Neha Patil (Editor)

Kavminvodyavia

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KV
  
MVD

Destinations
  
18

Website
  
kmvavia.aero

Founded
  
1995

Fleet size
  
6

MVD
  
AIR MINVODY

Parent company
  
Government owned

Headquarters
  
Mineralnye Vody, Russia

Ceased operations
  
October 1, 2011

Parent organization
  
Aeroflot

Kavminvodyavia httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb4

Key people
  
Vasiliy Viktorovich Babaskin (General Director)

Hubs
  
Vnukovo International Airport, Mineralnye Vody Airport, Stavropol Shpakovskoye Airport

Kavminvodyavia airlines tupoljev tu 204 100 take off in tivat


Kavminvodyavia (KMV Avia) was an airline based in Mineralnye Vody in the Caucasus, Russia. It operated scheduled services to over 20 destinations in the northern Caucasus region and abroad, as well as charter services. Its main base was Mineralnye Vody Airport, which was also operated by the company.

Contents

History

The first airport operation was in 1925, when a French Dornue-Comet was the sole aircraft. The present three-story airport building opened in 1965.

The airline was established in 1961 as the Mineralnye Vody Aviation Group. Its first international destination was Berlin in 1980. The airport and its civil aviation service was reorganized into the Mineralnye Vody Civil Aviation Enterprise in 1988, under the direction of V.V. Babaskin. It was reorganized again in 1995 into the State United Venture Kavminvodyavia, more commonly known as KMV. The airline purchased several Tupolev Tu-204 aircraft in 1997.

Following the 2010 decision of the Russian government to transfer the assets to Aeroflot, the airline ceased operations on 1 October 2011.

Destinations

In August 2010, Kavminvodyavia operated flights to the following:
All flights to the European Union were suspended on 19 June 2007 due to fleet issues.

Scheduled

 Armenia
  • Yerevan - Zvartnots International Airport
  •  Russia
  • Irkutsk - Irkutsk International Airport
  • Khabarovsk - Khabarovsk Novy Airport
  • Moscow
  • Domodedovo Airport
  • Sheremetyevo Airport
  • Vnukovo Airport (focus city)
  • Mineralnye Vody - Mineralnye Vody Airport (hub)
  • Nizhnevartovsk - Nizhnevartovsk Airport
  • Novokuznetsk - Spichenkovo Airport
  • Novosibirsk - Tolmachevo Airport
  • Noyabrsk - Noyabrsk Airport
  • Pevek - Pevek Airport
  • Saint Petersburg - Pulkovo Airport
  • Stavropol - Stavropol Shpakovskoye Airport
  • Yekaterinburg - Koltsovo Airport
  •  Ukraine
  • Simferopol - Simferopol International Airport
  • Charter

     Bulgaria
  • Burgas - Burgas Airport
  •  Cyprus
  • Paphos - Paphos International Airport
  •  Greece
  • Thessaloniki - Thessaloniki International Airport
  •  Israel
  • Tel Aviv - Ben Gurion International Airport
  •  Italy
  • Turin - Sandro Pertini International Airport (Caselle)
  • Fleet

    In April 2011 the Kavminvodyavia fleet included:

    112 first class (3 rows, 4 abreast) and 18 (3 rows, 6 abreast) seats.

    References

    Kavminvodyavia Wikipedia