Çağdaş Şahin AVM 301
Outline History Corporate Affairs Destinations Codeshare Agreements Subsidiaries Slogans İncidents,Accidents References
History The airline was established as Aeronaves de México on 15 September 1934, by Antonio Díaz Lombardo. Its first aircraft was a Stinson SR. Julio Zinser piloted the maiden flight on the Mexico City – Acapulco route on 14 September 1934.
Corporate affairs The company is run from its landmark headquarters at Paseo de la Reforma 445, Colonia Cuauhtémoc, Cuauhtémoc borough, Mexico City. There is small U.S.administrative office in Houston.
Destinations Aeroméxico has started to develop new international markets. From 2006 it started operations to Tokyo from Mexico City via Tijuana. Service to Shanghai from Mexico City via Tijuana began in May 2008. New destinations in 2014–2016 included Panama City ,Santo Domingo, Vancouver, Toronto, Boston, Medellín, Amsterdam, Cozumel, and Austin The airline launched service to Seoul from Mexico City on 1 July 2017.
Codeshare Agreements Aerolineas Argentinas Air Europa Air France Alaska Airlines Avianca Avianca Brazil Copa Airlines Czech Airlines Delta Air Lines Garuda Indonesia Gol Transportes Aéreos Jet Airways KLM LATAM Airlines Korean Air WestJet
Former subsidiaries Aeromexico Express ,was a commuter airline based at Monterrey International Airport. Aeroperú, Peru's national flag carrier based in Lima International Airport. Mexicana, from 1993 to 1995. Aeromexpress, a cargo handler based at Mexico City International Airport in Mexico City. Aeroméxico Travel, a charter airline based in Cancún International Airport.
Slogans 1960s–1970s – Mexico's largest airline 1990s – La línea aérea mas puntual del mundo.[47] Before 2009 – Travel the world (Vamos por el mundo) [48] 2010–2012 – A donde te lleven tus sueños. 2012–2013 – Nunca nos detenemos. 2013–2015 – La línea que nos une. 2016–present – La línea de los Mexicanos y del mundo. English slogan: "Mexico's Global Airline"[2]
Accidents,incidents 20 June 1973 Mexico: 23 death 27 July 1981, Mexico: 60 death 9 November 1981 Mexico: 18 death 31 August 1986; CA: 64 death 6 October 2000; Mexico:93 death
References https://en.0wikipedia.org/index.php?q=aHR0cHM6Ly9lbi53aWtpcGVkaWEub3J nL3dpa2kvQWVyb20lQzMlQTl4aWNvI0luY2lkZW50cy4yQ19hY2NpZGVudHNfYW5 kX2hpamFja2luZ3M "Aeromexico". aeromexico.com. Retrieved 4 August 2017. ^ "Aeromexico Announces Seoul, South Korea as Its New Destination in Asia". Marketwatch.com. Retrieved 4 August 2017. ^ "Next destination: Seoul, Korea" (in Spanish). Aeroméxico. January 2017. Retrieved 23 May 2017.