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Virgin airlines first to depart new runway

Darren CartwrightAAP
A Virgin Airlines plane has become the first aircraft to depart from Brisbane airport's new runway.
Camera IconA Virgin Airlines plane has become the first aircraft to depart from Brisbane airport's new runway.

A Virgin Australia passenger plane has created history by becoming the first aircraft to depart from Brisbane airport's heralded new runway.

A Boeing 737-8FE, destined for Cairns, departed about 11.15am after first passing under a water-arch guard-of-honour produced from the water cannons of two emergency service vehicles.

Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk was among dignitaries at the launch on Sunday to see the flight depart with 170 passengers.

She said the runway would not only accommodate more passenger planes but also freight services which alone was "worth billions" to Queensland's economy.

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"This is setting up Queensland for the future," she told reporters.

"To see that first full plane load of tourists heading up to Cairns on that Virgin flight was good news indeed."

Virgin Australia Group CEO Paul Scurrah said the VA781 to Cairns was part of the 73rd anniversary of flights between Brisbane and tropical North Queensland.

The runway took eight years to construct at a cost of more than $1 billion and will double Brisbane Airport's capacity for aircraft movements.

Other than for severe weather events, planes will be able to arrive and depart without hindrance.

It's predicted to take four decades until the airport even gets close to reaching its scheduling capacity, says Brisbane Airport Corporation's Runway Project Director Paul Coughlan.

"One thing airlines hate is having aircraft circling or waiting on the ground and all that circling over the Sunshine and Gold Coast, it all disappears," Mr Coughlan told AAP.

Virgin Australia Group CEO Paul Scurrah said the VA781 to Cairns was part of the 73rd anniversary of flights between Brisbane and tropical North Queensland.

The runway is 3.3km long and has been strategically placed to allow the future addition of a domestic passenger terminal.

The new runway will be used by planes departing to, or arriving from, destinations to the north and west of Brisbane, both domestically and internationally, such as Cairns, Darwin and Townsville or Europe, Asia and the Middle-East.

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