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A history of BA1, the (scrapped) London City to New York JFK flight

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Back in 2020, as airlines across the world moved to shore up their finances in the face of the pandemic, British Airways announced the discontinuation of BA1, the all-business class flight from London City Airport to New York JFK.

BA1, often affectionately known as the ‘babybus’ since it was operated by the only A318 in the British Airways fleet, offered a unique transatlantic experience – ‘Club World London City’.

We published a version of this article at the time of the closure announcement. I thought, almost four years later, it was worth dusting off for the benefit of readers who may never have flown on it – or perhaps not even heard of it.

History of BA1, London City to New York JFK flight

The writing was already on the wall for BA1 before the pandemic.  A year earlier, Rob wrote this speculative article in which he said that

“if you want to fly it, I would try to do it sooner rather than later, because it may not be around for long.”

The limitations of operating at City Airport, the tired seats, the lack of ‘real’ inflight entertainment, the continued rollout of Global Entry and the forthcoming opening of what would become the Elizabeth Line meant that a direct New York service from London City was losing its USP.

A brief history of BA’s all-business class BA1 flight

For many years, flight number BA1 was associated with the Concorde route from Heathrow to New York. This was not the flight number Concorde used when it entered service in 1977, however, and only began to be used in the mid eighties.  BA3 and BA4 were used for the second pair of daily Concorde flights.

In 2003 Concorde was retired and the BA1 flight number was retired with it.

In the mid noughties, a number of small new airlines launched dedicated business-only flights between the US and Europe. Eos and Maxjet operated flights from Stansted to New York, Las Vegas and Los Angeles.  At the time, both Lufthansa and SWISS also operated premium-only flights to the Big Apple from mainland Europe.

This caught the attention of Virgin Atlantic, which in 2007 boldly announced its intentions to launch what The Times called an ‘elite fleet’ from European airports to the US. According to a spokesman at the time, the flights would ‘certainly’ be operating within eighteen months of the announcement with a subfleet of 15 aircraft.

That never materialised, of course. The financial crisis meant that business travel was depressed, and Virgin Atlantic put its plans on ice. That didn’t stop British Airways, which announced plans to launch a rival all-business class flight from London City to New York JFK.

History of BA1, London City to New York JFK flight

British Airways bought two new Airbus A318 aircraft to serve the route and fitted them out with 32 seats in a 2-2 seat arrangement.

For whatever reason – perhaps aircraft width or seat weight – BA chose not to use its yin-yang Club World seat but introduced an entirely new seat that was all forward facing.

History of BA1, London City to New York JFK flight

Due to take-off restrictions at London City Airport (Canary Wharf is directly in front of the runway) the A318 was not able to take-off with a full tank of fuel: the weight would prevent it from being able to climb steeply enough. This meant that the aircraft had to make a 40 minute refuelling stop in Shannon on the outbound.

At the time, Shannon was one of the few airports outside the US to offer a US customs and immigration service.  This allowed travellers to clear the US border in Ireland and land in New York JFK as domestic passengers. This saved considerable time given the queues that US customs and immigration were renowned for.

History of BA1, London City to New York JFK flight

The return flight was direct as there were no take-off restrictions.  Landing into London City required a particularly steep approach for which the aircraft was modified and pilots specially trained.

The flights launched twice daily in the middle of a global recession in 2009 bearing flight numbers BA1, BA2, BA3 and BA4. For a long time, in addition to its unique Club seats, the flights also enjoyed catering which was significantly better than what you would have got from Heathrow. Passengers loved it.

(The fact that the flight earned 210 British Airways Executive Club tier points each way, compared to 140 each way in Club World out of Heathrow, didn’t hurt either.)

Although London City has no lounges, British Airways turned the departure gate into a ‘mini lounge’ and offered an arrivals service at the (not quite so) nearby Radisson Edwardian hotel.

Gradually, BA’s Heathrow services caught up. Improvements in catering meant that BA1 no longer enjoyed this advantage, and the US began rolling out Global Entry which expedites customs and immigration for frequent travellers to the US.

British Airways stopped catering at the departure gate, instead offering passengers a voucher to spend at Pilot’s restaurant.  As Rob found out on his 2019 trip, however, if you were travelling with just hand baggage and were unwilling to queue at the check-in desks, you did not get a voucher.  The ‘arrivals lounge’ was also closed.

In 2016, the second daily flight was scrapped and one of the two A318 aircraft sold to Titan Airways. The remaining flight was cancelled at the start of the pandemic and not reinstated. In May 2022 the Elizabeth Line opened, creating a fast route from Canary Wharf to London Heathrow and killing any remaining prospects of BA returning to the route.

A history of BA1, the (scrapped) London City to New York JFK flight

Gone but not forgotten

The story doesn’t have to end here, however. Whilst the A318s used by British Airways were getting old and in need of refurbishment, a newer generation of aircraft is offering a better passenger experience and better flying performance.

The A220, now marketed and owned by Airbus but developed by Bombardier, leaves the door open for a New York service from City Airport. It is the largest aircraft to be certified for operations at London City and can carry 100-150 passengers in a typical layout. It has already operated test flights with an all-business configuration between London City and New York, and can fly the distance without a refuelling stop.

It is likely, as Airbus ramps up production of the A321LR and A321XLR, that single aisle aircraft will become the primary method of travelling between the UK and New York. JetBlue is already flying them between the UK and the US East Coast, and Aer Lingus is flying them from Dublin to multiple US cities.

The maths should be attractive enough for most UK airports to support daily transatlantic flights on a single aisle A321LR / XLR, and it must only be a matter of time before someone else attempts an ‘all business class’ service from a London airport.


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Comments (107)

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

  • Charlie says:

    Wasn’t the main reason for the cancellation of this route because some Canary Wharf based investment banks ended their contracts to subsidise it (or guarantee a certain number of tickets)?

    IIRC the same has happened to the now-cancelled San Jose (CA) route which Google was essentially paying for.

    • Bernard says:

      Barclays significantly reduced their commitment.
      Tbf in our experience it was often populated by ‘baby bankers’ or clearly unnecessary trips to New York, so you can’t blame Barclays from protecting its shareholders from T&E binging.

    • newbz says:

      Also, the flight with a SNN stopover was significantly longer that LHR flights. No proper wifi (OnAir was painfully slow and also expensive from what I recall, you couldn’t really do any work on it).

      The benefit of arriving as a domestic flight at JFK probably faded out over time for heavy travelers who signed up for Global Entry once it was rolled out – clearing immigration using the GE channel takes 2 minutes on average maybe…

      Obviously the J product now would be significantly inferior compared to the Club Suite and the Elizabeth Line makes it easy to get to LHR quickly.

      Flying BA1 was fun though and I remember it was often the flight with most Avios availability!

      • John says:

        Good memories. Took this flight weekly for two years when I was living in NYC and working in London. Preferred it to BA First, only cancelled once and only delayed once (can’t say that for any other international commute I’ve done). City airport was so quick and easy compared to LHR. They had a few attempts at an arrival lounge experience but it wasn’t worth the effort if you had access to a shower at work. The On Air wifi was only for texting (at least when I was flying), but I found it productive and ahead of it’s time for most carriers. And despite flying on Sundays and Thursday/Fridays, I had an empty seat beside me every time but one – which felt like better overall space than First (that was a Sunday night when the earlier LCY was cancelled). I recall BA had a policy of not rebooking passengers impacted by delays on LHR onto the LCY flight, which kept the numbers down and the flight running smoothly

  • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

    A pilot told me that the seats were those that Airbus already had approval for from the regulators to install into the A318 so much easier to keep than to re certify the club world seat (which may have actually been too large and heavy anyway).

    The reason why the Gate 24 lounge was closed was that LCY needed the gate space when LX started to fly the A220 and Gate 24 was the gate nearest to the only place at the time capable of accommodating it and its waiting passengers. So BA was booted out!

    Having flown the BA1 several times I have fond memories of the service. The staff were always excellent as was the food and were LGW based but the pilots came from LHR. Cabin Crew stayed at LCY the night before but the pilots met at LHR before getting driven to LCY that morning.

    It’s a shame it ended.

  • executiveclubber says:

    Would have loved to experience this! It could be fun for them to experiment with this all-biz shorthaul model to flexibly accommodate premium / longer routes in Europe that regularly max out the Club Europe curtain to row 18. Don’t jump down my throat telling me why it wouldn’t work… just saying it could be fun 😁

  • Alan says:

    Whilst a “Club World” flight, you got 210 TP each way (F) at least for part of the lifetime of the route

  • ukpolak says:

    One of those somewhat “niche” lines I never flew as my US work travel years were well ahead of that route opening (and City a PITA to get to from Hants anyway).

    My boss lived in NJ and would rather take this service back (and traverse NYC) than take EWR-bound flights, all because of the service and atmosphere.

  • Geoff says:

    Not sure why you think Elizabeth line runs to Heathrow, it really doesn’t.

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      6 trains an hour says it does.

      That’s 2 more than the HEX.

    • Stu N says:

      Where does Rob say it does?

      “ the forthcoming opening of what would become the Elizabeth Line meant that a direct New York service from London City was losing its USP.”

      “In May 2022 the Elizabeth Line opened, creating a fast route from Canary Wharf to London Heathrow”

      Neither say it runs to Heathrow but it enables easy access to Heathrow from Canary Wharf. If you’re going to try to be clever, at least be right.

      #pedantfail

    • Ziggy says:

      Interesting theory. You may want to take this up with TfL because they seem pretty convinced that it does. They’ve even put it on the Tube map.

      • Stu N says:

        Elizabeth Line services run to Heathrow but use pre-existing Heathrow Express track for the last few miles as the Elizabeth Line track doesn’t go to Heathrow.

        99% of people don’t know the distinction and 99% of those who do know about it don’t care. The OP is one of the 0.01%.

    • Bernard says:

      Pedantic and incorrect.
      Elizabeth line is the opco and you are wrong on every count.

  • Alastair says:

    It was a great little service. I flew it half a dozen times over the years. Including on the second day of service as a guest of BA. Originally the catering was in partnership with Roast (of Borough Market). It was also the first BA aircraft with any kind of inflight connectivity (an OnAir cellular roaming service).

  • Speedbird676 says:

    My last ever duty travel flight working for BA was JFK-LCY. Certainly a unique experience!

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