Oral Ak Zhol Airport

Summary

Manshuk Mametova International Airport (Kazakh: Мәншүк Мәметова атындағы Халықаралық әуежайы, Mänşük Mämetova atındağı Xalıqaralıq äwejayı), also known as Oral Ak Zhol Airport (Kazakh: Ақжол халықаралық әуежайы, Aqjol halyqaralyq äuejaiy; formerly known as Uralsk Ak Zhol and Podstepnyy during the Soviet era) (IATA: URA, ICAO: UARR), is an airport in Kazakhstan located 12 km (7 mi) southeast of Oral (Uralsk). The airport is located south of the Oral River.

Oral Ak Zhol Airport

Ақжол халықаралық әуежайы
Aqjol halyqaralyq äuejaiy
Summary
Airport typePublic
OperatorHC Airports of Regions
ServesOral
Location12 km (7.5 mi) SE of Oral, Kazakhstan
Elevation AMSL38 m / 125 ft
Coordinates51°09′03″N 051°32′35″E / 51.15083°N 51.54306°E / 51.15083; 51.54306
Maps
URA is located in Kazakhstan
URA
URA
Location in Kazakhstan
URA is located in Europe
URA
URA
URA (Europe)
Map
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
04/22 2,799 9,183 Concrete
Source: AIP Kazakhstan[1]

In February 2023, Oral Ak Zhol Airport was acquired by the largest airport holding and management company in Russia, Airports of Regions.[2] The company hopes to develop the Oral airport as a regional hub, to serve Russian travellers affected by the shortage of flights out of Russia owing to its war in Ukraine.

Facilities edit

 
Domestic terminal check-in area
 
International terminal

It is a small airport servicing medium-sized airliners. It has parking for four jets. This airport has two terminals – domestic and international. The airport also serves the nearby town of Aksai, which provides the majority of Ak Zhol passenger traffic, being the "capital" of the gas industry in West Kazakhstan. In the past, a weekly international charter flight was operated by Astraeus Airlines from Oral to London Gatwick/London Stansted; this was subsequently operated by Air Astana to Amsterdam; however, the route was terminated, along with other Air Astana flights, due to the poor condition of the runway. The airport runway and facilities were inspected by Mott MacDonald to confirm that its substandard condition prevented the airport from accommodating larger jet aircraft. On 17 April 2013, the decision was made to transfer the airport's ownership back to the government for runway reconstruction.

A new terminal was built and opened in April 2022. It aims to double the capacity of the airport to 600 thousand people per year.[3]

Airlines and destinations edit

AirlinesDestinations
Air AstanaAlmaty, Astana, Frankfurt
Air CairoSeasonal: Sharm El Sheikh[4]
FlyArystanAktau,[5] Almaty, Astana,[6] Atyrau,[7] Dubai–International[8]
Qazaq AirAktobe,[9] Astrakhan, Atyrau
S7 AirlinesMoscow–Domodedovo[10]
SCAT AirlinesAktau, Atyrau,[11] Ras Al Khaimah,[12] Türkıstan
Sunday Airlines Seasonal charter: Sharm El Sheikh[citation needed]

Ground transport edit

Bus edit

The No 12 municipal bus line connects Ak Zhol International airport with centrally located Uralsk train station. Service is available from 06:00 to 22:00 daily.

Taxi edit

There is always a queue of available private taxi cabs at the airport parking lot.

Accidents and incidents edit

  • On 15 April 2006, a British Airways Boeing 747, G-BNLA, operating as flight number BA10 from Sydney to London via Bangkok with 354 passengers and 18 crew made an emergency landing at Uralsk Airport after a fire warning light went on in the cockpit. Although the only airport's landing strip is certified for operation of medium-sized aircraft the crew managed to perform a safe landing. There were no fatalities or reportable injuries, however the airport did not have the correct size of air stairs to reach the aircraft doors, the largest passenger aircraft that had operated on a regular basis previously had been an Air Astana Boeing 757. As the 747 was deemed too heavy for take-off smaller size aircraft were sent from Moscow and Bucharest to ferry the passengers to London.[13]
  • On 28 August 2009, an Itek Air Boeing-737-200 en route from Bishkek to Moscow performed an emergency landing due to oil leak on the port engine.
  • On 17 November 2011, a Bek Air Fokker 100 operating as flight BEK-2011 from Almaty to Uralsk made an emergency landing in Uralsk after a go-around having a landing gear and cargo door failure alerts.

References edit

  1. ^ AIP Kazakhstan Archived 30 June 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ "Sanctioned Russian buys into Kazakh airport in border region | Eurasianet". Retrieved 26 March 2023.
  3. ^ "Новый терминал аэропорта Уральска будет работать в режиме опытной эксплуатации (ВИДЕО)".
  4. ^ "Air Cairo Adds Sharm el Sheikh – Kazakhstan Scheduled Flights in NW22". Aeroroutes. 26 October 2022. Retrieved 19 November 2022.
  5. ^ Liu, Jim. "FlyArystan adds Aktau – Uralsk service from late-Oct 2020". Routesonline. Retrieved 6 October 2020.
  6. ^ "FlyArystan Schedules New Domestic Routes From Nur-Sultan in 2Q22". Aeroroutes. Retrieved 23 May 2022.
  7. ^ Liu, Jim. "FlyArystan expands domestic network in July/August 2020". Routesonline. Retrieved 19 June 2020.
  8. ^ "FLYARYSTAN EXPANDS DUBAI NETWORK IN NW22". AeroRoutes. 27 September 2022. Retrieved 27 September 2022.
  9. ^ "Qazaq Air Adds Aktobe – Uralsk Service From Nov 2022". Aeroroutes. Retrieved 26 October 2022.
  10. ^ Liu, Jim (18 July 2016). "S7 Airlines Adds Moscow – Uralsk Service from Nov 2016". Airlineroute, Routesonline. Retrieved 18 July 2016.
  11. ^ Liu, Jim (23 March 2017). "SCAT adds new routes in S17". Routesonline. Retrieved 23 March 2017.
  12. ^ "Direct flight to UAE". scat.kz. Retrieved 26 February 2021.
  13. ^ "BA010 BKK-LHR Divert - PPRuNe Forums". www.pprune.org. Retrieved 27 December 2019.