Tashkent International Airport Explained

Islam Karimov
Tashkent International Airport
Iata:TAS
Icao:UTTT
Type:Public
Owner:Government of Uzbekistan
Focus City:Ural Airlines
City-Served:Tashkent
Location:Tashkent, Uzbekistan
Hub:HumoAir
My Freighter Airlines
Panorama Airways
Qanot Sharq
Uzbekistan Airways
Elevation-F:1,417
Elevation-M:432
Coordinates:41.2579°N 69.2812°W
Website:UzbAirports.uz/
Pushpin Map:Uzbekistan
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of airport in Uzbekistan
Pushpin Label:TAS
Pushpin Label Position:right
R1-Number:08L/26R
R1-Length-F:13,123
R1-Length-M:4,000
R1-Surface:Concrete
Stat1-Header:Number of passengers
Stat1-Data:5,000,000
Stat-Year:2022
Footnotes:Uzbek Aeronautical Information Publication[1]
R2-Number:08R/26L
R2-Length-F:12,812
R2-Length-M:3,905
R2-Surface:Asphalt
Stat2-Header:Aircraft movements

Islam Karimov Tashkent International Airport (Uzbek: Islom Karimov Toshkent Xalqaro Aeroporti) is the main international airport of Uzbekistan and the third busiest airport in Central Asia (after Almaty International Airport and Nursultan Nazarbayev International Airport in Astana, both in Kazakhstan). It is located 121NaN1 from the center of Tashkent. It was named after Islam Karimov, the first president of independent Uzbekistan, in office from 1991 until his death in 2016.

History

This ICAO Category II airport is the primary hub of Uzbekistan Airways, the largest international airport in Uzbekistan, and the busiest in Central Asia. The airport comprises two terminals: Terminal 2 receives international flights, and Terminal 3 is for domestic traffic.[2]

In March 1995, Uzbekistan Airways started flights from Tashkent to New York via Riga. It used Airbus A310s on the route.[3] [4] [5] Terminal 2 was rebuilt in 2001, and renovations were completed in 2018. It has a capacity of 1000 passengers/hour and serves more than two million passengers per year. Facilities include waiting lounges, CIP and VIP halls, restaurants and bars, currency exchange offices, duty-free shops, airlines ticket counters and sales offices, and a 24-hour pharmacy.

Terminal 3 opened in 2011 with a capacity of 400 passengers per hour. The two terminals are separated by the runway, requiring passengers transiting from international to domestic flights and vice versa to exit the airport in order to transfer between them. In July 2017, Uzbekistan Airways began offering nonstop service to New York using its Boeing 787 fleet.[6] [7]

The government of Uzbekistan is planning to relocate Tashkent Airport to a new site by 2030.[8]

Incidents

In 2023, there was a big fire at the airport and a warehouse exploded.[9]

Airlines and destinations

Cargo

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Eurocontrol – The European AIS Database: Introduction to EAD Basic – Home.
  2. News: Uzbekistan Airways' new terminal starts operation in Tashkent. 26 September 2011. C.A.A.N. 26 September 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20150213161244/http://caan.asia/en/show-uzbekistan_airways%e2%80%99_new_terminal_starts_operation_in_tashkent.html. 13 February 2015. live. dmy-all.
  3. News: Uzbekistan Airways marks 20th anniversary of launch flights to New York . UzDaily . 2015-04-03 . 12 January 2023.
  4. . World airline report: 1994 - Europe . Air Transport World . 32 . 6 . June 1995.
  5. News: Рига привлекает авиакомпании . Biznes & Baltiya . 2004-11-01 . 2023-05-13 . Novak, Alexey . ru.
  6. News: . Uzbekistan Airways conducts first non-stop Tashkent-New York-Tashkent flight . UzDaily . 2017-07-28.
  7. Web site: Our story . Uzbekistan Airways . 12 January 2023.
  8. News: Tashkent Airoport to be relocated by 2030. 23 July 2012. UzDaily.com. 23 July 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20160403075952/https://www.uzdaily.com/articles-id-19415.htm. 3 April 2016. live. dmy-all.
  9. News: 2023-09-28 . Powerful blast in Uzbek capital kills one, injures 162 . en . Reuters . 2023-10-27.