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  • 21 Aug, 2019

  • By, Wikipedia

Krasnoyarsk International Airport

Krasnoyarsk International Airport (Russian: Международный аэропорт Красноярск, romanizedMezhdunarodnyy aeroport Krasnoyarsk) (IATA: KJA, ICAO: UNKL), is a major airport in Krasnoyarsk Krai, Russia, 27 kilometres (17 mi) northwest of Krasnoyarsk. As of December 2017, it was the 14th biggest in Russia in passenger traffic.

History

Currently inactive, old terminal 1
Currently inactive terminal 2

Construction of the airport started in 1970. It opened for operations in 1980.

In 2005, the airport launched Terminal 2 for handling transit and international passengers. By 2006, the old runway coating had been replaced by an asphalt-concrete layer with reinforced polymeric netting.

In November 2007, it was announced that Lufthansa Cargo might switch its Asian refueling and distribution point from Astana, Kazakhstan, to Krasnoyarsk (Yemelyanovo) International Airport, because Russia would no longer permit Lufthansa the use of its air space for their Europe to Asia flights unless they could sell fuel. In July 2008, Lufthansa stated that it would move its cargo logistics hub from Astana to Krasnoyarsk (Yemelyanovo) once the airport was brought up to ICAO safety standards. The cargo terminal of Lufthansa Cargo in Krasnoyarsk (Yemelyanovo) airport was its second largest one after Frankfurt. However, in October 2016, Lufthansa Cargo switched all flights from Krasnoyarsk (Yemelyanovo) to another Siberian airport Tolmachevo (Novosibirsk) citing its better infrastructure and the ability to outsource certain services whereas in Krasnoyarsk the company “had to involve its own personnel and equipment”. On the other hand, AirBridgeCargo Airlines switched its activities vice versa from Tolmachevo Airport to Yemelyanovo in January 2018.

In 2008, the modern Arrivals Terminal with the capacity of 750 passengers per hour was opened. Also in 2008, the lighting facilities were reconstructed and the new hi-intensity lighting system was installed: the centerline lights and the touchdown zone lights. In 2011, the airport handled over 1.6 million passengers, a 28% increase over 2010.

In November 2017, the general director of the airport has announced that the airport will now be called Krasnoyarsk-International, instead of Krasnoyarsk-Yemelyanovo. It is unknown if the airport has as yet been officially renamed.

Before 2019, RZD made a decision to construct a railway line to the airport, but due to escape of high ticket price and small train occupancy, this will not be an Aeroexpress route, this will be a simple commuter service. Nevertheless, the route will also serve cargo trains, to deliver air-cargo goods directly to Krasnoyarsk.

In March 2019, Aeroflot signed an agreement with the government of the Krasnoyarsk region and Yemelyanovo Airport to create a local international hub. The project will start in 2020. On 31 May 2021, Aeroflot officially commenced its hub operation in Krasnoyarsk.

Location

Krasnoyarsk Yemelyanovo's location is an unusual case, as the airfield is located right next to a smaller airfield, Cheremshanka. The reason this is unusual and slightly problematic is that since Cheremshanka is right next to the airfield, it can be easily confused as being Yemelyanovo, and what adds to the location issue is the fact that both airfields share their runway bearings - 11/29 - with each other. This, as a result, makes the two airports look like one, which is especially problematic as the only way to distinguish the two is the runway lengths - Cheremshanka has a shorter runway than Yemelyanovo - and the fact that no taxiway connects the two airfields.

Facilities

Inside the new terminal (check-in zone)
Airport entrance inside the terminal
Apron view of new terminal 1

At present, the airport provides a full array of passenger handling services in all three terminals, including VIP services, a business lounge, baby/parent room, ATMs, shops, cafés, bars, a drugstore and a post office. Runway 29 is certified for ILS Category II operations. The runway condition, the facilities and the technology of aircraft handling allows the airport to service more than 50 types of passenger and freighter aircraft, up to and including the Boeing 777, Boeing 767, Boeing 747, Airbus A330 family, McDonnell Douglas MD-11, Antonov An-124 and others.

At Krasnoyarsk (Yemelyanovo) International Airport, the new terminal is under construction and currently the construction is planned to finish by November 2017. On 16 December 2017, the airport plans to test the new passenger terminal and to commence operations also in December. The terminal will have 6 air-bridges.

On 8 December 2017, the new baggage system was tested at the airport, another testing opening is planned on 16 December. The airport opened officially on 26 December 2017, with the flight commencement on the next day, with NordStar Boeing 737-800 to Norilsk.

On 16 March 2018, the air-bridges started working, by accepting the first flight from Moscow-Domodedovo of Globus Airlines GH73, that arrived at 18:50.

The terminal currently serves domestic routes, which made terminal 1 to shut down the passenger service on 27 December. The international flights will shift in 2018 and then terminal 2 will shut down the service and the new terminal will be the only passenger terminal in the airport.

The re-construction of Terminal 1 is currently in process and it is planned to be changed in design, to easily integrate with the new terminal, and function. The old terminal will turn into a conference centre, to accept VIP flights more smoothly.

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

AirlinesDestinations
Aeroflot Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi, Beijing–Daxing, Harbin, Moscow–Sheremetyevo, Sanya (begins 29 June 2024)
Seasonal: Phuket
Aero Nomad Airlines Osh
AuroraKhabarovsk, Vladivostok, Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk
Avia Traffic Company Bishkek, Osh
Azimuth Mineralnye Vody, Ufa
Azur Air Seasonal charter: Antalya, Phuket
IrAero Baku, Manzhouli
KrasAvia Abakan, Barnaul, Baykit, Chara, Gorno-Altaysk, Igarka, Irkutsk, Khatanga, Kemerovo, Kodinsk, Kyzyl, Lensk, Nizhneangarsk, Novokuznetsk, Orenburg, Podkamennaya Tunguska, Polyarny, Severo-Yeniseysk, Svetlogorsk, Taksimo, Talakan, Tomsk, Tura, Turukhansk, Ufa, Ulan-Ude, Ulaanbaatar, Vanavara
NordStar Kazan, Moscow–Domodedovo, Norilsk, Saint Petersburg, Sochi
Nordwind Airlines Kazan, Makhachkala, Sochi
Pegas Fly Sochi
Seasonal charter: Phuket
Pobeda Moscow–Sheremetyevo
Rossiya Almaty, Astana, Bishkek, Blagoveshchensk, Chelyabinsk, Chita, Chulman, Gorno-Altaysk, Irkutsk, Khabarovsk, Khanty-Mansiysk, Magadan, Mirny, Novosibirsk, Novy Urengoy, Osh, Saint Petersburg, Sochi, Surgut, Tashkent, Tyumen, Ulan-Ude, Vladivostok, Yakutsk, Yekaterinburg, Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk
Seasonal: Mineralnye Vody, Novokuznetsk
S7 Airlines Bratsk, Irkutsk, Novosibirsk
Southwind Airlines Seasonal charter: Antalya
Ural Airlines Bishkek, Dushanbe, Harbin, Khujand, Osh, Tashkent, Yekaterinburg
UtairIrkutsk, Moscow–Vnukovo, Novosibirsk, Surgut
Uzbekistan AirwaysFergana, Namangan, Tashkent
Yakutia Airlines Ulan-Ude, Yakutsk

Cargo

AirlinesDestinations
AirBridgeCargo Airlines Amsterdam (suspended), Beijing–Capital, Hong Kong, Milan–Malpensa (suspended), Moscow–Sheremetyevo, Paris-Charles de Gaulle (suspended), Shanghai–Pudong

Statistics

Annual traffic

Annual Passenger Traffic
Year Passengers % Change
2010 1,275,000 Steady
2011 1,633,098 Increase 28%
2012 1,900,000 Increase 16.3%
2013 2,064,629 Increase 8.8%
2014 2,066,020 Increase 0.1%
2015 1,804,821 Decrease 12.6%
2016 1,822,877 Increase 1%
2017 2,297,468 Increase 26%
2018 2,587,734 Increase 11.5%

Incidents and accidents

  • On 23 December 1984, Aeroflot Flight 3519 crashed at the airport during an emergency landing, killing all but one of the 111 people on board.

See also