When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Tanner–Hiller Airport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tanner–Hiller_Airport

    Tanner–Hiller Airport, (ICAO: K8B5, FAA LID: 8B5) in Barre, Massachusetts, is a public airport owned by the G&C Group of Acton, MA, who purchased the field from the Leonard A. Tanner Estate in May 2017. It has one runway, averages 30 flights per week, and has approximately 25 aircraft and hang gliders based on the field. [1]

  3. List of airports in Ukraine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_airports_in_Ukraine

    Topographic map of Ukraine (with borders and towns) This is a list of airports in Ukraine grouped by type and sorted by location. All aviation infrastructure of Ukraine is being supervised and regulated by the State Aviation Service of Ukraine (until 2010 the State Aviation Administration of Ukraine). The service issues certificates for all ...

  4. Lviv Danylo Halytskyi International Airport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lviv_Danylo_Halytskyi...

    The Ukraine Air Alliance (Ukraine-Aeroalliance) plane ran out of fuel before a planned stopover at Lviv, en route from Vigo in Spain to Istanbul. [ 37 ] [ 38 ] On 18 March 2022, during the Russo-Ukrainian War , an aircraft-repair plant near the airport was hit by several Russian missiles.

  5. SkyUp Airlines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SkyUp_Airlines

    SkyUp Airlines LLC is a Ukrainian charter and low-cost airline headquartered in Kyiv, [3] which began its operation in May 2018. [4] During 2021, the airline carried 2,546,899 passengers, performed 15,962 flights, and transported 786.5 tons of cargo. It has 1172 employees. [5] The subsidiary SkyUp MT is based in Malta and has the IATA Code U5. [6]

  6. Cherkasy International Airport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherkasy_International_Airport

    In 1984, Cherkasy Airport was one of the largest airports in the USSR and had an international status, and received aircraft weighing up to 185.5 tons, serving up to 80 flights a day. After the fall of USSR airport had struggles maintaining airline services, and in 1992 the airport lost its international status and ceased to take international ...

  7. List of Aeroflot destinations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Aeroflot_destinations

    Once the world's largest carrier, [7]: 1389 Aeroflot did not restrict its operations to the transportation of passengers, but monopolised all civil aviation activities within the Soviet Union. Apart from passenger transportation that covered a domestic network of over 3,600 villages, towns and cities, activities undertaken by the airline that ...

  8. Transport in Ukraine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_in_Ukraine

    The share of the transport sector in Ukraine's gross domestic product (according to Goskomstat) as of 2009 was 11.3%. The number of workers employed in the sector is almost 7% of total employment. The transportation infrastructure of Ukraine is adequately developed overall, however it is obsolete and in need of major modernization.

  9. Chernivtsi International Airport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chernivtsi_International...

    Since 1992, it has been guarded by the Chernivtsi Border Detachment.. In 2016, scheduled operations were resumed by national carrier Ukraine International Airlines.The carrier inaugurated a route linking its hub in Kyiv-Boryspil with Chernivitsi on 12 July, initially operated on a daily basis with flights carried out by partner airline Dniproavia using their Embraer 145 fleet. [5]