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Deccan Aviation, India's leading private charter firm, will launch
a helicopter service this month to ferry passengers between the
new Bengaluru airport and Bangalore city, about 40 km away.
The service will help the 'well-heeled' save on time as its takes
from 90 to 120 minutes to travel by road to the city. The helicopter
will take 15-20 minutes and will operate from three locations in
the city.
'The
copter service is essentially meant for high-profile passengers,
especially corporate honchos, who are hard-pressed for time and
want to avoid the choc-a-block traffic from the new airport (at
Devanahalli ) on the outskirts of the city,' Deccan Aviation managing
director Captain G.R. Gopinath told IANS.
The aviation firm has acquired three twin-engine copters -- one
of Bell and two of Eurocopter make, which can carry seven to eight
passengers for every sortie from the new Bengaluru International
Airport (BIA) to the city.
The service will be available to three key locations -- two in the
city and one in Electronics City, about 70 km southwards from the
airport.
The other two locations are the old HAL airport in the eastern part
of the city, about 50 km away, and to UB City in downtown, about
40 km from the airport, which is located in the north-west.
The charges are estimated to be in the range of Rs 4,500-5,700 ($95-135)
per passenger.
'We are waiting for clearances from DGCA (Director General of Civil
Aviation) to operate the service and for permission from the BIA
operator -- Bangalore International Airport Ltd (BIAL) -- to fly
between the new airport and the old airport,' Gopinath pointed out.
The aviation firm is also seeking state approval for night landing
at the helipads at UB City and Electronics City.
'We have got a good number of enquiries and responses to the short-haul
copter service between the new airport and main city centres. As
a drive to and from the new airport to any point across the city
and beyond will take 90-120 minutes during peak hours (8 a.m. to
10 p.m.), we will be able to fly the well-heeled in 10-15 minutes,
saving their time and energy,' Gopinath said.
As India's IT capital, Bangalore is home to about 1,700 IT and biotech
firms, including global software majors (MNCs) and IT bellwethers
like Infosys and Wipro. A majority of the firms are located in Electronics
City and Whitefield, about 20 km from the old HAL airport.
The new airport operates about 350-400 flights a day. About 70 percent
of the traffic is domestic and the rest is international, mostly
between midnight and dawn.
An estimated 30,000-35,000 passengers fly in and out of Bangalore
daily on domestic and overseas routes.
With over 2.5 million vehicles choking the city thoroughfares, congested
linking roads and narrow connecting lanes, a drive to the new airport
during peak hours is a nightmare to any air passenger.
According to the traffic police, about 10,000 vehicles, including
two-wheelers, cars, buses and trucks ply every hour on the busy
thoroughfare to the new airport and towards National Highway seven
(NH 7).
Source: IANS
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