1925 to 1930s The story of Kai Tak started in 1912 when two businessmen,
Ho Kai and
Au Tak, formed the Kai Tak Investment Company to reclaim land in Kowloon for development. The land was acquired by the government for use as an
airfield after the business plan failed. In 1924, Harry Abbott opened the Abbott School of Aviation on that piece of land. Soon, it became a small grass strip runway airport used by the
RAF, and by several
flying clubs which, over time grew to include the Hong Kong Flying Club, the Far East Flying Training School, and the Aero Club of Hong Kong; these exist today as an amalgamation known as the
Hong Kong Aviation Club. In 1928, a concrete slipway was built for
seaplanes that used the adjoining Kowloon Bay. building two concrete runways, 13/31 and 07/25. Numerous POW diary entries exist recalling the gruelling work and long hours working on building Kai Tak. During the process, the historic wall of the
Kowloon Walled City and the tall
Sung Wong Toi, a memorial for the last
Song dynasty emperor, were destroyed for materials. A 2001 Environmental Study recommended that a new memorial be erected for the
Sung Wong Toi rock and other remnants of the Kowloon area before Kai Tak.
1945 to 1970s It was also the location of , a
Royal Navy Mobile Operational Naval Air Base, (MONAB) VIII, which was situated here between 1945 and 1947. At the start of April 1947, it was decommissioned, and concurrently re-commissioned as HMS
Flycatcher. At the end of December, HMS
Flycatcher was officially decommissioned at Kai Tak, although the Royal Navy retained lodger rights until 1978. A plan to turn Kai Tak into a modern airport was released in 1954. By 1957 runway 13/31 had been extended to , while runway 7/25 remained long; night operations were not allowed.
Bristol Britannia 102s took over
BOAC's London-Tokyo flights in the summer of 1957 and were the largest airliners scheduled to the old airport (
Boeing Stratocruisers never flew there). In 1958 the new NW/SE runway extending into
Kowloon Bay was completed by
land reclamation. The two old runways were removed with footprints used by the apron and terminal building. The passenger terminal was completed in 1962. This extension was completed in June 1974, but the full length of the runway was not in use until 31 December 1975, as construction of the new
Airport Tunnel had kept the northwestern end of the runway closed. In 1955, Kai Tak Airport was featured in the film
The Night My Number Came Up. An
Instrument Guidance System (IGS) was installed in 1974 to aid landing on runway 13. Use of the airport under adverse conditions was greatly increased. In the 1970s, the airport's increasing traffic and growth of high-density developments around it raised concerns about the potential loss of life should a crash occur, though no serious accidents happened throughout its history of operations. Moreover, clearance requirements for aircraft takeoffs and landings made it necessary to limit the height of buildings that could be built in
Kowloon. While Kai Tak was initially located far away from residential areas, the expansion of both residential areas and the airport resulted in Kai Tak being close to residential areas. This caused serious noise and engine pollution for nearby residents and necessitated height restrictions, which were removed after Kai Tak closed. A night
curfew from 11:30 pm to 6:30 am in the early morning also hindered operations. Boeing 747 approaching the airport in 1998 As a result, in the late 1980s, the
Hong Kong Government began searching for alternative locations for a new airport in Hong Kong to replace the aging airport. After deliberating on several locations, including the south side of
Hong Kong Island, the government decided to build the airport on the island of
Chek Lap Kok off
Lantau Island. The new airport is located far away from Hong Kong's main residential areas, conducive to minimising the dangers of a major crash and also reducing the nuisance of noise pollution. The hotel still exists, but the footbridge (which was connected to the passenger terminal) has been demolished. It is one of the few remaining buildings related to Kai Tak Airport.
Closure and legacy The new airport in Chek Lap Kok officially opened on 6 July 1998 to replace the functions of Kai Tak Airport. All of the essential airport supplies and vehicles that were left in the old airport for operation (some of the non-essential ones had already been transported to the new airport) were transported to Chek Lap Kok in one early morning with a single massive move, with a police escort. On the same day, at 03:30 HKT, when the first aircraft departed for Chek Lap Kok, Kai Tak was finally retired as an airport, with its ICAO and IATA airport codes reassigned to the new airport at Chek Lap Kok. Below were the final flights of Kai Tak: • The last arrival:
Dragonair KA841 from
Chongqing (
Airbus A320-200) landed on Runway 13 at 23:38 (11:38 p.m.) • The last scheduled commercial flight:
Cathay Pacific CX251 to
London–Heathrow (
Boeing 747-400) took off from Runway 13 at 00:02 (12:02 a.m.) • The last departure: Cathay Pacific CX3340 ferry flight to the
new airport at Chek Lap Kok (
Airbus A340-300) took off from Runway 13 at 01:05 (1:05 a.m.) With the ferry flight's takeoff to Chek Lap Kok, a ceremony celebrating the end of the airport was held inside the control tower, with then-
director of civil aviation Richard Siegel, giving a brief speech; he ended with the words "Goodbye Kai Tak, and thank you", before dimming the lights briefly and then turning them off.
Chek Lap Kok opened at 06:00 (6:00 a.m.) on 6 July 1998 with the arrival of Cathay Pacific Flight 889 (nicknamed Polar 1) from
New York–JFK. The first week of operations was disrupted by a sequence of IT failures based around
software bugs in the Flight Information Display System. This in turn disrupted baggage handling and airbridge allocation. But by the end of the first week these challenges, and other teething problems, were largely resolved, and the new airport was exceeding Kai Tak performance measures. The exception was the new airport's main air cargo terminal built and operated by HACTL as a franchisee. The terminal faced major difficulties in coming into operation on 6 July, such that it closed again on 7 July to enable the franchisee to implement a major recovery programme. The disruption this caused to air cargo operations at the new airport led the government to temporarily reactivate Kai Tak's
cargo terminal for a month. During this period, the airport was given temporary ICAO code VHHX. The Kai Tak passenger terminal later housed government offices, automobile dealerships and showrooms, gaming arcades, a mall, shopping centers, a
go-kart racecourse, a bowling alley, a
snooker hall, a mini-golf range and other recreational facilities. In the mid-2000s, the passenger terminal and hangars were demolished. Many aviation enthusiasts were upset at the demise of Kai Tak because of the unique runway 13 approach. As private aviation was no longer allowed at Chek Lap Kok (having moved to
Sek Kong Airfield), some enthusiasts had lobbied to keep about of the Kai Tak runway for
general aviation, but the suggestion was rejected as the Government had planned to build a new
cruise ship terminal at Kai Tak. The Hong Kong stop of
Celine Dion's
Let's Talk About Love World Tour was held on the airport's apron on 25 January 1999. Until its retirement in 2018, the name Kai Tak was one of the names used in the
lists of tropical cyclone names in the northwest Pacific Ocean. Submitted by Hong Kong, it was
used four times. BMW used to test its hydrogen cars on the former Kai Tak apron area, while a golf course was set up at the end of Runway 31. On March 30th 2025, Cathay Pacific flight CX8100, an
Airbus A350-1000, flew over Victoria Harbour to commemorate the airport's 100th anniversary. This coincided with the last day of the
2025 Hong Kong Sevens, hosted at
Kai Tak Sports Park, northwest of the former airport. ==Operations==