Airport
Zhukovsky (UUBW)

 UUBW / ZIA
Moscow CFPU
Moscow (UUWV)
Moscow (UUWV)
 55.55330, 38.15000  / 377 ft

show charts
Scenery title Scenery type Flight Simulator 9 Flight Simulator X Prepar3D v2 Prepar3D v3 Prepar3D v4 Prepar3D v5 xPlane
Moscow City X (incl. UUBW) payware(+trial)
Moscow City XP (incl. UUBW) payware
Zhukovskiy Ramenskoe (x-flight.su) freeware
Раменское UUBW freeware

Zhukovsky International Airport (IATA: ZIA, ICAO: UUBW), formerly (and still occasionally) known as Ramenskoye Airport or Zhukovsky Airfield is an international airport, located in Moscow Oblast, Russia 36 km southeast of central Moscow, in the town of Zhukovsky, a few kilometers southeast of the old Bykovo Airport.

After its reconstruction in 2014–2016, Zhukovsky International Airport was officially opened on 30 May 2016. The declared capacity of the new airport was 4 million passengers per year.

The airfield assigned to the newly established in 1941 Flight Research Institute has served as a major USSR aircraft testing establishment, with most of the major Russian OKBs having facilities there. This airfield was used as a test site for the Soviet Buran Spacecraft. It was also used by the Ministry of Emergency Situations and cargo carriers. Until June 2006, jet fighters flights for the public and international customers were available at the Gromov Flight Research Institute airfield (a number of two-seater jets like: Aero L-39 Albatros, Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-25 Foxbat, for Edge of Space flights, Mikoyan MiG-29 Fulcrum, etc.).

On March 29, 2011, then Russian prime minister Vladimir Putin proposed moving all charter and low-cost flights to Ramenskoye Airport (as it was then called), to relieve to Moscow's Sheremetyevo, Domodedovo and Vnukovo airports and reduce the cost of tickets. A new terminal was constructed and the airport scheduled to be opened on 16 March 2016, but was later postponed to unspecified date due to lack of interest and airport certification issues. The airport was eventually opened on 30 May 2016. The opening ceremony was attended by Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev.

The Joint Venture "Ramport Aero" running the airport is formed by Lithuania's Avia Solutions Group (75%) and Russia state corporation Rostec (25%), who aimed to expand the airport in three stages. While the opening of the new airport was delayed and aircraft limit to Ramenskoye is implemented, Air France-KLM noted it tends to use Ramenskoye as a diversion airport to Sheremetyevo in case of emergency.

The airport was originally named the same as the airfield after the nearby city of Ramenskoye. However, in 2016 it was officially re-named after the city of Zhukovsky, in which it is geographically situated. The opening ceremony of the airport was held on 30 May 2016 and the first commercial passenger flights were expected to begin on 20 June 2016.

The airfield is also publicly well-known as a place of the biennial MAKS Airshow). The airport uses the Gromov Flight Research Institute world's second longest public-use runway, at 5,402 m (17,723 ft). There is a second and shorter runway on site - of 2950 m, but it is closed for the time being.

 

RWY Size, м Elev, м MAG HDG ILS CAT Outer Inner ILS
12 5402×120 121,9 121° - 581 (DM) 1185 (D) -
30 5402×120 114,6 301° CAT I 370 (RT) 760 (R) 110.900 (IRT)

 

ATC units:

UUBW_APP - Gordy-Approach - 125.250

UUBW_GND - Gordy-Ground - 131.000

UUBW_ATIS - Gordy-ATIS - 127.750

 



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