Swiss To Build Out Geneva ? Civil Aviation Forum | Airliners.net
According to Travel Inside Swiss is planning to strengthen its position with a crew basis in Geneva and a local leadership organization. From a route perspective it plans to increase seasonal flights to Malaga and Palma as well as to Olbia and Catania next summer while reducing the flights to Athens to 1 daily. It plans to further increase its network with the arrival of the C-Series
Over the weekend, there was an interesting article about an interview with Harry Hohmeister about the renewal of parts of the long distance fleet: It seems that Swiss is looking at the 777 or 350's (no suprise) and plans to make a decision within the next 6 - 12 months
Quoting nyswiss (Thread starter): Over the weekend, there was an interesting article about an interview with Harry Hohmeister about the renewal of parts of the long distance fleet: It seems that Swiss is looking at the 777 or 350's (no suprise) and plans to make a decision within the next 6 - 12 months
http://www.sonntagonline.ch/ressort/...2603/
Being an all Airbus Airline now, i doubt they'll look at the 777. A350 shares commonality being an Airbus and they might be the winning candidate here.
Talking about hubs, will LX follow LH and have two hubs across their network?
Didn't SR have a hub for a while at GVA? If my memory serves me correctly it was pulled down as it simply wasn't profitable.
Quoting jayeshrulz (Reply 1): Being an all Airbus Airline now, i doubt they'll look at the 777. A350 shares commonality being an Airbus and they might be the winning candidate here.
Talking about hubs, will LX follow LH and have two hubs across their network?
From everything I have heard so far, they seem fairly serious about the B777-300ER as it is available earlier and already performs really well for many carriers with comparable networks.
I think they are more targeting O&D demand in Geneva than trying to build up a real second hub.
Quoting jayeshrulz (Reply 1):
Being an all Airbus Airline now, i doubt they'll look at the 777. A350 shares commonality being an Airbus and they might be the winning candidate here.
One could argue the blind transition to the Airbus fleet without properly evaluating aircraft led to the demise of Swissair. The A350 may be the airplane they choose, but I'd hope they do a better job of evaluating aircraft needs in terms of size of fleet and total acquired debt.
They already ordered the Cseries, so I don't think they are completely committed to Airbus exclusivity.
[Edited 2012-11-12 10:07:51]
Quoting Roseflyer (Reply 4): One could argue the blind transition to the Airbus fleet without properly evaluating aircraft led to the demise of Swissair. The A350 may be the airplane they choose, but I'd hope they do a better job of evaluating aircraft needs in terms of size of fleet and total acquired debt.
You need to read up on the SAirgroup, it wasn't Swissair the airline that took down the group, it was all the other side non-core activities, most notably Sabena and AOM that bled money.
From what I'm reading (translating), they seem to be leaning towards the 77W. It would be more economical, especially with regards to keeping fuel costs down, plus they could use aircraft with 50 more seats. Also the 777 would be available sooner than the 350 which they could not get until 2018.
The article also states they are not interested in receiving 346's from LH because the per-passenger costs are too high.
in any event, if they need to expand now, they'll need higher capacity and/or more aircraft sooner than later. So, they may need to lease some 346s, if just for a short time.
DED
I'm sure that an offer from Airbus SAS for A350s will include an interim solution of used A340-500s /-600s and new A330-300s.
I hope they will consider launching flights to Belgrade. I read on an aviation portal that the airport is currently seeking an air link with Serbia.
Shouldnt Swiss stick to its core business and leave Geneva and leisure routes to the LCC's? They can never compete with Easyjet and Wizzair ( Wizz will open up more and more CEE destinations from GVA. )
Quoting kl911 (Reply 9):
Shouldnt Swiss stick to its core business and leave Geneva and leisure routes to the LCC's? They can never compete with Easyjet and Wizzair ( Wizz will open up more and more CEE destinations from GVA. )
Geneva is a high yielding market, in fact according to what LX said today higher yielding than ZRH on similar routes. Whilst easyJet do have many leisure routes from GVA, they also have a number of business routes that LX need to be present in.
Quoting jayeshrulz (Reply 1): Talking about hubs, will LX follow LH and have two hubs across their network?
No hub. But rather a focus city with o/d connections. Actually LH has three hubs with FRA, MUC and ZRH (SWISS).
Quoting FI642 (Reply 2): Didn't SR have a hub for a while at GVA? If my memory serves me correctly it was pulled down as it simply wasn't profitable.
GVA was a hub for decades, and got killed offin the late 90s. As I recall, after their withdrawal, the only direct flights Swissair had out of GVA was London, Paris, Moscow and New York. Everything else was served via an hourly feeder route to Zurich.
I worked in Geneva at the time, and my employer (a multinational with probably 50 employees flying on any given day) which used to be very loyal to Swissair pretty much abandoned Swissair in favor of Lufthansa. If you HAD to make layovers, Frankfurt had much better connections than Zurich.
Quoting Roseflyer (Reply 4): One could argue the blind transition to the Airbus fleet without properly evaluating aircraft led to the demise of Swissair. The A350 may be the airplane they choose, but I'd hope they do a better job of evaluating aircraft needs in terms of size of fleet and total acquired debt.
That's a bit harsh. Personally I don't think there is anything wrong with Airbuses, but I do know a number of people who refuse to fly them, because they have a FBW system that "knows better than the pilot" - they prefer the more traditional systems such as Boeing offers (still FBW, but more easily overridden in case of emergency). I'm not sure if the number of people who think like this are significant, but they are out there.
I think this is easy one for for LX, and their order will most likely go to Airbus. However, (and I am not aware of their timeline to replacement but I know that the A333 is significantly new) Boeing can take the order with the 77W if LX is in dire need of new aircraft quick. If they want the 787. maybe they should knock on AI's door.
These news are a bit misleading as for the upcoming summer schedule LX will actually reduce overall flying from GVA by 17 weekly frequencies. However, the number of destinations increase due to the addition of CTA and OLB.
[Edited 2012-11-12 11:55:39]
[Edited 2012-11-12 11:58:47]
Quoting Dreadnought (Reply 12): That's a bit harsh. Personally I don't think there is anything wrong with Airbuses, but I do know a number of people who refuse to fly them, because they have a FBW system that "knows better than the pilot" - they prefer the more traditional systems such as Boeing offers (still FBW, but more easily overridden in case of emergency). I'm not sure if the number of people who think like this are significant, but they are out there.
I don't have anything wrong with Airbus airplanes. My point is that Swissair did not do a very good job with fleet planning in the 1990s for their own fleet. They pushed Sabena to rapidly replace airplanes that didn't need replacing. Swissair also ordered A340-600s which were too big.
I don't think Swiss will do that again, but am hoping they do a better job with fleet planning.
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