The Daily Telegraph - Saturday - Travel

All aboard the ‘superyacht in the sky’

Airlines are placing orders for the futuristic Airlander 10 ‘hybrid aircraft’ – due to take off in 2028, says Greg Dickinson

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Anew fleet of airships could hit the skies by 2028, with UK-based Hybrid Air Vehicles (HAV) revealing plans for a new manufactur­ing facility in South Yorkshire.

The production centre in Doncaster is where the Airlander 10, described by HAV as the world’s “most efficient large aircraft”, will be developed (subject to planning permission). HAV will have the capability to produce up to 24 of the aircraft per year.

Ed Miliband, the MP for Doncaster North, said: “This is absolutely fantastic news. This new production site will create over 1,200 much-needed highly-skilled jobs… as well as bring green air travel a step closer.”

Despite appearance­s, the Airlander 10 is not a traditiona­l airship but rather a “hybrid aircraft” reliant on buoyant lift from helium, aerodynami­c lift from its shape, and vectoring engine power for take-off and landing.

The Airlander 10 will have the capacity to carry 100 passengers (an average Boeing 737-800 carries 189) or 10 tonnes of payload, and the value of HAV’s order book currently stands in excess of £1 billion. The Spanish regional carrier Air Nostrum will be the first airline to put it into service, with a scheduled launch date of 2028 – two years later than originally planned.

When The Telegraph visited HAV’s Bedfordshi­re headquarte­rs in 2023, chief executive Tom Grundy said: “We’re working with Air Nostrum to create a network of city-to-city connection­s, much faster than a car, with 10 per cent of the carbon footprint of a flight, and affordable to the customer.”

Air Nostrum recently doubled its order to 20 ships, in a bid to expand its network from Spain into the Mediterran­ean and Malta. Potential routes include Malta to Gozo and Malta to Sicily. Other links to Italy and to Tunisia are in discussion. The Airlander 10 will have a top speed of around 100mph, closer to a car or train than a plane, meaning it is restricted in terms of how far it can travel without stopping. But reduced security protocols should speed up the boarding process.

HAV has also been in talks with the Highlands and Islands Enterprise and

Loganair to discuss developing A to B connection­s between Scottish islands. Possible destinatio­ns that could benefit from Airlander 10 services (both for passengers and freight) include Kirkwall, Papa Westray, Stornoway, Barra, Inverness, Sumburgh and Scapa Bay; viability surveys have been conducted in each of these locations

HAV has also had discussion­s with luxury tour operators to discuss the potential for safaris in the sky, or Northern Lights viewing experience­s. Among them is Grands Espaces, an eco-tourism company which intends to use the Airlander for trips to the Arctic Circle. For 25 years, the firm has operated polar exploratio­n tours on small boats, and now plans to take passengers to the skies.

Christian Kempf, founder of Grands Espaces, said: “We have worked for four years with HAV to prepare for this project and partnershi­p. The signing of this reservatio­n agreement is a significan­t step forward. We find in HAV the pioneering and innovative spirit that resonates with us, and we are confident that we will achieve great things together.”

While the Airlander project is in motion now, it got off to a rocky start. In 2016, the first prototype Airlander nosedived at low speed during a test flight from Cardington Airfield in Bedfordshi­re, damaging part of the flight deck. This, and the fact that some said it resembled a “flying bum”, made national news, while the subsequent successful test flights did not attract as much attention.

In 2017, after a successful test flight, the Airlander broke free from its mooring mast, triggering a safety system which ripped open and deflated the hull. As a result of the two accidents, HAV introduced improvemen­ts to the design, including an air cushion landing system which allows the aircraft to land on any reasonably flat surface via six inflatable studs.

 ?? ?? It relies on buoyant lift from helium, aerodynami­c lift from its shape, and engine power for take-off
It relies on buoyant lift from helium, aerodynami­c lift from its shape, and engine power for take-off
 ?? ?? iWindow seats: a computer generated image of the Airlander’s sleek interior
g ‘Closer to a car or train than a plane’: the hybrid craft will have a top speed of only 100mph
iWindow seats: a computer generated image of the Airlander’s sleek interior g ‘Closer to a car or train than a plane’: the hybrid craft will have a top speed of only 100mph
 ?? ?? i Early adopter: Greg Dickinson is given a preview of the Airlander 10 in March 2023
i Early adopter: Greg Dickinson is given a preview of the Airlander 10 in March 2023

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