Northwest Airlines' Nagoya, Japan Flights Now Operating From New 'Centrair' Airport
February 18 2005 - 10:58AM
PR Newswire (US)
Northwest Airlines' Nagoya, Japan Flights Now Operating From New
'Centrair' Airport First Northwest Flights Utilized Central Japan
International Airport Feb. 17 NAGOYA, Japan, Feb. 18
/PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Northwest Airlines today announced that
its flights to and from Nagoya are now operating from the new
Central Japan International Airport, known as "Centrair."
Northwest, which operates more flights at Nagoya than any other
U.S. airline, offers daily service between Nagoya and four
destinations including its WorldGateway hub at Detroit, Manila,
Philippines and Saipan, Northern Mariana Islands. The airline also
offers service between Nagoya and its Tokyo hub, providing
convenient single connections to eight top business and leisure
destinations in the U.S. including Detroit, Honolulu, Los Angeles,
Minneapolis/St. Paul, New York (JFK), Portland, Ore., San Francisco
and Seattle. The first Northwest departure from Centrair, Japan's
third largest international airport, was flight 78 to Tokyo,
scheduled at 12:05 p.m. The first Northwest arrival into Centrair
was flight 78 from Saipan, scheduled at 11:05 a.m. The flights
operated ontime. "Northwest was the only U.S. airline with service
to the mainland to introduce its customers to the new Central Japan
International Airport on its first day of operations," said Phil
Haan, executive vice president of international, alliances and
information technology and chairman of NWA Cargo. "Northwest's
presence at the opening of the new Centrair facility is another
milestone in our 13-year history of serving Nagoya and 57-year
history of serving Japan." The new Centrair airport's terminal has
twice the number of gates than the airport it replaces, allowing
all Northwest customers to board and deplane through loading
bridges versus outdoor boarding stairs. Centrair also has more
check-in capacity and additional checkpoints with the latest
security technology. Northwest customers departing from Nagoya can
check-in via the Internet at http://www.nwa.com/jp , at one of the
airline's self-service check-in kiosks in the lobby at island "E,"
or at the ticket counter. Once check-in is complete, members of
Northwest's WorldClubs airport lounge program, or customers flying
World Business Class, can visit the Japan Airlines' Sakura Lounge
located next to gate 18 prior to their departure. Travel time from
the new airport to Nagoya is 30-40 minutes, comparable to the
travel time to and from the previous airport. Centrair is
accessible via the Tomei and Meishin expressways, the Tokaido
Shinkansen bullet train or the Meitetsu rail line, as well as via
taxis and airport limousine services. NORTHWEST OFFERS UNMATCHED
SERVICE BETWEEN THE U.S. AND NAGOYA Northwest, the only American
airline currently offering service between Nagoya and the U.S.
mainland, offers service unmatched by any other U.S. carrier: --
The lie-flat World Business Class seat. Northwest is the only U.S.
airline to offer a business class seat that can recline up to 176
degrees, as well as a number of comforts and features not found on
any of the competing business class products offered by other U.S.
airlines. Northwest's new World Business Class seat is offered on
every one of its Detroit-Nagoya flights. -- Convenient, uncongested
hub airports. Northwest offers nonstop service from Nagoya to the
airline's uncongested and hassle-free WorldGateway at Detroit hub.
WorldGateway provides customers with easier connections than
competing hub airports, with all international and domestic flights
in one single terminal, boarding through climate- controlled
loading bridges no matter what type of aircraft is being flown, and
ample runway and gate capacity for better schedule reliability. --
Customer service technology. Northwest offers the industry's most
developed self-service program, with more airport self-service
check- in kiosks in more airports than any other airline, currently
numbering 1,057 kiosks in 216 airports, including airports
throughout its Asia/Pacific network such as Nagoya. -- The most
capacity to Nagoya. Northwest is the only U.S. airline to serve
Nagoya with the Boeing 747-400, which Northwest configures with 403
seats. In addition, its daily service from Nagoya to its Tokyo hub
offers single connections to eight top U.S. business and leisure
destinations. -- Experience. Northwest has been serving Japan
longer than any other U.S. airline. Northwest's first scheduled
passenger service to Japan began in 1947 and its first service to
Nagoya began in 1992. NORTHWEST SERVES MORE OF ASIA, MOST SERVICE
TO JAPAN Northwest offers service to more destinations in Asia,
more flights between the U.S. and Japan, and more flights within
Asia than any other U.S. airline. The airline operates a hub from
Tokyo's Narita Airport that connects the U.S. cities of Detroit,
Honolulu, Los Angeles, Minneapolis/St. Paul, New York (JFK),
Portland, San Francisco and Seattle to key destinations including
Bangkok, Thailand; Beijing; Busan, South Korea; Guam; Guangzhou,
China; Hong Kong; Manila; Nagoya; Saipan; Seoul, South Korea;
Shanghai, China and Singapore. Northwest also offers nonstop
service from Osaka, Japan to Detroit and Taipei, Taiwan, and from
Nagoya to Detroit, Manila, and Saipan. Northwest Airlines is the
world's fourth largest airline with hubs at Detroit,
Minneapolis/St. Paul, Memphis, Tokyo and Amsterdam, and
approximately 1,500 daily departures. Northwest is a member of
SkyTeam, an airline alliance that offers customers one of the
world's most extensive global networks. Northwest and its travel
partners serve more than 900 cities in excess of 160 countries on
six continents. A 2004 J.D. Power and Associates study of airports
ranked Minneapolis/St. Paul, one of Northwest's largest hubs,
fourth among large domestic airports in overall customer
satisfaction. DATASOURCE: Northwest Airlines CONTACT: Northwest
Media Relations, +1-612-726-2331 Web site: http://www.nwa.com/
http://www.nwa.com/jp
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