Marienkhof (German) ( Dunayevka (Russian), Kottslyauken (US) ) is a former air base in Kaliningrad Oblast , Russia located 10 km south of Pionersky . It was in use during the 1950s and has been abandoned near the end of the Cold War . It has a spartan layout, unimproved pads, if any, and an alert strip feeding directly onto the runway threshold.
5-546: Marienhof may refer to: Marienkhof , an air base in Kaliningrad Oblast, Russia Marienhof (TV series) , a German soap opera Aert Jansz Marienhof (1626–1652), Dutch Golden Age painter Anatoly Marienhof (1897–1962), Russian poet, novelist and playwright Munich Marienhof station , a future station on the Munich S-Bahn Mariënhof ,
10-861: A former restaurant in Amersfoort, the Netherlands Villa Mariënhof , a historic mansion in Tilburg, the Netherlands Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Marienhof . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Marienhof&oldid=937328899 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
15-530: A reserve airfield. With the development of aviation, the runway no longer met modern requirements in terms of load capacity and length. The Dunaevka airfield became a reserve airfield for the fighter aviation regiment based at Nivenskoye . Until 1984, communications and radio technical support for flights were deployed at the Dunaevka airfield. In 1989, the Soviet Armed Forces finally abandoned
20-499: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Marienkhof In the mid-1950s up to 75 Ilyushin Il-28 (ASCC: Beagle) tactical bombers were based at Marienkhof. The 15th independent Reconnaissance Aviation Regiment arrived in 1954 and left in 1956 [1] , and the 1st Guards and 51st Maritime Torpedo Aviation Regiments were based here [2] which disbanded 1 July 1960. Both were under
25-534: The Baltic Fleet's 8th Mine-Torpedo Aviation Division. At the Dunaevka airfield, the 469th Aircraft Storage Base was formed, where the Il-28s of the disbanded 8th MTAD and 128th Guards MTAD were transferred. The storage base existed for one year. There was a significant drawdown in forces by 1962, by which aircraft were rarely observed at the airfield except for the occasional Il-28, indicating Marienkhof became
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