Sky Airlines
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Founded | 2000 | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Commenced operations | 2001 | ||||||
Ceased operations | 2013 | ||||||
Hubs | Antalya Airport | ||||||
Secondary hubs | |||||||
Frequent-flyer program | Miles&Sky | ||||||
Subsidiaries | German Sky Airlines | ||||||
Fleet size | 5 | ||||||
Destinations | 50 | ||||||
Company slogan | "Smile in the Sky" | ||||||
Parent company | Kayi Group | ||||||
Headquarters | Antalya, Turkey | ||||||
Key people | Tahir Gorgulu (CEO) | ||||||
Website | www.skyairlines.net |
Sky Airlines was an airline which operated chartered flights. It was based in Antalya, Turkey,[1] operating on behalf of tour operators on short and medium haul routes into Turkey. The company was established in 2000 and started operations in 2001. It was wholly owned by Kayi Group. In 2010, the airline started scheduled domestic operations in Turkey making it the 9th airline to enter the domestic market. It downsized operations for the winter season 2012-13, returning three Boeing 737-800s to their lessors.[2]
A subsidiary, German Sky Airlines, based in Düsseldorf, was launched in 2010. On 1 December 2012 it announced a suspension of services (due to the economic downturn) and returned two Boeing 737-800s to their lessors. The airline hoped to resume services in Spring 2013.[2]
On 4 June 2013, the airline filed for bankruptcy and ceased all flight operations with immediate effect.[3]
Destinations
The airline also operated scheduled services to the following (as of December 2012)
- Albania
- Austria
- Graz - Graz Airport
- Linz - Linz Airport
- Salzburg - Salzburg Airport
- Vienna - Vienna International Airport
- Belgium
- Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Bulgaria
- Czech
- Denmark
- Estonia
- France
- Lyon - Lyon-Saint Exupéry Airport
- Marseille - Marseille Provence Airport
- Mulhouse - EuroAirport Basel-Mulhouse-Freiburg
- Germany
- Berlin - Schönefeld Airport
- Cologne/Bonn - Cologne Bonn Airport
- Dortmund - Dortmund Airport
- Düsseldorf - Düsseldorf International Airport
- Erfurt - Erfurt-Weimar Airport
- Frankfurt - Frankfurt Airport
- Frankfurt-Hahn - Frankfurt-Hahn Airport
- Hamburg - Hamburg Airport
- Hanover - Hannover-Langenhagen Airport
- Karlsruhe/Baden-Baden - Baden Airpark
- Leipzig/Halle - Leipzig/Halle Airport
- Munich - Munich Airport
- Münster/Osnabrück - Münster Osnabrück International Airport
- Nuremberg - Nuremberg Airport
- Paderborn - Paderborn Lippstadt Airport
- Saarbrücken - Saarbrücken Airport
- Stuttgart - Stuttgart Airport
- Zweibrücken - Zweibrücken Airport
- Iran
- Kazakhstan
- Republic of Macedonia
- Netherlands
- Poland
- Bydgoszcz - Bydgoszcz Ignacy Jan Paderewski Airport
- Katowice - Katowice International Airport
- Warsaw - Warsaw Chopin Airport
- Wrocław - Copernicus Airport Wrocław
- Norway
- Romania
- Bucharest - Henri Coandă International Airport
- Cluj-Napoca - Cluj-Napoca International Airport
- Timişoara - Traian Vuia International Airport
- Slovakia
- Slovenia
- Switzerland
- Turkey
- Adana - Adana Şakirpaşa Airport
- Antalya - Antalya Airport Hub
- Bodrum - Milas-Bodrum Airport Secondary hubs
- Dalaman - Dalaman Airport Secondary hubs
- Diyarbakır - Diyarbakır Airport
- Erzincan - Erzincan Airport
- Erzurum - Erzurum Airport
- Gaziantep - Oğuzeli Airport
- Istanbul - Sabiha Gökçen International Airport
- İzmir - Adnan Menderes Airport
- Kayseri - Erkilet International Airport
- Malatya - Malatya Erhaç Airport
- Samsun - Samsun-Çarşamba Airport
- Trabzon - Trabzon Airport
- Van - Van Ferit Melen Airport
Fleet
As of February 2013, the Sky Airlines fleet consists of the following aircraft, which are all equipped with an all-economy class cabin layout:[4][5]
Aircraft | In fleet | Order | Passengers | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Boeing 737-400 | 1(stored) | - | 170/150Y+12C | |
Boeing 737-900ER | 0 | 215 | leased from ALAFCO | |
Total | 1 | ' |
References
- ↑ "Contact." Sky Airlines. Retrieved on 21 February 2012. "Güzeloba mah. Ay – 1 Sok. No:1 07230 Lara – Antalya / Türkiye"
- 1 2 "German Sky Suspends Operations", Airliner World, February 2013: 7
- ↑ "Sky Airlines hat den Betrieb eingestellt". Radio Bremen. Retrieved 4 June 2013.
- ↑ "Sky Airlines - ch-aviation.com". ch-aviation. horizontal tab character in
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at position 16 (help) - ↑ Sky Airlines fleet
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sky Airlines. |
Wikimedia Commons has media related to German Sky Airlines. |
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