TheLocalYokel
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- Jan 14, 2009
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- #561
When WOW was announced I think that a number of people with an interest in the subject wondered whether a direct NYC service had become less likely, at least in the short term. I certainly did. About a year ago the airport was then sufficiently confident of securing a direct NYC service for 2016 that they stated publicly that talks were at an 'advanced stage' having, they said, just missed out to another airport for such a service in 2015. The assumption was that if the airline was American Airlines the other airport was BHX and if United it was NCL.
It does seem that for whatever reason the advanced stage talks foundered, for a service this year anyway. One of BRS's strengths going back many years and certainly since the airport was privatised is the ability of its senior management team in getting airlines and routes, most of which have succeeded, that to many people including me at times I admit seemed questionable in terms of the catchment's ability to support them. I believe that if anyone can get these long haul routes the BRS team can. I say this as someone who has never worked in the industry. I am a customer, albeit one who for many years has taken an interest in the often arcane practices (to an outsider anyway) of the airline and airport industries.
Dubai would suit me perfectly as my wife and I use Emirates every year to visit our daughter and her family in Australia. However, Emirates currently uses on its UK sectors aircraft that would be too big for BRS's limited operational capabilities.
Considering the many physical and natural obstacles with which the airport has to contend the fact that it is where it is now is little short of remarkable. An enduring frustration is 'what might have been' if BRS was sited at a larger and more accessible location. When the city council moved its airport from Whitchurch to Lulsgate in the 1950s because the former was incapable of being developed to accommodate the larger aircraft then coming into service it was creating an identical problem for future generations.
I was first aware of 'Lulsgate' as many older locals still refer to the airport when it was home to a glider club. As a youngster I lived a couple of miles down the road at Redhill and actually had no interest whatever in civil aviation then. I was consumed entirely by sport, and the two codes of football (round and oval ball) and cricket are still huge interests of mine although these days I'm just a spectator.
It does seem that for whatever reason the advanced stage talks foundered, for a service this year anyway. One of BRS's strengths going back many years and certainly since the airport was privatised is the ability of its senior management team in getting airlines and routes, most of which have succeeded, that to many people including me at times I admit seemed questionable in terms of the catchment's ability to support them. I believe that if anyone can get these long haul routes the BRS team can. I say this as someone who has never worked in the industry. I am a customer, albeit one who for many years has taken an interest in the often arcane practices (to an outsider anyway) of the airline and airport industries.
Dubai would suit me perfectly as my wife and I use Emirates every year to visit our daughter and her family in Australia. However, Emirates currently uses on its UK sectors aircraft that would be too big for BRS's limited operational capabilities.
Considering the many physical and natural obstacles with which the airport has to contend the fact that it is where it is now is little short of remarkable. An enduring frustration is 'what might have been' if BRS was sited at a larger and more accessible location. When the city council moved its airport from Whitchurch to Lulsgate in the 1950s because the former was incapable of being developed to accommodate the larger aircraft then coming into service it was creating an identical problem for future generations.
I was first aware of 'Lulsgate' as many older locals still refer to the airport when it was home to a glider club. As a youngster I lived a couple of miles down the road at Redhill and actually had no interest whatever in civil aviation then. I was consumed entirely by sport, and the two codes of football (round and oval ball) and cricket are still huge interests of mine although these days I'm just a spectator.