Lufthansa CityLine

Lufthansa CityLine
IATA
CL
ICAO
CLH
Callsign
HANSALINE
Founded 1958
(as Ostfriesische Lufttaxi)
Hubs
Frequent-flyer program Miles & More
Airport lounge
  • Senator Lounge
  • Business Lounge
Alliance Star Alliance (affiliate)
Fleet size 47
Destinations 75
Parent company Lufthansa Group
Headquarters Munich Airport, Germany[1]
Key people Stephan Klar
Michael Knitter
Employees 2,532 (31 December 2013)
Website lufthansacityline.com

Lufthansa CityLine GmbH is a German regional airline with its headquarters on the grounds of Munich Airport.[1][2] It is a wholly owned subsidiary of Lufthansa and member of the Lufthansa Regional network and maintains hubs at Frankfurt Airport and Munich Airport.[3]

History

Early years

The airline was founded as Ostfriesische Lufttaxi (OLT) in 1958 and became Ostfriesische Lufttransport (OLT) in 1970 - which existed until 2013 as a separate airline - in Emden. It was reorganised and renamed as DLT Luftverkehrsgesellschaft mbH on 1 October 1974 and began cooperation with Lufthansa in 1978 with short-range international routes.

By 1988 all operations were on behalf of Lufthansa. In March 1992 DLT became a wholly owned subsidiary of Lufthansa and was renamed Lufthansa CityLine. Lufthansa CityLine employs 2,332 people, of whom 664 are cockpit crew, 849 cabin crew and 819 work in the technical and administrative areas as of 31 December 2011.[4]

Lufthansa placed an order on 17 April 2007 for 30 Embraer E-190/195 and 15 Bombardier CRJ-900 aircraft to directly replace LH CityLine's fleet of BAe 146 and Avro RJ aircraft. The last Avro RJ 85 took off from Zurich Airport at 17:00 on 29 October 2012 and was scrapped on 15 February 2013.

Development since 2014

The airline was previously headquartered at Cologne Bonn Airport.[5] In May 2013 it has been announced that the management and administration offices of CityLine will be relocated from Cologne to Munich.[6] As of September 2014 the move has been completed.[1] It now maintains its corporate headquarters in the Flight Operations Center (FOC) of Munich Airport.[1]

In late 2014, parent company Lufthansa announced it would begin transferring eight of its current Airbus A340-300 aircraft to CityLine. After reconfiguration to a high-density configuration, these aircraft will be owned by CityLine and operated by CityLine pilots, but wet-leased back to Lufthansa to be used on leisure routes and serviced by Lufthansa cabin crews starting in 2015.[7] The first destinations to be served by the new CityLine-operated long-haul fleet are Cancún, Mexico; Male, Maldives; Mauritius; Tampa, USA;[8] and Panama City, Panama.[9]

In March 2015, the Lufthansa Group announced to transfer 17 Embraer 195 from Lufthansa CityLine to Austrian Airlines. As a replacement, CityLine will receive several more Bombardier CRJ900s that are currently phased out at sister company Eurowings.[10] These will also be used to replace the remaining slightly smaller Bombardier CRJ700s which will leave CityLine's fleet by 29 March 2015.[11]

Destinations

Fleet

Lufthansa CityLine Embraer 195

As of April 2015, the Lufthansa CityLine fleet consists of the following aircraft:[12]

Lufthansa CityLine fleet
Aircraft In service Orders Passengers Notes
Airbus A340-300 8 298 To be transferred from Lufthansa mainline by late 2015;[8] will be wet-leased back to Lufthansa[7]
Bombardier CRJ900 14 84 21 arriving from Eurowings to replace Embraer 195s and the retired CRJ700s
Embraer 190 9 100
Embraer 195 24 116 17 to be transferred to Austrian Airlines from 2015[13]
Total 47 8

Fleet development

A former Lufthansa CityLine Avro RJ85

Over the years, Lufthansa CityLine operated the following aircraft types:[14][15]

This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Aircraft Introduced Retired
ATR 42
1992
2002
Avro RJ85
1992
2013
Bombardier CRJ100/200
1992
2013
Bombardier CRJ700
2000
2015
Bombardier CRJ900
2008
Dash 8-100/-300
1992
1997
Boeing 737-200
1986
1999
Embraer 190
2009
Embraer 195
2009
Fokker F27 Friendship
1987
1988
Fokker 50
1992
1997
Hawker Siddeley HS 748
1981
1989
Short 330
1974
1992

Accidents and incidents

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "Contact". Lufthansacityline.com. Retrieved 2015-05-02.
  2. "Flughafen München - FOC - Flight Operations Center". Munich-airport.de. Retrieved 2015-05-02.
  3. "Route network". Lufthansacityline.com. Retrieved 2015-05-02.
  4. "Directory: CLH official site". lufthansacityline.com. 24 Jan 2012. p. About us.
  5. Contact" (Archive). Lufthansa CityLine. 5 May 2013. Retrieved on 7 January 2014. "Lufthansa CityLine GmbH Airport Köln/Bonn Waldstraße 247 51147 Cologne Germany "
  6. "Lufthansa-Tochter Cityline zieht nach München um." Münchner Merkur (DE). 29 May 2013.
  7. 7.0 7.1 "CityLine pilots to operate Lufthansa's A340 'Jump' fleet". Ch-aviation.com. Retrieved 2015-05-02.
  8. 8.0 8.1 "Lufthansa Adds 3 Destinations from Dec 2015; Transfer Select A340 Fleet to CityLine". Airlineroute.net. 2014-12-16. Retrieved 2015-05-02.
  9. "Lufthansa to Start Panama City Service from mid-Nov 2015". Airlineroute.net. 2015-02-05. Retrieved 2015-05-02.
  10. "Austrian confirms CityLine E195s will replace Fokker fleet". Ch-aviation.com. Retrieved 2015-05-02.
  11. "Lufthansa Plans Last CRJ700 Scheduled Service in late-March 2015". Airlineroute.net. 2015-02-03. Retrieved 2015-05-02.
  12. "Lufthansa CityLine". Ch-aviation.com. Retrieved 2015-05-02.
  13. "Austrian confirms CityLine E195s will replace Fokker fleet". Ch-aviation.com. Retrieved 2015-05-02.
  14. "Lufthansa Cityline Fleet | Airfleets aviation". Airfleets.net. Retrieved 2015-05-02.
  15. "AeroTransport Data Bank". Aerotransport.org. Retrieved 2015-05-02.
  16. "ASN Aircraft accident de Havilland Canada DHC-8-311 D-BEAT Paris-Charles de Gaulle Airport (CDG)". Aviation-safety.net. 1993-01-06. Retrieved 2015-05-02.
  17. "ASN Aircraft accident Canadair CL-600-2B19 Regional Jet CRJ-100LR D-ACJA Düsseldorf Airport (DUS)". Aviation-safety.net. 1999-12-28. Retrieved 2015-05-02.
  18. "STATE COMMISSION ON AIRCRAFT ACCIDENTS INVESTIGATION : PRELIMINARY REPORT" (PDF). Mir.gov.pl. Retrieved 2015-05-02.

External links

Media related to Lufthansa CityLine at Wikimedia Commons