alt=A Royal Jordanian passenger jet parked at a gate at Queen Alia International Airport in Amman, connected to a jet bridge.|thumb|268x268px|Royal Jordanian aircraft at Queen Alia International Airport

Queen Alia International Airport () is an international airport located in Zizya, 30 kilometers (18 miles) south of Amman, the capital and largest city of Jordan. It is the largest airport in the country, named after Queen Alia (1948–1977), who died in a helicopter crash in 1977. The airport is home to the country's flag carrier, Royal Jordanian, and serves as a hub for Jordan Aviation.

History

thumb|Terminal exterior

thumb|Terminal interior

Foundation and early years

Queen Alia International Airport (QAIA) was built in 1983 in response to the growing airport traffic needs that Amman Civil Airport could not accommodate. At the time, passenger traffic was increasing at a rate above the international average, recording 25–30% growth per annum and placing considerable pressure on airport facilities despite continuous expansion and development. In 1981, the number of arriving, departing, and transit passengers exceeded 2.3 million, while cargo traffic reached 62,000 tonnes and aircraft traffic topped 27,000 movements.

The Jordanian Ministry of Transport undertook the building of a new international airport with sufficient capacity to cope with demand in the foreseeable future. QAIA was built at an estimated total cost of JOD 84 million (~120 million USD as of January 2023) . Passenger facilities were designed to serve 3.5 million passengers per year.

Accordingly, AIG invested an estimated $750 million USD in the construction of the new terminal.

The new terminal accommodates rising annual passenger traffic, taking the original airport capacity from 3.5 million passengers per year to 7.5 million.

A new terminal was opened in March 2013 to replace the airport's older two passenger terminals and one cargo terminal. The three original terminals were made obsolete once the new terminal officially began operations. Inaugurated by King Abdullah II On 20 January 2014, AIG launched the second phase of QAIA's expansion, valued at a total cost of over $100 million USD.

Development since 2015

In 2016, the second expansion phase, costing $1 billion, was completed raising QAIA's annual passenger traffic capacity to 12 million, supporting Jordan's national tourism strategy to serve as a regional transit hub for leisure and business travel. The aim is to boost its capacity to 16 million passengers annually by the end of the concession time frame in 2032. Following the airport expansion, Emirates operated a one-off Airbus A380 service to Amman, celebrating 30 years of Emirates' operation to Jordan. The superjumbo (registration A6-EUC) operated EK901/EK902 on 25 September 2016, and it was the first-ever A380 service to the Levant. Since then, Emirates has continued daily A380 service to Amman through EK903/EK904.

On 14 March 2020, it was announced by the Jordanian Ministry of Health that "...all flights to and from the Kingdom will be suspended from Tuesday, 17 March 2020, until further notice, excluding commercial freight traffic." The airport had been closed to passenger traffic since 17 March 2020 in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. However, several Royal Jordanian flights were commissioned to return Jordanian citizens, especially students, back to Jordan during the pandemic if they desired. On 1 March 2022, all travel restrictions regarding the COVID-19 pandemic were subsequently lifted.

Terminal

QAIA's new design was created by architects Foster + Partners. The roof was inspired by Bedouin tents and is composed of 127 concrete domes, each weighing up to 600 metric tonnes.

The airport has three lounges, one operated by Royal Jordanian for business and first-class passengers, one operated by Airport Hotel next to the North Concourse, and the last exclusively run by telecom operator Zain Jordan for its VIP customers. Retail space was expanded by 25% at the new terminal, covering more than .

Airport management

Airport International Group (AIG) is a French company formed to rehabilitate, expand, and operate Queen Alia International Airport under a 25-year Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) concession agreement.

Through the BOT public-private partnership framework, the Government retains ownership of the airport and receives 54.47% of the airport's gross revenues for the first six years and 54.64% of the gross revenues for the remaining 19 years of the agreement's 25-year term.

As part of its public-private partnership with the Government of Jordan, AIG closely collaborates with the Government on a day-to-day basis on all issues related to the airport.

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

The following airlines operate regular scheduled and charter flights at Amman-Queen Alia Airport:

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Cargo

Statistics

{| class=wikitable

|+Passenger numbers

! Year !! Total passengers !! Growth

|-

! 2002

| 2,334,779

|

|-

! 2003

| 2,358,475

| 1%

|-

! 2004

| 2,988,174

| 21%

|-

! 2005

| 3,301,510

| 9%

|-

! 2006

| 3,506,070

| 6%

|-

! 2007

| 3,861,126

| 9%

|-

! 2008

| 4,477,811

| 6%

|-

! 2010

| 5,422,301

| 12%

|-

! 2011

| 5,467,726

| 1%

|-

! 2012

| 6,250,048

| 13%

|-

! 2013

| 6,502,000

| 4%

|-

! 2014

| 7,089,008

| 9%

|-

! 2015

| 7,095,685

| 0%

|-

! 2016

| 7,410,274

| 4.4%

|-

! 2017

| 7,914,704

| 6.8%

|-

! 2018

| 8,425,026

| 6.5%

|-

! 2019

| 8,924,080

| 5.9%

|-

!2020

|2,050,883

|

|-

!2021

|4,559,336

|

|-

!2022

|7,837,501

|

|-

!2023

|9,201,269

|

|-

!2024

|8,798,595

|

|}

{| class="wikitable"

|+Handled cargo

!Year

!Total cargo (in tons)

!Growth

|-

|2016

|101,206

|

|-

|2017

| 67,190

|-

! 2014

|76,894

|-

!2019

According to a statement from Airport International Group (AIG), QAIA also became one of eight airports in the Middle East and one of sixty one airports all around the world to have received ACEA.

The global Airport Service Quality (ASQ) Survey for Q1 2014 ranked QAIA first place in 18 different service and facility categories from ten airports across the Middle East. QAIA came in at 13th place from amongst 81 airports worldwide within the group of airports serving 5–15 million passengers and recorded an Overall Satisfaction Score of 4.42 out of a possible 5.0, an improvement compared to its 4.23 score in Q4 2013. Regarding luggage delivery speed, QAIA earned a 4.13 score, up from 3.99 during the previous quarter.

QAIA received two 2013 Airport Service Quality (ASQ) Awards in February 2014, ranking at first place in the category of "Best Improvement by Region: Middle East" and 5th in the category of "Best Airport by Region: Middle East." The ASQ Awards results were based on the ASQ Survey, an international airport passenger satisfaction benchmark program. In the 2014 version of the awards, QAIA again received the "Best Improvement in the Middle East region" award.

In March 2013, QAIA was named one of the world's top 40 public–private partnership PPP projects, receiving Gold recognition as "Best Emerging Market Infrastructure Project for Europe, Central Asia, the Middle East, and North Africa" in Emerging Partnerships. The winning PPPs, selected from among projects nominated by governments, industry, NGOs, academia and other organizations following a global call for submissions, demonstrated best practices for governments working with the private sector to provide a wide range of public services and to spur economic development in their countries.

Ground transport

The airport is connected to Amman by shuttle buses that ply back and forth between Amman and the airport every 30 minutes. An airport taxi service as well as car rental is also available. A shuttle bus is available to transport passengers between the terminal and car park.

Royal Jordanian also operates ground bus services to Damascus.

See also

  • Amman Civil Airport
  • List of the busiest airports in the Middle East

References

  • Official website
  • Accident history for AMM at Aviation Safety Network