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Zvartnots Airport Reconstruction to be Completed this Year

by Contributor
May 18, 2011
in Armenia, Featured Story, Latest, News, Top Stories
5
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Construction of the new terminal (above) at Zvartnots Airport is expected to be completed this year

YEREVAN (RFE/RL)—An Argentine company managing Armenia’s main international airport pledged on Wednesday to essentially complete its multimillion-dollar reconstruction and more than double the airport capacity this year.
The Corporacion America group of Eduardo Eurnekian, an Argentine billionaire of Armenian descent, took over the Zvartnots airport near Yerevan in 2002 after signing a 30-year management contract with the Armenian government.
The agreement committed it to building a new airport terminal and modernizing other airport facilities left over from the Soviet era. The terminal’s arrivals section went into service in 2006, while work on the larger departures section is still going on.
Andranik Shikhkian, Zvartnots’s deputy managing director, told journalists that the construction will be complete by the end of this year. He said Eurnekian’s group, which operates over 30 airports across South America, has invested $160 million in the 34,000 square-meter facility.
According to Shikhkian, this will allow Zvartnots to handle up to 3 million passengers a year, up from 1.1 million passengers who used it last year. “Compared with Azerbaijan and Georgia, we will have a twice bigger capacity, both in terms of passenger traffic and use of modern technology,” he said.
Shikhkian added that the new terminal will also significantly speed up passenger check-in at Zvartnots. “In place of 24 check-in desks existing now we will have 46 ones,” he said. “Check-in lines have long been the main source of complaints by passengers.”
The official also expressed hope that the upgraded airport will attract more transit flights from Europe, the Middle East and Asia. “The airport can simultaneously accept up to 10 flights per hour,” he said. “Right now, we have up to five flights every hour.”
The Zvartnots complex is also expected to become soon home to Armenia’s first-ever tax-free zone that will mainly cater for domestically grown agricultural produce to be exported abroad. It will reportedly have warehouses equipped with refrigerators, packaging facilities and a food safety laboratory.
The creation of the tax haven is envisaged by Eurnekian’s 2001 agreement with the Armenian government. The Argentine tycoon, who has a warm rapport with Armenia’s current and former presidents, owns hundreds of hectares of vineyards and orchards in the Ararat Valley adjacent to the airport.

Contributor

Contributor

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European Parliament President Says Armenia Part of Europe

Comments 5

  1. arx says:
    11 years ago

    It is obvious that Mr. Eurnekian has a warm rapport with our current and former presidents.You need to mention also that our former president owns half of the airport, too. Of course, we don,t know how he got that much money to buy even half of it, but that is not the only property that he owns.Since no one is asking anything, sooner or later he is going to have everything in our desperate and poor country.Wake up and smell the coffee.

    Reply
  2. Arman says:
    11 years ago

    This looks too much like the central mall in Varna, Bulgaria. All flashing lights and showmanship while the jobless locals gawk like idiots at any foreign tourists.

    Reply
    • Aram says:
      11 years ago

      Don’t you think that this construction project created hundreds if not thousands of jobs for those “jobless locals” you speak of? Always complaining….

      Reply
  3. Hrant K. says:
    11 years ago

    Tourizm is fine, medical sector upgrading is vital too, but most importantly Armenia needs
    to speed up with its light and heavy industry sectors. Firstly to grow exports, thus generating revenues
    to the GNP and GDP.
    Secondly grow an Armada of scientists, willing to work in Armenia and serve its interests.
    Thirdly, to catch up with the globalization race, IT, and a fleet of Software Programmers
    are a high necessity to anchor in the high tides of Cyber Competition!!! (7)

    Reply
  4. Armanen says:
    11 years ago

    Arx and Arman’s comments are another example of the self destructive attitude of too many within the Armenian nation. Don’t give credit where credit is due, and of course are the first ones to whine and complain when something doesn’t occur correctly. And arx, provide proof for your claims otherwise keep them to yourself.

    Reply

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