Jump to content
Wikipedia The Free Encyclopedia

MexicanaLink

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Former regional airline of Mexico (2009–2010)
MexicanaLink
IATA ICAO Call sign
I6 MXI LINK
Founded10 March 2009 (2009年03月10日)
Commenced operations13 March 2009 (2009年03月13日)
Ceased operations28 August 2010 (2010年08月28日)
Hubs
Focus cities
Alliance Oneworld
(affiliate; 2009—2010)
Fleet size15[1]
Destinations16
Parent company Grupo Posadas
HeadquartersGuadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico
Key peopleGaztón Azcárraga (CEO)

MexicanaLink, a subsidiary of Mexicana, was a regional airline based in Guadalajara International Airport that operated as a feeder airline for both Mexicana and MexicanaClick. It operated into markets that were considered too thin to justify the use of larger aircraft. It was Mexicana's regional carrier, while MexicanaClick was a low-fare domestic airline competing against Interjet, Volaris, and VivaAerobus. MexicanaLink used to compete against Aeromar and Aeroméxico Connect.

The airline was presented to the media on 10 March 2009. The ceremony was conducted by Grupo Mexicana CEO, Manuel Borja. The president of Mexico, Felipe Calderon Hinojosa, joined the ceremony with a short speech. The event was held on the Mexicana maintenance base in the Guadalajara International Airport Miguel Hidalgo.[2]

First flight of this airline was on 13 March 2009 at 2:30 PM CST departing from Guadalajara (GDL) to Puerto Vallarta (PVR).[3]

Link, along with its parent company ceased operations on 28 August 2010, after filing for bankruptcy earlier in the month.[4] Mexicana and its subsidiaries had stopped selling tickets three weeks prior to the shutdown.

Fleet

[edit ]
MexicanaLink's fleet
Aircraft Total Orders Passengers Notes
Bombardier CRJ200 15 0 50 2 options

References

[edit ]
[edit ]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to MexicanaLink .
Major carriers
Regional carriers
Charter
Cargo
Defunct

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /