Brisbane Airport’s T3 to create 10,000 jobs, says CEO

Brisbane Airport’s T3 to create 10,000 jobs, says CEO

Brisbane Airport Corporation (BAC) is planning for the future with an estimated 50 million passengers forecast to travel through its terminals each year by 2040.

To cater for this rise in demand, BAC is consulting with its airline partners about the shape of a future Terminal 3.

“We are running out of terminal capacity and we’re looking at the best location, together with our airline partners, for where that new terminal will go,” Gert-Jan de Graaff, CEO of Brisbane Airport Corporation said.

“We think it will be in between the two runaways because that’s the perfect location to minimise aircraft taxiing, and it is close to our current domestic terminal.

“We need more domestic capacity to cater for demand. A few of our domestic airlines will likely go into Terminal 3. We might even allocate some international traffic in there as well to provide for better connectivity between domestic and international flights.”

Brisbane is a uniquely positioned hub, flying to 53 Australian destinations. BNE is also well positioned as a gateway for flights from North America and South East Asia.

Every day around 60,000 people rely on the airport for holidays Queensland’s tourism industry relies on BNE to deliver interstate and overseas guests to support the $23 billion dollar tourism economy which employs 1 in 12 workers.

Today, 24,000 people come to work at Brisbane Airport, and the airline knows there will be another 10,000 jobs created on-site in the coming decade.

“Terminal 3 will be state of the art so that will be a terminal we’ve built for the 2030s. Sustainability will be front and centre, as will accessibility,” de Graaff

“We know that come 2032, Brisbane Airport will provide the first and last impression for all Olympic and Paralympic visitors and we take that responsibility very seriously.”

Currently Brisbane Airport is planning to invest more than $5 billion in the next 10 years to upgrade both terminals, build extra car parking, develop a regional aeromedical hub, expand Skygate and DFO, and build more freight facilities.

“We are well-placed to further develop the airport’s air connectivity to meet travel demand, but equally important is BNE’s connectivity on the ground,” de Graaff said.

“All levels of government need to collaborate to ensure fast, reliable and affordable road and public transport connections for travellers and workers to BNE. We need mass transit connections not just to the CBD and Brisbane suburbs, but also the Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast.”


Featured Image: Terminal artist rendering (Supplied)

Latest News

  • Luxury

COMO launches new family-sized farmhouse in the heart of Tuscany

COMO Hotels and Resorts has launched its new farmhouse apartments in the heart of Tuscany, just in time for Australians to escape our wet winter. And it’s also an ideal time for Aussies of Italian ancestry to explore their home country as 2024 has been declared the year of Roots and Heritage Tourism by the […]

  • Destinations
  • News

New Caledonia in lockdown and airport closed after violent riots rock Noumea

New Caledonia officials have announced a 6pm-6am curfew, a liquor ban and have closed the country’s main airport after overnight riots in which vehicles were torched and roads blocked in the wake of proposed constitutional reforms. Australian Government website Smartraveller has issued an alert informing visitors to exercise a high degree of caution in metropolitan […]