Airlink (helicopter shuttle service)

Last updated
Airlink
Sikorsky S-61N G-LINK operating the Gatwick - Heathrow's Airlink shuttle.jpg
Airlink Sikorsky S-61N at Gatwick
Founded1978
Commenced operations9 June 1978
Ceased operations6 February 1986
Fleet sizeOne Sikorsky S-61
Destinations
Parent company British Caledonian Airways and British Airways Helicopters

Airlink was the brand name of a helicopter shuttle service which ran between London's two main airports, Gatwick and Heathrow, between 1978 and 1986. Operated jointly by British Caledonian Airways and British Airways Helicopters using a Sikorsky S-61 owned by the British Airports Authority, the "curious and unique operation" [1] connected the rapidly growing airports in the years before the M25 motorway existed. Although at one point the service was granted a licence to operate until 1994, the Secretary of State for Transport intervened and revoked the licence with effect from February 1986—by which time the continued existence of the link had become "a highly controversial issue" debated by Members of Parliament, airlines, airport operators, local authorities and many other interest groups. [2] No similar service has operated between the airports since Airlink's cessation.

Contents

Background

Gatwick Airport pictured in 1972 Gatwick Airport in 1972 - geograph.org.uk - 1577784.jpg
Gatwick Airport pictured in 1972

Heathrow Airport is 12 nmi (22 km; 14 mi) west of central London, [3] and Gatwick Airport is 24.7 nmi (45.7 km; 28.4 mi) south of the city. [4] Transport connections between London and the respective airports are good, but the difficulty of travelling directly between Heathrow and Gatwick was noted as soon as the latter was designated London's second main airport. [5]

The first attempt to run an air shuttle service between the two airports started on 25 June 1969, when Westward Airways [note 1] started operating flights between Heathrow and the General Aviation Terminal at Gatwick using a Britten-Norman Islander aircraft. This was not well marketed, and the route was unprofitable—not helped by the need for Westward to lease another Islander aircraft after one of the fleet was damaged in an accident in February 1970. Between July 1970 and 22 August 1970, when the route ran for the last time, a Piper PA-28 Cherokee had to be borrowed from another company. [5]

Throughout the 1970s, "many and complex pressures" both encouraged and opposed the reintroduction of an air shuttle service. Large airlines such as British Caledonian and Dan-Air were based at Gatwick and wanted better links with Heathrow for the benefit of their passengers and staff. Meanwhile, the government wanted to reduce the pressure on Heathrow by moving some foreign airlines' flights to Gatwick—a difficult proposal at a time when national airlines were a symbol of prestige—and improving links between the airports would help minimise the negative effect of moving from Heathrow. National transport policy suggested that a motorway would be built between Gatwick and Heathrow at some time in the future, so an air shuttle was considered to be a possible temporary solution. [6] Noise pollution, was expected to be a problem, though, as the natural flightpath between the airports lay above densely populated residential areas. The low altitude of the flights was also expected to invade the privacy of "rich and influential residents" under the flightpath. [6]

Introduction

British Caledonian, British Airways Helicopters and the British Airports Authority (the operator of both airports) began discussing a new service in mid-1977. Their rationale was that a quick, high-frequency shuttle would "effectively link the two airports' flight networks" and allow Gatwick and Heathrow "to operate in tandem". [1] In 1978, they formed a joint venture company called London Airways [7] to operate a new shuttle service using a Sikorsky S-61N helicopter. [8] This was owned by BAA, [6] who "saw [the link] as another sweetener for airlines banished to [Gatwick]". (Moving to Gatwick was generally unpopular with Heathrow-based airlines because it was less convenient for passengers making connections.) [9] British Airways Helicopters (a subsidiary of British Caledonian's larger rival British Airways) [1] could not provide one because all of its aircraft were already in use on services to North Sea oil rigs and the Isles of Scilly. [7] British Caledonian itself was responsible for marketing, ground crew and the single member of cabin crew. [1] [6] Initially, British Airways Helicopters provided the pilots and engineering services; but they later withdrew from the joint venture and were replaced by British Caledonian Helicopters, who provided the same things. [6] The helicopter could accommodate up to 28 passengers, and the company set a target of 64,000 passengers per year. It claimed a potential annual benefit of £10 million to the British economy, on the assumption that each interlining passenger would be transferring to another British carrier and would be generating £150 profit. [10] These arguments—along with claims that international interlining traffic would be won from rival European airports such as Paris Charles de Gaulle and Amsterdam Schiphol; that the British government's transport and economic policies treated Gatwick and Heathrow as a single entity; and the flight planners' demonstration that the route chosen for Airlink would have "the least possible impact" on residential areas below the flightpath—helped to persuade the Civil Aviation Authority to allow the service to start. [10]

A report in February 1978 described Airlink as "long-awaited" and stated it was expected to start in mid-summer. [7] Pending the completion of the southern section of the M25 motorway, [6] [8] and after a public hearing, [10] the joint venture company was given a temporary one-year licence to run the service. [2] [note 2] The inaugural flight was on 9 June 1978. Prince Charles attended the launch ceremony: [8] [11] after travelling from London Victoria on the Rapid City Link express rail service (now branded Gatwick Express ), he toured the terminal building and travelled with British Caledonian chairman Sir Adam Thomson on the first flight. [1] One newly built [7] helicopter was sufficient to run the service, which operated ten return trips each day. It took 15 minutes to fly from one airport to the other (a straight-line distance of about 30 miles (48 km)), [10] and passengers were charged £12.00 each way. [8] One of the conditions of the Civil Aviation Authority licence was that flights should not operate between 9.15pm and 6.30am. [7] Unlike its Westward Airways predecessor, Airlink had its own departure and arrival gates and boarding ramps at both airports. [11]

End

During the 1978/79 financial year, when British Caledonian made a pre-tax profit of £12.2 million, 50,000 people used Airlink, [12] and passenger numbers later rose to 60,000 per year. Ten flights were operated in each direction per day. [9] The "quick and rather exciting" [9] service was popular with users, [13] and the licence was renewed for four years in 1979. [2] The next application, made in 1983, sought to extend the licence for ten years. The Civil Aviation Authority granted this in February 1984, but the Secretary of State for Transport Nicholas Ridley [14] overturned this four months later: the link would now cease four months after the M25 opened between Junctions 8 and 10. [note 3] This condition was varied again in November 1985: the helicopter link had to stop by 7 February 1986 if its licence had not already run out as a result of the Secretary of State for Transport's amendment. [2] [14] The motorway was in fact completed by October 1985, and Airlink operated for the last time on 6 February 1986, after which its licence was revoked. [13] "Intense and relentless" campaigning against noise pollution and low flying continued throughout Airlink's existence, [13] coordinated by groups such as the Gatwick Conservation Area Campaign and the Federation of Heathrow Anti-Noise Groups. [10] Their argument was that coaches should have been used to connect the airports, whereas BAA claimed "their important passengers were accustomed to helicopters and would not take kindly to a mere bus." [9]

After the service ceased, it was stated that Airlink had carried 600,000 passengers in its eight years of operation, earning £10.5m of direct revenue from fares and generating indirect revenue of £100m. It also supported 62 jobs. Sir Adam Thomson, the chairman of British Caledonian, claimed that Ridley's decision not to renew the licence cost the company £4 million at a time when it was suffering financial problems. [14] In a parliamentary debate in May 1986, Nicholas Soames, then the Member of Parliament for Crawley (which covered Gatwick Airport), claimed that "nearly half the existing passengers [would] in future avoid London", and that their choice of alternative carriers or transport methods would cost the airline industry several million pounds. Michael Spicer, the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Transport, noted that while many people had "argued strongly for the retention" of Airlink, many others within and outside Parliament had "argued no less passionately ... that the helicopter link should cease". He further stated that Airlink had become "a highly controversial issue" and that any outcome would anger some people. [2]

The Sikorsky S-61N helicopter (registration code G-LINK) built for the service and registered on 9 March 1978 had its registration cancelled from 10 June 1987. Research in 2006 found that it had been scrapped and was "languishing in weeds somewhere in Brazil". [15] Regular coach services have operated between the airports via the M25 since Airlink ceased, but no direct heavy rail, light rail or other transport link has been created. The motorway suffers from frequent and unpredictable congestion. [16]

See also

Notes

  1. This company became defunct in October 1970, and is not connected to the present Westward Airways company. [6]
  2. Sir Adam Thomson's autobiography states that the first licence was granted for 18 months. [10]
  3. The section between the A217 at Reigate and the A3 at Wisley. [2]

Related Research Articles

Virgin Atlantic, a trading name of Virgin Atlantic Airways Limited and Virgin Atlantic International Limited, is a British airline with its head office in Crawley, England. The airline was established in 1984 as British Atlantic Airways, and was originally planned by its co-founders Randolph Fields and Alan Hellary to fly between London and the Falkland Islands. Soon after changing the name to Virgin Atlantic Airways, Fields sold his shares in the company after disagreements with Sir Richard Branson over the management of the company. The maiden flight from Gatwick Airport to Newark Liberty International Airport took place on 22 June 1984.

Gatwick Airport Secondary airport serving London, England, United Kingdom

Gatwick Airport, also known as London Gatwick, is a major international airport near Crawley, West Sussex, England, 29.5 miles (47.5 km) south of Central London. It is the second-busiest airport by total passenger traffic in the UK, after Heathrow Airport. Gatwick is the tenth-busiest airport in Europe. It covers a total area of 674 hectares.

First Choice Airways Limited was a British charter airline of European tour operator TUI Travel PLC, based in Crawley, England until its merger with Thomsonfly to form Thomson Airways in 2008. It flew to more than 60 destinations worldwide from 14 UK and Irish airports. 70% of the airline's services were operated for its parent company, rising to 85% in the summer season, with the remainder on behalf of some 120 other tour operators. It also operated scheduled year-round leisure routes to Cyprus and the resorts of Spain and Portugal.

British Midland Airways Limited was an airline with its head office in Donington Hall in Castle Donington, close to East Midlands Airport, in the United Kingdom. The airline flew to destinations in Europe, the Middle East, Africa, North America and Central Asia from its operational base at Heathrow Airport, where at its peak it held about 13% of all takeoff and landing slots and operated over 2,000 flights a week. BMI was a member of Star Alliance from 1 July 2000 until 20 April 2012.

Aberdeen Airport International airport in Aberdeen, Scotland

Aberdeen International Airport is an international airport, located in the Dyce suburb of Aberdeen, Scotland, approximately 5 nautical miles northwest of Aberdeen city centre. A total of just under 3.1 million passengers used the airport in 2017, an increase of 4.6% compared with 2016.

British Caledonian (BCal) was a British private independent airline which operated out of Gatwick Airport in south-east England during the 1970s and 1980s. It was created as an alternative to the British government-controlled corporation airlines and was described as the "Second Force" in the 1969 Edwards report. It was formed by the UK's second-largest, independent charter airline Caledonian Airways taking over British United Airways (BUA), then the largest British independent airline and the United Kingdom's leading independent scheduled carrier. The carrier slogan was Let's go British Caledonian in the 1970s and We never forget you have a choice in the 1980s. The BUA takeover enabled Caledonian to realise its long-held ambition to transform itself into a scheduled airline. The merged entity eventually became the UK's foremost independent, international scheduled airline.

Caledonian Airways Scottish private charter airline from 1961 until a merger in 1970

Caledonian Airways was a wholly private, independent Scottish charter airline formed in April 1961. It began with a single 104-seat Douglas DC-7C leased from Sabena. Caledonian grew rapidly over the coming years to become the leading transatlantic "affinity group" charter operator by the end of the decade. During that period, passenger numbers grew from just 8,000 in 1961 to 800,000 in 1970. The latter represented 22.7% of all British non-scheduled passengers. It also became Britain's most consistently profitable and financially most secure independent airline of its era, never failing to make a profit in all its ten years of existence. By the end of 1970, Caledonian operated an all-jet fleet consisting of eleven aircraft and provided employment for over 1,000 workers. At that time, its principal activities included group charters between North America, Europe and the Far East using Boeing 707s, and general charter and inclusive tour (IT) activities in Europe utilising One-Elevens. This was also the time Caledonian merged with British United Airways (BUA), the largest contemporary independent airline and leading private sector scheduled carrier in the United Kingdom, and formed British Caledonian.

CityFlyer Express was a short-haul regional airline with its head office in the Iain Stewart Centre next to London Gatwick Airport in England.

Laker Airways

Laker Airways was a private British airline founded by Sir Freddie Laker in 1966. It was originally a charter airline flying passengers and cargo worldwide. Its head office was located at Gatwick Airport in Crawley, England.

Bermuda II was a bilateral air transport agreement between the governments of the United Kingdom and the United States signed on 23 July 1977 as a renegotiation of the original 1946 Bermuda air services agreement. A new open skies agreement was signed by the United States and the European Union (EU) on 30 April 2007 and came into effect on 30 March 2008, thus replacing Bermuda II.

British United Airways

British United Airways (BUA) was a private, independent British airline formed as a result of the merger of Airwork Services and Hunting-Clan Air Transport in July 1960, making it the largest wholly private airline based in the United Kingdom at the time. British and Commonwealth Shipping (B&C) was the new airline's main shareholder.

British Island Airways

British Island Airways (BIA) was the legal successor to British United Island Airways (BUIA). It commenced operations under that name in mid-1970. Ten years later it merged with Air Anglia, Air Wales and Air Westward to form Air UK, at the time the United Kingdom's biggest regional airline and its third-largest scheduled operator. The first British Island Airways had its head office at Congreve House (1970–1972) and Berkeley House (1973–1979), which are respectively located in Station Road and on the high street in Redhill, Surrey.

British Eagle

British Eagle International Airlines was a major British independent airline that operated from 1948 until it went into liquidation in 1968. It operated scheduled and charter services on a domestic, international and transatlantic basis over the years.

British Caledonian in the 1980s

British airline British Caledonian (BCal) suffered a series of major setbacks in the 1980s as a result of several geopolitical events that occurred during that decade. These events significantly weakened BCal operationally and financially. They were the main factors that contributed to the airline's demise in 1988.

Reasons for the failure of British Caledonian

In December 1987, following substantial losses, the private, British independent airline British Caledonian (BCal) was taken over by newly privatised British Airways (BA).

British Caledonian (BCal) came into being in November 1970 when the Scottish charter airline Caledonian Airways, at the time Britain's second-largest, wholly privately owned, independent airline, took over British United Airways (BUA), then the largest British independent airline as well as the United Kingdom's leading independent scheduled carrier.

British Airways Helicopters

British Airways Helicopters was a British helicopter airline from 1964 to 1986.

Intra Airways

Intra Airways Limited was a private, British independent airline formed in 1969. Initially, it was a charter airline operating passenger and cargo charters from the Channel Islands to the United Kingdom and Continental Europe. Scheduled services commenced in 1971, linking Jersey with Staverton. The airline also established an associated engineering company at Exeter Airport. In 1979, Intra Airways merged with Express Air Freight (C.I.) to form Jersey European Airways. The new entity was initially absorbed into Air Bridge Carriers (ABC), a Field Aviation/Hunting Group company. It subsequently left the Field Aviation/Hunting Group as a result of the demerger of Express Air Services, which had acquired Express Air Freight's cargo operation.

Heathwick

Heathwick is an informal name for a 2011 proposal to create a high-speed rail link between London's Heathrow and Gatwick airports, in effect to combine them into a single airport. Proponents argue this would balance their capacity and so reduce the need to add more runways to Heathrow, or more airports in the south-east of England. In 2018 the similar project HS4Air was proposed.

Gatwick Airport was in Surrey until 1974, when it became part of West Sussex as a result of a county boundary change. The original, pre-World War II airport was built on the site of a manor in the parish of Charlwood. The land was first used as an aerodrome in the 1920s, and in 1933 commercial flights there were approved by the Air Ministry.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Thomson 1990 , p. 355.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Parliamentary Debates (Hansard) . House of Commons. 13 May 1986. col. 679–686.
  3. "EGLL – London Heathrow" (PDF). Civil Aviation Authority. 9 April 2009. Archived (PDF) from the original on 24 January 2013. Retrieved 28 December 2012.
  4. "EGKK – London Gatwick" (PDF). Civil Aviation Authority. 7 May 2009. Archived (PDF) from the original on 24 January 2013. Retrieved 28 December 2012.
  5. 1 2 Holland 2006 , p. 2.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Holland 2006, p. 3.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 Ramsden, J.M., ed. (18 February 1978). "Summer launch for London airports helicopter link". Flight International . Vol. 113 no. 3596. London: IPC Transport Press Ltd. p. 416. ISSN   0015-3710. Archived from the original on 24 January 2013. Retrieved 2 January 2013.
  8. 1 2 3 4 Ramsden, J.M., ed. (17 June 1978). "Untitled news item". Flight International . Vol. 113 no. 3513. London: IPC Transport Press Ltd. p. 1832. ISSN   0015-3710. Archived from the original on 24 January 2013. Retrieved 2 January 2013.
  9. 1 2 3 4 Hayter 1989 , p. 125.
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 Thomson 1990 , p. 356.
  11. 1 2 Holland 2006 , p. 4.
  12. Thomson 1990 , p. 365.
  13. 1 2 3 Holland 2006 , p. 6.
  14. 1 2 3 Thomson 1990 , p. 524.
  15. Holland 2006 , p. 8.
  16. Holland 2006 , p. 9.

Bibliography