SunExpress

SunExpress, is a Turkish-German airline based in Antalya.[1] SunExpress was founded in October 1989 as a joint venture between Turkish Airlines and Lufthansa. It operates scheduled and chartered passenger flights to 90 destinations in 30 countries in Europe as well as North Africa, the Mediterranean, Black Sea, and Red Sea.[2] The airline concentrates on international tourism, ethnic travel, and domestic Turkish flights to cities of Anatolia. The total number of SunExpress employees is 5,000.

SunExpress
IATA ICAO Callsign
XQ SXS SUNEXPRESS
Founded1989
Hubs
Frequent-flyer programSunExpress Bonus
Subsidiaries
Fleet size62
Destinations90+
Parent companyTurkish Airlines (50%)
Lufthansa Group (50%)
HeadquartersAntalya, Turkey
Key people
  • Max Kownatzki, CEO
  • Ahmet Fevzi Çalışkan, Deputy CEO
Employees5,000
Websitewww.sunexpress.com

History

SunExpress was founded in Antalya in October 1989 as a joint venture of Turkish Airlines and Lufthansa. Its first flight was in 1990.

SunExpress became the first private airline company to offer international scheduled flights from Turkey with its first Antalya-Frankfurt flight in 2001. SunExpress opened its second base in İzmir and started to operate domestic flights in 2006. With this launch, SunExpress became the first airline company to connect İzmir with Anatolian cities with direct flights in Turkey.

In May 2010, SunExpress took delivery of the first of six newly purchased Boeing 737-800s and launched its new corporate identity including its new logo, aircraft livery, new corporate colours, uniforms and visual identity elements.

SunExpress Deutschland GmbH was founded in 2011. The company started business operations in June 2011. Besides the Turkish destinations on the South Coast, on the Aegean, on the Black Sea and in the East of the country, it also serves – with German registration – destinations along the Mediterranean, Black Sea, North Africa and Red Sea.

SunExpress decided to invest in its building and SunExpress Plaza was built in June 2012. The new company building is environmental friendly, and is located in a natural setting. The architectural theme of the building is transparency and naturalness; therefore each room has been designed so that it has access to natural light and fresh air. The sun is a source for clean energy inside the building. The solar panels on the roof generate enough electricity to supply power to all of the computers. On the exterior of the building, “smart” glass panels have been used to allow sun rays to shine inside the building while blocking out unwanted heat to help reduce cooling costs. Orange, bergamot, and lemon trees have been planted in both the interior and exterior gardens. The building consists of 1 basement and 4 floors which house 250 SunExpress employees in 87 offices. There are several special category spaces incorporating meeting, briefing, training, storage, and various special operation rooms. The building also hosts common archive room, a stationary flight simulator room and a general purpose auditorium.

On 23 June 2020, it has been announced that SunExpress' German subsidiary SunExpress Deutschland would cease operations and be liquidated.[3] Its route network would be partially taken over by SunExpress and Eurowings.[4]

Awards

  • Skytrax World Awards: Fifth best leisure airline in the world (2018 & 2019)[5]
  • Turkey's safest airline (2018) By the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA)[6]
  • Germany's most punctual airline (2018) by Flightright[7]
  • Sixth place in Atmosfair's Airline Index (2018)[8]

Destinations

SunExpress Boeing 737-800 in the old livery
SunExpress Boeing 737-800 in special livery to celebrate the 20th anniversary
SunExpress Boeing 737-800

SunExpress serves the following destinations as of February 2020:[9]

City Country Airport
AalborgDenmarkAalborg Airport
AdanaTurkeyAdana Şakirpaşa Airport
AmsterdamNetherlandsAmsterdam Airport Schiphol
AnkaraTurkeyEsenboğa International Airport
AntalyaTurkeyAntalya AirportHUB
Basel/MulhouseSwitzerland / FranceEuroAirport Basel–Mulhouse–Freiburg
BeirutLebanonBeirut–Rafic Hariri International Airport
BerlinGermanyBerlin Tegel Airport
BillundDenmarkBillund Airport
BodrumTurkeyMilas–Bodrum Airport
BremenGermanyBremen Airport
BrusselsBelgiumBrussels Airport
BucharestRomaniaHenri Coandă International Airport
BudapestHungaryBudapest Ferenc Liszt International Airport
Cologne/BonnGermanyCologne Bonn Airport
CopenhagenDenmarkCopenhagen Airport
CorfuGreeceCorfu International Airport
DalamanTurkeyDalaman Airport
DiyarbakırTurkeyDiyarbakır Airport
DortmundGermanyDortmund Airport
DublinIrelandDublin Airport
DüsseldorfGermanyDüsseldorf Airport
Edremit / KörfezTurkeyEdremit Körfez Airport
EindhovenThe NetherlandsEindhoven Airport
ElazığTurkeyElazığ Airport
EnfidhaTunisiaEnfidha–Hammamet International Airport
ErbilIraqErbil International Airport
ErcanCyprusErcan International Airport
EskişehirTurkeyEskişehir Hasan Polatkan Airport
ErzurumTurkeyErzurum Airport
FrankfurtGermanyFrankfurt Airport
GaziantepTurkeyOğuzeli Airport
GdanskPolandGdańsk Lech Wałęsa Airport
GothenburgSwedenGöteborg Landvetter Airport
HamburgGermanyHamburg Airport
HanoverGermanyHannover Airport
HatayTurkeyHatay Airport
HelsinkiFinlandHelsinki Airport
HeraklionGreeceHeraklion International Airport
HurghadaEgyptHurghada International Airport
IzmirTurkeyAdnan Menderes AirportHUB
KarsTurkeyKars Airport
KatowicePolandKatowice Airport
KayseriTurkeyErkilet International Airport
KonyaTurkeyKonya Airport
Lamezia TermeItalyLamezia Terme International Airport
Leipzig/HalleGermanyLeipzig/Halle Airport
LondonUnited KingdomLondon Luton Airport
Lyon Saint-ExuperyFranceLyon–Saint Exupéry Airport
MalatyaTurkeyMalatya Erhaç Airport
Marsa AlamEgyptMarsa Alam International Airport
MarseilleFranceMarseille Provence Airport
MilanItalyMilan Malpensa Airport
MunichGermanyMunich Airport
Münster/OsnabrückGermanyMünster Osnabrück International Airport
NurembergGermanyNuremberg Airport
Ordu/Giresun[10]TurkeyOrdu-Giresun Airport
OsloNorwayOslo Airport, Gardermoen
PaderbornGermanyPaderborn Lippstadt Airport
ParisFranceCharles de Gaulle Airport
PoznanPolandPoznań–Ławica Henryk Wieniawski Airport
PragueCzech RepublicVáclav Havel Airport Prague
SaarbrückenGermanySaarbrücken Airport
Saint Petersburg[11]RussiaPulkovo Airport
SkopjeMacedoniaSkopje Airport
SamsunTurkeySamsun-Çarşamba Airport
StockholmSwedenStockholm Arlanda Airport
StuttgartGermanyStuttgart Airport
TrabzonTurkeyTrabzon Airport
VanTurkeyVan Ferit Melen Airport
VarnaBulgariaVarna Airport
ViennaAustriaVienna International Airport
WarsawPolandWarsaw Frederic Chopin Airport
WroclawPolandCopernicus Airport Wrocław
ZürichSwitzerlandZurich Airport

Fleet

As of October 2020, the SunExpress fleet consists of the following aircraft:[12]

Aircraft In service Orders[13][14] Passengers Notes
Boeing 737-800 62 189
Boeing 737 MAX 8 42[15] TBA
Total 62 42

References

  1. "Imprint." SunExpress. Retrieved 19 February 2020.
  2. "Company Profile".
  3. "aviation24.be". Aviation24.be. 2020-06-23.
  4. aerotelegraph.com (German) 23 June 2020
  5. https://www.worldairlineawards.com/worlds-best-leisure-airlines-2019/. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  6. "Company Profile".
  7. "Company Profile".
  8. https://edition.cnn.com/travel/article/eco-friendly-airlines-atmosfair/index.html. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  9. "Flight Connections Winter 2019/2020". SunExpress. Retrieved 19 February 2020.
  10. "SunExpress schedules German routes from Ordu Giresun in S17". routesonline.com. 2 March 2017. Retrieved 2 March 2017.
  11. "SunExpress plans new routes in S18". routesonline.com. 16 November 2017.
  12. "Fleet". sunexpress.com.
  13. "SunExpress places order for 50 Boeing aircraft". reuters.com. Retrieved 19 February 2014.
  14. "Boeing Inks New Deal With SunExpress Worth Billions". fool.com. Retrieved 21 February 2014.
  15. Perry, Dominic. "DUBAI: SunExpress tops up Max orders with 10-unit deal". FlightGlobal. Retrieved 18 November 2019.

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