Eagle Farm Airport Brisbane's first airport was
Eagle Farm Airport that was built in 1925 on former
agricultural land in the suburb of
Eagle Farm located north-east of the
Brisbane central business district, south-west of Brisbane Airport's
Domestic Terminal. Although Qantas started operations there in 1926, most of the flights in Brisbane operated at the
Archerfield Airport, which contained a superior landing surface. While in operation,
Charles Kingsford Smith landed at Eagle Farm on 9 June 1928, after completing the first trans-pacific flight in his
Fokker F.VII, the
Southern Cross. There is now a museum containing the original aircraft, along with a memorial located within the Brisbane Airport precinct. During
World War II, Brisbane was the headquarters of the Supreme Commander of
Allied forces in the
South West Pacific Area, General
Douglas MacArthur. The
United States Armed Forces upgraded the airfield (Eagle Farm Airport) to cater for military flights, bringing it to such a standard that it became the main civilian airport for the city. StateLibQld 1 101040.jpg|
Charles Kingsford Smith and
Charles Ulm, first trans-
Pacific flight, June 1928 Scoutside2.jpg|The Kingsford Smith Memorial, housing the
Southern Cross 1988 opening The
Federal Government announced the construction of Brisbane Airport to be built immediately north east of Eagle Farm Airport. Construction commenced in June 1980. The new airport was built by Barclay Brothers at a cost of $400 million and opened on 19 March 1988, with a new domestic terminal and two runways. The opening was hosted by Prime Minister
Bob Hawke. The new airport was built on the former Brisbane residential suburb of
Cribb Island that was demolished to make way for the airport. Large amounts of sand were pumped from nearby
Moreton Bay to raise the swamp land above the
tidal range. The 1988 facilities included: a domestic terminal; state-of-the-art maintenance facilities; freight apron at the existing passenger terminal; two
runways ( and ) with parallel taxiway systems (cater for Code F+ aircraft); access roads; parking facilities and a tall
air traffic control tower. In September 1995, the international terminal was inaugurated by Prime Minister
Paul Keating, and it has been expanded since that time.
Privatisation In 1997, as part of the
privatisation of numerous Australian airports, the airport was acquired for $1.4 billion from the
Federal Airports Corporation by Brisbane Airport Corporation (BAC) under a 50-year lease (with an option to renew for a further 49 years). The original BAC shareholders were
Amsterdam Airport Schiphol,
Brisbane City Council,
Commonwealth Bank and Port of Brisbane Corporation. Since that time, BAC has assumed ultimate responsibility for the operations of Brisbane Airport including all airport infrastructure investment with no government funding. As at January 2024, the major shareholders were
Queensland Investment Corporation (29%),
Igneo Infrastructure Partners (27%), Amsterdam Airport Schiphol (20%) and
IFM Investors (20%). Brisbane Airport is categorised as a Leased Federal Airport.
New parallel runway On 18 September 2007, the federal government granted approval for the construction of a new parallel runway. The proposed $1.3 billion, runway was expected to take approximately eight years to construct and was constructed on swamp land west of the existing terminal area and parallel to the existing main runway. The long construction period was due to the settling period of the of sand fill dredged from Moreton Bay. In early December 2014 the delivery of of sand to the site was completed. In 2019, asphalting of the second runway had begun and was completed by late 2019, while mid February 2020 saw the start of the line-marking of the runway. The runway was completed on 30 April 2020 after over eight years of construction at a cost of over $1 billion. It opened officially on 12 July 2020 with a
Virgin Australia flight to
Cairns being the first to take off from the new runway. On 30 March 2020, runway 14/32 was decommissioned early as part of Brisbane's new runway 'Operational Readiness & Testing' phase so that the newly decommissioned cross runway could be used for aircraft parking. In May 2020, construction of a new runway was completed. Its first flight was operated by Virgin Australia, flight VA781 to
Cairns, on 12 July 2020. ==Terminals==