Belgorod International Airport

UUOB / EGO

Description

Belgorod International Airport is an airport in Russia located 4 km north of Belgorod.

The establishment date of the airport is considered to be 30 August 1954, when the order was issued by the Deputy Chief of Air Fleet under the Council of Ministers of the USSR and Belgorod landing pad began its transformation into a class IV Airport.

In 1954, the Kursk squadron relocated to the northern outskirts of Belgorod. These aircraft carried cargo and mail transportation, medical staff in the newly created districts of the Belgorod Oblast. The staff (technicians, drivers) did not exceed 20-30 people then.

In 1957, Yak-12 came into operation, capable of carrying 4 passengers or 350 kilograms of cargo. Aircraft used for flight on the territory of the region. In the years 1959–1968, made fleet capacity by AN-2 and Yak-12.

In 1969, the runway was put into operation. It began receiving short-haul aircraft: Yak-40, L-410, An-24. To fly to Moscow, Sochi, Anapa, Simferopol, Poltava, Donetsk. Created by air traffic control, 170 people work at the plant. Since 1970, flights operated to Rostov-on-Don, Voronezh, Krasnodar and Lipetsk.

In 1975, the airport admitted to reception of the Tu-134. New lines opened up to new directions in Murmansk, Yekaterinburg, Astrakhan, Tyumen, Smolensk, Saratov and Mariupol.

In 1976–1989, years of the expansion of the geography of flights and an increase in the intensity of flights. 1981 saw the reconstruction of the runway. In the years 1985–1994 passenger flights were performed to Khabarovsk, Novosibirsk, Surgut, Tyumen, Murmansk, Arkhangelsk, Leningrad, Riga, Minsk, Kiev, Lviv, Yerevan, Sochi, Odessa, Simferopol, Kaliningrad, Chelyabinsk and Baku.

In 1995, the airport was given the status of international airport. Along with the implementation of domestic flights, international flights started to operate to Turkey, Bulgaria, Israel, Hungary. Accepted cargo planes from India, China, the Netherlands, the United Arab Emirates.

In 1998–1999 following an economic meltdown, which resulted in a sharp decline in demand for passenger air travel and the reduction of the amount of work, number of flights reduced.

In 2000–2001, scheduled passenger transport resumed, including international with opening of new flights to Salekhard, Tyumen, Surgut, Norilsk, Yekaterinburg, Anapa, Murmansk, Sochi, Novy Urengoy, Soviet, Naryan-Mar, Arkhangelsk, Israel, Hungary, Cyprus and Bulgaria using Tu-134, Tu-154, Yak- 42, with a capacity of 70–160 passengers.

In April 2002, "the airline Belgorod" transformed into a Federal State Unitary Enterprise "Belgorod State Aviation Enterprise", and in December of the same year transformed into Open Joint Stock Company "Belgorod Airlines".


Weather
Management

Ivan Skatov *

Head of the Regional ATM Center (Moscow)
Location
Region
Western Russia
FIR
Moscow
APT coordinates
50.64380, 36.59010 
Elevation
735 ft / ≈224 m
Airport charts
Runways information
RWY MAG BRG Dimensions(m) Landing system
11/29 109° 2500x45 RNAV
289° ILS CAT I (110.500)
ATC positions
Position Designator Callsign Frequency
FSS  * RU-WRC_FSS Western Russia Control 135.320
Control UUWV_CTR Moscow Control 127.500
Tower * UUOB_TWR Belgorod Tower 118.200
ATIS UUOB_ATIS Belgorod ATIS 130.300
Files
EuroScope FS 9 FSX MSFS 2020 P3Dv2 P3Dv3 P3Dv4 P3Dv5 xPlane 9 xPlane 10 xPlane 11
Title Type Tags Addition time
UUOB Belgorod (x-flight.su)  
scenery MSFS 2020 P3Dv4 P3Dv5 xPlane 11  23.11.2021
(no description)