Delta Air Lines and Virgin Atlantic celebrate start of new services

Delta Air Lines (NYSEAL) and Virgin Atlantic have launched their new services between Heathrow and Los Angeles and Heathrow and Atlanta respectively.

p>Delta Air Lines (NYSEAL) and Virgin Atlantic have launched their new services between Heathrow and Los Angeles and Heathrow and Atlanta respectively.

The new routes are the first transfer of operations between the two airlines since the launch of their joint venture earlier this year and will offer more choice and flexibility for both airlines? customers on these key routes across the Atlantic.

From yesterday, Delta flew nonstop from London to California for the first time with one of two daily Heathrow-Los Angeles flights previously operated by Virgin Atlantic. The route is Delta?s seventh nonstop destination between London and the United States. Virgin Atlantic, meanwhile, is operating its first ever flights into the world?s busiest airport, Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International, having taken over one of Delta?s three daily services, and is now able to offer more than 100 additional international and domestic connections to its customers at Delta?s hub airport.

?We have a common goal to grow our joint venture network across the trans-Atlantic and provide customers with greater choice,? said Ed Bastian, President of Delta. ?With the Virgin Atlantic service to our hometown and Delta providing nonstop access between London and Los Angeles, this route harmonisation is a further demonstration of our strong partnership.?

Delta and Virgin Atlantic will operate their Los Angeles and Atlanta services at Heathrow Terminal 3. This co-location adds to the New York-JFK, Boston and Seattle joint venture flights, which already operate from Terminal 3. This provides convenient connections and a seamless customer experience for passengers of both airlines, including access to Virgin Atlantic?s award winning Clubhouse for all business class passengers. Both carriers also offer full flat-bed seats with direct aisle access on all business class flights between the U.K. and U.S.?

Virgin Atlantic expects to fly around 160,000 passengers annually to Atlanta and beyond on its new service providing convenient connections to Delta flights across the U.S., Mexico and the Caribbean. Virgin Atlantic has recently announced plans to add a second daily seasonal flight to Atlanta in summer 2015 as part of a package of investment into North American routes that will see the total number of peak day flights operated by the joint venture at 37 from March.