List of Aerosvit destinations
Ukrainian airline Aerosvit served seventy-two destinations in Asia, Europe and North America from its base at Kyiv Boryspil Airport as well as operating domestic flights. In addition to scheduled destinations listed below, Aerosvit operated charter flights to a variety of destinations:
Following bankruptcy proceedings, the airline announced that it would operate only domestically, plus five long-haul (New York, Beijing, Ho Chi Minh city, Bangkok, Goa) and four medium-haul (Moscow, St. Petersburg, Istanbul and Tashkent) routes, with most CIS connections, and all European routes outside Russia and Ukraine, discontinued.[1] The airline ceased operations in February 2013.
Asia
- Armenia
- Azerbaijan
- People's Republic of China
- Cyprus
- Georgia
- India
- Israel
- Thailand
- United Arab Emirates
- Uzbekistan
- Viet Nam
Europe
- Belarus
- Bulgaria
- Czech Republic
- Denmark
- Germany
- Berlin Tegel Airport
- Hamburg – Hamburg Airport
- Düsseldorf – Düsseldorf Airport
- Stuttgart – Stuttgart Airport
- Greece
- Hungary
- Italy
- Lithuania
- Republic of Moldova
- Poland
- Romania
- Russia
- Kaliningrad – Khrabrovo Airport
- Krasnodar – Pashkovsky Airport
- Moscow – Sheremetyevo International Airport
- Murmansk – Murmansk Airport
- Nizhnevartovsk – Nizhnevartovsk Airport
- Novosibirsk – Tolmachevo Airport
- Rostov-on-Don – Rostov-on-Don Airport
- Saint Petersburg – Pulkovo Airport
- Sochi – Sochi International Airport
- Yekaterinburg – Koltsovo Airport
- Sweden
- Turkey
- Ukraine
- Dnipro – Dnipro International Airport
- Donetsk – Donetsk International Airport
- Ivano-Frankivsk – Ivano-Frankivsk International Airport
- Kharkiv – Kharkiv International Airport
- Kyiv – Boryspil International Airport hub
- Lviv – Danylo Halytskyi International Airport
- Odesa – Odesa International Airport
- Sevastopol – Sevastopol International Airport
- Simferopol – Simferopol International Airport
- United Kingdom
North America
- Canada
- United States
References
- Aerosvit announces revised winter scheduleArchived 19 February 2013 at the Wayback Machine
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.