British Airways: new Club World business class seat for 2019
- New Club World seat for Airbus A350, Boeing 787-10
- All seats to have direct aisle access
- Not all A350s, 787-10s will have first class
British Airways will debut a new Club World business class seat on both its Airbus A350-1000 and Boeing 787-10 jets in 2019, and may refit the seat to some of its existing fleet.
The seat – which British Airways CEO Alex Cruz said would deliver direct aisle access for every passenger – will “absolutely (be) for the 350-1000 and the 787-10 and they will be coming from 2019.”
“We do believe we have to consider some retrofitting” Cruz told Australian Business Traveller at the airline’s launch of its new Club World meal and sleep service.
However, Cruz said he was determined not to “over-sell the (new) seat.”
“This will take a bit of time, so we will take some time to come back to you with all the details.”
“We have seen recent overpromising by other carriers and it would be a disaster if we talked about what we want to do and (then) make you wait a long time.”
PREVIOUS | British Airways has opted for evolution rather than revolution when it comes to the new Club World business class seat for its forthcoming Airbus A350 fleet.
Designs for what the airline describes as its Club World Mark III seat – detailed in leaked internal BA documentation seen by Australian Business Traveller – indicate the British flag-carrier will keep the alternating foward-backward layout of its current business class.
However, improvements to key aspects of the seat should boost its appeal to high flyers.
Foremost among them: all passengers will now enjoy direct access to the aisle, instead of having to gingerly step over or around their neighbour.
Australian Business Traveller understands that the seats convert into a fully flat bed measuring from 6'1" (185cm) to 6'4" (193cm) depending on if they are located at a window, aisle or middle pair, with a press-button recline into a relaxing 'lazy Z' position.
A new storage cubby lurks beneath the armrest of each seat, in addition to a slightly larger storage drawer, while manually-operated screens provide privacy or sociability between seat pairs.
The inflight video screen is almost 50% larger, having been upsized from 10.4 inches to a high-definition 15.3 inch display.
The new seat design, which plays up BA's palette of blue and silver, is both more stylish and spacious than the current second-gen Club World seat (shown below).
The leaked design matches up against a UK patent application lodged by British Airways and credited to BA Design Lead Peter Cooke and Paul Grader from London design firm Forpeople, which most recently worked on British Airways' Boeing 787-9 first class cabin and suites (seen below).
Video, photos: British Airways' new Boeing 787-9 first class
Mockup illustrations and diagrams from that patent application – while based on an earlier, less-refined seat concept – give a better idea of how this all comes together in the cabin of the Airbus A350.
British Airways is also retaining a 2-4-2 'high density' layout, although this benefits from the wider cabin footprint of the A350.
BA's patent application also illustrates two possible ClubWorld layouts for the A350's business class cabin...
... using a different mix of orientations for the paired seats.
British Airways will begin flying the long-range Airbus A350-1000 from 2018, with 18 of the advanced jets on order and options for 18 more.
Approached by Australian Business Traveller for comment, a British Airways spokesperson said “we regularly see speculation around what the next generation of our seats will look like, as we develop a lot of ideas with a range of design agencies. We often patent these ideas which is one driver of that speculation."
"As and when we’re ready to announce the seats for the A350s, which are not due to arrive until 2018, we’ll do so."
Earlier this year British Airways CEO Alex Cruz began tamping down expectations for the A350's Club World seat, saying it is not "ultra-revolutionary" and the design would focus more on incremental changes.
Speaking with UK media, Cruz added the seat would not be retrofitted across BA's long-range international fleet – such as the Airbus A380 and Boeing 777-300ER and 787 Dreamliner fleets – because "it doesn't appear to be sufficiently revolutionary."
Also read:
- Airbus reveals its innovative A350 first class mockup
- The Airbus A380 first class concept cabins you never saw
- Concept designs for new Singapore Airlines first, business class
- The fabulous bars, lounges and restaurants of the Boeing 747
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Delta Air Lines - SkyMiles
14 Apr 2013
Total posts 325
Would be nice to see BA launch the A350-1000 on the LHR - SIN - SYD Route. It would make for a strong argument on the Kangaroo Route :-)
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer
04 Mar 2014
Total posts 204
I wouldnt actually be surprised if it is..following crew training. Frees up less efficient 77Ws to operate shorter routes to North America.
Delta Air Lines - SkyMiles
14 Apr 2013
Total posts 325
agreed. Lets face it, the B747 is nice but would rater fly LHR - JFK on a B777
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer
31 Aug 2015
Total posts 121
Obviously it is unfair to comment on just drawings from a patent application, but, doesn't that look... rather congested? Personally, when I fly business, I do enjoy the exclusive aspect of it. Also, I'm not a fan of flying backwards.
Delta Air Lines - SkyMiles
14 Apr 2013
Total posts 325
When UA used to fly the B777 to Sydney I didnt mind flying backwards. Didnt notice any difference only when taking off and landing.
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer
31 Aug 2015
Total posts 121
I guess people react to it differently. Sadly, I can't even travel on a train without sitting facing the direction of the journey :(
25 Feb 2012
Total posts 77
That makes two of us!
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer
17 Aug 2016
Total posts 23
i cant travel on a train unless facing forward but when i was the EY A380 rear facing seat did not feel a thing it was really comfortable and i love it and would do it again! you dont feel any different when flying that fast.
QFF
12 Apr 2013
Total posts 1560
Airplanes are completely different - you cannot sense what direction you travel after take-off and before landing.
Singapore Airlines - KrisFlyer
14 Jan 2014
Total posts 340
It's actually safer to fly backwards as you are less likely to get neck injuries during a crash or aborted take off / landing
19 Aug 2016
Total posts 1
A pity that BA went with this design, just as other airlines are moving to suite-style J. This is really premium economy plus.
On another note, impressive editorial independence from AusBT - running BA promo spreads one day and publicising leaks the next!
15 Jan 2013
Total posts 36
Oh dear more awfulness from BA!
What a lost opportunity, they could have made their First seats their business seats and then introduced a true First Class.
21 Jul 2012
Total posts 128
BA has so much captive premium traffic out of London that they don't really need to be competitive. They know business travellers will take a non-stop with a bad product over a connection with a good one. Of course, if Brexit destroys the UK financial sector that may all come to an end.
30 Jul 2015
Total posts 104
The UK financial sector does not exist because of the EU! The global financial sector is based in London, IS LONDON...
BREXIT is destroying nothing.
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer
21 Aug 2014
Total posts 501
Yeah we need to stop panicking, the most that will happen is a small two-year recession then the UK will be back in business as it will have new agreements with the likes of US, China and Australia.
No one in the EU is gonna halt trade with the UK, they would be dumb to do so.
13 Aug 2015
Total posts 40
Just dreadful.
21 Oct 2013
Total posts 15
I could not agree more Vantage03
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer
19 Aug 2011
Total posts 165
"British Airways is also retaining a 2-4-2 'high density' layout, although this benefits from the wider cabin footprint of the A350'
Wider than what? The A380, 747 and 777 all have 2-4-2 on BA and all have wider cabins than the A350. The 787 is 2-3-2 and is narrower than the A350, so the A350 has the narrowest cabin of any with a 2-4-2 layout.
It's an improvement as it addresses the biggest objection to the product, but it is designed to make money on the Atlantic, as it probably will still do for some time.
20 May 2015
Total posts 579
So... more bed length, more width, more privacy and direct aisle access for all seats.
A great improvement! Good work BA! Please bring this upgraded product to Australia ASAP!
18 Nov 2015
Total posts 117
Have there ever been any designs with seats facing sideways? I think that could be a good design.
Qantas
19 Apr 2012
Total posts 1430
Cathay Pacific - Asia Miles
25 Apr 2013
Total posts 542
This has potential to be a forwards-backwards Apex suite of sorts (Japan Airlines, Korean Air, Oman Air etc.), let's hope that they get those partitions up!!
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer
15 Mar 2016
Total posts 167
What's with airlines opting for backwards facing seats? It doesn't sound hugely progressive. True, they don't feel different in the air but people still won't naturally gravitate to them. JAL, I think it is, do a 2-2-2 configuration with all seats getting aisle access - its perfectly possible to do with all seats forward and still fitting lots in. Credit to BA for good seat width and, I hear from those who've flown their latest J and F, comfortable cushion but i'd love to see an end to this 2-4-2 melarky. Still, between the UK and US, BA would always be my first choice on their B787 or A380, they still beat the American products on service, seating, plane and food.
21 Oct 2013
Total posts 15
Hey, greed is good at 8 across,maybe they should try Boeings patented 12 across!Then you could travel from a shoe box into a sardine tin, all for the price of a business class ticket. I much prefer to travel with airlines that think about me,instead of their shareholders and travel business class just 4 abreast.
UA
09 Mar 2016
Total posts 55
Backwards or forwards, who cares? But BA's J config is rubbish, even though the seat itself ain't bad at all. It's just too congested and one can usually feel a person exiting behind one's pod: bump, bump, rumble, rumble. Window seats are bearable but the rest are like flying in a Japanese capsule hotel only for about 500 times the cost. And the soft product is always, always very iffy, not much better than a Japanese convenience store (to extend the simile) at its worst, like DJ's food hall at best.
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer
19 Jan 2015
Total posts 13
You are sooooo right ....
03 Oct 2011
Total posts 39
Nice to see the biggest problems addressed (climb-over or be-climbed-over, lack of storage). It'll still be a tight squeeze, but the worst is that it won't be retrofitted to existing planes.
03 Oct 2011
Total posts 39
Personally, I'm fine with backwards-facing seats. I get nauseous riding backwards in trains, or in a car looking inside or reading, or in a bus in the back, but never a problem flying backwards, aside from taxiing.
21 Aug 2015
Total posts 86
Much prefer the herringbone config used by other carriers.......BA is going to be last choice for me.
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer
17 May 2016
Total posts 1
I travelled on BA A380 in business class from Hong Kong to London and London to Singapore earlier this year. I chose BA over other airlines because I like the A380 configuration on other airlines. I will NEVER travel BA again except on short hauls to Europe. It was a 2/3/2 configuration meaning 7 seats across so it felt cramped and quite claustrophobic.
My husband who is over 6ft was on the window and because of the bulk head struggled to get past the feet of the sleeper in front as he had to bend down very low and then lift his legs over - it was ridiculous and unacceptable for a full paying customer.
I am pleased to hear that they are reconfiguring the seats but from what I can tell on the plans it doesn't look any less congested.
I repeat - I am never flying BA on a long haul.
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer
19 Jan 2015
Total posts 13
I sooooo totally agree with you .... NEVER AGAIN. Did the same flights virtually, HKG/LHR/HKG - A380 both ways. QF Business beats this hands down!
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer - Chairmans Lounge
01 Sep 2011
Total posts 416
Which seats would be at 193cm and which seats would be at 185cm? You dont really say, other than "depending ...". What would be the guess ... window and cramped middle two at 193cm?
03 May 2013
Total posts 682
BA=Horrid business class hard and softproduct(First isn't much better either)
QFF
19 Sep 2013
Total posts 205
Minimal flat areas to place anything. I'm with others - wouldn't pay for the seats, but acknowledge that it's easy to find BA J award seats.
QFF
12 Apr 2013
Total posts 1560
Actually I like BA design far better than QF one (I am talking about old one, not new on A330). Though to get most of it one should choose seat carefully.
However I agree that nowadays this Yin-Yang approach more suitable for PE than for Business.
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer
28 Oct 2011
Total posts 467
I quite like BA's existing J seats - especially the window seats, where you have plenty of storage and a lot of privacy. Direct aisle access in the new config fixes the only real problem. FAR superior to the QF Skybed, though I rate the QF A330 J suites better than the BA version.
23 Feb 2015
Total posts 260
Actually looks like a PE layout more than a business layout.
23 Feb 2015
Total posts 260
Wow, people actually like this? Wow
Emirates Airlines - Skywards
11 Mar 2015
Total posts 190
still try to squeeze 8 seats into business while the quality airlines have 4 in a row-this is really bad! would never pay for this as long as there are alternatives-
Emirates Airlines - Skywards
11 Mar 2015
Total posts 190
btw etihad also uses backward facing seats on their 787 business class products but it still 1-2-1 layout
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer
19 Jan 2015
Total posts 13
Never, ever again will I do Business Class with BA. HKG to LHR return .... That's it .... They got my money, but they won't ever get it again. I will say no more ....
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer
19 Jan 2015
Total posts 13
Never, ever again will I do Business Class with BA. HKG to LHR return .... That's it .... They got my money, but they won't ever get it again. I will say no more ....
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer
17 Sep 2012
Total posts 5
Why persist with the Club World format? Almost every time you fly the "Nose to Tail" format long haul you get the unfortunate experience of having a flatulent person in the next seat for 24hrs. So apart from being packed like sardines, you guaranteed to get that specially priced CW (or was that WC?) smell. AY,CH,CX,QF,SQ are so many better ways to fly.
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer
19 Aug 2011
Total posts 165
Let's be VERY clear. This design is by no means confirmed as the option BA is going to go for. CEO Alex Cruz said "“We have made a decision to move away from the Club World seats. The time has come to change and the decision has been made. It’s going to take a little time, and we’re not going to oversell and we will tell you as we make our decisions, but it will have full-aisle, all-aisle access for all passengers so people will no longer have to have long legs to step over a passenger when they want to get to the aisle. We will take some time to come back with all the details of how we will do that."
BA
31 Mar 2014
Total posts 23
I gave up on BA (iro long haul) some time ago because of its rear facing seats and the feeling of being cramped. I know its illogical but I hate travelling backwards, even on aircraft. The two centre seats look dreadful and I would hate to wind up in one of them. When I am paying J class prices I want a J class product. Other airlines understand this and provide a better product so I fly with them. This proposed 'new' offering has done nothing to persuade me to return to long haul BA.
17 Mar 2017
Total posts 14
Why do people keep saying other airlines offer 4 seats per row compared to BA's 8?! Do you not realise that BA have significantly fewer rows compared to other airlines because herringbone or staggered seating overlaps each other. Other airline seats can be very claustraphobic in a different way by having little cubby holes to put your feet in, compared with BA's having full height for the whole length of the pitch. The trade off is a lack of table space, but BA have tried to compensate for that with this new update with the small table in addition to the main table.
I grant that BA seats might be slightly narrower than other carriers but i think people get carried away when criticising the product.
The improvements to this seat design will make the product much more competative than the current offering, and because it is a unique product offers a real alternative to other airlines depending on what you like.
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer
21 Dec 2012
Total posts 16
This is very much like the current set up.
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