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| SCREENING
FOR THE FUTURE Airports such as Oakland's have
time to incorporate baggage screening requirements into
expansion planning. (Photo courtesy of the Port of Oakland) |
At Boston's Logan
Airport, crews are driving some 170 piles to a depth of up
to 130 ft and ordering steel beams for 90,000 sq ft of additional
space to the existing terminal in a $106-million project.
This would not be an unusual job for an airport undergoing
a $4.4-billion modernization program except that this particular
project might not have happened if not for Sept. 11.
The airport earlier this month
also received a record of decision approving a new runway,
a crucial step in an almost 30-year struggle to increase capacity
to save some 90,000 hours a year in flight delays. Logan is
a model of the present and future challenges facing aviation
construction-building for security while anticipating the
return of capacity needs. "We have a little bit for everybody,"
notes Chris Brady, director of capital programs for the modernization
program.
Logan is striving for the status
of being the first U.S. airport-and perhaps one of few-to
be 100% compliant with new requirements calling for baggage
explosion detection systems (EDS) to be in service by Dec.
31, issued by the Transportation Security Administration.
"We're making the commitment to meet the deadline, and
even if it changes, we will meet it," says Terry Rookard,
project manager at Logan for DMJM+Harris, New York City, which
also is part of a team working with TSA.
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| CAPACITY
Runways and terminal expansions anticipate renewed
traffic. (Photo courtesy of CH2M Hill) |
But who will pay for the infrastructure
changes? "It's going to [be an] interesting debate for
years to come," says Rookard. Industry officials agree
that just about every airport will likely seek reimbursement
from the federal government for extra costs incurred now.
But security improvement money comes from the same Airport
Improvements Grants that would have been used for capacity-related
work in a pre-9/11 world.
Security has eclipsed capacity
as the top priority for airport builders and planners in the
U.S., but the capacity issue will have to be addressed at
some point in the future as air travel rebounds. "The
capacity problem has not gone away, but traffic had dropped
and the political scene changed," says John Storms, vice
president for aviation services in the Denver office of Carter
& Burgess. "We have a chance to get environmental
studies done and programs going now, because further down
the road we'll get back to the same capacity problems."
While the new TSA scrambles to
staff up, aviation officials are reshaping master plans and
redesigning projects to be flexible and ready to accommodate
whatever structural requirements are needed in the future.
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| KANSAS
Airport work schedule increased by three months. (Photo
courtesy of KCI) |
Newly hired TSA security director
James Blair says it will be "an ongoing process to accommodate
new technology as it emerges." He says TSA has technical
people working with airports to review security criteria and
infrastructure planning, but he offers no details. doubts.
Unlike Logan, more than 30 U.S. airports have expressed doubts
about the feasibility and practicality of meeting the Dec.
31 deadline. "The EDS machines being used now are like
a mainframe computer, when in a few years you will have a
desktop," says Gerry FitzGerald, president of PB Aviation,
New York City. "When Congress passed legislation last
fall, the expectation was that all baggage be X-rayed. Now,
it's either X-ray or trace detection."
In Tulsa, a new 90,000-sq-ft addition
to the terminal will be ready for EDS machines, but "if
the TSA comes back with a trace detection system, we'll have
space to accommodate that as well," says Ron Coker, managing
director for Atkins Benham, Oklahoma City, lead architect-engineer.
He notes that each of the six EDS machines slated for Tulsa
requires a 15 x 30-ft footprint and will require some $26
million in related infrastructure work.
The security regulations forced
design changes at Kansas City Airport's $229-million terminal
improvement project and pushed the completion date back three
months to Sept. 2004. The HNTB-led design includes gutting
three terminals and adding 150,000 sq ft of new terminal space.
GNT Conveyor, Tavares, Fla., is installing an $8-million baggage-handling
system "according to plans approved prior to 9/11,"
but changes could be forthcoming, says Bret Pilney, vice president
with Burns & McDonnell, the Kansas City-based terminal
program manager. "We're waiting to see what TSA is going
to do."
"Because of where we were
in the construction process on Sept. 11, we were able to continue
on with much of the project while we redesigned certain elements
to meet new requirements," says Russ Widmar, Kansas City's
aviation department director. About 65,000 sq ft of sidewalk
space is being converted into interior departure lounges by
using glass-encased "bumpouts." Glass wall height
has increased from 8.5 ft to 11 ft and curbside glass walls
will now have blast-resistant material.
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LAX
Los Angeles is reshaping plans in light of requirements.
(Photo courtesy of American Airlines) |
Oregon's Portland Airport had just
completed a three-year terminal reconstruction. Now, it must
start over, says Mark Crosby, the airport's general manager
of security and public safety. PDX's passenger ticketing level
is on the second level, a floor not structurally sufficient
for 1-million-lb screening machines. The facility redesign
awaits TSA's approval of a proposed baggage-handling system.
Like other airports, San Jose Airport
will use a combination of explosive trace detection screening
and EDS machines, says Steve Luckenbach, airport spokesman.
The airport is awaiting word from Chicago-based Boeing, TSA's
lead consultant for baggage screening, on "what our technology
response will be," he adds.
But whatever the mix of technologies,
meeting the Dec. 31 deadline "is going to be the most
daunting challenge," he says. Currently the airport has
only two of the $1-million EDS machines, with a projected
need for 15 more. To handle an estimated annual 17.6 million
passengers by 2010, the airport has just started work on its
$3-billion master plan. With a 2008 or 2009 construction completion
date, the plan calls for a new central terminal, runway reconstruction,
two parking structures and a cargo facility.
URS Greiner's Seattle-based baggage
handling division has contracts for screening systems at airports
in Seattle, Albuquerque, Tulsa, Oklahoma City, Los Angeles,
Baltimore-Washington, Newark and Houston. "They are all
in the same boat," says Nebil Ammal, URS airport services
director. "No one will meet the Dec. 31 deadline."
Acting swiftly has not paid off.
Denver International Airport submitted a proposed redesign
to TSA in January and has not yet received federal approval,
says Ed Currier, assistant deputy manager of aviation maintenance
and engineering. He says there is no way DIA now can meet
the Dec. 31 deadline. "The issues here are pretty much
the same as with every other airport in the country,"
he says. "If [TSA] had made a decision by March, we could
have installed a system within the deadline." A bright
spot for DIA is that it was designed with space for future
change. "We cabled the hell out of DIA," says Ginger
Evans, Carter & Burgess aviation vice president. "The
things that give you flexibility are space and data infrastructure."
U.S. Dept. of Transportation Secretary
Norman Y. Mineta has told Congress on behalf of airports that
the Dec. 31 deadline is unrealistic. Industry officials believe
there is a 50% chance it will be extended. But by how much?
Evans notes that before 9/11, the Federal Aviation Administration
had a deadline of 2014 for a 100%-compliant baggage screening
program. "People were incorporating it into new terminals,
but old existing terminals don't have the space and electrical
load capacity," she says. Now, "even next year is
a very aggressive goal," adds Tim Bond, Carter &
Burgess's head of facilities, maintenance and information
technology.
William Fife, aviation senior vice
president for DMJM+Harris, predicts that "the need for
remodeled or new terminals will be accelerated" because
current security requirements are costing up to 15% of capacity
for efficient processing of passengers. Such is the case at
fast-growing Harrisburg Airport, which now will have a brand-new
$224-million terminal rather than previously planned $90 million
of additions, notes airport director Fred Testa. "It
will be a more efficient use of our dollar," he says.
But he adds, "A [deadline]delay would save a lot of money,
time and mistakes. [The current deadline] forces too many
people to make decisions based on inadequate information."
Inevitably, airports will spend
millions on Band-Aid interim work. Richard Roth, executive
director of airport consultant CTI Technologies Inc., Madison,
Ala., warns against going overboard. New machines now in testing
promise extremely low false-alarm rates, faster baggage processing
and lower cost. "At some point, [airports] may have to
redesign for systems that won't need so much room" for
baggage screening areas, while checkpoint areas get bigger,
he says.
Other impacts loom as well. "We've
been studying what would happen if the Dec. 31...deadline
didn't get delayed, and we've learned that a passenger would
end up waiting four hours to get to their terminal,"
says Tina Quigley, assistant director of planning and construction
for Las Vegas's McCarran Airport. "We are doing an interim
solution by sticking the machines in the lobbies. It's a very
manual process and every step adds time."
FUTURE. Some airports are ramping
up expansion plans again, and others are completely reevaluating
them. "We made $80-million in design changes to accommodate
security" in October 2002, says Dave Peixotto, capital
program director for Oakland Airport. About $5 million in
short-term work has doubled the size of checkpoints and moved
cargo receiving to a remote location, he says. Minneapolis-St.
Paul Airport, in the midst of a $3-billion expansion, slashed
its 2002 construction program from $475 million to $150 million,
but plans to complete a new 8,000-ft-long, 150-ft-wide runway
by 2004, says Dennis Probst, building construction manager
for the Metropolitan Airports Commission. It recently obtained
TSA approval for funding of its baggage screening system,
which will be 75% complete by Dec. 31 and require $38.5 million
for a new underground enclosure, utility relocation and other
related work.
LAX officials last month announced
plans to install a $15-million motion-detection system by
the end of 2003. A new $10-billion master plan emphasizes
security but scales back a previous $12-billion version. Gone
are plans for a new terminal, $700-million ring road, and
a $1-billion elevated connector road. Four of nine terminals
would be replaced by open-space terminals. Short-term parking
and curbside check-in would be relocated to a new transportation
center, linked by an automated people mover to the terminals.
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| NEW
VIEW Airports of the future will look different
and they will learn from each. (Photo courtesy of Carter
& Burgess) |
Intermodal centers and remote facilities
such as these will be in many airports' future, predicts Orlando
Cruz, area manager for Pasadena, Calif.-based Parsons, Inc.,
which is managing Miami Airport's expansion. And more airports
are considering common-use facilities, adds Mike McCarron,
San Francisco Airport spokesman. "The philosophy worked
very well," at SFO's international terminal, a common-use
facility where no airline has its own separate facilities,
he says. SFO expects to be 100% EDS compliant ahead of the
deadline, though it is still waiting from the TSA for approval
of a $100-million in-line system for its domestic terminals,
he says.
Collaboration abounds."We're
learning about things we'd never head of," like blast
resistance and surveillance, says Logan's Brady. "Airports
in the future will be much different and we must learn from
each other."
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Arrival Scheduled:
New High-Tech Scanner
By Leah Hitchings
SECURITY OFFICIALS
theoretically will be able to identify a passenger who
has been handling explosives simply by scanning the
boarding pass with the Boarding Pass Analyzer, developed
by Oak Ridge National Laboratory and technical development
firm Mass Spec Analytical, Bristol, England.
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New
analyzer may come to airports soon
(Photo courtesy of Oak Ridge National Laboratory) |
In development since 2000,
the analyzer currently is being used to test people
entering the Golden Jubilee celebration at Buckingham
Palace and the system is expected to be used in airports
in the near future, says Dr. Michael Kuliasha, program
director for homeland security at Oak Ridge National
Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tenn.
The scanner, the size of
a small copy machine, uses spectrometry that can detect
a billionth of a gram of explosives, such as TNT and
nitroglycerine. Explosives linger on the body for days
and are easily transferred from the body to anything
it touches, including a boarding pass, says Kuliasha.
Even if the person were wearing protective clothes while
handling explosives, the analyzer would likely still
be alerted. The system would allow airport officials
to test all passengers rather than use random testing,
and it can scan up to 1000 boarding passes an hour.
The Analyzer scans each pass
in less than five seconds by shooting a stream of hot
air over the pass, desorbing the explosive molecules
and separating them from other molecules through the
selective nature of negative ionization. Thus, chemicals
from perfume, sweat and other sources do not interfere
with the scanning. To prevent false alarms, the machine
performs two stages of analysis with a tandem mass spectrometer.
During tests, the rate of false alarms was 0.2%.
The analyzer costs
about $250,000, but that is expected to lower as it
is commercialized. The project has been funded by the
Dept. of Energy. Developers now are working on creating
a simple visual system and audible alarm to alert users
when explosives are detected. Oak Ridge also plans on
allowing security officials to control a threshold setting
as another barrier to false alarms. The project team
plans to adapt the technology to detect drugs and biological
weapons, to analyze breath to determine what disease
a patient is suffering from and to test forensic traces
of gunpowder or chemicals for law enforcement.
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