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BA and Virgin celebrate US re-opening with a historic parallel take-off – and I’m on board!

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Today, Monday 8th November, is the first day in 601 days that the United States is open to visitors and tourists flying from the UK.

The re-opening has taken longer than expected – several industry pundits predicted it would happen much sooner alongside the G7 Summit in Cornwall in June – but it is better late than never.

It feels like things have finally come full circle. I (Rhys) was on holiday in Australia when Donald Trump announced the travel ban. I managed to piece together our article on my phone during an eight hour drive to Byron Bay (I was a passenger ….) so that it could run the following morning. I don’t think anyone was expecting the ban to last for over 18 months.

BA Virgin USA reopening

Record-breaking dual take-off

To mark the reopening both airlines have come together in a show of unity to stage a joint press trip which I will be on today. You can follow along with the celebrations on our Instagram page.

British Airways has brought back its BA1 flight designation, previously used for Concorde and the ‘baby bus’ all-business A318 flights from London City Airport, for this special occasion.

If the weather behaves, the celebrations will feature a unique synchronised dual take-off – the first of its kind for two commercial flights at Heathrow.

(You may remember something similar was originally planned for BA’s Boeing 747 farewell. Poor weather conditions meant the occasion had to be postponed but the plans have been dusted off for the US re-opening.)

Both British Airways and Virgin Atlantic will fly their flagship A350-1000 aircraft with the latest business class seats. If you want to track the flights via FlightRadar or similar they are:

  • BA1, departing 8:30am from Heathrow’s 27R runway
  • VS3, also departing 8:30am from Heathrow’s 27L runway
BA and Virgin taxxing at Heathrow

A synchronised take-off is a more complex affair than you might think, as Heathrow operations cannot be paused if there are any delays.

The flights will have to leave their stands on schedule and both BA and Virgin will have to liaise with Air Traffic Control to make sure they both arrive at their respective runways at the same moment, taking into account the different distances from terminal to runway and other aircraft movements.

Why is this so important?

The news of the reopening is especially important to both British Airways and Virgin Atlantic, both of whom make their bread and butter on transatlantic routes.

BA Virgin USA reopening 2

To give you a sense of just how important the reopening is, BA’s London Heathrow – New York-JFK flights formed the only billion-dollar airline route in the world in 2019, according to OAG. There’s a lot of money at stake.

Cirium tells us there is already a 21% increase in flights between the UK and US this month versus October. The number is likely to increase as both Virgin Atlantic and British Airways gradually re-instate their US route networks.

Sean Doyle, CEO of British Airways said:

“After more than 600 days of separation, today is our moment to celebrate the UK-US reopening. We’re setting aside rivalry and for the first time ever, British Airways and Virgin Atlantic aircraft will be seen taking-off together to mark the vital importance of the transatlantic corridor“

Transatlantic connectivity is vital for the UK’s economic recovery, which is why we’ve been calling for the safe reopening of the UK-US travel corridor for such a long time. We must now look forward with optimism, get trade and tourism back on track and allow friends and families to connect once again.”

Whilst Shai Weiss, Sean’s counterpart at Virgin Atlantic said:

“Today is a time for celebration, not rivalry.  Together with British Airways we are delighted to mark today’s important milestone, which finally allows consumers and businesses to book travel with confidence.  The US has been our heartland for more than 37 years and we are simply not Virgin without the Atlantic.  We’ve been steadily ramping up flying to destinations including Boston, New York, Orlando, Los Angeles and San Francisco, and we can’t wait to fly our customers safely to their favourite US cities to reconnect with loved ones and colleagues.

“As the UK forges its recovery from the pandemic, the reopening of the transatlantic corridor and the lifting of Presidential Order 212F acknowledges the great progress both nations have made in rolling out successful vaccine programmes. The UK will now be able to strengthen ties with our most important economic partner, the US, through boosting trade and tourism. We are thankful to Prime Minister Johnson and the UK Government, the Biden administration and our industry partners for their support in removing these barriers and allowing free travel between our countries to resume.”

Even Grant Shapps chimed in:

“This historic event marks a significant moment for the aviation sector. Transatlantic travel has long been at the heart of UK aviation and I’m delighted to see flights return in time for Thanksgiving and Christmas.

“Thanks to the work of industry and the US-UK Experts Working Group, these vitally important flight routes will help boost the economy, protect and create British jobs and through the work of the Jet Zero Council help to build back greener.”

We will run a second article later today with photos and video from the event. Check back to HfP during the morning – we’ll have official pictures from the two airlines along with my own personal shots (if the aircraft wi-fi is working …..).

Head for Points made a financial contribution to the Woodland Trust as part of this trip. The Woodland Trust creates and manages forests in the UK in accordance with the Woodland Carbon Code.

Comments (128)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • tony says:

    If US media reports are to be believed I guess we can look forward to a first hand account this afternoon of just how horrific those queues are at immigration then, too?

    • Worksop Dave says:

      That’s possible at any time isn’t it? I’ve previously waited 3 hours

    • Simon Barlow says:

      Exactly, and an update on how Rhys found the extra documentation and testing would be good to hear as well.

      • Anna says:

        Indeed – I shudder to think of the way US immigration officials will respond to someone having the wrong test result!

        • Andrew says:

          You won’t have been able to board the fight with the wrong test result though.

    • Andrew says:

      That’s the benefit of flying BA into a near-dedicated terminal at JFK. If you’re off your flight first then you’ll likely be the first ones in the queue. But even through Rhys is flying virgin, that time of day should be reasonably quiet – the other European carriers won’t be arriving that early in the morning.

      • Andrew H says:

        Choice of seat flying in to JFK is critical. Learnt the hard way…

        • BuildBackBetter says:

          Doesn’t the benefit of a seat in the front help you in any terminal? How’s that different for JFK? Surely it depends on how many flights arrive at same time?

    • Paul says:

      This takes “geekness” to new levels!:)

      Has anyone opened a book on which aircraft will be airborne first. Let’s face it, these two airlines despise one another and neither is beyond wanting to trumpet that it was first!

  • Paul says:

    How are Virgin Atlantic doing these days? It’s been dire straits at points and yet all seems very quiet now.

    • AJA says:

      I think they’re still not out of danger. According to the Guardian in their article on today’s joint PR exercise:

      “Weiss said the airline’s battle for survival was “still with us, and cost discipline remains. But with the opening of the US market, we’re at 60% of our capacity, and we feel more confident than in a long time about the prospects.””

  • Phil G says:

    Last time BA & Virgin worked together resulted in a large fine and pitiful refunds to clients if I remember correctly

  • Sam G says:

    From what I’ve read the airlines are chiefly responsible for the covid doc check and immigration will just be normal doc checks. Queues are more of a concern due to the sudden increase in volume, lots of new passports/ESTAs etc

    • Paul says:

      Yes I agree, there will be limited if any checks as it’s done before you board as indeed are most immigration checks via the ESTA process and the APIS data sent days in advance and again just before push back. My last 4 visits pre pandemic had waiting times under 10 minutes at JFK, DFW. My last awful experience in the USA was a decade ago in Boston and just 2 weeks ago in T2 at LHR

    • Lyn says:

      They have also been doing random checks of the test results immediately after people exit their plane in the US.

      I don’t know if random in this case means random people on every flight, or just on some flights.

  • AJA says:

    I wonder which airline Rhys is on? I’m guessing Virgin.

    Whichever, enjoy. I do hope they manage the simultaneous take off too.

  • Mattb says:

    So who should we expect to touch down first, you can’t tell me the pilots don’t have a few quid on that.

  • Aaron C says:

    This was a missed opportunity to do one of those “we review every class of travel on the same flight” articles but on both airlines.

  • NFH says:

    Will they be also be landing simultaneously at JFK on parallel runways?

    • Gruntfuttock says:

      Check back in under 7hrs time, we’ll see if Kennedy Approach is as accommodating given the traffic complexities there. Depends on headwinds and a whole host of other factors.

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