Hapag-Lloyd Express

Hapag-Lloyd Express
IATA ICAO Callsign
X3 HLX YELLOW CAB
Founded 2002
Ceased operations 2007 (became part of TUIfly)
Hubs Cologne/Bonn, Hannover, Stuttgart, Leipzig/Halle
Fleet size see TUIfly
Destinations see TUIfly
Parent company TUI AG
Headquarters Langenhagen, Germany
Key people Roland Keppler
Website Hlx.com

Hapag-Lloyd Express (previously also marketed as HLX.com) was a no-frills, high-frequency, express airline based in Langenhagen, Germany. It operated services within Germany and to destinations in Europe.

In January 2007 it combined its operations with those of Hapag-Lloyd Flug to become TUIfly.[1] While Hapag-Lloyd Flug operated all TUIfly flights, Hapag-Lloyd Express marketed them until TUIfly got its own licence.

History

old Hapag-Lloyd Express logo

Hapag-Lloyd Express was established in 2002 and began operations in December 2002. Its main competitors were more established no-frills carriers such as Ryanair and EasyJet, as well as other low-cost startups such as Germanwings or Transavia.com, consequently being constantly engaged in a price war with these carriers. In an attempt to win this price war, it expanded rapidly in the first half of 2004, announcing many new routes that it viewed as underserved by other airlines. Examples of such routes include Dublin to Hamburg and Stuttgart, both of which are no longer in operation. In January 2007, Hapag-Lloyd Express and Hapag-Lloyd Flug were merged into the cooperation TUIfly in an attempt to reorganize TUI's airline portfolio.

HLX adopted the IATA code of the now defunct Russian airline, Baikal Airlines.

Services

Hapag-Lloyd Express offered no-frills services to destinations in Germany and Europe. Most of them are now operated by TUIfly.

Fleet

Hapag-Lloyd Express Boeing 737-800

All Hapag-Lloyd Express aircraft were wetleased from Hapag-Lloyd Flug or Germania. The fleet consisted of 17 Boeing 737 aircraft and two Fokker 100. The Fokker 100s left Hapag-Lloyd Express in 2006.[2]

Livery

Hapag-Lloyd Express aircraft were highly recognisable due to their distinctive "New York taxi" style: a checkered black and white line wrapped around a yellow body, aiming to convey the image of quick and cheap point-to-point service.

References

External links

Media related to Hapag-Lloyd Express at Wikimedia Commons

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