A report on Haarlemmermeer, Martinair and Amsterdam
But it was not until a furious hurricane in November 1836 drove the waters as far as the gates of Amsterdam, and another on Christmas Day sent them in the opposite direction to submerge the streets of Leiden, that the mind of the nation was seriously turned to the matter.
- HaarlemmermeerMartinair had passenger service throughout Europe, the Americas, Asia, and Africa from Amsterdam.
- MartinairMartinair has its head office in the TransPort Building, Schiphol East, on the grounds of Amsterdam Airport Schiphol, Haarlemmermeer, Netherlands.
- MartinairFour airlines, TUI fly Netherlands, KLM Cityhopper, Martinair, and Transavia have their headquarters on the grounds of Schiphol Airport in Haarlemmermeer.
- HaarlemmermeerThis can be recognised by the suffix -meer which means lake, as in Aalsmeer, Bijlmermeer, Haarlemmermeer and Watergraafsmeer.
- AmsterdamIt handles over 68 million passengers per year and is the home base of four airlines, KLM, Transavia, Martinair and Arkefly.
- Amsterdam2 related topics with Alpha
Amsterdam Airport Schiphol
1 linksMain international airport of the Netherlands.
Main international airport of the Netherlands.
It is located 9 km southwest of Amsterdam, in the municipality of Haarlemmermeer in the province of North Holland.
Schiphol is the hub for KLM and its regional affiliate KLM Cityhopper as well as for Corendon Dutch Airlines, Martinair, Transavia and TUI fly Netherlands.
Transavia
1 linksDutch low-cost airline and a wholly owned subsidiary of KLM and therefore part of the Air France–KLM group.
Dutch low-cost airline and a wholly owned subsidiary of KLM and therefore part of the Air France–KLM group.
The first brainstorming sessions about starting a second charter company in the Netherlands, after Martinair, started in spring 1966, when the American Chalmers Goodlin met with captain Pete Holmes.
Transavia has its head office in the TransPort Building, Schiphol East, on the grounds of Amsterdam Airport Schiphol, Haarlemmermeer, Netherlands.
On 8 February 1997, Transavia Airlines Flight 484, a Boeing 737-300 flying from Salzburg to Amsterdam, was damaged en route. The push/pull rod of the elevator broke off, damaging the Boeing 737's rudder, and an emergency landing was made at Nuremberg Airport. There were no fatalities, but the FAA issued an Airworthiness Directive after this and a similar incident.