Harbin Taiping Airport, formerly known asYanjiagang Airport, is located about 37 kilometres (23 mi) southwest of the city of Harbin and was constructed in 1979 with further expansion between 1994 and 1997 at a cost of $960 million RMB. It replaced the old Harbin Majiagou Airport (哈尔滨马家沟机场) that was originally built by theJapanese in 1931.[2][3] In 1984, Taiping was upgraded to an international airport. Today it serves as an important transportation hub for the northeastern region of China and is the largest airport servingHeilongjiang province.
It is capable of handling 6 million passengers annually and has more than 70 air routes, both domestic and international. Currently it has one 3200 m asphalt runway.
By the flight of theSpring Airlines from June 2015, The first LCC international air routes toNagoya, Japan began.
In 2013, Harbin Taiping International Airport handled 10 million passengers. It is the23rd Chinese airport which reached the level of 10 million passengers per year.
In 2017, Harbin Taiping International Airport handled 18 million passengers, becoming the21st busiest airport in mainland China.[4][5]
To handle the growing number of passengers, the new Terminal 2 opened on 30 April 2018. This terminal is for domestic flights only. All international flights were moved to the old terminal, about 1 mile to the north of Terminal 2, which is being redeveloped to handle international flights.
Harbin Airport was divided into two separate terminals, International and Domestic. On 22 May 2013, in order to build Terminal 2, International Departure and Arrival has been moved to a former terminal.[6]
The first runway opened with the airport in 1979 as 05/23
The second runway 05R/23L opened on January 23, 2025, as part of the expansion program, at the mean time the old runway 05/23 will be changing its name into 05L/23R to form a two-runway system together with the new runway.