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This is a list of destinations served and formerly served by easyJet as of October 2024, the operations of which collectively include those of easyJet Europe, easyJet Switzerland, and easyJet UK. [ 1 ] [ 2 ]
EasyJet plc (styled as easyJet) is a British multinational low-cost airline group headquartered at London Luton Airport. [3] It operates domestic and international scheduled services on 927 routes in more than 34 countries via its affiliate airlines EasyJet UK, EasyJet Switzerland, and EasyJet Europe. [4]
Exclusive: Summer flights from Birmingham to Barcelona are selling for as little as £26 one-way on a range of dates in June Fares war steps up from Birmingham airport as easyJet opens base ...
This marked the first time that Eastern Airways were to operate scheduled flights from the airport, as well as the first ever route to Southampton and the resumption of the Birmingham service that was lost after Monarch's collapse in October 2017. [25] Both routes ceased in 2022. June 2021 saw a new EasyJet route to Edinburgh.
The Birmingham Maglev, opened in 1984, was the first commercial Maglev transport system in the world. Constructed during the early 1980s by a consortium under contract from West Midlands County Council , the system was fully automated and used an elevated concrete guideway (the majority of which has been reused for the current Air-Rail Link ...
The aircraft of the Easyjet group have the range to reach e.g. Cape Verde, Senegal, Gambia and Dubai from a European base. 17:18, 1 November 2022: 680 × 540 (447 KB) WikiPate: removed Romania, Norway and Estonia: 20:29, 19 February 2022: 680 × 540 (447 KB) Robert7211: Cross-wiki upload from en.wikipedia.org
The airline was established following the UK referendum vote to leave the European Union and the airline's preparation against possible outcomes of Brexit.EasyJet structured itself as a pan-European airline group with three different air operator's certificates, each based in Austria, Switzerland and the United Kingdom.
"Map of Air Routes and Landing Places in Great Britain, as temporarily arranged by the Air Ministry for civilian flying", published in 1919, showing Aldergrove as a "civil station". Royal Air Force B-24 Liberators in Belfast, c.1943 British Airways BAe ATP in Belfast, 1994