elevated at a height of around 6 storeys.[174] Melbourne Airport Corporation objected to the elevated station, arguing for it to be built underground.[174]
Accidents and incidents
On 29 May 2003,
Qantas Flight 1737 from Melbourne to
Launceston Airport was subjected to an attempted hijacking shortly after takeoff. The hijacker, a passenger named David Robinson, intended to fly the aircraft into the
Walls of Jerusalem National Park, located in central
Tasmania. The flight attendants and passengers successfully subdued and restrained the hijacker, and the aircraft returned to Melbourne.[175][176]
On 20 March 2009,
Emirates Airline Flight 407, an
Airbus A340-500, was taking off from Melbourne Airport on Runway 16 for a flight to
Dubai International Airport and failed to become airborne in the normal distance. When the aircraft was nearing the end of the runway, the crew commanded nose-up sharply, causing its tail to scrape along the runway as it became airborne, during which smoke was observed in the cabin. The crew dumped fuel over Port Phillip Bay and successfully returned to Melbourne. The damage caused to the airport was considered substantial, with a damaged strobe light at the end of the runway as well as an antenna on the localiser, which led to the ILS being out of service for some time causing some disruptions to the airport's operation.[177]
On 11 October 2022, a security breach occurred at the airport, with a Qantas spokesperson saying that "A passenger appears to have inadvertently passed from an unscreened area to a screened area of the airport in Melbourne".
Australian Federal Police shut down a section of the airport, and ordered all passengers in the terminal be rescreened, including those already on planes waiting to take off.[178][179][180]
In December 2023, it was confirmed that two planes had near misses at Melbourne airport back in September the same year. There was construction work on one of the runways, leading to closure of a section of runway. In one case, a Malaysia Airlines plane took off about two hundred metres before construction workers and equipment. In the other case, a Bamboo Airlines plane took off narrowly missing construction workers and equipment (3 metres). [181][182]
Awards and accolades
Melbourne Airport has received numerous awards. The
International Air Transport Association ranked Melbourne among the top five airports in the world in 1997 and 1998.[183][184] In 2003, Melbourne received the IATA's Eagle Award for service and two National Tourism Awards for tourism services.[185][186][187]
The airport has received recognition in other areas. It has won national and state tourism awards,[186][187] and
Singapore Airlines presented the airport with the Service Partner Award and Premier Business Partner Award in 2002 and 2004, respectively.[184][188] In 2006, the airport won the
Australian Construction Achievement Award for the runway widening project, dubbed "the most outstanding example of construction excellence for 2006".[189] In 2012,
Parkroyal Melbourne Airport was awarded for the best airport hotel in Australia/the Pacific by
Skytrax.[190] According to Skytrax World's Top 100 Airports List, Melbourne Airport has improved from ranked 43rd in 2012 to 27th in 2018.[191][192]
See also
City of Keilor – the former local government area of which Melbourne Airport was a part
^Barnes, Renee (14 November 2005).
"The Airbus has landed". The Age. Melbourne.
Archived from the original on 26 November 2005. Retrieved 29 September 2008.
^Lucas, Clay (12 November 2009).
"New airport link proposed". The Age. Melbourne, Australia.
Archived from the original on 19 January 2010. Retrieved 28 February 2010.