Quick Facts — VC-25B Bridge
Aircraft: Boeing 747-8KB (ex-A7-HBJ, Qatar Amiri Flight)
Built: 2012, originally for Qatar’s House of Thani
Donated: May 2025; MoU signed July 7, 2025
Designation: VC-25B Bridge (serial 25-3300)
Livery: New red, white, and blue scheme (Trump design)
Modification: L3Harris, Greenville & Waco, Texas
Cost: Under $400 million for modifications
Target delivery: July 4, 2026
From Royal to Presidential
The aircraft started life as a Boeing 747-8KB — the business jet variant of the 747-8 Intercontinental — delivered to Qatar Amiri Flight in April 2012. Registered as A7-HBJ, it served the House of Thani for more than a decade before being withdrawn from service in 2023. Qatar formally offered the jet to the United States in May 2025, and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth signed a memorandum of understanding accepting the “unconditional donation” on July 7, 2025. It was re-registered as N7478D on August 5 before receiving its military serial. The “Bridge” designation tells you everything about why this aircraft exists. Boeing’s main VC-25B programme — two purpose-built 747-8i conversions awarded under a $3.9 billion fixed-price contract in 2018 — is massively behind schedule. Originally due in December 2024, the first delivery is now expected in mid-2028. Boeing has absorbed more than $2.4 billion in losses on the programme, adding it to a defence portfolio that includes write-downs on the T-7A, KC-46A, and MQ-25. The current VC-25A fleet — the two 747-200Bs that have served since 1990 — is showing its age. The Bridge fills the gap.The New Look
The livery is unmistakable — and deliberately different from the aircraft it will eventually supplement. The Air Force describes it as white on top, with red and gold accent lines running along the fuselage, a dark blue underside, and a large waving American flag on both sides of the tail. “UNITED STATES OF AMERICA” runs in bold text across the upper fuselage. The same colour scheme is already appearing on C-32A aircraft that serve as Air Force Two. It replaces a design that became one of the most recognisable liveries in aviation history. The original Air Force One colour scheme was created in 1962 by industrial designer Raymond Loewy, working directly with President Kennedy and First Lady Jackie Kennedy — they reportedly sat on the Oval Office floor drawing with crayons. Loewy settled on “luminous ultramarine blue” as the defining colour, paired with white and polished aluminium. The design debuted on SAM 26000, a Boeing 707, and served for more than six decades across three generations of presidential aircraft. Trump announced in 2018 that he wanted to replace what he called “Jackie Kennedy blue” with bolder colours. Biden reversed the decision during his term; Trump reinstated it upon returning to office.




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