Luxury Hoteliers Magazine 2nd Quarter 2016 | Page 54

2016 Design and Tech Trends in airports By Elise Krentzel Airports were built to withstand heavy traffic and to last decades. With hundreds of millions of passengers flying around the globe, airports have to keep pace with the needs of their customers. That means airports can no longer play catch-up with technology, unless they want to aggravate end users. At most Asian airports and at many in Europe and North America, state of the art technology is being deployed and integrated. The way in which passengers experience delays, food and beverage service, shopping, movement and layovers is changing drastically. Some of the biggest trends of 2016 include: • silence and relaxation • all-in-one entertainment centers another, passengers require down time and that means a little quiet. Angela Gittens, Director General of Airports Council International (ACI), says airports and airlines want to “create a calm, relaxed ambiance” as passengers dislike being disrupted by announcements. offer mobile services such as flight and baggage status and airport directions. It is predicted that bag status updates will be offered by 61% of airlines. 79% of airports will offer status notifications such as queue times through security and walking times to gates. It’s no longer uncommon to see massage chairs, relaxation booths, showers, sleep pods or state-ofthe-art private lounges operated by third parties. Passengers want and need to wind down in this 24/7 no rest-for-the-weary economy where our personal and private lives are blurred. Rushing from one place to If on the one hand experiencing OM at an airport is important, the urgency of locating one’s itinerary and movement is its extreme opposite. Smart phone apps are being developed faster than we can imagine. Air transport IT provider SITA has found in 2015, that a majority of airlines and airports will The highly-anticipated new airport in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia will use way finding technology once opened. AviaVox has developed phoneme technology which helps deliver grammatically correct language. That’s especially helpful to passengers who use English as a second language as translation apps • mobile apps for just about everything from WiFi, location promotions to way-finding from various locations, queue length, check-in wait time and baggage delivery 54 ILHA