
The federal government and the Province of Manitoba have announced a joint investment of C$89 million to extend airside lands at Winnipeg Richardson International Airport (YWG). In a press release issued on 27 February 2026, Prairies Economic Development Canada said the project will add 45 hectares of serviced apron and taxiway infrastructure, positioning the airport as a multimodal trade and logistics hub for central Canada.
Under the agreement, Ottawa will contribute up to C$55 million, with Manitoba providing C$25 million; Winnipeg Airports Authority and private-sector tenants will supply the balance. Construction is slated to begin in Q3 2026, creating an estimated 850 jobs and increasing the airport’s cargo-handling capacity by 35 percent once operational in 2028.
While expanded runways and new cargo facilities pave the way for smoother logistics, companies still need to ensure their employees arrive with the correct travel documents. VisaHQ’s self-service platform (https://www.visahq.com/canada/) simplifies Canadian work-permit and visa processing for organizations moving staff to or through Winnipeg, reducing administrative lead times so teams can capitalize on the upgraded airport as soon as it opens.
For global-mobility managers, the expansion matters on two fronts. First, dedicated customs facilities and a new remote-stand complex will improve on-tarmac processing for charter flights that ferry specialized technicians to mining and energy projects across the North. Second, the project includes a 10,000-m² cold-chain warehouse, expected to accelerate clearance times for perishable imports—a boon for companies that relocate staff requiring time-sensitive biomedical shipments.
Winnipeg sits at the junction of Canada’s east-west rail corridor and the U.S. Interstate 29 trade artery. Officials say the larger airfield will support new long-haul freighter services to Europe and Asia, reducing reliance on Toronto and Vancouver for heavy or hazardous cargo. Customs and Border Services Agency (CBSA) will assign an additional 30 officers to the site, and a dedicated NEXUS lane is planned for corporate aircraft.
Employers relocating talent to Manitoba should anticipate smoother household-goods moves and potentially lower freight rates once capacity comes online. The airport authority is consulting with indigenous communities on workforce development, creating pathways for local apprentices in airside construction trades.
Under the agreement, Ottawa will contribute up to C$55 million, with Manitoba providing C$25 million; Winnipeg Airports Authority and private-sector tenants will supply the balance. Construction is slated to begin in Q3 2026, creating an estimated 850 jobs and increasing the airport’s cargo-handling capacity by 35 percent once operational in 2028.
While expanded runways and new cargo facilities pave the way for smoother logistics, companies still need to ensure their employees arrive with the correct travel documents. VisaHQ’s self-service platform (https://www.visahq.com/canada/) simplifies Canadian work-permit and visa processing for organizations moving staff to or through Winnipeg, reducing administrative lead times so teams can capitalize on the upgraded airport as soon as it opens.
For global-mobility managers, the expansion matters on two fronts. First, dedicated customs facilities and a new remote-stand complex will improve on-tarmac processing for charter flights that ferry specialized technicians to mining and energy projects across the North. Second, the project includes a 10,000-m² cold-chain warehouse, expected to accelerate clearance times for perishable imports—a boon for companies that relocate staff requiring time-sensitive biomedical shipments.
Winnipeg sits at the junction of Canada’s east-west rail corridor and the U.S. Interstate 29 trade artery. Officials say the larger airfield will support new long-haul freighter services to Europe and Asia, reducing reliance on Toronto and Vancouver for heavy or hazardous cargo. Customs and Border Services Agency (CBSA) will assign an additional 30 officers to the site, and a dedicated NEXUS lane is planned for corporate aircraft.
Employers relocating talent to Manitoba should anticipate smoother household-goods moves and potentially lower freight rates once capacity comes online. The airport authority is consulting with indigenous communities on workforce development, creating pathways for local apprentices in airside construction trades.