Beijing Capital International Airport (
IATA:
PEK,
ICAO:
ZBAA) is the main international airport serving Beijing. It is located 32 km (20 mi) northeast of Beijing's city center,[
citation needed] in an enclave of
Chaoyang District and the surroundings of that enclave in suburban
Shunyi District.
[4] The airport is owned and operated by the
Beijing Capital International Airport Company Limited, a state-controlled company. The airport's
IATA Airport code,
PEK, is based on the city's former romanized name,
Peking.
[note 1]
Beijing Capital has rapidly ascended in rankings of the world's busiest airports in the past decade. It had become the busiest airport in Asia in terms of passenger traffic and total traffic movements by 2009. It was the world's second busiest airport in terms of passenger traffic from 2010-2013 and as of March 1, 2014 it was the
second-busiest airport in the world in 2014. The airport registered 557,167 aircraft movements (take-offs and landings), which ranked
6th in the world in 2012.
[3] In terms of cargo traffic, Beijing airport has also witnessed rapid growth. By 2012, the airport had become the
13th busiest airport in the world by cargo traffic, registering 1,787,027 tonnes.
[3]
Beijing Capital International Airport is the main hub for
Air China, the
flag carrier of the People's Republic of China, which flies to around 120 destinations (excluding cargo) from Beijing.
Hainan and
China Southern Airlines also use the airport as their hub.
To accommodate the growing traffic volume, Beijing Capital added the enormous Terminal 3 in 2008 in time for the Olympic Games, the second largest
airport terminal in the world after
Dubai International Airport's Terminal 3, and the
sixth largest building in the world by area. Beijing Capital International Airport covers 1,480 hectares (3,700 acres) of land.