[OC] Monthly Enplaned Passengers, Hong Kong International Airport and Indianapolis International Airport, 2019-2022
Submitted by thexylom t3_zzjuck in dataisbeautiful
I’d appreciate a more upfront legend, otherwise I like it! Crazy to think about purely by pop up with Hong Kong at 7mil and Indianapolis at 800K..
Will do better next time! Yes, it's insane that HKG was the 8th largest passenger airport in 2018, and then it just shrunk to something barely resembling a mid-sized regional airport
Wonder what they are doing with that massive airport of theirs. Been through it a few times pre covid and it was always fun walking around it waiting for your connection.
Been back there a few times since COVID, it's... Not holding up well
Was there in October, all the shops including restaurants were closed indefinitely inside the departure area, hope things will goes back to normal soon!
Don’t forget the HKG is the central hub of two regional airlines and a major international airline (Cathay Pacific).
While IND is home to a Delta Air Lines regional affiliate (Republic), it doesn’t serve as a hub to the flight operations, but merely the corporate headquarters.
How Cathay Pacific is surviving today is a total mystery to me.
Cathay survives cause they are owned by SwireAlso they basically Monopolized the Air Cargo Biz throughout covid into HK. If companies are using their planes for Air Cargo; they still own the Cargo Terminal that processes everything entering and exiting. As well as owning the maintenance company; where a lot of airlines outside HK fly over to do their work.
On top of all the cost cutting they did to their staff; including, but not limited to, closing Dragonair outright. Most employees found out their company disappeared when they couldn't get into the building.
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Which would make both airports transport ~50% of city's population pre COVID.
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