GateHold
Jan 29, 12, 6:57 pm
Now in Patrick Smith's ASK THE PILOT column:
HIDDEN AIRPORT: Unexpected Pleasures in a Terminal Near You
And, why does the United States refuse to acknowledge the "in transit" passenger?
Some excerpts:
".... Frommer's, the travel guide people, recently released their list of the world's best and worst airports. I'm disappointed to see JFK's terminal 5, the much overhyped home of JetBlue, rated near the top. As I've opined before, this building has to be one of the most disappointing airport projects of the last three decades. It's certainly one of the ugliest. The airside view -- the exterior as seen from the runways and taxiways -- is criminally hideous. It looks like the back of a shopping mall; all that's missing are some pallets and dumpsters. On the inside: wow, gee-whiz, a food court...
...With scattered exceptions, US airports don't have a whole lot going for them. Putting aside aesthetics, cleanliness, and a lack of public transport options, another thing that doesn't help is that American airports simply do not recognize the "in transit" concept. * All * passengers arriving from overseas, even if they're merely transiting to a third country, are forced to clear customs and immigration, re-check their luggage, pass through TSA screening, etc. It's an enormous hassle that you don't find overseas...
...Flying from Australia to Europe, for instance, a traveler has the option of flying westbound, via Asia or the Middle East, or eastbound via the US West Coast. Even though the distance and flying times are about the same, almost everybody will opt for the westbound option. I suspect this costs our airlines many millions annually in lost revenue. Indeed this is part of what has made carriers like Emirates, Singapore Airlines, et al., so successful...
..Now, so that you don't accuse me of harping on the negative, allow me to introduce a new feature. I'm calling it "Hidden Airport." The idea is to highlight little known spots of unexpected pleasantness at US airports. It can be a place for some peace and quiet, an unusually good restaurant, etc. It should be somewhere out of the ordinary and relatively unknown -- an escape spot. I'll start things off with two of my favorites......."
The FULL article is here:
http://life.salon.com/2012/01/24/escape_to_hidden_airport/singleton/
Recently in ASK THE PILOT:
View From the Cockpit: Auroras, UFOs, Oil Fields, and Other Oddities
“…Sable Island is one of the oddest places I've ever seen from aloft. The oceans are full of remote islands, but Sable's precarious isolation makes it especially peculiar. It’s a tiny, ribbony crescent of sand, almost Bahamian in shape and texture, all alone against the relentless North Atlantic. It’s like the fragment of a submerged archipelago -- a miniature island that has lost its friends….”
THE FULL article is here:
http://life.salon.com/2012/01/19/who_needs_ufos/singleton/
Since 2002, ASK THE PILOT has been the Web’s most trenchant and entertaining source of all things air travel, dammit.
www.Salon.com
www.AskThePilot.com
Patrick Smith
HIDDEN AIRPORT: Unexpected Pleasures in a Terminal Near You
And, why does the United States refuse to acknowledge the "in transit" passenger?
Some excerpts:
".... Frommer's, the travel guide people, recently released their list of the world's best and worst airports. I'm disappointed to see JFK's terminal 5, the much overhyped home of JetBlue, rated near the top. As I've opined before, this building has to be one of the most disappointing airport projects of the last three decades. It's certainly one of the ugliest. The airside view -- the exterior as seen from the runways and taxiways -- is criminally hideous. It looks like the back of a shopping mall; all that's missing are some pallets and dumpsters. On the inside: wow, gee-whiz, a food court...
...With scattered exceptions, US airports don't have a whole lot going for them. Putting aside aesthetics, cleanliness, and a lack of public transport options, another thing that doesn't help is that American airports simply do not recognize the "in transit" concept. * All * passengers arriving from overseas, even if they're merely transiting to a third country, are forced to clear customs and immigration, re-check their luggage, pass through TSA screening, etc. It's an enormous hassle that you don't find overseas...
...Flying from Australia to Europe, for instance, a traveler has the option of flying westbound, via Asia or the Middle East, or eastbound via the US West Coast. Even though the distance and flying times are about the same, almost everybody will opt for the westbound option. I suspect this costs our airlines many millions annually in lost revenue. Indeed this is part of what has made carriers like Emirates, Singapore Airlines, et al., so successful...
..Now, so that you don't accuse me of harping on the negative, allow me to introduce a new feature. I'm calling it "Hidden Airport." The idea is to highlight little known spots of unexpected pleasantness at US airports. It can be a place for some peace and quiet, an unusually good restaurant, etc. It should be somewhere out of the ordinary and relatively unknown -- an escape spot. I'll start things off with two of my favorites......."
The FULL article is here:
http://life.salon.com/2012/01/24/escape_to_hidden_airport/singleton/
Recently in ASK THE PILOT:
View From the Cockpit: Auroras, UFOs, Oil Fields, and Other Oddities
“…Sable Island is one of the oddest places I've ever seen from aloft. The oceans are full of remote islands, but Sable's precarious isolation makes it especially peculiar. It’s a tiny, ribbony crescent of sand, almost Bahamian in shape and texture, all alone against the relentless North Atlantic. It’s like the fragment of a submerged archipelago -- a miniature island that has lost its friends….”
THE FULL article is here:
http://life.salon.com/2012/01/19/who_needs_ufos/singleton/
Since 2002, ASK THE PILOT has been the Web’s most trenchant and entertaining source of all things air travel, dammit.
www.Salon.com
www.AskThePilot.com
Patrick Smith