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 Nagoya Airport - Definition 

Nagoya Airport (Japanese: 名古屋空港) is an airport located near Nagoya, Aichi Prefecture, Japan, in the cities of Komaki and Kasugai. It is sometimes referred to as Komaki International Airport. Its IATA Airport Code is NGO, and its ICAO Airport Code is RJNN. Under Japanese law it is classified as a second class airport.

During the 1980s and early 1990s, NGO was a busy international airport because of overflow from Japan's other international airports, New Tokyo International Airport (now Narita International Airport) near Tokyo and Osaka International Airport (Itami Airport) near Osaka. Since the opening of Kansai International Airport in 1994, the airport's main traffic source has been the nearby automotive industry, causing carriers such as United Airlines and Delta Air Lines to stop flying to Nagoya. Some discount holiday flights still operate from NGO, drawing passengers from the Kansai region.

On April 26, 1994, an Airbus A300B4-622R jet operating as China Airlines flight 140 (B-1816) from Taipei to Nagoya crashed onto a runway while trying to land, killing 264 of the 271 people on board, making it the second deadliest crash on Japanese soil.

In addition to its lack of traffic, the airport is also hampered by its location in a residential area of Aichi Prefecture, limiting the number of flights that can use the airport, as well as the hours in which they can fly. Because of this, a new airport, Chubu International Airport, is being built on an island south of Nagoya. All of NGO's commercial flights will move to Chubu on February 17, 2005, and the old airport will then become a general aviation facility. [1] (http://www.pref.aichi.jp/kouku/bj.htm)

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fr:Aéroport de Nagoya ja:名古屋空港 zh:名古屋机场

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