Chelyabinsk Airport
Airport in Chelyabinsk, Russia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Airport in Chelyabinsk, Russia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chelyabinsk Airport (Balandino) (IATA: CEK, ICAO: USCC) is an international airport in Russia located 18 km north of Chelyabinsk. It services large airliners and can park up to 51 aircraft. It also serves as a secondary hub for Ural Airlines and Yamal Airlines.
This article needs additional citations for verification. (April 2012) |
International Airport Balandino named Igor Kurchatov Международный аэропорт Баландино имени Игоря Курчатова | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Summary | |||||||||||
Airport type | Public | ||||||||||
Operator | Novaport | ||||||||||
Serves | Chelyabinsk | ||||||||||
Location | Chelyabinsk, Russia | ||||||||||
Hub for | Red Wings Airlines[1] | ||||||||||
Focus city for | |||||||||||
Elevation AMSL | 771 ft / 235 m | ||||||||||
Coordinates | 55°18′18″N 061°30′18″E | ||||||||||
Website | cekport | ||||||||||
Runways | |||||||||||
| |||||||||||
Statistics (2018) | |||||||||||
| |||||||||||
Sources: Russian Federal Air Transport Agency (see also provisional 2018 statistics)[2] |
Passenger flights to Chelyabinsk were served by Chelyabinsk Shagol Airport from 1938 until it was repurposed for military only use.
The current Chelyabinsk airport, initially called Balandino Airport, was opened in late 1953 with a passenger terminal and a dirt runway. The runway was paved in December 1962. A year later, the first jet plane (a Tu-104) arrived at the airport.
A new terminal was built in 1974 which remains in service to this day as one of the terminal buildings. In 1994, the government-owned airport was privatized and started its first international flights.
Passenger traffic reached 1.1 million and declined heavily during the 1990s. In 2013, the airport handled 1.2 million passengers, breaking the Soviet-time record.
The new, longer runway was built in 1999, while the old runway was repurposed as a taxiway. The airport can accept heavy aircraft including the Boeing 747 and the An-225.
The construction of the new passenger terminal is planned at Chelyabinsk Airport, this is done for BRICS summit in 2020. The project includes the construction of the new terminal, which was scheduled to commence in summer 2018 and finish by December 2019.[3] The complex will be able to handle 2,5 million passengers per annum.[4] The next plan for the airport is to take the third category of ICAO. This category in Russia is owned only by Moscow's Domodedovo and Sheremetyevo Airports and Pulkovo Airport in Saint Petersburg.[5][6][7]
Airlines | Destinations |
---|---|
Aeroflot | Moscow–Sheremetyevo, Saint Petersburg, Sochi |
Azimuth | Mineralnye Vody |
Azur Air | Seasonal charter: Phuket,[8] Sharm El Sheikh[8] |
IrAero | Baku[9] |
Nordwind Airlines | Sochi Seasonal: Makhachkala[10] |
NordStar Airlines | Norilsk, Sochi |
Pobeda | Antalya, Moscow–Sheremetyevo, Moscow–Vnukovo, Saint Petersburg,[11] Sochi |
Red Wings Airlines | Almaty, Antalya,[12] Istanbul, Kazan, Krasnoyarsk–International, Nizhnevartovsk,[13] Nizhny Novgorod, Norilsk, Novy Urengoy,[14] Samara,[13] Tbilisi,[15] Volgograd, Yerevan Seasonal: Makhachkala[10] |
Rossiya | Saint Petersburg |
RusLine | Naryan-Mar, Saint Petersburg |
S7 Airlines | Novosibirsk[16] |
Smartavia | Kaliningrad,[17] Saint Petersburg, Sochi |
Turkish Airlines | Antalya |
Ural Airlines | Dushanbe, Khujand, Moscow–Domodedovo (resumes 31 October 2024),[18] Osh, Sochi, Yekaterinburg (begins 1 January 2025) |
Utair | Khanty-Mansiysk, Surgut |
Yamal | Novy Urengoy |
Airlines | Destinations |
---|---|
Grizodubova Air Company | Moscow–Vnukovo |
Year | Total passengers | Change | Domestic | International | Aircraft departures |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2000 | 274 236 | +0,1% | 208 912 | 65 324 | 2 656 |
2001 | 297 198 | +8,4% | 325 077 | 62 121 | 3 205 |
2002 | 302 626 | +1,8% | 234 495 | 67 701 | 3 152 |
2003 | 359 822 | +18,9% | 282 186 | 77 636 | 3 439 |
2004 | 404 151 | +12,3% | 307 231 | 96 920 | 3 550 |
2005 | 386 115 | −4,5% | 333 206 | 52 909 | 3 096 |
2006 | 432 034 | +11,9% | 357 733 | 74 301 | 3 167 |
2007 | 675 141 | +56,3% | 534 796 | 140 345 | 5 050 |
2008 | 685 408 | +1,5% | 561 649 | 123 760 | 4 832 |
2009 | 581 555 | −15,2% | 477 507 | 104 048 | 3 499 |
2010 | 664 184 | +14,2% | 510 314 | 153 870 | 4 416 |
2011 | 833 780 | +25,5% | 594 087 | 239 693 | 5 150 |
2012 | 1 000 753 | +20,0% | 679 920 | 320 833 | ≈5 800 |
2013 | 1 210 388 | +20,1% | 799 288 | 339 609 | ≈6 380 |
2014 | 1 404 238 | +16,0% | 964 887 | 364 075 | ≈7023 |
2015 | 1 239 212 | -11,8% | 990 868 | 248 344 | no data |
2021 | 1 827 951 | +57,0% | 1 683 432 | 144 519 | 8 227 |
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.