Kazan International Airport

Kazan International Airport (Tatar: Qazan Xalıqara Aeroportı / Казан Халыкара Аэропорты, Russian: Международный аэропорт Казань; IATA: KZN, ICAO: UWKD) is an airport in Russia, around 25 km southeast of Kazan. It is the largest airport in Tatarstan, and the 15th-busiest airport in Russia. The Kazan International Airport serves the nearly 3.8 million citizens of the region.

Kazan International Airport

Qazan Xalıqara Aeroportı / Казан Халыкара Аэропорты

Международный аэропорт Казань
Summary
Airport typeInternational
OwnerKazan International Airport
OperatorJSC "Kazan International Airport"
ServesKazan, Russia
Hub forUVT Aero
Elevation AMSL410 ft / 125 m
Coordinates55°36′24″N 049°16′54″E
Websitewww.kazan.aero
Map
KZN
Location of the airport in Tatarstan
KZN
Location of the airport in Russia
KZN
Location of the airport in Europe
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
11L/29R 12,218 3,724 Concrete
Statistics (2018)
Passengers3,141,776
Time zoneUTC +4
Operating time7.00-24.00, all year
Most popular international flightIstanbul, Turkey
Sources: Russian Federal Air Transport Agency (see also provisional 2018 statistics)[1]

History

Inside Kazan Airport, departure hall

On 15 September 1979, Kazan 2 was completed. On 28 September 1984, Kazan 1 (located inside the city) was shut down, and Kazan 2 was renamed to Kazan Domestic Airport. On 21 February 1986, Kazan Airport gained international rank. This was a drastic announcement, because the USSR Council of Ministers only rarely allowed its citizens to fly out of the USSR.

In 1991, after the fall of the Soviet Union, the Tatarstan region separated from USSR's single Aeroflot airline and created Tatarstan Airlines. This airline didn't gain an efficient amount of investments in its 22 years of service, and its operating license was officially terminated on 31 December 2013 after a disaster.[2]

On 26 October 1992, Kazan got its first international regular flight: Kazan - Istanbul - Kazan. This flight was (and still is) operated by Turkish Airlines and 145 annual trips are made to and from Istanbul, making it the most popular international route.

In 2008, Tatarstan's president, Mintimer Shaimiev, after winning the bid for the 2013 Universiade Olympic Games, began creating a set of major reform projects of Kazan. Apart from repairing the streets, bringing in investments, integrating English language and improving the bus route system in Kazan, Shaimiev also began to completely redesign Kazan's airport. He designed the blueprints for Terminal 1A, and planned out the complete refining of the airport between 2008 and 2025. Shaimiev's successor and today's president of Tatarstan, Rustam Minnikhanov, used the blueprints, which were made in 2009, to begin the construction of Terminal 1A and a complete redesign of Terminal 1 (essentially also a new reconstruction).

First, a new 3,700 meter runway was built, and edge lights were added on both of the runways. This made it possible for the airport to operate 24/7. In 2012, a new airport fire station was built. In 2012, the construction of Terminal 1A began. Later that year, Terminal 1 began its own renovation. Terminal 1A was officially opened on 7 November 2012. Terminal 1 finished renovations on 22 June 2013.

Today, the new airport has more than 30 check-in slots and seven conveyor belts. It has three separate duty-free shops, selling merchandise such as alcohol, cigars and cigarettes, chocolates. It offers popular brands such as Costa Coffee. The airport can sustain around three million passengers. Further expansions and the creation of Terminal 2 will occur before the 2018 FIFA World Cup.

Following the Skytrax Airport and Airline Awards, Kazan Airport was nominated for 4 stars in 2014, and was called Russia's and CIS's best airport.

Thanks to the opening of new air routes and to the increase of flights in the existing ones, the Kazan Airport, at the beginning of the month of December 2017 reached the record of 2.5 million passengers transported in less than a year.[3]

Airlines and destinations

AirlinesDestinations
Aeroflot Frankfurt, Moscow–Sheremetyevo
Air Astana Nur-Sultan
airBaltic Seasonal: Riga (resumes 3 May 2021)[4]
Avia Traffic Company Bishkek
Azimuth Rostov-on-Don
Azur Air Seasonal: La Romana, Nha Trang
Charter: Dubai–Al Maktoum, Goa, Phuket, Zanzibar
Belavia Minsk
Buta Airways Baku
flydubai Seasonal: Dubai–International
I-Fly Seasonal charter: Antalya
Nordwind Airlines Istanbul,[5] Kaliningrad,[6] Khujand, Moscow–Sheremetyevo
Seasonal charter: Antalya, Bodrum, Burgas, Nha Trang, Dalaman, Djerba, Dubai–Al Maktoum, Heraklion, Monastir, Phuket
Pegas Fly Charter: Dubai–Al Maktoum, Nha Trang, Phuket
Pobeda Istanbul, Istanbul–Sabiha Gökçen,[7] Mineralnye Vody, Sochi, Moscow-Vnukovo, St. Petersburg
Seasonal: Anapa, Antalya
Rossiya St. Petersburg
Seasonal charter: Antalya
Royal Flight Seasonal charter: Barcelona, Dubai–Al Maktoum, Zanzibar
RusLine Bryansk,[8] Kaluga, Moscow–Vnukovo,[8] Voronezh,[8] Yekaterinburg
S7 Airlines Moscow–Domodedovo, Novosibirsk
Smartavia St. Petersburg
Somon Air Dushanbe
Turkish Airlines Istanbul
Turkmenistan Airlines Ashgabat
Ural Airlines Moscow–Domodedovo, Moscow–Zhukovsky,[9] Yekaterinburg
Utair Astrakhan,[10] Moscow–Vnukovo, Ufa
UVT Aero Astrakhan, Barnaul, Chelyabinsk, Kaliningrad, Krasnodar, Krasnoyarsk–Yemelyanovo, Makhachkala, Moscow–Zhukovsky, Nizhnevartovsk, Nizhny Novgorod, Novokuznetsk,[11] Novy Urengoy, Perm, Salekhard, Simferopol, Sochi, St. Petersburg, Surgut, Yaroslavl, Yekaterinburg[11]
Seasonal: Gelendzhik, Gorno-Altaysk, Yerevan
Uzbekistan Airways Fergana, Tashkent
Wizz Air Budapest
Yakutia Airlines Yakutsk

Statistics

Passenger statistics

Annual passenger traffic[12]
Year Passengers % change
2004309,900
2005393,600 27%
2006445,700 13.2%
2007616,400 38.3%
2008751,500 22%
2009675,700 -10.1%
2010958,500 41.8%
20111,227,000 28%
20121,487,000 21.2%
20131,847,000 24.2%
20141,942,408 5.2%
20151,799,267 7.4%
20161,923,223 6.9%
20172,623,423 36.4%

Arrivals and departures

2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
4,831 6,192 6,601 7,946 8,238 6,898 9,549 11,210 20,475 29,783

Cargo handled

2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012
2,078 4,384 4,456 5,321 2,744 2,936 3,834 6,014 7,212

Other facilities

Tatarstan Airlines had its head office on the airport property.[13][14]

Accidents and incidents

On 17 November 2013, Tatarstan Airlines Flight 363, a Boeing 737-500, operating for Tatarstan Airlines, crashed while attempting to land at the airport. All 44 passengers and six crew members died.[15] Investigations revealed the pilot had not completed his primary flight training, a revelation which then led the Russia's Federal Air Transport Agency (Rosaviatsiya) to revoke hundreds of pilots' licenses.[16]

See also

References

  1. "Объемы перевозок через аэропорты России" [Transportation volumes at Russian airports]. favt.ru (in Russian). Federal Air Transport Agency. Retrieved 23 October 2018.
  2. "Ak Bars Aero wins Volga contract; to absorb Tatarstan Air's assets". Ch-aviation.ch. 27 December 2013. Retrieved 9 May 2017.
  3. http://aviationews.net/blog/kazan-airport-reaches-record-25-million-passengers/
  4. https://www.leta.lv/eng/home/press_release/6B246BC6-9682-4A53-B0E8-2CADC0F77D1B/
  5. Liu, Jim. "Nordwind expands Istanbul network from late-Oct 2020". Routesonline. Retrieved 23 October 2020.
  6. Liu, Jim. "Nordwind adds new routes to Kaliningrad from mid-July 2020". Routesonline. Retrieved 25 June 2020.
  7. Liu, Jim. "Pobeda increases Istanbul flights form Nov 2020". Routesonline. Retrieved 21 October 2020.
  8. Liu, Jim (20 December 2019). "RusLine adds new domestic sectors in 1Q20". Routesonline. Retrieved 20 December 2019.
  9. Liu, Jim (8 October 2020). "Ural Airlines adds new domestic routes from Moscow Zhukovsky in late-Oct 2020". Routesonline.
  10. "Utair утвердил расписание новых рейсов на юге России". utair.ru. Utair. Retrieved 19 December 2019.
  11. "Из Казани появится новый авиарейс в Екатеринбург и Новокузнецк". БИЗНЕС Online (in Russian). 5 December 2019. Retrieved 5 December 2019.
  12. Архив новостей. "Международный аэропорт Казань". kazan.aero.
  13. "Головной офис." Tatarstan Airlines. Retrieved on 28 October 2010. "420144, Россия, Татарстан, г. Казань, Аэропорт"
  14. "World Airline Directory." Flight International. 23–29 March 1994. 122. "Head office: Kazan Airport, Tatarstan 420017, Russia"
  15. Simon Hradecky (17 November 2013). "Crash: Tatarstan B735 at Kazan on Nov 17th 2013, crashed on go-around". Avherald.com. Retrieved 9 May 2017.
  16. Mark Hubert (9 May 2017). "Russian Pilots Protesting Mass License Revocations". Ainonline.com. Retrieved 9 May 2017.
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