QR apre EDI,LCA e DFW, allo studio PRG,AMS,GIG


intendevo comodo per l'utente finale. Arrivare a LCY per chi si occupa di affari credo sia più comodo di LHR

Dipende: sicuramente LCY è comodo per chi lavora dalle parti della City e di Canary Wharf, e per chi abita in zona, ma fare affari a Londra non significa necessariamente dover andare là. Inoltre chi viaggia per affari ha spesso l'esigenza di volare in specifici orari - un unico volo giornaliero comporta uno schedule delay medio piuttosto significativo, quindi molti passeggeri finirebbero a LHR comunque per fruire di voli in altre fasce orarie. Da considerare poi che un 318 probabilmente non riuscirebbe a fare LCY-DOH senza uno scalo per rifornire: lo scalo tecnico disincentiverebbe ulteriormente i passeggeri sul volo originante da Londra.
 
Dipende: sicuramente LCY è comodo per chi lavora dalle parti della City e di Canary Wharf, e per chi abita in zona, ma fare affari a Londra non significa necessariamente dover andare là. Inoltre chi viaggia per affari ha spesso l'esigenza di volare in specifici orari - un unico volo giornaliero comporta uno schedule delay medio piuttosto significativo, quindi molti passeggeri finirebbero a LHR comunque per fruire di voli in altre fasce orarie. Da considerare poi che un 318 probabilmente non riuscirebbe a fare LCY-DOH senza uno scalo per rifornire: lo scalo tecnico disincentiverebbe ulteriormente i passeggeri sul volo originante da Londra.
Assolutamente d'accordo.
 
A quanto pare QR sarebbe intenzionata ad operare anche dal secondo aeroporto di Londra (LGW), oltre ad aprire rotte in Irlanda.
Inoltre il 319 'all-business' su LHR verra' sostituito con il nuovo servizio con 787.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...wick-route-as-heathrow-flight-upgraded-to-787
Qatar Air Mulls Gatwick Route as Heathrow Flight Upgraded to 787


  • London's secondary hub could get first flights from Gulf No. 2
  • Services from Doha to Dublin, Belfast also being evaluated

Qatar Airways Ltd. is examining the business case for its first flights to London Gatwick airport as well as services to Ireland as the second-biggest Gulf airline plots its next moves for expansion in the British Isles.
With slots at London’s crowded Heathrow hub tough to come by, flying to Gatwick would be the next best option for adding seats to the U.K. capital, Richard Oliver, country manager for the U.K. and Ireland, said in an interview.
Qatar Air this week boosted capacity at Heathrow, where it has six daily flights, by dropping its 40-business-seat Airbus Group SE A319 service to Doha in favor of a Boeing Co. 787 with 254 seats. Away from London, it’s looking at serving southwest England and possibly another Scottish airport, Oliver said.

“We still see huge potential for growth in Britain,” Oliver said. “There’s a stable economy, a valuable currency and a firm market.” While Qatar Air’s first deployment of a 787 to the U.K. will cut business berths on the flight by 18 versus the A319, the switch, made Sunday, will still boost revenue, he said.
Flights to Ireland, among options under review, could target either the capital Dublin, competing with Dubai-based Emirates and Abu Dhabi’s Etihad Airways PJSC, or Belfast in Northern Ireland, a location not yet served by any of the three leading Gulf carriers.
Sales on a new route to Birmingham, which starts in March with eight weekly flights, are ahead of expectations, according to Oliver. He said he’d ideally like to offer triple-daily services there, as well on Qatar Air’s Manchester and Edinburgh routes, to match the three waves of departures from the Doha hub.
Bigger wide-body planes may also be deployed in other Heathrow slots, Oliver said. It’s unlikely the carrier will add to its two Airbus A380 services given the size of the superjumbo fleet, which is six strong, with four on order
.