|
|||||||
Founded | 1980 | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ceased operations | 1998 (rebranded as KLM uk) |
||||||
Operating bases |
Norwich Airport Humberside Airport Blackpool Airport Exeter Airport London Stansted Airport Southampton Airport Southend Airport Jersey Airport Guernsey Airport Isle of Man Airport |
||||||
Fleet size | 36 aircraft (11 Fokker F-100, 11 British Aerospace BAe 146 (10 srs. 300, 1 srs. 100), 9 Fokker F-50, 5 Fokker F-27 Friendship 500 (as of March/April 1997)) |
||||||
Destinations |
British Isles Continental Europe |
||||||
Company slogan |
Take the Blue Plane. (early 1980s) Big enough to mean business. (mid- to late 1980s) |
||||||
Parent company | British Air Transport (Holdings) | ||||||
Headquarters |
Redhill, Surrey, England, UK (1980-1984) Crawley, West Sussex, England, UK (1985-1987) London Stansted Airport, Essex, England, UK (1988-1997) |
||||||
Key people |
Sir Nicholas Cayzer Hon Anthony Cayzer Peter Villa Philip Chapman Neil Forster Stephen Hanscombe Andrew Gray Henny A. Essenberg Bob Frost Stuart Carson Harold Payne Allan McQuarrie James French Tony Le Mesurier Tony Camacho John Derbyshire Bob Coleman David McCammon Matt Button Leonard Nutter George White Robert Nunn E.F. Bates C.E. Smith Capt Alan Cottle Capt Christopher Haysom Capt P. Murphy |
||||||
Website | AirUK |
Air UK was a wholly privately owned, independent regional British airline formed in 1980 as a result of a merger involving four rival UK-based regional airlines.British and Commonwealth (B&C)-owned British Island Airways (BIA) and Air Anglia were the two dominant merger partners. The merged entity's corporate headquarters were originally located at Redhill, Surrey, the location of the old BIA head office. It subsequently relocated to Crawley, West Sussex. In addition to the main maintenance base at Norwich Airport (Air Anglia's former engineering base), there also used to be a second major maintenance base at Blackpool Airport (the old BIA engineering base). This was closed down following Air UK's major retrenchment during Britain's severe recession of the early 1980s. In 1987, Air UK established Air UK Leisure as a charter subsidiary. The following year, Air UK shifted its headquarters to London Stansted Airport. When Stansted's new Norman Foster-designed terminal opened in 1991, the airline became its first and subsequently main tenant.
Air UK was a full member of the International Air Transport Association (IATA) for most of its existence.