Transavia.com

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The correct title of this article is transavia.com. The initial letter is shown capitalized due to technical restrictions.
transavia.com
IATA
HV
ICAO
TRA
Callsign
TRANSAVIA
Founded 1966
Hubs Schipol International Airport
Focus cities / secondary hubs Rotterdam Airport Eindhoven Airport
Fleet size 31
Destinations 19
Parent company Air France-KLM
Headquarters Amsterdam, Netherlands
Key people
Website: http://www.transavia.com

transavia.com is a Netherlands based low-cost airline operating as an independent part of the Air France-KLM group. Schiphol International Airport (AMS), Amsterdam is its main base while Rotterdam Airport (RTM) is its secondary hub. transavia.com chiefly operates scheduled and charter services to leisure destinations.

Contents

[edit] History

The airline was established in the end of 1965 as Transavia Limburg. The name was changed in 1966 in Transavia Holland and it began operations on 17 November 1966. In 1986, the name was changed to Transavia Airlines and it was the first airline to take advantage of the first open skies agreement signed between the UK and Dutch governments. Transavia started operating its first scheduled service on the Amsterdam to London Gatwick route on 26 October 1986.

During 1991, the airline's major shareholder, Nedlloyd, sold its 80% holding to KLM. In 1998, Transavia was the first foreign airline to operate domestic services in Greece following a change in Greek aviation law. In June 2003, KLM acquired the remaining 20% of Transavia, making it 100% KLM owned. The subsequent merger of Air France and KLM made Transavia a wholly owned subsidiary of Air France-KLM.

In the early 2000's, Transavia was primarily a charter airline with a low-cost airline subsidiary called Basiq Air. However, to strengthen its brand, Basiq Air and the Transavia charter arm were combined under the transavia.com name on 1 January 2005.

Picked Eindhoven as its 3rd base, after Amsterdam and Rotterdam, and will base a Boeing 737-800 there from November 1st, 2006. It will operate 5 weekly flights to Alicante and Málaga as well as 2 weekly flights to Faro.

[edit] Destinations

transavia.com's scheduled network covers 19 destinations served from Amsterdam and Rotterdam, while charter services are flown to over 60 destinations in Europe.

[edit] Fleet

transavia.com Boeing 737
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transavia.com Boeing 737

The transavia.com fleet consists of the following aircraft (at August 2006) [1]:

transavia.com Fleet
Aircraft # of Aircraft
Boeing B737-700 10
Boeing B737-800 21 (plus 1 on order)

The airline has disposed of a large number of aircraft operated earlier including 16 Boeing 737-300 and 4 Boeing 757 aircraft. Seasonally, transavia.com leases out 737 aircraft to operators such as Sun Country Airlines, KLM Royal Dutch Airlines and SpiceJet. This winter, six 737-800 aircraft will be leased to Sun Country and Indian airline SpiceJet will be leasing two 737-800s. KLM Royal Dutch Airlines, who owns transavia.com, is leasing two 737-800s.

Since December 2005 the company is introducing a new 'look', including new uniforms and aircraft livery.

transavia.com Boeing 737-700 new livery
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transavia.com Boeing 737-700 new livery

Transavia.com average fleet age is 4.2 years old in June 2006.


[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ Flight International, 3-9 October 2006