- Oral Ak Zhol Airport
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Oral Ak Zhol IATA: URA – ICAO: UARR Location of airport in Kazakhstan Summary Airport type Public Location Oral, Kazakhstan Elevation AMSL 125 ft / 38 m Coordinates 51°9′6″N 051°32′42″E / 51.15167°N 51.545°ECoordinates: 51°9′6″N 051°32′42″E / 51.15167°N 51.545°E Runways Direction Length Surface ft m 04/22 7,874 2,400 Concrete Oral Ak Zhol Airport (also given in Soviet years as Uralsk Ak Zhol and Podstepnyy) (IATA: URA, ICAO: UARR) is an airport in Kazakhstan located 12 km southeast of Oral, Kazakhstan. It is a small airport servicing medium-sized airliners. It has parking for 4 jets. This airport has two terminals - domestic and international. The airport also serves nearby town of Aksai which in fact provides the majority of Ak Zhol passenger traffic being a "capital" of gas industry in West Kazakhstan.
Contents
Airlines and destinations
Passenger
Airlines Destinations Air Astana Astana, Atyrau Bek Air Almaty Euro-Asia Air Seasonal: Dubai, Istanbul-Sabiha Gökçen SCAT[1] Aktau, Astana
Seasonal: AntalyaTransaero Airlines Moscow-Domodedovo Cargo
Airlines Destinations Coyne Airways Tbilisi Silk Way Airlines Baku Ground transport
Bus
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
There is always a queue of available private taxi cabs at the airport parking lot.
Accidents and incidents
On 15 April 2006 a British Airways Boeing 747 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 landing safely. There were no fatalities or reportable injuries. As the 747 was deemed too heavy for take-off a smaller size aircraft were sent to ferry the passengers to London.
On August 28 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.
References
Categories:- Airports built in the Soviet Union
- Airports in Kazakhstan
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