Niue International Airport (Alofi / Niue)
Niue International Airport, also known as Hanan International Airport, is an international airport serving the island nation of Niue. It is located near the town of Alofi, and is only used by Air New Zealand, flying to and from Auckland twice a week, departing Auckland on Tuesdays and Saturdays, and departing Niue on Mondays and Fridays.
Plans for an airfield on Niue were initially proposed in 1947, but were not advanced. In 1964 the Niue Assembly asked the New Zealand government to construct an airport, and a site was surveyed. Originally an emergency airfield was planned, but following the survey the plans were upgraded to a full airfield capable of handling turboprop airliners. Construction would be carried out by the New Zealand Army. Construction began in 1968, with New Zealand Ministry of Works staff overseeing Niuean workers from the Department of Public Works. Funding was provided by the New Zealand government. The airport initially had a 5400 foot sealed runway.
The airport received its first flight in December 1970, and its first commercial passengers in July 1971. It was formally opened in November 1971. It was initially served by Polynesian Airlines Hawker Siddeley HS 748s and Fokker F.27 Friendship aircraft from Fiji, but no direct flights from New Zealand. The runway was upgraded in 1981, with direct flights to Auckland using Boeing 737s beginning that year. From 1990 to 1992, it served as the base of the now-defunct Niue Airline.
The airport is named after Ralph Hanan, who was formerly a New Zealand Minister of Island Affairs.
Plans for an airfield on Niue were initially proposed in 1947, but were not advanced. In 1964 the Niue Assembly asked the New Zealand government to construct an airport, and a site was surveyed. Originally an emergency airfield was planned, but following the survey the plans were upgraded to a full airfield capable of handling turboprop airliners. Construction would be carried out by the New Zealand Army. Construction began in 1968, with New Zealand Ministry of Works staff overseeing Niuean workers from the Department of Public Works. Funding was provided by the New Zealand government. The airport initially had a 5400 foot sealed runway.
The airport received its first flight in December 1970, and its first commercial passengers in July 1971. It was formally opened in November 1971. It was initially served by Polynesian Airlines Hawker Siddeley HS 748s and Fokker F.27 Friendship aircraft from Fiji, but no direct flights from New Zealand. The runway was upgraded in 1981, with direct flights to Auckland using Boeing 737s beginning that year. From 1990 to 1992, it served as the base of the now-defunct Niue Airline.
The airport is named after Ralph Hanan, who was formerly a New Zealand Minister of Island Affairs.
IATA Code | IUE | ICAO Code | NIUE | FAA Code | |
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Telephone | Fax | ||||
Home page |
Map - Niue International Airport (Alofi / Niue)
Map
Country - Niue
Flag of Niue |
Niue is a self-governing state in free association with New Zealand, and New Zealand conducts most diplomatic relations on its behalf. As part of the Realm of New Zealand, Niueans are citizens of New Zealand and Charles III is Niue's head of state in his capacity as King of New Zealand. Between 90% and 95% of Niuean people live in New Zealand, along with about 70% of the speakers of the Niuean language. Niue is a bilingual country, with 30% of the population speaking both Niuean and English. The percentage of monolingual English-speaking people is only 11%, while 46% are monolingual Niuean speakers.
Currency / Language
ISO | Currency | Symbol | Significant figures |
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NZD | New Zealand dollar | $ | 2 |
ISO | Language |
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EN | English language |