Friday, May 3, 2013

Newly completed airport terminal at Rasht, Iran

New terminal building at Sardar-e-Jangal Airport (RAS / OIGG) at Rasht

Airport's new terminal interior detail. Note high ceiling and overall elegant design.

Baggage claim area with single level baggage carousel and stacked baggage carts

New terminal's ticket counters and flight information displays

Position of new terminal next to airport building and control tower

Visible through the terminal glass: Iran Aseman Airlines Fokker 100 (F-28-0100), EP-ASQ (cn 11513)

Photos: Islamic Republic News Agency

27 comments:

Anonymous said...

Rasht my ancestral city is amazingly beautiful like rest of Iran. Looks like a great airport. Thanks.

Anonymous said...

Soon it will be full of Boeing 787 and Airbus A380.

Anonymous said...

Sorry to extinguish the light bulb above your head ... but that won't happen before the Mullahs are expunged from power.

mat said...

Is this the so-called West's 34 long years of sanctioning?

Nader Uskowi said...

Agreed with you. On my mother's side, I am also a Rashti! My last name does show it, as my father was from Tabriz area, Uskoo to be exact.

Nader Uskowi said...

mat,

Don't underestimate the oil and banking sector sanctions that started only in 2012. Those are the real sanctions, and are showing their effects only after one year. Let's hope the upcoming presidential election results and Obama's commitment to a peaceful resolution of the crisis will create a situation that all the sanctions, and especially oil and banking sector, are lifted later this year. Iran's economy will go to a new height if the sanctions are lifted, the like of which we have not seen in the past 34 years.

Anonymous said...

Are you sure about Obama's commitment? what I saw is just a game.

Anonymous said...

Agree with you 100%! Unfortunately some of these west residing mullahs little spoiled "lollipop" boys have been allowed by their mummies to be on the computer before bed time.

Anonymous said...

mat lives in his own delusions.

Anonymous said...

Anon 11:39 I doubt it.Maybe there will be full of Hezbollah terrorists coming in from Lebanon in rickety old planes.As long as Akhoond regime and their minions exist,Iran will remain in the sewers.

Anonymous said...

So typical posts; any positive development in Iran are made fun of by one group, and any real problems and negative developments in Iran are regarded as nothing or fault of West by others. It's obvious both groups posting here either have no clue what they are talking about or are so entrenched in their views that logic and reality avoids them.

Nader Uskowi said...

Meant to say that my last name does NOT show it!

Anonymous said...

Sad for you haters! Watch and bite your nails.

Anonymous said...

You are right. We all live in delusions. Good for mat that lives in his own delusions and sorry for you who live in the most evil capitalist consumerist of all societies' delusions. Your delusional American Dream. Kudos to capitalism for being able to fool so many people for such a long time.

Anonymous said...

Obama and Zionist are counting on riots and "revolution"; after the election,...and they also hoping that B. Assad will be somehow gone soon.

After the counts' outcomes, they will make their minds what to do next...

So the lifting of major sanctions, may have to wait; by their intentions, for an approval by the next (Republican?) administrations.

Let's hope that any outcomes, will come according to the Iranian nation majority's wishes.

A-F

Anonymous said...

What's there to hate or bite nails over a third world design style building?
You are some strange creature.

Anonymous said...

Oh come on stop trying to kid yourself ! Mat and no doubt you "live in the most evil capitalist consumerist all societies delusional" US/West and lording it for what ever it's worth.Why don't you and your pal mat just admit it that you're real hypocrites.

Anonymous said...

Welcome to the Rashti brotherhood.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous 11:39 AM
Soon it will be full of Boeing 787 and Airbus A380.


what, you think a Fokker 100 isn't good enough?

lots of them haven't crashed, and even though Fokker went out of business decades ago, the airframes still can be useful.

Nader Uskowi said...

mat,

A-F has decided to answer the question you had asked on Obama (he had to add the Zionist flavor to it as well): A-F knows that Obama expects riots to break out after the presidential election in Iran; he believes Obama is hoping for Assad’s departure after the election. A-F also knows that Obama will then make his mind on what to do next (after riots and Assad’s departure). A-F knows the lifting of sanctions will not happen. He has a strong hunch that the next administration is Republican and will not favor the removal of sanctions anyway. And all these predictions in three sentences, without an iota of analysis of why those things will happen the way he believes they do. Mind reading and fortune telling always sound more robust than dry analysis.

Anonymous said...

"Obama's commitment to a peaceful resolution of the crisis will create a situation that all the sanctions, and especially oil and banking sector, are lifted later this year."
Thats a very good joke mr Uskowi I`m glad to see you have a sense of humor it made me laugh,but realistically none of these things are likely to happen,had the americans wanted a deal they could have had one,instead we have sanctions after sanctions and negotiations to nowhere,its obvious that the us and its allies want capitulation

Nader Uskowi said...

Of course it’s a joke to you and the like of you who have wrapped yourselves around empty slogans and discredited ideologies and can only see the world in stark pro- or anti-U.S. and western imperialism, unable to offer concrete analysis of the changing situation in many countries. The approach works for you and that’s fine, and you can laugh your way to more slogans, more a therapy for you, I assume.

Anonymous said...

It is quite unfortunate that the same line of attack comes up whenever you have no reasonable response to give to criticism; a lazy argument that whoever lives in the US, for whatever reason that is, necessarily subscribes to the same values as the Capitalist owners of this country. Well, if you ever lived in a close proximity to some intelligent Americans, which I doubt that is the case, you would've even found amongst them those who would, in a matter of seconds, burry your simplistic argument and this idiotic endorsement of a metaphysics of presence.

Anonymous said...

Medication mix up?

Anonymous said...

Perhaps you can enlighten us as to the details of "Obama's commitment to a peaceful resolution of the crisis will create a situation that all the sanctions, and especially oil and banking sector, are lifted later this year."
after all as the old saying goes "inquiring minds want to know",or perhaps its just "empty slogans" on your part,personally I think that the situation in the middle east is a stark one with a stark and simple choice you either support the western backed status quo of arab puppets and israeli dominance or you do not,its really that simple now perhaps you think there is a middle ground,if so then please enlighten us those inquiring minds are still awaiting your answer

Anonymous said...

I find it disconcerting that after so many many conspiracies carried out by the US government, especially the CIA, to the extent that is clear to every, you are too quick to dismiss any worldview that allows some room for skepticism towards US. I think there is always an easy way out of serious discussions by labeling others as conspiracy theorist and that is what you are doing here Mr. Uskowi. Well, I believe dismissing imperialism is a greater mistake than seeing the world in a binary opposition of imperial powers and exploited countries. At least the latter has historical precedents and groundings, while singing euphorically the end of imperialism seems all too convenient for imperialism itself.

Nader Uskowi said...

@5:31 AM,


Thanks for your important comments.

I do not dismiss any worldview that allows room for skepticism toward U.S. and its policies. I respect critical thinking. My continued objection to some of the comments posted here are precisely for their lack of intellectual skepticism and curiosity regarding changing trends in today’s world. Theory of Imperialism cannot and will not explain all political and economic trends in our century. To be precise, my objections on this blog have been directed toward those commentators that believe they know all the answers to the Iranian puzzle based on two words: Imperialism and Zionism. It becomes sloganeering at that point.