Quick Facts
Aircraft: Antonov AN-225 Mriya (Dream)
First flight: December 21, 1988
Wingspan: 88.4 m (290 ft) — largest of any aircraft ever built
Max takeoff weight: 640 tonnes
Engines: 6 × Ivchenko Progress D-18T turbofans
Destroyed: February 27, 2022, Hostomel Airport, Ukraine
Replacement: Antonov announced plans to build AN-225-2 using existing components
Born to Carry a Space Shuttle
The AN-225 was built for one purpose: to carry the Buran space shuttle on its back. The Soviet Union needed an aircraft that could transport the 100-tonne orbiter from its manufacturing plant in Moscow to the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan — a distance of 2,100 kilometres across Central Asian steppe where no road could bear the weight.
The World’s Cargo Carrier
After the Soviet Union collapsed and the Buran programme was cancelled, the Mriya sat idle for nearly a decade. In 2001, Antonov Airlines returned it to service as a commercial cargo carrier — the only aircraft in the world capable of carrying certain oversized loads. It hauled power plant generators, wind turbine components, military vehicles, and emergency humanitarian supplies. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the Mriya made headlines flying massive loads of medical equipment from China to Europe. Each flight was an event. Aviation spotters would travel hundreds of miles for a glimpse.Three Days of War
Hostomel Airport, also known as Antonov Airport, was the Mriya’s home base. On February 24, 2022, Russian airborne forces launched a helicopter-borne assault on the airfield in one of the opening moves of the invasion. The goal was to seize the airport as a staging base for a rapid advance on Kyiv. Ukrainian forces counterattacked fiercely. The airport changed hands multiple times over three days of intense fighting. The Mriya, unable to be evacuated in time, sat in its hangar through the battle. By February 27, satellite imagery confirmed the worst: the hangar was destroyed, and the aircraft with it. The images of the burned-out wreckage — the unmistakable twin tail fins poking through collapsed roof panels — became one of the defining images of the war’s opening days.A Dream Reborn?
Antonov has announced plans to build a second AN-225 using components that were manufactured for a second airframe (designated AN-225-2) but never assembled. The project has attracted international interest and pledges of financial support. Whether it will actually be completed — in the middle of a war that has devastated Ukraine’s industrial base — remains uncertain. The name “Mriya” means “Dream” in Ukrainian. For thirty-three years, it was a dream that flew. Its destruction was not just the loss of an aircraft. It was the loss of something that made people look up.Sources: Antonov Company, Aviation Week, BBC News, Ukrinform




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