In 1962, the Japanese government began investigating possible alternatives to the crowded Tokyo International Airport (Haneda Airport), and proposed a New Tokyo International Airport (新東京国際空港 Shin-Tōkyō Kokusai Kūkō) to take over Haneda's international flights. Initially, surveyors proposed placing the airport in the village of Tomisato: however, Tomisato residents refused to give up their land, so the site was moved 5 km northeast to the village of Sanrizuka where the Imperial Household had a large farm, the government therefore had less difficulty to place the planning airport.
Due to land scarcity and weak expropriation laws, the inital and ongoing development of Narita Airport has been the cause of great controversy. Many people against the Vietnam War saw the construction of a new airport as participation in the war effort. The Japanese government had offered to relocate homeowners in the surrounding regions: however, neighbours threatened to burn down new homes of anyone who would voluntarily move. In 1971, when expropriations began, 291 area farmers were arrested and more than 1,000 villagers and police were injured in fights. Later that year, some villagers chained themselves to their houses and refused to leave.
The airport was scheduled to open in March of 1978. Shortly before its scheduled opening, a group of villagers broke into the control tower and destroyed much of its equipment, delaying the opening by another two months.
In 1986, the airport authority began work on Phase II, a new runway north of the airport's original main runway. To avoid the problems that plagued the first phase, authorities agreed not to confiscate land. Residents in surrounding regions were compensated for the increased noise-pollution with home upgrades and soundproofing, although some farmers who refused to give up their land were forced to keep henhouses close to the threshold of the new runway. The runway opened in April of 2002, in time for the World Cup events shared between Japan and South Korea.
Today, individuals continue to stage demonstrations regularly on the eastern edge of the airport.
Subsequent history
Narita also had other problems. Arguments over slots and landing fees have plagued the busy airport. Because so many airlines want to use it, the Japanese aviation authorities have limited the number of flights each airline can operate from this airport, making the airport expensive for both airlines and their passengers.
Recently, Tokyo International Airport was allowed to have other international flights within Asia, as well as to Hawaii, in an attempt to alleviate Narita's problems with capacity. There has been some discussion about exchanging roles between Narita airport and Haneda to accommodate Tokyo residents as Narita is in Chiba prefecture and a typical train ride from even the eastern parts of Tokyo on an express train takes roughly 1 hour.
On April 1, 2004, New Tokyo International Airport was officially renamed Narita International Airport, reflecting its popular designation since the 1970s.
On June 22, 1985, a piece of luggage that was checked into Vancouver International Airport in Vancouver, British Columbia was in transit to an Air India flight in New Tokyo International Airport when it exploded, killing two baggage handlers in New Tokyo International Airport. 55 minutes later, a piece of luggage that also originated from Vancouver on Air India Flight 182 exploded, killing all of the passengers on the flight.
Authorities later found out that Ramzi Yousef planted the bomb on the airliner to test the bomb for his Project Bojinka plot. His project was discovered in Manila, Philippines after an apartment fire on the night of January 6 and the morning of January 7, 1995. If the plot had not been discovered, one or more aircraft owned by a U.S. carrier/s flying to this airport would have blown up over the Pacific Ocean on January 21, 1995 as part of the project's first phase.
All Nippon Airways (Beijing, Dalian, Fukuoka, Hangzhou, Ho Chi Minh City, Hong Kong, London Heathrow, Los Angeles, Nagoya, New York JFK, Osaka Itami, Paris de Gaulle, Qingdao, San Francisco, Shanghai, Seoul Incheon, Vancouver, Washington Dulles)
Japan Air Lines (Amsterdam, Bangkok, Beijing, Brisbane, Busan, Chicago O'Hare, Delhi, Denpasar, Frankfurt, Fukuoka, Guangzhou, Hong Kong, Honolulu, Jakarta, Kona, Kuala Lumpur, London Heathrow, Los Angeles, Manila, Mexico City via Vancouver, Milan, Moscow, Nagoya, New York JFK, Osaka Itami, Osaka Kansai, Paris, Qingdao, Rome nonstop and via Moscow, San Francisco, Sao Paulo via New York JFK, Sapporo Chitose, Seoul, Shanghai, Singapore, Sydney, Vancouver)
There are also regular bus services to regional transport hubs, although these are often slower than the train because of traffic jams. Taxi service is also available, although it is usually prohibitively expensive for single travelers because of the great distance from the airport to the city.