The Denver Post

Direct flight to Dublin coming in May to DIA

Irish carrier to offer service 4 days a week beginning on May 17

- By Judith Kohler jkohler@denverpost.com

After years of considerin­g Denver, Aer Lingus, Ireland’s flagship airline, will launch its inaugural flight from Denver Internatio­nal Airport to Dublin on May 17.

A group of Aer Lingus representa­tives met and mingled Monday morning with local business and civic leaders, tourism officials and Ireland natives excited for the start of direct flights from the Mile High City to the Emerald Isle.

“It’s 116 days until heels up. Not that we’re counting,” said Yvonne Muldoon, director of sales for Aer Lingus.

Flights from Denver to Dublin will depart four days a week: Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Sunday. To start, the service will be seasonal, running from May to Oct. 29. Jim Bochneak, the airline’s regional sales manager for the western U.S., said the season could be extended, depending on the kind of support there is in Denver. After attending the Denver Travel Show at the Colorado Convention Center over the weekend, Bochneak and Muldoon believe the support for service to Dublin is strong.

“We are genuinely overwhelme­d with the support,” Muldoon said.

Seattle, San Francisco and Los Angeles are the three Aer Lingus routes on the West Coast. In all, the airline offers 21 nonstop routes from the U.S. to Dublin. Some of the European cities Aer Lingus connects to are Edinburgh, Scotland; London; Paris; Rome; Geneva; Amsterdam and Barcelona, Spain.

Aer Lingus will add Minneapoli­s- St. Paul to its routes beginning April 29.

Other European cities where passengers can travel nonstop from Denver are London; Paris; Zurich; Reykjavik, Iceland; and Munich and Frankfurt, Germany.

Aer Lingus takes its time to make a business case for adding new routes, Muldoon said. “I believe Denver to Dublin has been under review for over six years.”

After the pandemic, Denver really started to rise on the list of opportunit­ies, Muldoon said. It is an untapped market where interest is high in traveling on to Europe.

She said whether the service is extended past October will depend on the volume of business.

“I’m over from the head office. I wanted to get a feel for what the demand was on the ground, speak to the local community and just get a feel for what the support is like,” Muldoon said. “It’s been phenomenal.”

The first flight from Denver to Dublin, which will take 91/2 hours, is nearly full, Muldoon said.

The airline will fly the Airbus A330, a wide-body aircraft.

Both business and tourism representa­tives said service from Denver to Dublin will be a big benefit.

“It’s a huge opportunit­y because a lot of U. S. companies have a corporate presence in Ireland and the Dublin area,” said Maggie Fouquet, president and CEO of the Internatio­nal Business Circle in Denver.

All nonstop flights from

Ireland to the U. S are precleared by U. S. Customs and Immigratio­n Services at the Dublin and Shannon airports. “That’s a big timesaver,” Fouquet said.

A big benefit for Bill Graebel’s company, Denver- based Graebel’s Relocation Services Worldwide, is that one of its offices is about 40 miles north of the Dublin airport. Graebel said it will be much more efficient flying into Dublin, rather than going through Heathrow Airport in London or f lying to Boston, New York or Chicago on the return trip.

“I think it will be good for tourism in the area” as well, Graebel said.

And tourists from Ireland will likely appreciate direct f lights to Colorado so they can explore the West, Graebel added.

Muldoon said Aer Lingus will work with tourist boards in Colorado to pitch the state to people in Ireland. Tim Wolfe, director of the Colorado Tourism Office, said the state’s efforts to attract tourists from Ireland has been un

derway and the Denver-toDublin air service will increase the momentum.

“Any time that you add a link to an internatio­nal destinatio­n, that’s huge for both our residents but also four guests and visitors that come to Colorado,” Wolfe said.

Susan Morrice is part of the Irish diaspora in Colorado that Aer Lingus hopes to tap. She has lived in the Denver area for 40 years and travels four or five times a year back to her home country, but she can’t wait to fly nonstop to Dublin. Patricia Fitzpatric­k, who lives in Ireland, works with Morrice and flies to Denver seven or eight times a year, is likewise eager for the new service.

“I don’t like going to London. It’s another day’s travel,” Fitzpatric­k said. “This is perfect.”

Fitzpatric­k and Morrice think Colorado should sell its skiing to lure more Irish tourists.

“They need to tell the Irish that the skiing here is actually better than in Europe,” Morrice said.

“And it lasts longer,” Fitzpatric­k said.

Will the two be on the in

augural flight?

“We need to look into it,” Morrice said. “If we’re not

on that first one, which we could be, we’ll be on the second.”

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