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Germany received its third VIP Airbus A350 plane, which replaced the country's old fleet of unreliable A340s

Jun 6, 2024, 17:11 IST
Insider
The third and final fully VIP-equipped A350 was sent to the German Air Force on Wednesday.Jan Brandes Fotografie/Lufthansa Technik
  • Germany has received its last VIP-equipped Airbus A350 plane, creating a uniform fleet.
  • The aircraft got a paint job and a swanky new interior, though details of the cabin are scarce.
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Boasting the country's national colors of black, red, and gold on the fuselage and wingtips, the German Air Force, or Luftwaffe, has received its third and final fully-equipped governmental A350-900.

Inside the aircraft, which is named "Kurt Schumacher" after the German politician, is a new VIP cabin retrofitted by the aircraft service provider Lufthansa Technik.

The jet is used for political and parliamentary transport, carrying top officials like Germany's president Frank-Walter Steinmeier and Chancellor Olaf Scholz.

"Kurt Schumacher" was the first A350 built for the Luftwaffe, initially delivered in 2020.

The aircraft sports black, red, and gold on the wingtip.Lufthansa Technik

Its Germany's third A350 aircraft fit with the swanky new cabin. The first two A350s complete with the VIP interior were sister planes "Konrad Adenauer" and "Theodor Heuss."

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These aircraft were delivered factory-fresh in November 2022 and March 2023, respectively, with the new cabin already installed. The "Kurt Schumacher" A350 was sent back to Lufthansa Technik in early 2023 to get its retrofit.

"Only a few small accents in the interior, individual reminiscences of the respective namesakes, now distinguish "Adenauer," "Heuss," and "Schumacher" from each other," the company said.

Aside from the minor differences, Lufthansa Technik described the A350's new uniform fleet as having generous seating, an appropriate number of bathrooms, and a modern galley.

It represents a significant change from the interim cabin that was initially installed on the jet four years ago.

The "Kurt Schumacher" A350 once flew without a VIP cabin because, at the time, Germany was flying unreliable Airbus A340 government planes riddled with maintenance problems and needed replacements quickly put into service.

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A mid-flight electrical fault on one of the VIP A340s (pictured) forced then-Chancellor Angela Merkel to take a commercial flight to the G7 summit in 2018.Bernd von Jutrczenka/picture alliance/Getty

"In contrast to the [interim's] open cabin design, the various functional areas for political-parliamentary flight operations are now structurally separated from one another," Lufthansa Technik said after the delivery of the first VIP-equipped A350 in 2022.

The three A350 replacements cost Germany $1.3 billion, Aerotime Hub reported. This included about $325 million for the cabins and about $312 million for missile defense systems.

A company spokesperson told Business Insider that, due to security reasons, interior shots of the aircraft have not been released to the public.

Given this is the first VIP A350 project for Lufthansa Technik, there are no prior fully-built cabin designs for reference. The company has a concept for a corporate A350 that it released in 2016, which includes things like a bed, showers, and a spa.

Rendering of Lufthansa Technik's VIP A350 cabin.Lufthansa Technik

It's likely Germany's private fleet will have a similar grandiose design and aesthetic, but it will also have those specific governmental touches.

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Other countries' widebody governmental airplanes can give an idea of what that might look like.

Barack Obama speaks on the phone in a conference room on Air Force One.Official White House Photo by Pete Souza

For example, the US government fleet consists of two specially modified Boeing 747-200B quad-jets to carry the president.

The "Flying Oval Office" has three levels, 4,000 square feet of floor space, dining and conference spaces, an executive suite, and an office for the president and his or her entourage.

Barack Obama on Air Force One.Official White House photo by Pete Souza

Separate living areas are available for senior staff, the Secret Service, and the media, among other guests.

Mexico's former governmental Boeing 787 had similar luxuries, including a bedroom and dining and office spaces, as well as rows of business-class-like recliners.

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The private bedroom onboard Mexico's former presidential Boeing 787.Marco Ugarte/Associated Press

The country sold the "ostentatious" airliner for $92 million last year because its president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, refused to use it.

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