Paris museum gets an Airbus A380
superjumbo
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[February 17, 2017]
By Tim Hepher
PARIS (Reuters) - France honored the A380
superjumbo with a place in its national aerospace museum on Tuesday,
granting it equal status with the Boeing 747 even as questions pile up
over the future of the industry's biggest jets.
The A380 test plane, the fourth to be built and the second to actually
fly in 2005, flew to Le Bourget near Paris from Toulouse with 50
technicians who will spend months adapting it for public view.
It is the first time Airbus has transferred one of its test planes to a
museum and a victory for curators who for years have coveted the world's
largest jetliner, designed to carry up to 853 people in all-economy
seating or 544 in standard layout.
The plane will see out its retirement alongside a vintage 747 once flown
by Air France and is expected to become a popular tourist attraction
when it goes on display in 2018.
But after fewer than 10 years in service, the A380's double-decker
design is less successful commercially than designers hoped.
Air France recently swapped its remaining order for two A380s for three
smaller Airbus A350s, symbolizing the shift in demand to a new
generation of lightweight jets.
Airbus insists the A380 still has a future and rejects any link between
the exhibit and the A380's commercial fortunes. Boeing has also put
three of its 787 Dreamliners in museums.
"Museums are not just about preserving the past; they are also a window
on the future," said Jacques Rocca, president of the Airitage
association, set up to preserve Airbus artefacts.
SHOW-STOPPER
In the 1990s, Airbus's vision of the future was a super-capacity
airliner able to revolutionize air travel and displace the profitable
747 by linking the world's largest travel hubs.
Boeing disagreed and later developed the smaller 787, though it hedged
its bets by updating the 747, with disappointing results.
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An Airbus A380 aircraft takes part in a flight display during the
48th Paris Air Show at the Le Bourget airport near Paris June 18,
2009. REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol/File photo
Since 2005, the A380 superjumbo has been a show-stopper at events
like the Paris Airshow, yards from the aerospace museum at Le
Bourget. Airbus and Dubai's Emirates, the largest A380 operator, say
its roomy cabin is a hit with passengers.
Despite this, the A380 has not proved as popular with fleet planners
because of the risks of being unable to fill it up in a fragile
economy, as well as advances in twin-jet design.
Airbus sees demand for 1,264 very large jets like the A380 and 747-8
over 20 years: higher than Boeing's forecast of 530.
But it is also expected to confirm in its annual results next week
that the A380 will go back into loss after its biggest customer
Emirates deferred some deliveries this year. An Airbus spokesman
reaffirmed the company's delivery targets.
(Reporting by Tim Hepher; Editing by Keith Weir)
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