Khodynka Aerodrome

For other uses, see Khodynka (disambiguation).
Khodynka Aerodrome
IATA: noneICAO: none
Summary
Airport type Public
Location Khodynka Field, Moscow
Elevation AMSL 153 m / 502 ft
Coordinates 55°47′18″N 37°32′00″E / 55.7883°N 37.5333°E / 55.7883; 37.5333Coordinates: 55°47′18″N 37°32′00″E / 55.7883°N 37.5333°E / 55.7883; 37.5333
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
09/27 1,460 4,790 Concrete
Concrete

Khodynka Aerodrome (officially Frunze Central Aerodrome, often referred to as Tsentralny Aerodrome) was an airport in Moscow, Russia located 7 kilometres (4.3 mi) northwest of the centre of the city.

History

The founding of the aerodrome took place on June 17, 1910 when the Moscow Aeronautical Society announced that the staff of the Moscow Military District had approved the allocation of land in the territory of Khodynka field as an airfield. Donations from aviation enthusiasts met much of the cost of the construction of the facility. There resulted a runway and six small hangars for airplanes. The official opening took place on October 3, 1910 in the presence of military authorities and of many Russian aviators. M. F. De Campo Scipio made the first takeoff.

On May 3, 1922 the first ever Russian international flight on the route Moscow - Königsberg - Berlin took place. On July 15, 1923 the first regular domestic passenger flights between Moscow and Nizhny Novgorod started - the 420 km route took 2.5 hours in a 4-seater AK-1 monoplane.

From 1923 to 1926 the facility bore the name "Central L. D. Trotsky Aerodrome" (Russian: Центральный аэродром имени Л. Д. Троцкого). Subsequently it officially became "Central M. V. Frunze Aerodrome" (Russian: Центральный аэродром имени М. В. Фрунзе).

In 1938 the airport gave its name to the newly-opened Moscow Metro station Aeroport to the north of the runway.

Khodynka remained the only airport in Moscow until the opening of Bykovo in 1933. (Tushino opened in 1935, Vnukovo in 1941). Khodynka Aerodrome closed in 2003, and as of 2016 the whole site has been redeveloped for other uses. It housed a large number of stored aircraft from Sukhoi and Mikoyan-Gurevich (which were moved to Lukhovitsy).

See also

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