Freedom Air

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Freedom Air
IATA
SJ
ICAO
FOM
Callsign
FREE AIR
Founded 1995
Hubs Auckland International Airport
Focus cities Hamilton International Airport
Alliance Star Alliance (affiliate member under parent company Air New Zealand)
Fleet size 12 (Zeal320 aircraft used)
Destinations 11
Parent company Air New Zealand Ltd.
Headquarters Auckland, New Zealand
Key people Rob Fyfe (CEO, Air New Zealand); Stephen Jones (General Manager, Zeal320)
Website: http://www.freedomair.com

Freedom Air was Air New Zealand Group's low-cost airline which operated from December 1995 to March 2008. It ran scheduled passenger services from New Zealand to Australia and Fiji and charter services within New Zealand. Its main base was Auckland International Airport.[1]

Contents

[edit] History

The airline was established in 1995 as a response to the commencement of discount services between Australia and New Zealand by Kiwi Airlines[2] and started operations on 8 December 1995 with a single Boeing 757. It was formed as South Pacific Air Charters by Mount Cook Airline. It was later wholly owned by Air New Zealand.

By 2004 its fleet had expanded to five Boeing 737-300[3] aircraft and it was providing direct non-stop services to the Australian cities of Brisbane, Gold Coast, Sydney and Melbourne from Hamilton, Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch, Dunedin and Palmerston North. It briefly operated on the New Zealand main trunk domestic routes such as Auckland–Christchurch, but ceased these services to concentrate on providing value trans-Tasman flights.[2]

The Freedom Air fleet at March 2007[1] consisted of 12 Airbus A320-200. In June 2006, aircraft from Freedom Air were combined with Air New Zealand's fleet of Airbus A320-200 under the Air Operators Certificate (AOC) of Zeal320 Limited, which was then the sole operator of the Air New Zealand Group's Airbus fleet.[4] Currently Zeal320 has one aircraft (ZK-OJO) painted in Freedom Air livery.[5] As such, Freedom Air has no aircraft or current Air Operators Certificate, and Freedom Air is no longer an operational entity.[6]

Air New Zealand ceased all Freedom Air operations from the end of March 2008.[7]

[edit] Destinations

Freedom Air flew to six destinations in New Zealand and four in Australia.[8] All flights ended on March 30, 2008, being replaced (with the exception of Palmerston North, which are now operated by other ANZ subsidiaries) by Air New Zealand flights.[9]

A Freedom Air Airbus A320 in Dunedin
A Freedom Air Airbus A320 in Dunedin

[edit] References

[edit] External links