The Prince George Citizen

First-class upgrade

New colours, uniforms, cabins and routes for Air Canada

- Steve MacNAULL Kelowna Daily Courier

Sharp new black, white and red livery. Fashionabl­e and functional new uniforms. New cabin designs. And new routes from major hubs to Frankfurt, London’s Gatwick, Taipei, Nagoya, Reykjavik, Shanghai, Algiers, Berlin, Mumbai and Marseille.

All were unveiled by Air Canada, the nation’s largest and oldest airline, in a flashy multi-media show recently at Vancouver Airport and simultaneo­usly at Toronto and Montreal airports.

While Prince George isn’t getting any new routes, it will see the new plane exteriors, interiors and uniforms as Air Canada flies in and out of the local airport.

Air Canada serves Prince George with multiple non-stops daily to Vancouver.

“This is about more than just a new coat of paint,” said Air Canada chief operations officer Klaus Goersch at the event at the airline’s Vancouver Airport hangar.

“This is about the evolution of Air Canada and a new era in aviation. We’re taking the very best of Canada to the world. And nothing says that louder than the maple leaf.”

As such, the new-look exteriors of airplanes sheds the light blue in favour of clean white with Air Canada in black lettering and a distinctiv­e black tail with a re-imagined red maple leaf logo at its centre.

The airline showcased the new livery to great effect by making the announceme­nt in front of a giant white drape, which dropped during a punctuatio­n in the music to reveal a 44.5-metre-long Airbus A321-200 jet decked out in the ABOVE: A Dreamliner sporting Air Canada’s new colours soars above a bank of clouds. BELOW: Klaus Goersch, Air Canada’s chief operations officer, poses with an Airbus A321-200 painted in the airline’s new colour scheme, including a redesigned maple leaf logo. new colours.

There will also be a black mask around the cockpit’s windshield to give aircraft the facial markings of a bird.

The bellies of planes will also be black, a tribute to the country’s vast frozen bodies of water and stark Canadian Shield, which appear black in winter.

The black belly is embellishe­d with the red maple leaf logo as well, not that anyone is going to see it from the ground when the plane is at 35,000 feet.

Goersch touted the rebranding as a the perfect way to celebrate Canada’s sesquicent­ennial and Air Canada’s 80th birthday.

All-new Air Canada aircraft will be delivered in the new livery and the airline’s entire fleet of 300 planes will be repainted starting immediatel­y and continue over the next couple of years.

Updates to interiors have already started, replacing blue décor and seats with cream, grey and black features to match exteriors.

Pilot and flight attendant uniforms are also being replaced to align with the new hues.

Canadian designer Christophe­r Bates, who is now based in the fashion capital of Milan, created charcoal grey wool uniforms for flight attendants and black suits for pilots to replace the old navy uniforms.

“Of course, there will always be a bit of red in the uniforms, we’re Air Canada, after all,” said in-flight service vice-president Renee Smith-Valade.

“The uniforms are really all about a classic, trim fit that’s worldly, but Canadian, and looks good and feels good.”

While previously announced, the unveilings reiterated a myriad of new routes Air Canada will start flying this year.

Starting June 1 and June 8, respective­ly, the carrier will fly non-stop between Vancouver and Frankfurt and Vancouver and London’s Gatwick using Boeing 787 Dreamliner­s.

Non-stop flights VancouverT­aipei and Vancouver-Nagoya will also be launched this year.

Last year, the airline introduced the Vancouver-New Delhi, Vancouver-Dublin, Vancouver-Osaka and Vancouver-Brisbane routes.

In 2017, the airline will also start flying Toronto-Mumbai, Toronto-Berlin, Toronto-Reykjavik, Montreal-Shanghai, MontrealAl­giers, Montreal-Marseille and Montreal-Reykjavik.

In 2016, Air Canada launched new routes Toronto-London’s Gatwick, Toronto-Seoul, TorontoDel­hi, Toronto-Amsterdam, Toronto-Dubai, Toronto-Prague, Toronto-Budapest, Toronto-Warsaw, Toronto-Glasgow, MontrealVe­nice, Montreal-Mexico City, Montreal-Casablanca and Montreal-Lyon

 ?? AIR CANADA HANDOUT PHOTO/PHOTO BY STEVE MACNAULL ??
AIR CANADA HANDOUT PHOTO/PHOTO BY STEVE MACNAULL
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