Cityscape
by This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it on Sunday, 10 August 2008
Airports have progressively evolved from rudimentary airstrips of yesterday through to lavish modern airports of today. But as the industry evolves from building city airports to creating airport cities, should a line be drawn under the concept of an 'aerotropolis'?
Visualise large airports, larger than the two largest on either side of the Atlantic. Now imagine the largest passenger plane ever built and the creation of mega-airline alliances.
Consider major aircraft manufacturers flush with orders of new aircraft for delivery in the next few years. These scenarios may sound unbelievable but they are in fact the reality of the air transport industry today.
Dubai World Central (DWC), the huge 140km2 urban aviation project under construction in Jebel Ali will incorporate Al Maktoum International Airport. Two huge terminals and six concourses at the airport will handle in excess of 140 million passengers annually.
When completed, the airport will be the world's biggest passenger and cargo hub.
The airport will be able to facilitate the new Airbus 380, a 525-seat double-deck aircraft, which is the largest passenger airliner in the world. The A380's cabin allows for 50% more floor space than the next largest airliner, the Boeing 747-400.
A total of 192 orders for the A380 have already been placed by the world's airlines. Fifty eight of these have been placed by Emirates Airline, five have been placed by Qatar Airways and four by Etihad Airways.
DWC creates a new benchmark in urban planning, but does it create a dangerous ethos of one-upmanship where airport planners will constantly be striving to build bigger and better facilitated airports? For Inderjit Singh, senior vice president of Dubai Aerospace Enterprise (DAE) and former director of Indira Gandhi International Airport, this is a major concern.
"You can have large airports if the demand of the traffic is just, but my concern is how large should these airports be? Should they be three times the size of Heathrow, or combine Heathrow and Chicago O'Hare, plus a little more?" asks Singh.
"You need to draw a good balance between what is happening on the ground and what is happening in the air." But will Al Maktoum International Airport achieve this balance?
Singh believes it will. "You can easily differentiate between what is happening at DWC and other airports that have grown into an ‘aerotropolis'. If you go back 50 years, Heathrow was a small airport, as was O'Hare. It has taken this amount of time to become what they are today."
"DWC's growth is planned. Facilities and supporting infrastructure has all been taken into consideration. The airport should be a good size to handle the predicted 140 million passengers, but there may not be a need for larger than this elsewhere in the world."
Looking back to Heathrow's growth however it can be argued that it is impossible to stunt airport development. After Heathrow's third terminal was built, it was presumed there was no scope for more. Then the fourth was built and the same was said.
Now the fifth terminal has been completed and there are reports of developers planning another runway. In contrast, Singh warns that Al Maktoum International should be a benchmark of airport development and nothing more.
"If Al Maktoum International works, my suggestion is that we should draw a line and say OK - this much and no more.
"No one anticipated airports as large as this and as such there should be no one-upmanship. It's fine when it comes to the world's tallest buildings such as the Burj Dubai. It will become a monument to Dubai and only affects a miniscule amount of people, but by 2027 we expect about 26 million passengers to be handled per day by the worldwide aviation industry. This accounts for 135% of the world population 20 years from now. A new facility that can cope with this has to have a different attitude from these good looking tall buildings. Let us not emulate that trend into our airports."
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