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WHAT'S
NEXT? Technology is challenging architecture as
the hallmark of terminal design.
(Photo courtesy of Foster and Partners) |
Gone are the days
of V-shaped runways, quonset huts and complacency, replaced
now by parallel runways, plugged-in terminals and uncertainty.
Since the first flight by the Wright Brothers a century ago,
aviation has evolved from early feats of daring to a multibillion-dollar
industry that has relied on equally great feats of engineering
and architecture to capture first the imagination and then
the expectations of the traveling public.
The Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks
and the subsequent recession shook the industry and redefined
expectations. Airport improvement projects stalled as security
requirements took precedence. Major carriers teetered on the
edge of bankruptcy. People were afraid to fly.
Although the 9/11 attacks were
the worst catastrophe in U.S. aviation history, its causes
and effectshijackings, economic slumps and the rise
of low-cost carriershave been seen before and are all
milestones of the past 100 years. So are the eventual rejuvenation
of commercial flight and the increasingly high-tech art of
airport construction.
"Change is obvious,"
says D. Kent Turner, transportation director for St. Louis-based
architect Hellmuth, Obata + Kassabaum. Currently, the model
is changing for airports to spend less on grand architectural
statements and more on concessions, information systems and
security systems, he says.
"Wi-fi" and Internet-based
technology are already allowing fliers to print boarding passes,
check in and pick seats remotely from the terminal. That will
expand to include self-printing of baggage tags, separate
bag delivery to the airport, electronic ID tags, remote-facility
airport screening and biometric identification. The implementation
of these methods will affect the physical shape of airport
facilities and layout.
Providing those services is key
to moving people quickly to their destinations as owners expect
to close in on pre-9/11 levels of air traffic in 2004 and
2005.
"In the past 15 to 20 years,
we have had strikes, wars and other impacts, and while there
are dips, over time we always trend back upward," says
Clay R. Paslay, executive vice president of Dallas-Fort Worth
International Airport, which is forging ahead with its $2.5-billion
program, including a new 2-million-sq-ft terminal. "So,
ironically, we feel now is the best time to be developing
so that we are out in front of the next wave of growth."
But airports wont look and
operate the same as security and the bifurcation of airline
philosophy drives changes. Los Angeles International Airports
new master plan is a $9-billion, security-focused overhaul
backed by Mayor James K. Hahn (D) to create a central passenger
pick-up and drop-off area connected to terminals by a people
mover. Hahn wants to demolish the airports parking structures
and replace them with 6.5 million sq ft of redeveloped terminal
space.
Hahn followed that on Dec. 8, announcing
the long-planned, $225-million renovation of Tom Bradley International
Terminal. The project, separate from the master plan, will
include relocation of baggage screening machines, mechanical
and electrical upgrades and remodeling.
In the next five years, Airbus
380 double-decker planes will attempt to succeed in hub-and-spoke
travel, while Boeing is pinning aircraft development on point-to-point
travel. Either way, air-side and terminal-side facilities
must be prepared to handle either the 80-person regional jet
or the 800-person double-decker jet.
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| WAITING
Passenger convenience tehnologies will continue
to evolve, but the shape of future security concerns is
unpredictable. (Photo courtesy of Kansas City Aviation
Dept.) |
Some industry veterans caution
over extrapolating business and building trends over too long
a time. Although "deregulation impacts still resonate,
whos going to tell how long before the political situation
will change in regard to security?" says airport consultant
Yeong Yee. Even the continued growth of low-cost carriers
is "a big open question," says Marion Golemis, a
veteran aviation planner now retired from the Port Authority
of New York & New Jersey. "Any projections of what
will happen in the next five years, let alone 10 or 20, is
iffy."
A 1950s report by aviation planners
with the Port of New York & New Jersey illustrates the
point. In 1948, "the airline industry became extremely
conservative in estimates of their future. This... prompted
a reduction in the plans for a first-stage passenger terminal."
Two years later, "optimism...was again on the upswing
so that the passenger terminal studies in turn were again
in the expansion phase."
The basic challenges that airport
builders and designers face in this century are not any different
than what their predecessors faced in the last. They face
the challenge of being flexible and adaptable to the patterns
that occur and recur through the constant evolution of the
aviation business.
Click below for more articles
from special report "Airports of the Future">>
Design: The Future is At the Gate
International: Global Aviation Takes Off
Security: Baggage Screening Goes In-line, Out of View
Regionals: Reviving with Revisions
Connections: Take the Train to the Plane
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