Last modified: 2015-02-28 by zoltán horváth
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image by Randy Young, 26 February 2015
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Headquartered in Brussels, Belgium, EUROCONTROL works closely with the
European Civil Aviation Conference (ECAC) and the European Union (EU). Indeed,
EUROCONTROL, the EU and the EU member states signed a protocol in 2002, enabling
the EU to accede to the Revised EUROCONTROL Convention.
Thirty-seven countries are members of EUROCONTROL. Of these, twenty-five are in
ECAC, EUROCONTROL and the EU and twelve are in ECAC and EUROCONTROL, but not the
EU. Two countries are in the ECAC and EU, but are not members of EUROCONTROL. A
full membership list, together with "dates of adhesion" and graphic maps may be
found on the membership page of the
EUROCONTROL web site.
It is both a civil and a military organisation and its primary objective is the
"development of a seamless, pan-European Air Traffic Management (ATM) system.
On the EUROCONTROL web site page on membership
here in a section headed "The ECAC Member States", is an explanation of the
working relationship and a small graphic, which *looks* as if it could be a
close up photograph of the ECAC flag. I've not researched this further, as I
can't find anything on the ECAC web site or elsewhere to indicate that they have
a flag or to confirm the status of this image.
Thus, I'm just sending this report to the list in case anyone else might perhaps
be an aviation enthusiast or otherwise knows about any possible flag of this
organisation.
French and English are its working languages, which is why I've put the title in
both languages in the subject line.
Colin Dobson, 16 February 2007
There is an image
of the EUROCONTROL flag, cropped from a photograph on their web site.
Here is some text, to accompany the image:
"The EUROCONTROL flag, as flown outside its Brussels headquarters, is simply the
organisation's logo, on a white background. This consists of a rounded, stylised
lower case letter 'e' in dark blue. Superimposed upon the letter 'e' and
obscuring part of it, is a stylised image of an aircraft tail fin in a lighter
shade of blue. It is not presently clear whether the organisation's abbreviated
name also appears on the flag, although the word 'EUROCONTROL' does appear
immediately underneath the logo in block letters and a different shade of blue
on other documents and publications of the organisation, including its web site,
which is the primary source for this report."
Sources:
(1) EUROCONTROL, Image Viewer, as consulted at
EUROCONTROL web site, 16 February 2007
(2) EUROCONTROL,
web site, membership information, as consulted 16 February 2007 and stated
to be last updated 01September 2006.
If anyone else is interested, here's a rather unusual indoors use of flags in a
proposal for a EUROCONTROL office environment, which if actually utilised, might
well stretch the traditional meaning of a flag:
http://www.eurocontrol.int/care-innov/gallery/content/public/docs/studies2001/deepblue-final-rep-v4.pdf
[It is a pdf document, nearly 2 Mb]
Source: EUROCNOTROL, Integrated Concept Scenarios from Visual Arts,
Architecture, Music and Interaction Design, Referring to the Call for Proposal
CARE Innovation Action PROC/EC/PE1030/01, Final report, 3 December 2001, as
consulted EUROCONTROL, web site, 16
February 2006
Colin Dobson, 16 February 2007
While doing a little research tonight, I came across a photograph of the
EUROCONTROL flag. Not being familiar with that organization, I immediately hit
up FOTW, only to find no entries for it. Coming to the Yahoo Groups archive, I
found that the organization was ever-so-briefly discussed in February 2007, at
which time the group consensus was that the flag consisted of the organization's
two-toned blue logo on a white field without the lettering denoting the
organization's name or acronym.
Based, however, on the
photograph I found online tonight, the flag does appear to include the name
"EUROCONTROL" in blue capital letters beneath the logo.
Randy Young, 26 February 2015
image by Eugene Ipavec, 16 February 2007
There is another photo in the
PDF
as well, showing
all the member-state flags plus the EUROCONTROL one. It appears to be
without lettering.
Eugene Ipavec, 16 February 2007
image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 16 February 2007
Trusting the
photo flag seen very small among member's flags on line, the specs are
(11+34+11):(22+40+22) = 2:3. I used the
vectorial image (with a bit
of recolouring)
All photos of this flag (granted that not many) seem to show the logo
centered and the lettering absent. For now, I'm betting on no letters.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 16 February 2007