An-225 landing at
Hostomel Airport, 2014 The Antonov An-225 Mriya was originally operated between 1988 and 1991 as the prime method of transporting
Buran-class orbiters for the Soviet space program. "
Antonov Airlines" was concurrently founded in 1989 after it was set up as a holding company by the Antonov Design Bureau as a heavy airlift shipping corporation. This company was to be based in
Kyiv, Ukraine, and operate from
London Luton Airport in partnership with
Air Foyle HeavyLift. While operations began with a fleet of four An-124-100s and three
Antonov An-12s, the need for aircraft larger than the An-124 became apparent by the late 1990s. During this time, all six of its engines were removed for use on various An-124s, while the second uncompleted An-225 airframe was also stored. As the 1990s progressed, it became clear that there was sufficient demand for a cargo liner even bigger than the An-124. Accordingly, it was decided that the first An-225 would be restored. It also became an asset to international relief organizations for its ability to quickly transport huge quantities of emergency supplies during multiple disaster-relief operations. Under Antonov Airlines, the An-225 received its type certificate from the Interstate Aviation Committee Aviation Register (IAC AR) on 23 May 2001. The type's first flight in commercial service departed from
Stuttgart, Germany, on 3 January 2002, and flew to
Thumrait, Oman, with 216,000 prepared meals for American military personnel based in the region. This vast number of ready meals was transported on 375 pallets and weighed 187.5 tons. The An-225 was later contracted by the Canadian and U.S. governments to transport military supplies to the Middle East in support of coalition forces. During 2016, Antonov Airlines ceased cooperation with Air Foyle and partnered with
Volga-Dnepr instead. This led to the An-225's blue and yellow paint scheme, added in 2009. These matched the colors of the Ukrainian flag and led to the An-225 becoming "Ukraine's winged ambassador to the world," in the words of
The New York Times. The aircraft was popular with
aviation enthusiasts, who frequently visited airports to view its scheduled arrivals and departures.
Records On 11 September 2001, carrying five
main battle tanks at a record load of of cargo, the An-225 flew at an altitude of up to over a closed circuit of at a speed of . During 2017, the hired cost was () per hour. On 11 August 2009, the heaviest single cargo item ever sent by air was loaded onto the An-225. At long and wide, its consignment, a generator for a gas power plant in Armenia along with its loading frame, represented a payload of , It also transported a total payload of on a commercial flight. On 11 June 2010, the An-225 carried the world's longest piece of air cargo, two test
wind turbine blades from
Tianjin, China, to
Skrydstrup, Denmark. On 27 September 2012, the An-225 hosted the highest altitude art exhibition in the world at above sea level during the AviaSvit-XX1 Aerospace Show at
Antonov Airport. The exhibition was part of the Globus Gallery based in Kyiv and consisted of 500 artworks by 120 Ukrainian artists. In total, the An-225 has set 240 world records, which is unique in aviation.
Destruction The aircraft's last commercial mission was from 2 to 5 February 2022, to collect almost 90 tons of COVID-19 test kits from
Tianjin, China, and deliver them to
Billund, Denmark, via
Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan. From there, it returned on 5 February to its base at
Antonov Airport in
Hostomel, On 27 February, a photo was posted on
Twitter of an object tentatively identified as the An-225 on fire in its hangar. A report by the Ukrainian edition of
Radio Liberty stated that the airplane was destroyed during the Battle of Antonov Airport, which was repeated by Foreign Minister
Dmytro Kuleba and by
Ukroboronprom, Antonov's parent organisation. The Antonov company initially refused to confirm or deny the reports, Also on 27 February 2022, a press release by Ukroboronprom Several other aircraft were in the same hangar as the An-225 at the time of its destruction, and were also destroyed or damaged during the battle; these include a Hungarian-registered
Cessna 152, which was crushed by the An-225's left wingtip after the latter fell on top of it. Ukroboronprom said that they planned to rebuild the plane at the Russians' expense. The Ukrainian government also said that it would be rebuilt.
Aftermath On 1 March, a new photograph, taken since the initial conflict, was tentatively identified as the tail of the aircraft protruding from its hangar, suggesting that it remained at least partly intact. However, further evidence proved to show that the aircraft is inoperable due to the extreme damage it sustained. On 4 March, footage on Russian state television
Channel One showed the first clear ground images of the destroyed aircraft, with much of the front section missing. Following Russia's withdrawal from northern Ukraine, the second unfinished aircraft airframe was reported to be intact, despite Russian artillery strikes on the hangar housing it at the Antonov factory at
Sviatoshyn Airfield. Major
Dmytro Antonov, the pilot of the An-225, alleged on 19 March 2022 that Antonov Airlines knew that an invasion was imminent for quite some time, but did nothing to prevent the loss of the aircraft. On his
YouTube channel, Antonov accused company management of not doing enough to prevent the destruction of the aircraft, after having been advised by NATO to move the aircraft (ready to fly status) to
Leipzig, Germany, in advance. Multiple Antonov staff have denied his allegations. On 1 April, drone footage of Hostomel Airport showed the destroyed Mriya, with the forward fuselage completely burned and the wings partly intact. It was later revealed that the right wing had been broken, but was held up only by its engines resting on the ground. Investigations into rebuilding the An-225 are underway, including the possibility of cannibalising the second, incomplete An-225 or salvaging the remnants of the first plane to finish the second. However, several obstacles stand in the way of rebuilding. Many of the aircraft's Soviet-made components were from the 1980s and are no longer made. Engineers quote a price of US$350–500 million, although there is uncertainty about whether it would be commercially viable and worth the cost. However, Andrii Sovenko, a former An-225 pilot and aviation author, said: At the time, the company did not state whether parts from the wrecked aircraft and the incomplete airframe would be combined to create a new flying aircraft or where funding might come from. Four months later, Antonov confirmed that parts had been removed from the wrecked aircraft for future mating to the unfinished fuselage. In April 2023, Ukrainian prosecutors charged the former head of Antonov, , with "
official negligence" for failing to order the aircraft flown to Leipzig, Germany, ahead of the Russian invasion. The Ukraine Security Service (
SBU), which investigated the case, stated, "according to the investigation, on the eve of the full-scale invasion, the An-225 was in proper technical condition, which allowed it to fly outside Ukraine. Instead, the general director of the company did not give appropriate instructions regarding the evacuation of Mriya abroad. Such criminal actions of the official led to the destruction of the Ukrainian transport plane." ==Former operators==