Jun
15th
The Future of Airport Design Goes Green - Dominic Donaldson
By AircraftOwner Online
An international airport is a hub of activity; with
holidaymakers, business people and others travelling en mass, it
is essential to create a calm and tranquil atmosphere. It is also
important to plan and design the airport so that a large number
of people can pass through with minimum disturbance to each other
and to the operations within the terminal itself.
There are, however, smaller general terminals and military bases
that form a large part of the aviation industry and the design
and development of each of these has different priorities.
The smooth running of these large projects takes a level of
organisation and planning that requires the amalgamation of many
skills in the engineering industry. In recent years the building
of any industrial development has had to conform to new
environmental impact legislations.
To guarantee that the development meets these regulatory
standards it is essential to implement an Environmental
Management System. This will ensure that every step of the
airport design has been considered in accordance with any future
environmental impacts it might have.
Environmental engineering takes many environmental factors into
consideration and meets the 'green' standards expected by a
concerned public and demanded by government regulations. Using
resources wisely and setting high standards that will meet
tomorrow's sustainability requirements are a priority.
It is now widely understood in business that an increase in
environmental performance translates as a rise in general
performance and profits; it is this kind of understanding that is
allowing the boundaries of design to be pushed and for
developments in airport design to embrace the future of
technology.
The aesthetics of an airport differ depending on whether it
functions as a consumer-facing international air terminal, a
military base or a general aviation airport, due to significantly
different end user requirements. In a commercial airport, the
design is tailored toward creating a calm, open atmosphere.
The users of this type of airport are generally waiting for long
amounts of time to board a flight and will spend this interval
shopping in the many tax free boutiques and eating and drinking
in the terminals bars and restaurants. The way these airports
function has to facilitate a large number of people queuing and
moving between areas. This requires wide, open walkways and an
environmental control system that ensures passengers are
comfortable while they wait to board.
If you compare this with the functioning of a military air base,
the differences in design priorities are startling. At military
air bases, comfort and aesthetics take a lower priority than
functionality because a military establishment is primarily a
place of work. There is no need to create a consumer-friendly
atmosphere culture and the volume of personnel that military
airports have to process is dramatically reduced.
A small local airport often has to accommodate a unique
demographic that needs more functionality than an international
terminal because some of the clientele are pilots and others are
passengers, so a certain level of consumer-friendly aesthetics
are built in and the facilities on offer mirror those that would
be expected at a major airport, such as restaurants and
shops.
Understanding and unifying aesthetics and functionality in
accordance with a sustainable way of development is the major
challenge facing airport designers today. When you have
passengers who seek five star service and airport operators that
aim to meet a target of zero carbon emissions, formulating a
green project that gets the green light can seem like pie in the
sky.
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