- British Airways just retired its exclusive all-business class jet that only served the incredibly lucrative London-New York route.
- The single Airbus A318 used for the service stretched only eight rows and was fitted with luxurious lie-flat business class seats.
- With 32 seats in total, the aircraft is more like a private jet that used London’s smaller City Airport to directly connect the Big Apple with the UK capital’s financial district.
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British Airways just dealt another blow to its premium customers by retiring its all-business class aircraft offered on the billion-dollar London-New York route, the airline’s flagship.
The service was operated by a VIP-configured Airbus A318 aircraft, the only one of its kind in the British Airways fleet when its retirement was announced in July, and boasted enhanced convenience and luxury to the business travelers that frequented the route. With capacity for only 32 passengers in a premium-configuration, it was the closest thing to a private jet in the airline world.
Launched six years after the Concorde’s retirement, the service once again solidified British Airways as the route’s go-to premium carrier and was the new crown jewel of the airline’s transatlantic offering. While heavy-hitters like the Boeing 777 and now-retired Boeing 747 still dominated the route, the smaller and more exclusive A318 service catered to the airline’s top spenders with a direct link between New York City and London’s financial district.
It was also a bucket list flight for many aviation enthusiasts since the A318 was already itself a rare aircraft on which to fly, let alone on a transatlantic journey and in an all-business class configuration.
Take a look inside the most exclusive aircraft to connect New York and London since the Concorde.
Most people traveling between New York and London on British Airways before the pandemic found themselves either flying on a Boeing 747-400...
Or Boeing 777-200.
The two make up the majority of flights flying the $1 billion route between the two economic hubs but most don't know about the third aircraft that flew British Airways' top clients: the Airbus A318.
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