Hamburg Airlines was a small German regional airline carrier that formed in 1988 and was owned by Eugene Block.[1] The company later dissolved after it went bankrupt in 1997.[1]

Hamburg Airlines
IATA ICAO Call sign
HX HAS Hamburg Air
Founded1988
Commenced operationsApril 1988
Ceased operations1997
Parent companySaarland Airlines (1993)
HeadquartersHamburg, Germany
Employees180

History

edit

Hamburg Airlines was founded in April 1988 and commenced operations with a Dornier 228 with services between its home base of Hamburg and Rotterdam and Westerland. A couple of months later a second Dornier 228 was added and services expanded to Antwerp and Gothenburg. By the end of 1988 a de Havilland Canada Dash 8 was added and the airline expanded operations.

With the reunification of Germany, flights to the east were added. The airline leased a Fokker 100 and the routes of Berlin based Tempelhof Airways were taken over, thus Berlin becoming a second hub for Hamburg Airlines. As destinations expanded, London Gatwick Airport, Kaliningrad and Riga were served. Unfortunately, Hamburg Airlines was losing money so in 1993 it was sold to Saarland Airlines (a charter company), but Hamburg Airlines continued to operate independently of the parent company. Block retained 20% shareholding and was given a seat on the Saarland board.[2]

In 1993 Saarland Airlines went bankrupt and Hamburg Airlines ceased operations for a short period until revived in December 1993. The aircraft of choice for the resurrected Hamburg Airlines was the BAe 146. Things did not go well for Hamburg Airlines and by 1997 it was in dire financial problems. When no buyer or merger partner could be found, Hamburg Airlines was liquidated on 21 December 1997.[3]

Fleet

edit
 
Hamburg Airlines BAe 146-200

Hamburg Airlines operated the following types of aircraft during its existence:

References

edit
Citations
  1. ^ a b "World Airline Directory" (PDF). flightglobal.com. Flight International. 31 March 1992.
  2. ^ "HALISAAIR, S. A. See ACORI: AERO COSTARICA, S. A". World history. Retrieved 2018-07-03.
  3. ^ Hengi, [page needed]
Bibliography
  • Hengi, B. I. (2000). Airlines Remembered. Hersham, England, UK: Midland Publishing. ISBN 978-1857800913.