British Airways, preparing for intense press coverage of the final week
of Concorde operations featuring 20 farewell flights, will soon unveil
the final resting places of its five remaining models that are still
flying.
The carrier last Tuesday finished its three-city North American
"farewell tour" with a Concorde flight from London Heathrow to
Washington Dulles. BA is now gearing up for 20 individual flights
between Oct. 18 and Oct. 24, the final day of service. During the week,
Concorde will carry up to 2,000 passengers, a weekly record for Concorde
during its 27 years in service.
Unlike Air France, which quietly retired its last Concorde in the
spring, BA all summer has held flashy, global promotions and contests
for trips on the final flights. The last flight on which customers could
buy seats was BA001 from Heathrow to New York Kennedy on Oct. 23, but it
has already sold out, executives said. BA002, flying from New York to
London, is for invited guests and will carry mostly executives, VIPs and
television reporters.
In addition to the final week's transatlantic flights, more than 1,000
contest winners and guests will be a part of a U.K. farewell tour taking
Concorde to Birmingham, Belfast, Manchester, Cardiff and Edinburgh,
capped with a series of three farewell supersonic flights on Oct. 24,
arriving from New York, Edinburgh, and a circular tour over the Bay of
Biscay. The plan is to have all three Concordes land in succession on
Heathrow's north runway.
While BA did not corroborate it, sources said BA will start taking its
Concordes out of service next week. Barring last-minute changes,
aircraft G-BOAD will end its career at the Intrepid Air and Space museum
in New York City. That same week, aircraft BOAC will go to the
Manchester, U.K., Airport Viewing Park. In early November, BOAE will
travel to Seattle with at least one refueling stop, to be donated to
that city's Museum of Flight. It is believed that BOAG might be donated
to a Barbados group with a final flight in November.
Preliminary plans call for the last Concorde flight to be on Nov. 17,
when BOAF -- the last Concorde ever built -- travels to Filton, near
Bristol, U.K., where it would be the main feature at a proposed Filton
Aviation Heritage Center. Filton is where the plane's Rolls Royce/SNECMA
Olympus engines were tested and built.
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