Lauda Air
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Founded | 1979 | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Commenced operations | 1985 | |||
Ceased operations | April 2013 | |||
Operating bases | Vienna International Airport | |||
Focus cities |
Innsbruck Graz Linz | |||
Frequent-flyer program | Miles & More | |||
Alliance | Star Alliance (affiliate member) | |||
Destinations | 59 | |||
Company slogan | "The Austrian Way to holidays" | |||
Parent company | Austrian Airlines Lufthansa Group | |||
Headquarters | Vienna Airport, Schwechat | |||
Key people |
Jaan Albrecht (CEO) Karsten Benz (CCO) | |||
Website | laudaair.com |
Lauda Air Luftfahrt GmbH was[1] an airline headquartered at Vienna International Airport in Schwechat, Austria. It was owned by Niki Lauda for much of its history. For the final portion of its history it was a charter airline that was a subsidiary of Austrian Airlines AG.
On 6 April 2013, Lauda Air ceased to exist and was replaced by Austrian myHoliday. Austrian myHoliday is not an airline, but a brand name that is used for flights and leisure offers provided by Austrian Airlines.[2]
History
Lauda Air was established in April 1979 by former Formula One world motor racing champion, Niki Lauda, and started operations in 1985, initially operating as a charter and air taxi service. One of the first jetliner types used by Lauda Air was the British Aircraft Corporation BAC One-Eleven series 500 with these aircraft being leased from Romanian airline TAROM. It opened its headquarters in the Lauda Air Building in Schwechat, Austria.[3] Scheduled operations were licenced and initiated in 1987; and in 1990 licences for international flights were obtained.[4] In 1989 Lauda started its first long-haul flights from Vienna to Sydney and Melbourne, via Bangkok. In the 1990s, it started to fly its Sydney and Melbourne flights via Kuala Lumpur and Bali. Daily flights to Dubai, Cuba, and Miami via Munich followed.
Lauda Air became a wholly owned subsidiary of Austrian Airlines in December 2000, and employed 35 as of March 2007.[4] In 2005 the flight operation merged with Austrian Airlines, and the label, "Lauda Air" operated charter flights within the Austrian Airlines Group.
At an AAG board meeting in November 2006, plans were approved to retire the Airbus wide-bodied fleet by mid-2007, to concentrate on a Boeing 767 and Boeing 777 fleet. As a result of subsequent fleet cuts, Austrian Airlines suspended some long-haul services and Lauda Air withdrew from the long-haul charter market over the next year.[5] This led to a refocus on the short/medium haul market, and led to the addition of a 737-800 to take over most of the charter routes.
Lauda Air was officially merged into Austrian Airlines on 1 July 2012.[6]
The brand was retired at the start of the summer flight schedule on 31 March 2013, and was replaced by "Austrian myHoliday". It is no longer an airline but branding that is used to sell Austrian Airlines' own leisure offers.[1][2]
Corporate affairs
The airline had a mascot, Niki the Rat, for its children's club, "Niki’s Kids Club."[7][8]
Lauda Air had an Italian subsidiary, Lauda Air S.p.A.[9] Its operations ended in 2007.[10]
Destinations
Austrian Airlines regularly served, among others, the following destinations under the Lauda Air brand until March 2013:[11]
Africa
- Hurghada - Hurghada International Airport
- Luxor - Luxor International Airport
- Sharm el-Sheikh - Sharm el-Sheikh International Airport
Europe
- Vienna - Vienna International Airport Base
- Innsbruck - Innsbruck Airport Base
- Chania - Chania International Airport [seasonal]
- Corfu - Corfu International Airport [seasonal]
- Heraklion - Heraklion International Airport, "Nikos Kazantzakis" [seasonal]
- Karpathos - Karpathos Island National Airport [seasonal]
- Kavala - Kavala International Airport [seasonal]
- Kefalonia - Kefalonia Island International Airport [seasonal]
- Kos - Kos Island International Airport [seasonal]
- Lesbos - Mytilene International Airport [seasonal]
- Mykonos - Mykonos Island National Airport [seasonal]
- Preveza - Aktion National Airport [seasonal]
- Rhodes - Rhodes International Airport, "Diagoras" [seasonal]
- Samos - Samos International Airport [seasonal]
- Santorini - Santorini (Thira) National Airport [seasonal]
- Skiathos - Skiathos Island National Airport [seasonal]
- Thessaloniki - Thessaloniki International Airport, "Macedonia" [seasonal]
- Volos - Nea Anchialos National Airport [seasonal]
- Zakynthos - Zakynthos International Airport, "Dionysios Solomos" [seasonal]
- Reykjavík - Keflavik Airport [seasonal]
- Dublin - Dublin Airport [seasonal]
- Faro - Faro Airport [seasonal]
- Funchal - Madeira Airport [seasonal]
- Barcelona - Barcelona El Prat Airport [seasonal]
- Fuerteventura - Fuerteventura Airport
- Las Palmas de Gran Canaria - Gran Canaria Airport
- Málaga - Málaga Airport [seasonal]
- Lanzarote - Lanzarote Airport [seasonal]
- Tenerife - Tenerife South Airport
- Antalya - Antalya Airport
- Bodrum - Milas-Bodrum Airport [seasonal]
- Dalaman - Dalaman Airport [seasonal]
Fleet
All aircraft within the group were transferred to Austrian Airlines on 1 July 2012, to be able to take advantage of Austrian Airlines structure.
- 1 Boeing 737-800 which is equipped with 184 passenger seats in an all-economy class cabin
layout,[12] carried the Lauda Air livery until the closure of the brand to secure the Air operator's certificate.
Past Fleet
Lauda's Air In the past Years Have:
- Boeing 737 Classic(200,300,400), Next Generation (600,700,800ER) 1985-2013
- Boeing 767 (200's And 300's) 1989-2002
- Boeing 777 (200ER And 300ER) 1999-2006
- Airbus A320(111 and 214) 1999-2005
- Fokker 28 1985-1994(5,6)
- Bombardier CRJ200. 1995-1998
Incidents and accidents
- On 26 May 1991, Lauda Air Flight 004, a Boeing 767-3Z9ER (named the "Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart") crashed in Thailand shortly after take-off from Don Mueang International Airport in Bangkok, due to the non-commanded deployment of one of its thrust reversers. This accident resulted in the deaths of all 223 passengers and crew.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 http://www.ch-aviation.ch/portal/airline/NG
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Lauda Air; DIE Press; retrieved .
- ↑ 99 "World Airline Directory;" Flight International; 27 March–2 April 1991; Head Office: Lauda Air Building, PO Box 56, 1300 Wien-Schwechat, Austria; accessed .
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 "Directory: World Airlines". Flight International. 2007-04-03. p. 105.
- ↑ Airliner World; January 2007
- ↑ "Austrian bids farewell to the 737", Airliner World, June 2013: p6
- ↑ Niki the Rat; 27 November 2001 article; Lauda Air; retrieved 6 March 2013.
- ↑ Ratte; Laud Air; Note: The name is the same in German as in English; website accessed .
- ↑ Lauda Air Annual Report 1995/1996; 24 May 1998 article; Lauda Air; retrieved 6 March 2013.
- ↑ 9 Fam 41.2 Exhibit III List of Signatory Visa Waiver Program (VWP) Carriers: INA 217(E) Signatory Transportation Lines; Archive of U.S. Department of State website; retrieved on 15 February 2013.
- ↑ Lauda Air destinations Summer 2011 (.PDF article in German); Lauda Air; auto download.
- ↑ Lauda Air Fleet List; planespotters.net; accessed January 2014.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lauda Air. |
- Official website (Archive)
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