Hradčany Air Base Explained

Hradčany Airport
Nativename:Letiště Hradčany
Icao:LKHR
Type:Military
Location:Ralsko (Česká Lípa District)
Elevation-M:278
Pushpin Map:Czech Republic#Europe
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of airport in Czech Republic
R1-Number:09L/27R
R1-Length-F:9,186
R1-Length-M:2,800
R1-Surface:Concrete

Hradčany Airport (in Czech Letiště Hradčany, often Letiště Ralsko) is a former military airport within the area of Ralsko in Liberec Region, northern Czech Republic. Built toward the end of World War II for the Luftwaffe, it was expanded after the war. In 1968 the Soviet Army took control and set up a large air base here. However, after the Soviets left in 1991, the airport was abandoned and it is now neglected and damaged.

History

The area was used for military training during Austria-Hungary and during the First Republic of Czechoslovakia. Since 1938 the area was controlled by the Wehrmacht and used for training. In March 1945 the Wehrmacht built a field airport next to village Hradčany (Kummer).[1] By April 1945 Stab and II./SG 2 of Luftwaffe's Schlachtgeschwader 2 were based here, while its I./SG 2 was in Austria, and III./SG 2 near Prague. The airport was also used by a wing of Messerschmitt Me 262 at the end of the war, and later damaged by American bombing.

After the war, German speaking inhabitants were expelled. On 30 October 1946 the Czechoslovak Army closed up the area and established military base, later known as Military District Ralsko (Vojenský újezd Ralsko). In 1968, during the initial phases of Soviet occupation of Czechoslovakia, Soviet planes shipped military materiel through the airport. The whole base was handed over to the newly established Central Group of Forces of the Soviet Armed Forces. To host the Soviet 236th bomber-fighter squadron and part of the 131st air division the airport runway was expanded to 2,800 meters (width 60 m, one of the largest in Central Europe) and completely covered with concrete. Over forty hardened hangars hosted about 44 Mig-21 fighters and Mi-24 helicopters. Fuel tanks had capacity over 37,000 m³.[2]

Between 1945 and 1968 the Czechoslovak Air Force operated several regiments from Hradčany airfield:[3]

Aircraft operated from the airfield included Arado Ar-96Bs, AS-11s, and MiG-15 (MiG-15, MiG-15bisR and MiG-15UTI).

Former airport

After the fall of the communist party from power in 1989, withdrawal of Soviet troops was negotiated in February 1990. The last soldier left the district in May 1991. The district lost its military status in the same year, was open to the public and on 1 January 1992 the village of Ralsko (area of 170 km2, town since 2006) was established by joining of nine villages together. Between 1993 and 2004 the area was extensively cleaned up from chemical contamination and searched for unexploded ammunition.

Soon after the airport was handed over to Czech authorities several projects has been proposed: setting up large cargo terminal here, to use it by Rolls-Royce for engine tests, to attract a low-cost carrier or create a Czech Scout base for huge events such as a jamboree.[4] Due to unwillingness and inability of the authorities none of the plans has materialized. The state was unable even to provide protection of existing structures and these became target of vandals and looters and were completely devastated during the 1990s.

The airport is now (without official certification) used by ultralight clubs, for unorganized car races and for rave parties. Newer plans propose to turn the location into a recreational area.

Notes

  1. Web site: Short info about the former village Hradčany. Czech.
  2. Web site: Vojenský výcvikový prostor Ralsko a letiště v Hradčanech. Czech. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20070928010446/http://www.ceskalipa.cz/info/vojensky-vycvikovy-prostor-ralsko-a-letiste-v-hradcanech/. 2007-09-28.
  3. http://www.ronaldv.nl/abandoned/airfields/CZ/liberec.html Abandoned & Little-Known Airfields: Czech Republic: Hradcany
  4. Web site: Na místě ruské střelnice v Ralsku chce poslanec Farský skautskou rezervaci. 30 October 2018.

Literature

External links