📍 Lhasa⬆ 11,713 ft3 runways
ZULS · LXA
Lhasa Gonggar Airport
29.29780°N
90.91190°W
ARR / DAY
0
▲
0.0%
DEP / DAY
0
▲
0.0%
ON-TIME
—
schedules pending
AVG DELAY
—
7d window
Lhasa Gonggar Airport (ZULS/LXA) is a medium regional airport located in Lhasa, China, 40 km south of Chéngguān Qū. It features 3 runways with the longest being 13,123 feet.
Safety incidents
Last 7 days · 0 total
Current weather
Latest METAR observation
Temp
—
Wind
—
Visib
—
Ceil
—
Runways
3 installed
09/27
13,123 ft × 148
Concrete● LIT
10L/28R
13,123 ft × 148
CON● LIT
10R/28L
13,123 ft × 148
ASPH● LIT
Delays by hour
Avg minutes · local time · last 30 days
⏱
No delay data for this window
Try a busier airport or a longer time range.
Top carriers
Share of flights
Top destinations
By flight count
No data.
Carriers
No carrier data.
Top routes
Click any segment for full inspection
See all routes →
0 routes
No routes on file.
Pilot & community notes
1 comment from OurAirports (click to expand)
1
Pilot & community notes
1 comment from OurAirports (click to expand)
AR
Armaan
05/21/2025
The Lhasa Airport is the airport serving the Tibetan capital of Lhasa, one of the highest places on Earth. In case of an emergency cause by freezing temperatures, high turbulence, mountains on the roof of the world creating dangerous emergency landings, and a lack of airports, the Tibet-Qinghai plateau is very dangerous to fly over, and trust me, even World War Two Allied pilots suffered a stretch over the Himalayas called the Hump. This is why in 1965, Lhasa Gonggar International Airport was founded, but it was originally a no-fly zone due to safety concerns. The year is 1965, and this is when the runway was built, and then a terminal. Immediately, domestic Chinese airlines began service in the airport. Then, a few restaurants and lounges opened. A second runway was built in 1994 due to safety concerns. In 2004, Terminal 2 was built, and in 2011, an expressway was finished. A decade later, in 2021, a third terminal was constructed to improve infrastructure and meet demands. Now, it on average gets five million passengers a year, and flies to China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Macau, Nepal, and Singapore, depending on the very few airlines stationed there. No airlines have hubs there but it is still an important landing spot during emergencies on the so-called roof of the world.
© SkyMeter ·
All flight data subject to ODbL attribution
·
Updated 02:44 UTC