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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Subsidiaries  





3 Destinations  



3.1  Domestic  





3.2  International  







4 Livery  





5 Fleet  





6 References  





7 External links  














Futura International Airways






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Futura International Airways
IATA ICAO Callsign
FH FUA FUTURA
Founded1989
Ceased operations7 September 2008
HubsPalma de Mallorca Airport
Fleet size27
Destinations146
HeadquartersPalma de Mallorca, Spain
Websitewww.futura.aero

Futura International Airways was an airline with its head office in the Zona Facturación on the property of Palma de Mallorca AirportinPalma de Mallorca, Spain.[1] It operated scheduled services and charter flights for tour operators and other airlines, in Europe, as well as wet lease and ad hoc charters. Its main base was Palma de Mallorca Airport.[2] After failing to re-finance itself the company ceased trading on the 8 September 2008, leaving many passengers stranded in and around Spain.[3]

There was also an intrastate airline operating in California in the U.S. in 1962 flying as Futura Airlines with Lockheed Constellation propliners serving Los Angeles, Oakland, Sacramento, Fresno, Bakersfield and Lake Tahoe.[4]

History[edit]

The airline was established in 1989 by Aer Lingus, Belton Air and Banco Santander, starting operations on 17 February 1990 with a flight from Palma de MallorcatoManchester. During the 1990s, the airline expanded to cover the whole of Europe, including the Canary Islands in the South and Scandinavia and Iceland in the North, with charter flights, ad hoc charters, third party short-medium-long term operations (wet-lease) and ACMI. Under the leadership of CEO Roman Pané [1], it used to operate its own scheduled flights and ad hoc flights on behalf of various tour operators and airlines in Europe, North and South America, Africa and Southeast Asia. Futura operated from five permanent bases: Palma de Mallorca, Tenerife, Málaga, Gran Canaria and Dublin; as well as various other seasonal bases throughout the year. (Source: [2]).

The airline was later owned by Corpfin Capital (65%), Aer Lingus (20%) and management and employees (15%). On 16 October 2007, Corpfin Capital and Aer Lingus sold their stakes, during the process of a secondary buyout instigated by the present management team, making way for the participation of the investment fund Hutton Collins, so that the resulting shareholdings were as follows: the Futura Group (management and employees) had 53.5% and Hutton Collins owned 46.5%. The airline had 1,211 employees (at May 2008). It wholly owned cargo subsidiary Flyant (officially Servicios Aéreos Integrales S.A.) and Dublin-based Irish charter airline Futura Gael.[2]

In 2008, a few months prior to its demise, in order to reduce the cost base structure, Futura relaunched Flyant as a new passenger carrier with a class-1 AOC, while continuing freighter operations as well under the Flyant name as well. Flyant (passenger carrier) took over some Futura operations, wet leasing a Boeing 737-300 and a 737-400 to Air Algerie, both aircraft and crew were based in Algiers. Futura also set up and operated a successful turn-key airline setting up and management consultancy and offered its services and on the ground aircraft maintenance services as well to several air carriers across continents, one example being Aerolínea Principal in Chile.

The airline abruptly ceased operations at 00:00 on September 8, 2008, due to a lack of cash (with debts of around €50 million). Its AOC was revoked by the Spanish Aviation Authority two weeks later after the airline was unable to show a viability plan. Since then, its grounded fleet was gradually returned to lessors.

Flyant, which also ceased operations initially alongside parent Futura, later continued in the cargo business, having been sold for the symbolic amount of one Euro, to New Iberital, a Catalan logistics group, which later renamed it Saicus Air. Flyant/Saicus Air continued operating a reduced fleet of a single Boeing 737-300, although eventually this other airline also ceased operations on 14 December 2008. [3]: An attempt was made to restart passenger operations under Saicus Air using MD-83 aircraft however, that also was unsuccessful.

Subsidiaries[edit]

Futura Gael - An Irish-based wholly owned subsidiary set up in 2007 to begin charter flights from Ireland to the EU.

Flyant (Servicios Aéreos Integrales S.A)
Futura Formación TRTO
Futura Mantenimiento

Destinations[edit]

[citation needed]

Domestic[edit]

  • Almería
  • Barcelona
  • Bilbao
  • Fuerteventura
  • Girona
  • Granada
  • Gran Canaria
  • Ibiza
  • Jerez
  • La Palma
  • Lanzarote
  • Madrid
  • Málaga
  • Menorca 
  • Oviedo
  • Palma de Mallorca
  • Pamplona
  • Reus
  • Santander
  • Santiago de Compostela
  • Seville
  • Tenerife North Airport
  • Tenerife South Airport
  • Valencia
  • Valladolid
  • Vitoria
  • Zaragoza
  • International[edit]

  • Amsterdam
  • Antalya
  • Athens
  • Basel/Mulhouse
  • Banjul
  • Belfast
  • Bergamo
  • Bergen
  • Berlin
  • Billund
  • Birmingham
  • Bodø
  • Bologna
  • Bournemouth
  • Bremen
  • Brno
  • Brussels
  • Bucharest
  • Budapest
  • Cairo
  • Cardiff
  • Catania
  • City of Derry Airport
  • Cologne
  • Copenhagen
  • Corfu
  • Cork
  • Dresden
  • Dublin
  • Düsseldorf
  • East Midlands
  • Edinburgh
  • Exeter
  • Faro
  • Frankfurt am Main
  • Freetown
  • Glasgow
  • Gothenburg
  • Graz
  • Hamburg
  • Hanover
  • Helsinki
  • Humberside
  • Iraklion
  • Istanbul
  • Jönköping
  • Kalmar
  • Katowice
  • Keflavík
  • Klagenfurt
  • Knock
  • Kos
  • Kristiansand
  • Kyiv
  • Leeds/Bradford
  • Leipzig
  • Liège
  • Lille
  • Linz
  • Lisbon
  • Liverpool
  • London
  • Luton
  • Luxor
  • Lyon
  • Madeira
  • Malmö
  • Manchester
  • Marseille
  • Marrakech
  • Metz
  • Milan
  • Moscow
  • Munich
  • Nantes
  • Naples
  • Newcastle upon Tyne
  • Norrköping
  • Nuremberg
  • Örebro
  • Oslo
  • Ostrava
  • Palermo
  • Paris
  • Porto
  • Poznań
  • Prague
  • Prestwick
  • Rhodes
  • Rome
  • Saint Petersburg
  • Salzburg
  • Sandefjord
  • Shannon
  • Stansted
  • Stavanger
  • Strasbourg
  • Stockholm
  • Stuttgart
  • Tallinn
  • Tangier
  • Tel Aviv
  • Teesside
  • Toulouse
  • Treviso
  • Trieste
  • Tromsø
  • Trondheim
  • Tunis
  • Turin
  • Venice
  • Verona
  • Vienna
  • Warsaw
  • Zagreb
  • Zakynthos
  • Zürich
  • Livery[edit]

    Futura's aircraft were painted in white through the fuselage area, with the name Futura in blue over the front passenger windows. The tails carried Futura's logo and were painted blue.

    Fleet[edit]

    Futura Boeing 737-900

    As of 4 September 2008, the Futura International Airways fleet consisted of the following aircraft:[5]

    Aircraft # Seats Notes
    Boeing 737-300 2 146 one aircraft was operated by Aerolínea Principal
    Boeing 737-400 11 170 one aircraft was operated by Aerolínea Principal, one aircraft was operated for Blue Panorama Airlines,
    two aircraft were operated for Jetairfly, one aircraft was operated for Air Algérie, one aircraft was operated for Binter Canarias and one aircraft was operated for Blue Air
    Boeing 737-800 12 189 one aircraft was operated for SunExpress, one aircraft was operated for JetX Airlines and one aircraft was operated for Jetairfly
    Boeing 737-900ER 2 which were operated for Arkefly

    References[edit]

    1. ^ "Directorio." Futura International Airways. March 5, 2005. "Departamento de Atención Al Cliente Aeropuerto Son San Juan Zona Facturación 07000 Palma de Mallorca P.O.B 50019 Baleares. Spain"
  • ^ a b "Directory: World Airlines". Flight International. 2007-04-03. p. 85.
  • ^ "Futura seeks administration, suspends flights". Reuters. 2008-09-08.
  • ^ http://www.timetableimages.com, 1962 Futura Airlines timetable
  • ^ "CH-Aviation - It's all about aviation in Switzerland and Europe". www.ch-aviation.ch. Archived from the original on 2007-02-08.
  • External links[edit]

    Media related to Futura International Airways at Wikimedia Commons


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Futura_International_Airways&oldid=1076999853"

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