Air Iceland
Air Iceland (Icelandic: Flugfélag Íslands) is a regional airline with its head office at Reykjavík Airport in Reykjavík, Iceland.[1] It operates scheduled services to domestic destinations and to Greenland and the Faroe Islands. Its main bases are Reykjavík Airport and Akureyri Airport.[2] It is a subsidiary of Icelandair Group.
History
The airline was formed in Akureyri by Tryggvi Helgason as Norðurflug, and was incorporated as Flugfélag Norðurlands on 1 May 1975. A reorganisation and merger of Icelandair Domestic and Norlandair (Flugfélag Norðurlands) resulted in the present name in 1997. It is wholly owned by Icelandair Group and had 226 employees in March 2007.[2]
In late 2011 Air Iceland acquired two Bombardier Dash 8-200 aircraft for delivery in early 2012. Upon delivery of these aircraft, Air Iceland sold its only Dash 8-100 series. It previously operated ATR 42 aircraft from 2000 to 2003.[3] A fleet of 3 Bombardier Dash 8-Q400 aircraft will replace the airline's 5 Fokker F50 aircraft in 2015-16. Services using the new aircraft will include a route to Aberdeen on behalf of Icelandair due to start in March 2016.[4]
Destinations
Fleet
In February 2016. Air Iceland will introduce a new livery on its Bombardier Q400 that will be delivered in February 2016.
As of December 2015, the Air Iceland fleet consisted of the following aircraft:[5]
Accidents and incidents
- On 29 May 1947, a Air Iceland C-47A TF-ISI crashed at Héðinsfjörður, Iceland in bad weather, killing all 25 on board. This was the worst air accident in Icelandic history.
- On 14. April 1963 an Air Iceland Vickers Viscount TF-ISU, named Hrímfaxi crashed on visual approach to Oslo Airport, Fornebu, 10 miles off the airport in a residential area at Nesøya. All on board, eight passengers and four crew, lost their lives. No fatalities on ground.
- On 4 March 2011, as Dash 8 TF-JMB was landing at the Nuuk Airport it was hit by a microburst and the right wheel broke off causing the aircraft to slide off the runway. All 31 people on board were unharmed.[6] However, the aircraft was written off.[3]
References
External links
Media related to Air Iceland at Wikimedia Commons