The 9,250 square metre (100,000 square foot) centre offers training and refresher courses for crew staffing Airbus planes including the double-decker A380 and the A350, Airbus said in a statement.
When fully operational, it will be Airbus' largest flight crew training facility, with eight full-flight simulators, six fixed cockpit training devices and extensive classroom facilities, with capacity to churn out more than 10,000 trainees per year, it said.
The Asia-Pacific is expected to lead demand for new aircraft in the next 20 years, with the regional fleet forecast to grow from around 5,600 aircraft currently to 14,000 over that period, Airbus said.
This will push the number of flight crew employed by airlines in the region to almost 170,000 from over 65,000 in the next two decades, it said.
Airbus' chief salesman John Leahy said at the Singapore Airshow in February that Asia's burgeoning middle class would drive travel growth in the region, which would require the need for more aircraft.
Seventeen airlines across Asia Pacific have already signed up to train their crew at the new centre.
The centre is a joint venture between Airbus, which holds 55 percent, and Singapore Airlines, which owns 45 percent.
US plane-maker Boeing also has a training centre in Singapore, a regional aviation hub.
