Saturday, October 11, 2025

Qatar Airways Worldwide Network, 2011. Detail # 1: The Gulf Region & Western Hemisphere

Continuing from the last post, here is the first in a series of posts about Qatar Airways from back in 2011, when it began on to nip at the heels of super-rival Emirates, chasing that megacarrier to all corners of the globe in the formative decades of the ME3

Origin & destination traffic is not nearly as important as making Doha a global megahub like Dubai, even before the state-of-the-art Hamad International Airport even opened. Hence, early extension all the way to Buenos Aires and Sao Paulo, as well as a fledgling operation to the four United States gateways, with Chicago in bright green, either as a cargo destination or in anticipation of its 2012 announcement of its new thrice-weekly passenger service which began in November 2013. These all connect with Qatar's regional, "Intra-Gulf" network—a triangle of cities between Kuwait, Muscat and Jeddah.

While only showing 14 cities on 3 continents on this page, dozens of other dots sprout across North America—presumably code-share connections although the map does not bother to explain.

Saturday, October 4, 2025

Stockholm Arlanda Arrivals Board, May 2017



Staying in Scandinavia, the display screens at Stockholm's Arlanda Airport showing the bank of mid-morning arrivals in May 2017. Note the long-delayed flight from Thessaloniki meant to land the night before and still not showing up til mid-afternoon, that starts off the roster up top.

The Baltic region is heavily represented, naturally, and a handful of the airports shown here, mainly domestic operations within Sweden, make their Timetablist debut with this post: Åre Östersund, Luleå, Skellefteå, Turku in Finland, Umeå, Vaasa (also in Finland), and Visby

Longer-haul services, the handful not flown by SAS, are also landing around this time, including Turkish Airlines from Istanbul and Qatar Airways from Doha. The most distant arrival is SK940 landing from Los Angeles
 

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

Icelandair: Your way to Norway, 2011


Continuing to look at Icelandic air carriers in the 21st century, here is a magazine advert for Icelandair, specifically highlighting the airline's service to four Norwegian airports: Oslo, Bergen, Stavanger, and Trondheim. The top of the page lists, in no particular order, Icelandair's 19 other European destinations from Glasgow to Alicante. That number has today nearly doubled above 35 cities, counting a number of seasonal services.