Petrozavodsk Airport Petroskoin Lendoazema Аэропорт Петрозаводск |
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Summary | |||||||||||
Airport type | Civil/military | ||||||||||
Operator | Ministry of Economic Development of the Republic of Karelia | ||||||||||
Serves | Petrozavodsk | ||||||||||
Location | Besovets, Russia | ||||||||||
Elevation AMSL | 151 ft / 46 m | ||||||||||
Coordinates | 61°53′6″N 034°9′24″E / 61.88500°N 34.15667°E | ||||||||||
Website | airport-petrozavodsk.ru | ||||||||||
Runways | |||||||||||
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Petrozavodsk Airport (Russian: Аэропорт Петрозаводск, Karelian: Petroskoin lendoazema; (IATA: PES, ICAO: ULPB); ex: Besovets, Petrozavodsk-2) is a joint civil-military airport in Russia located 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) northwest of Petrozavodsk in Besovets, Shuya Rural Settlement (municipality). It services small airliners. It is a minor airfield with 12 parking stands and a small amount of tarmac space.
The airfield has seen military use as an interceptor base. During the 1960s or 1970s Sukhoi Su-15 aircraft were based at Besovets. During the 1970s it was home to the 991st Fighter Aviation Regiment (991 IAP), which flew Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-25 Foxbat aircraft. In 1992-93, the 159th Fighter Aviation Regiment (159 IAP) transferred in from Poland, having left the 4th Air Army. It flies the Sukhoi Su-27 aircraft and is now part of the 54th Air Defence Corps, 6th Air Army.
On 20 June 2011, a RusAir Tupolev TU-134, Flight 9605, operating for RusLine, with 43 passengers and nine crew crash landed, broke up, and caught fire on a highway short of the runway at Petrozavodsk Airport while en route from Moscow to Petrozavodsk, killing 47 people and leaving five survivors.