Crossair


Crossair Ltd. Co. for Regional European Air Transport was a regional airline headquartered on the grounds of EuroAirport Basel-Mulhouse-Freiburg in Saint-Louis, Haut-Rhin, France, near Basel, Switzerland. It became Swiss International Air Lines after taking over most of the assets of Swissair following that airline's bankruptcy in 2002.

History

Founded as a private company under the name Business Flyers Basel AG by Moritz Suter, it changed to Crossair on 18 November 1978, before the beginning of scheduled services on 2 July 1979 with flights from Zürich to Nuremberg, Innsbruck and Klagenfurt. It was headquartered at Zurich International Airport in Kloten in 1985.
It added charter services for major shareholder Swissair in November 1995. On 31 March 2002, Swissair passed out of existence as
most of its assets were taken over by Crossair which then changed names to Swiss International Air Lines.
tail on a Crossair MD-83 in a McDonald's livery to promote the restaurant.

Fleet

Crossair operated the following aircraft.

AircraftTotalDeliveredRetiredNotes
Piper L-4J11975
Cessna 310P11975
Cessna 421B11976
Cessna 55111977First Jet Operated by Crossair
Fairchild Swearingen Metro II31979May have been used up to the late 80s or early 90s
Fairchild Swearingen Metro II91980sMay have been used up to the late 80s or early 90s
Saab 3403419842002flew mainly from Basel as well as Lugano and Zürich.
Replaced by Embraer ERJ-145. One crashed as Flight 498
Fokker 50519901995
Fokker F27 Friendship319841984
BAe 146319901994
Avro RJ 85419932002named Kärpf, Piz Julier, Montchaibeux, Lindenberg
Avro RJ 1001619952002All were named. One written off as Flight 3597
Saab 20003219942002all were stored or sold, though what happened to one is not known
was world's largest operator of the type in 2000
flown mainly from Basel as well as Lugano and Zürich
replaced by Embraer ERJ 145. One written off as Flight 850
McDonnell Douglas MD-83122004some were named, all were sold, though what happened to one is not known
mostly used on larger routes from Zurich, and some from Basel
Embraer ERJ 145 LU252000all were named or sold
used on routes from all three hubs
replaced SAAB aircraft
Embraer ERJ 145 LR12002named Gemsstock
used on routes from all three hubs
replaced SAAB aircraft

Destinations

Crossair flew from Basel, Bern, Geneva, Lugano and Zurich. Crossair was very interested in serving from several hubs and, therefore set up a multi-hub business plan. Crossair set up a Eurocross scheme from their Basel base which was set up to help them serve smaller airports and transfer their passengers to larger hubs with short transit times This helped Crossair link with their partners, such as Swissair from Zurich. Crossair also operated flights between Swiss airports.

Incidents and accidents

Crossair was headquartered on the grounds of EuroAirport Basel-Mulhouse-Freiburg in Saint-Louis, Haut-Rhin, France, near Basel, Switzerland. In 2002 the name "Crossair" was replaced with "Swiss International Air Lines" on the head office building.