GMF AeroAsia
TypeSubsidiary[1]
IDX: GMFI
IndustryMaintenance, Repair & Overhaul
GenreMaintenance repair and overhaul
Founded2002
FounderGaruda Indonesia
HeadquartersSoekarno-Hatta International Airport, ,
Number of locations
1
Key people
Andi Fahrurrozi (CEO)
ServicesCommercial aircraft maintenance repair and overhaul, Military maintenance repair and overhaul, power services, and aircraft on ground support[2]
RevenueIncreaseUSD 519,5 million (2019)
DecreaseUSD 15 million (2019)
DecreaseUSD -3,0 million (2019)
Total assetsIncreaseUSD 756,4 million (2019)
Total equityDecreaseUSD 265,3 million (2019)
Number of employees
5,000 (2019)
ParentGaruda Indonesia
WebsiteGMF AeroAsia

GMF AeroAsia (PT Garuda Maintenance Facility AeroAsia Tbk) is an Indonesian company that specialises in aircraft maintenance repair and overhaul. The company serves the Asia-Pacific region and employs more than 4,000 people, and is based in Tangerang, Indonesia, it has many offices around the world.[1][3] It services airplanes of many types and is one of the largest and leading aircraft maintenance facilities in Asia.

History

Before 2000 (millennium year)

The company was established in 1984 as Garuda Maintenance Facilities Support Center. In seven years, funded entirely by the Indonesian government, it had spent US$200 million, of which 63% was used to import hi-tech machinery and equipment. In 1996, it became a SBU changing its name to Garuda Maintenance Facilities AeroAsia, or GMF AeroAsia in short.

After 2000

In August 2002, it split off from PT Garuda Indonesia.[4]

In January 2007, PT Garuda Indonesia announced it would sell a minority stake of GMF AeroAsia in April 2007. Other subsidiaries, PT Aerowisata, PT Abacus Distribution System and PT Gapura Angkasa would be sold completely as Garuda Indonesia does not consider them as "core business".[5] GMF AeroAsia has recently concluded a restructuring as part of the company's strategic development visions embodied in ‘The Global Challenge’, a fifteen-year ‘voyage’ plan.[6]

Currently, it is certified in many countries[7] and serves many airlines.[8] It has three partners; KLM Engineering & Maintenance, Swiss Air and Global Aviation USA[9] In September 2008, KLM attempted to buy shares in GMF, but were turned down. The intention is to release the shares publicly and KLM were told they were free to buy shares at that point.[10] In 2009, GMF AeroAsia's biggest clients are parent Garuda followed by Lion Air,[11] but as 2015, GMF AeroAsia's biggest clients are its parent company Garuda Indonesia with its low-cost arm Citilink followed by Sriwijaya Air. Lion Air itself as previous second biggest client of GMF already sets up their own maintenance repair and overhaul in Batam called Batam Aero Technic and now only uses GMF when unable to bring their aircraft to Batam.[12]

Facilities

Garuda Indonesia ATR 72-600 and Boeing 737-800 at GMF AeroAsia Hangar 2

All of its facilities are at Soekarno-Hatta International Airport. They comprise 480,000 m2 of built-up structures, including four [13] hangars, a spares warehouse, workshops, utility buildings, ground support equipment building, chemical stores, engine test cell and management offices. In addition, GMF AeroAsia has an apron capable of handling up to 50 aircraft, taxiways, a run-up bay and a waste treatment area[14] taking up a 1,150,000 m2 area.

Hangar 1 was built in 1991 designed for Boeing 747s, has two full docks and is 22,000 m2. It can perform Section 41 Modification, replace and strengthen body skin, frame stringer, intercostal and several selected structure in Nose Section 41 area.[15] Hangar 2 is 23,000 m2 and has 5 aircraft bays. It can perform minor A and B checks. It can hold up to one narrow body and one wide body jet. Hangar 3 is 23,000 m2. It normally holds up to 7 narrow body aircraft, but can be reconfigured to hold up to one wide body and 6 narrow body. It has 7 bays with 4 full docks. It has 6 roof-mounted cranes and has one bay designed for McDonnell Douglas MD-11s, McDonnell Douglas DC-10s, and Airbus A330s.[14] On September 28, 2015 Hangar 4 began operation with a capacity of 16 narrow-body aircraft on an 67,022 square-meter of land, making it the largest in the world,[16] is equipped with a purpose-built docking platform for heavy maintenance of narrow body aircraft.[17]

AeroAsia also provides certain assets of OEMs, located in a customs bonded area at Soekarno-Hatta International Airport. Customers can get anything from this storage warehouse with a computerized system. It uses this warehouse to provide asset management, inventory assistance, management services and trading aircraft parts.[18][19]

Customers

From [20] which includes previous clients.

Worldwide

Domestic

Certification

From [7]

References

  1. 1 2 About the Firm
  2. What We deliver, 2004, retrieved 2008-02-17
  3. "Network of Branches". GMF AeroAsia. Archived from the original on June 6, 2007. Retrieved 2008-02-14.
  4. History of GMF AeroAsia
  5. "Trade and Investment News" (PDF). The Coordinating Ministry for Economic Affairs of the Republic of Indonesia. 2007-01-22. Retrieved 2008-03-23.
  6. Management System of GMF AeroAsia
  7. 1 2 List of certifications
  8. Client Base of AeroAsia
  9. Partners of AeroAsia
  10. RI temporarily turns down KLM`s offer to buy GMF shares Archived 2008-09-13 at the Wayback Machine - September 9 - Antara
  11. Indonesia's Lion Air expands reach, Leithen Francis, 22/06/09
  12. Garuda, Citilink, dan Sriwijaya Air Jadi Pelanggan Terbesar GMF AeroAsia, Indo-Aviation, 25/05/15
  13. "Hangar 4 GMF, Biggest Eco Friendly Narrow Body Hangar in the World - Garuda Indonesia". Archived from the original on 2018-05-22. Retrieved 2018-05-22.
  14. 1 2 Facility Description of AeroAsia
  15. Nugraha, Kukuh (1 August 2011). "GMF AeroAsia Modifikasi Pesawat Pakistan". Media Indonesia.
  16. Joniansyah (September 29, 2015). "Garuda Operates World's Largest Hangar".
  17. "GMF to get its fourth maintenance repair and overhaul hangar in 2012". October 13, 2011.
  18. Asset Facilities
  19. Services provided by Asset Management
  20. Client Base
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.