Kaliningrad Devau Airport

Kaliningrad Devau

The main building of the former Königsberg Devau Airport in May 2006
IATA: noneICAO: none
Summary
Airport type Public
Location Kaliningrad
Elevation AMSL 69 ft / 21 m
Coordinates 54°43′30″N 020°34′24″E / 54.72500°N 20.57333°E / 54.72500; 20.57333Coordinates: 54°43′30″N 020°34′24″E / 54.72500°N 20.57333°E / 54.72500; 20.57333
Website koenig-ask.ru
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
4,593 1,400 Gravel

Kaliningrad Devau Airport (German: Flughafen Devau) is a small general aviation airfield and sport airport located 3.5 km (2.2 mi) northeast of Kaliningrad. Opened in 1921 as the main airport of Königsberg, it is one of the oldest passenger airports in the world.

History

The airport was built at the site of the former Kalthof proving ground of the Prussian Army on the road from Königsberg to Labiau (present-day Polessk), named after the nearby village of Devau. First flights were conducted here already before World War I. In 1919, per the terms of the Versailles treaty, the "Polish corridor" had separated East Prussia from the main part of Germany. The main building was designed by the architect Hanns Hopp, who was the architect of several public and private buildings erected in Königsberg in the 1920s. The airport gained a tram link to the city, a couple of miles to the south, in 1924.

On 1 May 1922, the flight route from Berlin via Königsberg to Moscow was inaugurated, then the first international air connection of the Soviet Union. The airlink was provided by the joint Soviet-German Deruluft airline. From 1926, Devau Airport was also used by the Deutsche Luft Hansa, which set up the first night flying connection between Königsberg and Berlin as well as air links to Tilsit and Memel (Klaipėda).

After World War II, Devau was discontinued as the main airport by the Soviets, in favor of Khrabrovo Airport. Parts of the original main building still exists and is used by the Kaliningrad Sport Aviation Club. There are Antonov An-2 aircraft parked on the site.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/21/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.