Terminals Auckland Airport consists of two terminals; the International Terminal and the Domestic Terminal. The two terminals are located approximately apart and are connected by a free shuttle bus service and a signposted walkway. The airport has 65 gates in total, 23 with
jetbridges and 42 remote stands for aircraft parking.
International terminal The international terminal building has three levels, with departures occupying the eastern half of the terminal and arrivals occupying the western half. Departing passengers check-in on the ground floor, then proceed to the first floor though landside retail, immigration and security, and duty-free, before proceeding to the departure gates on the second floor. Arriving passengers arrive on the first floor, passing through duty-free and immigration, before proceeding to the ground floor through baggage claim, customs and biosecurity, and into the arrivals hall. The terminal has 14 airbridge gates, 10 airbridge gates (1 through 10) and four bus gates (4A through 4D) in Pier A, and four airbridge gates (15 through 18) and four bus gates (16A through 16D) in Pier B, and another gate number 19 is next to 18 without an airbridge. Each international pier feature a tomokanga (
Māori carved gateway) in the arrivals area accompanied by a
karanga audio recording, symbolising Auckland Airport as a major international gateway and welcoming passengers to New Zealand. The Pier A tomokanga was installed in 1994, while the Pier B tomokanga was installed when the pier opened in 2009. On 2 October 2012 Emirates began operating the Dubai–Melbourne–Auckland with an A380, having previously operated the route with a B777-300ER. From 2 October 2013, the A380 took over from a B777-300ER on the Dubai–Brisbane–Auckland route This meant that Emirates would serve Auckland solely with A380s, and Auckland Airport for a period of time was the only airport in the world, other than
Dubai, to have four scheduled Emirates A380s on the ground at the same time. In 2014,
Singapore Airlines was the second airline to operate A380s at the airport.
Domestic terminal The two previously separate domestic terminal buildings have now been connected by a common retail area. The Jetstar check-in area is located in the western end of the terminal, in the building previously used by
Ansett New Zealand,
Qantas, and
Pacific Blue. The Air New Zealand check-in area is located in the centre of the terminal. There are nine gates that have jetbridges in the domestic terminal.
Jetstar domestic A320 services operate from gates 20–23 (
jetbridge gates). Gate 24 (tarmac gate) is used by both Jetstar and
Air New Zealand's A320 aircraft. Gates 60–63 were used for Jetstar regional flights, with 62 and 63 being bus gates in a separate building at the Jetstar end of the terminal. Gates 20 and 21 were turned into 60 and 61 during peak regional times. Air New Zealand mainline services operate from gates 24–33. Gates 28 through to 33 all have jetbridges, while gates 25, 26 and 27 don't exist. Air New Zealand turboprop services operate from the regional section of the domestic terminal, along with
Barrier Air and
Air Chathams. This is located at the eastern end of the terminal and consists of gates 34–50 (excluding gate numbers 37, 38 and 44, which do not exist). These gates are linked to the terminal by covered walkways, and passengers walk across the apron to the aircraft. Barrier Air also uses remote gates 51–59, whilst further to the east, gates 101–106 are used for business jets and long-term parking.
Passenger separation In 1993, the
CAA instituted the requirement that all international airports in New Zealand must keep
airside departing and arriving passengers separate. Auckland Airport was granted an exemption to this rule, allowing the airside mingling of arriving and departing passengers to continue, on the basis that all international flights operating into Auckland originated from airports with adequate security screening. Following the
September 11, 2001 attacks and further regulation by the
ICAO, the CAA required the airport to physically separate arriving and departing passengers by 2006. In the interim period until passenger separation was achieved, flights to the United States as well as all Qantas, and for a short time Cathay Pacific, flights were restricted to departing from gates where a secondary X-ray and metal detector inspection was operating. To physically separate arriving and departing passengers, Auckland Airport decided to build a new departure level on top of the existing one, with the existing floor becoming the arrivals level. The existing departure lounges were kept by installing glass walls to separate the waiting areas from the newly designed arrivals corridor, and escalators were installed to transport passengers from the new departures level down to each departure lounge. The modifications to the terminal were completed in December 2005, and also involved the expansion of retail space within the pier by and an increase in the number of bus gates to four.
Radio station Auckland Airport owned radio frequencies over a 15-year period. It purchased the
Radio Hauraki frequency 1476 AM in 1990, and began operating
adult contemporary and flight information radio station Info Music from the domestic terminal. It purchased 1XD Counties Manukau L Double L and its 1404 AM, 1548 AM and 702 AM frequencies in 1992, and changed the station name to Info Music Counties 1476 and then Airport Radio AKL1476. The 1476 frequency was leased to Independent Broadcasting Company in 1993, which used it at various times for Auckland 1476, The Breeze on 91, Lifestyle Radio, and Today 99.8FM. It was sold in 2005.
Property portfolio In addition to the airport,
Auckland International Airport Limited controls a 500,000 square metre property portfolio surrounding the airport including logistics facilities and distribution warehouses. The
New Zealand School of Tourism's main campus and the
ExecuJet Auckland FBO for general aviation flights are located on airport grounds. The
Mānawa Bay outlet mall which features over 100 stores is located on the former Aviation Country Club site north of the airport and was developed by the airport corporation. ==Ground transport==