Sunday, January 19, 2014
SAHSA Route Network, 1993
A luscious example of SAHSA's advertising artistry was shown in the middle of last year, but the posts moved on before this equally elegant and attractive example could be featured: an almost railroad-like vine of routes creeps out from a central spine, showing a respectable reach for such a small carrier. Tegucigalpa, the presumed hub, is shown off the the side, completely off-center, below it are the cities of the isthmus, ending at Panama. The broader boughs of the trees, spinning off the top of the network like the kicking legs of a triskelion, are the American gateways: Houston, New Orleans, and Miami, with the Caribbean stops just below, surprisingly including Grand Cayman but also the domestic destinations of Roatan, La Ceiba, and San Pedro Sula—these may had international routes as well. Guatemala City and San Salvador branch off to the far right.
A gorgeous mural of the attractions of SAHSA's network lies at the ad's base, from the skyline of Houston, the icons of Disney World and a Gone with the Wind Antebellum scene at left, to the Mayan temples of Mesoamerica at center, to the fun and sun of the warm Caribbean, a merchant ship navigating the Panama Canal at upper right.
Friday, January 17, 2014
Mexicana: The Americas Unified, 1993
Mexicana boasted of its pan-American network in 1993: stretching from Santiago to San Francisco, Caracas to Chicago, Montreal to (not quite) Montevideo. As with Eastern Air Lines, it's interesting that there are no Brazilian routes: Buenos Aires is the farthest down the cone that Mexicana reached. The inclusion of secondary cities such as San Jose, California, San Antonio and Denver is interesting, compared to the absence of larger airports such as Houston, Dallas, and Washington. There are also only three capitals of Central America in the network: Guatemala, Panama, and San Jose de Costa Rica.
Monday, January 6, 2014
Eastern Airlines: the South American Route System, August 1982
A dreamy, pencil-sketch styled route Map from the pre-digital era adorned the back section of Eastern Airlines in-flight magazine in August 1982. This excerpt detailed the airline's famed Latin American Routes, which fanned out from New York and Miami, following a predominant Andean spine, with busy interconnections between bases in Panama City, Bogota, Quito, Guayaquil, and Lima, thinning out toward Santiago and Buenos Aires. Astonishingly, there were apparently no routes to Venezuela, or to the huge cities of Brazil. The route map shows connections through Miami to Washington, Houston and Los Angeles, and a single non-stop from New Orleans to Panama City.
Labels:
Asunción,
Barranquilla,
Bogota,
Buenos Aires,
Cali,
Eastern,
Guayaquil,
Houston,
La Paz,
Lima,
Los Angeles,
Miami,
New Orleans,
New York,
Panama,
Quito,
Santiago,
Washington
Sunday, November 17, 2013
ASKY Airlines Schedule, April 2013
The complete network schedule for ASKY Airlines from this spring, helpfully published in their in-flight magazine, detailing their weekly timetable for flights between twenty cities in West and Central Africa, from Banjul to Bamako to Brazzaville.
Labels:
Abidjan,
Abuja,
Accra,
ASKY,
Bamako,
Banjul,
Brazzaville,
Conakry,
Cotonou,
Douala,
Freetown,
Lagos,
Libreville,
Lome,
Monrovia,
N'Djamena,
Niamey,
Ouagadougou,
Pointe-Noire,
Yaounde
Sunday, November 10, 2013
Ethiopian Airlines: the Gateway Route, c.1965
Decades before it spanned to five continents, Ethiopian Airlines was still a leading carrier, yet with a more modest reach. This vintage advert from a mid-century magazine emphasizes Ethiopian's Frankfurt-Athens-Cairo-Asmara-Addis Ababa-Nairobi axis, flown overnight aboard the luxurious DC-6B. The Queen of Sheba's secondary east-west routes to Khartoum, Djibouti and Aden are also shown.
Friday, November 8, 2013
Ethiopian Airlines: The West African destinations, Spring 2013
Nearly twenty Ethiopian flights stretch across the African continent to points in Western and Southern Africa.
Labels:
Abidjan,
Accra,
Addis Ababa,
Bamako,
Brazzaville,
Cotonou,
Dakar,
Douala,
Ethiopian,
Johannesburg,
Kinshasa,
Lagos,
Libreville,
Lome,
Luanda,
Malabo,
N'Djamena,
Ouagadougou,
Pointe-Noire
Ethiopian Airlines: The East African Destinations, Spring 2013
Of the more than four dozen African cities that Ethiopian serves, it is particularly strong in its home region of East Africa.
Labels:
Addis Ababa,
Blantyre,
Bujumbura,
Dar Es Salaam,
Djibouti,
Entebbe,
Ethiopian,
Harare,
Juba,
Kigali,
Kilimanjaro,
Lilongwe,
Lubumbashi,
Lusaka,
Maputo,
Mombasa,
Nairobi,
Ndola,
Seychelles,
Zanzibar
Wednesday, November 6, 2013
Ethiopian Airlines: Long-haul to three continents, Spring 2013
Even before it reached Brazil in July, the global network of Ethiopian Airlines spread long-haul routes from Addis Ababa to three other continents, including three cities on Mainland China (Beijing, Hangzhou and Guangzhou), plus Hong Kong; a new route to Kuala Lumpur via Bangkok, two cities in India (Delhi and Mumbai), and two cities in Italy (Rome and Milan), plus five other European cities: London, Paris, Brussels, Frankfurt, and Stockholm. The route to Rome continues on to Washington Dulles, and there is a new non-stop to Toronto on a 787 Dreamliner.
Sunday, November 3, 2013
Ethiopian: Three times weekly from Addis Ababa to Ndola, April 2013
Ethiopian's neck-and-neck race against Kenya Airways to cover all of Africa has spread to a second airport in Zambia: the northern town of Ndola, gateway to Zambia's famed copperbelt region. Ethiopian serves the town non-stop from Addis Ababa's Bole Airport three times per week.
Saturday, November 2, 2013
Ethiopian Airlines: Three times per week from Addis Ababa to Blantyre, April 2013
Ethiopian Airlines has been in fierce competition with its east African rival, Kenya Airways, to connect the continent through its hub at Addis Ababa's Bole Airport. Earlier this year, it launched flights to Blantyre, Malawi's commercial capital and second largest city, which is served by only handful of airlines. Malawian aviation has suffered greatly this year due to the indefinite suspension of Air Malawi.
Friday, November 1, 2013
Ethiopian Airlines Addis Ababa-Lomé-Rio de Janeiro-Sao Paulo, July 2013
While no Brazilian carrier currently serves West Africa, as of July of this year the South American cone and the Western coast of Africa are connected via one of the world's more unusual routes. Ethiopian Airlines connected a fifth continent to its 55-year old network when a brand-new B787 Dreamliner took flight from tiny Lomé, Togo to Rio de Janeiro, with a continuing service to Sao Paulo, Brazil. Lome is also the home base for Ethiopian-affiliated super-regional ASKY Airlines. The Dreamliner apparently also serves the transcontinental Lomé-Addis Ababa section; ET506/507 spans half the globe thrice-weekly.
Friday, October 25, 2013
VARIG: South American Network, 1973
Brazil dominates commercial aviation in South America today, but four decades ago Rio de Janeiro was the primary gateway to the continent's southern cone, with Sao Paulo just another way station on the routes to Asuncion and Santiago, without, apparently so much as a link to Montevideo and Buenos Aires, at least not on VARIG. Manaus is a more important gateway, with connections to Bogota and Mexico City via Panama, as well as an Andean-hopper terminating at Iquitos, Peru. Recife and Salvador, and Belem all have flights into Europe, with the latter also linked to Cayenne and Paramaraibo, as well as Miami.
See the previous post for the global view of the VARIG route map of 1973.
Labels:
Asunción,
Belem,
Bogota,
Brasilia,
Buenos Aires,
Caracas,
Cayenne,
Iquitos,
La Paz,
Lima,
Mexico City,
Montevideo,
Panama,
Paramaraibo,
Recife,
Rio de Janeiro,
Salvador,
Santiago,
Sao Paulo,
VARIG
Thursday, October 24, 2013
VARIG: Worldwide Network, 1973
The International route network of VARIG Brazilian Airlines in 1973 is a fascinating glimpse into a bygone world of flag carriers. Far more European cities are linked directly or indirectly with Brazil by its main airline than today, an indecipherable tangle of routes connects even tertiary airports such as Geneva and Copenhagen. The network funnels together at Rio de Janeiro, with Sao Paulo a tiny dot in Rio's shadow; today Sao Paulo is by far the dominant gateway into South America. Also note the southern Atlantic routes, particularly to Lagos and Cape Town. Ironic that four decades later this rising economic giant does boast a global carrier with an equal reach on continental Europe or Africa.
See the following post for a detail on the South American section of VARIG's network.
Labels:
Cape Town,
Copenhagen,
Frankfurt,
Geneva,
Johannesburg,
Lagos,
Lisbon,
London,
Los Angeles,
Madrid,
Miami,
New York,
Oporto,
Paris,
Rio de Janeiro,
Rome,
Sao Paulo,
Tokyo,
VARIG,
Zurich
Thursday, October 17, 2013
TACV Network, c.2011
An original design by Airlineroutemaps.com shows the network of Cape Verdean flag carrier, TACV. Few airlines could boast such an impressive size-to-reach ratio, with the tiny company connecting four continents on both sides of the Atlantic. From Praia, the national capital, flights hop to nearby Dakar and Bissau on the mainland; the largest regional hub and the nearby Lusophone capital.
The motherland is well served also, with three flights to the Iberian peninsula in total: to the two busiest Portuguese airports, Lisbon and Porto, as well as Madrid. Paris, Amsterdam, and Milan are all served from Sal, with Munich connected via a stop in Las Palmas.
In the New World, the giant Portuguese-speaking Brazil is linked from the closest large city, Fortaleza, while larger, closer airports in North America are bypassed in favor of Boston, hub of America's largest Portuguese-speaking immigrant communities; New England boasts the largest Cape Verdean population outside of the islands themselves. TACV uses a B757 on the route.
Friday, October 11, 2013
Munich Departures, August 2013
The last departures before midnight on a Sunday evening at Munich's airport in August of this year reveals many of Bavaria's more exotic visitors: South African Airways to Johannesburg, and Turkish to Izmir, and Emirates to Dubai, with long-haul services by Lufthansa from its second-biggest hub to Sao Paulo, Shanghai and Hong Kong. Of shorter duration is an Easyjet hop to London Gatwick. Before midnight there are two flights to Moscow, one on S7 to Domodedovo and one on Aeroflot to Sheremetyevo. There is an El Al flight to Tel Aviv. There are also charter services to Palma de Mallorca and Antalya.
Monday, October 7, 2013
Arrivals at Dresden International, August 2013
The television arrivals screen at Dresden airport in Germany on a Friday in August of 2013, showing many internal flights on Lufthansa from Munich and Frankfurt, and on Air Berlin from Düsseldorf. Easyjet has a single service on the board from Basel. Air Berlin also flies in from Antalya, Turkey, and Germanwings arrives from Cologne with an earlier service in from Corfu, which is not the sole Greek Isle connection shown on the board, as there is a later charter arrival on Pegasus from Kos.
Labels:
Air Berlin,
Antalya,
Basel,
Corfu,
Dresden,
Düsseldorf,
Easyjet,
Frankfurt,
Germanwings,
Köln,
Kos,
Lufthansa,
Munich
Saturday, October 5, 2013
Turkish Airlines: the German destinations, 2013
In addition to its impressive array of African destinations, Turkish Airlines, now the world's seventh largest carrier, is heavily focussed on services to Germany, principally given the large number of Turkish immigrants, so it offers flights to a dozen German cities, in many cases offering some of the few services outside of the European Union from smaller airports such as Bremen, and tiny Friedrichshafen on the Bodensee. Most flights are to Istanbul Ataturk. Larger urban centers, including Düsseldorf, Munich, Berlin and Frankfurt host multiple, daily operations to a half dozen Turkish cities, including leisure destinations like Antalya as well as secondary urban centers such as Adana and Trabzon.
Friday, October 4, 2013
Turkish Airlines: the African destinations, 2013
It's surprisingly anachronistic to find a printed timetable in 2013, complete with glossy dust-jacket and newspaper-thin black-and-white sheets inside. Yet Turkish Airlines still apparently publishes such a volume, which displays the breadth of what is suddenly the world's sixth largest airline.
To illustrate the density of this nascent megacarrier, the timetable shows several maps of the airline's vast, pentacontinental network. Here is the astonishing variety of the airline's destinations in Africa, where it has eclipsed its many European rivals in terms of number of cities served, and is well ahead of even the Gulf super-carriers in its sub-Saharan system, as it has landed in airports as uncommon as Nouakchott and Niamey, Kilimanjaro and Kinshasa, Mombasa and Mogadishu. The arrival of a Turkish B737-800 in the Somali capital last year made global headlines, and more recently a Turkish firm won the contract to administer the airport. Note the Turkish spelling as Djibouti as Cibuti.
Further expansion is underway, another Turkish B737-800 will land at N'Djamena via Kano before year's end.
Labels:
Abidjan,
Addis Ababa,
Cape Town,
Dakar,
Dar Es Salaam,
Djibouti,
Entebbe,
Istanbul,
Khartoum,
Kilimanjaro,
Kinshasa,
Lagos,
Libreville,
Mogadishu,
Nairobi,
Niamey,
Nouakchott,
Ouagadougou,
Turkish,
Yaounde
Saturday, September 28, 2013
South African Airways: the Southern African destinations 2013
Following from the previous post, this promotional brochure shows the ease of connecting to the southern cone of Africa from South African Airways's gateways in Europe: Munich, Frankfurt, and London Heathrow, via Johannesburg. With the map superimposed, these long-haul legs seem mercifully short. Cities in Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Swaziland, Mozambique and Malawi are shown, as well as the airline's many domestic destinations. In most cases, especially outside of South Africa, the proposition is to fly from Europe to OR Tambo, passing over a final destination, before tracking back to reach it on a local connection.
Labels:
Beira,
Blantyre,
Bulawayo,
Cape Town,
Durban,
Frankfurt,
Gaborone,
Harare,
Johannesburg,
Lilongwe,
London,
Manzini,
Maputo,
Munich,
Port Elizabeth,
South African Airways,
Tete,
Victoria Falls,
Walvis Bay,
Windhoek
Friday, September 27, 2013
South African Airways: the African Network, 2013
Troubled, loss-making state carrier South African Airways, whose past has been covered extensively on Timetablist, continues to dominate its home continent as one of the largest African carriers. As shown in this flyer circulated at Munich airport earlier this year, the airline still has success connecting passengers via its antipodean hub at Johannesburg OR Tambo, which remains Africa's busiest airport.
Beyond the southernmost cone, detailed in the next post, SAA serves sixteen cities in Western, Central and Eastern Africa, from Dakar to Dar Es Salaam, including smaller airports such as Brazzaville, Bujumbura, Cotonou and Pointe-Noire. However, the airline by-passes the Sahel and Sahara on its way to its new remaining European gateways.
Labels:
Abidjan,
Accra,
Antananarivo,
Brazzaville,
Bujumbura,
Cotonou,
Dakar,
Dar Es Salaam,
Douala,
Entebbe,
Kigali,
Kinshasa,
Lagos,
Libreville,
Lubumbashi,
Nairobi,
Ndola,
Pemba,
Pointe-Noire,
South African Airways
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