John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK): Two new international terminals will be built

Two new international terminals will be built at John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) in a mostly privately financed project that will modernize and expand the aging facility, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said Thursday. This week’s announcement adds details to the project that was originally announced in the governor’s 2017 JFK Vision Plan.

The plan calls for a transformation of JFK with two new world-class international terminal complexes on the airport’s north and south sides. The governor’s office said the project will result in a “unified and interconnected airport system with best-in-class passenger amenities, centralized ground transportation options and vastly improved roadways that collectively will increase the airport’s capacity by at least 15 million passengers a year.”

Of the $13 billion, $12 billion for the project will come from private sources, mainly airlines. The south side terminal will be developed by the Terminal One Group, a consortium of four international airlines: Lufthansa, Air France, Japan Airlines and Korean Air Lines. It will be operated by Munich Airport International. The north side terminal will be developed by JetBlue. The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operates JFK, will invest $1 billion in the project.

The JFK Vision Plan, initially unveiled in January 2017 and based on recommendations from the Governor’s Airport Advisory Panel, calls for an overhaul of the airport’s hodgepodge of eight disparate terminal sites into one unified JFK Airport by demolishing old terminals, utilizing vacant space, and modernizing on-airport infrastructure, while incorporating the latest in passenger amenities and technological innovations.

The Vision Plan also calls for increasing the number and size of gates, improving parking availability, an array of airside taxiway improvements to allow for bigger planes and reduced gate congestion, upgrading the AirTrain JFK system to handle increased passenger capacity, and enhanced roadways on and off the airport.

Beginning late last year, a team led by Mott MacDonald and Grimshaw Architects sought proposals from JFK’s existing six terminal operators. The proposals were evaluated by a formal comparative analysis team.

Terminal One Group will develop the new $7 billion, 2.9-million-square-foot south side terminal.

The plans call for replacing JFK’s Terminal 1, which the group currently operates, and the functionally obsolete Terminal 2, as well as the area left vacant when Terminal 3 was demolished in 2014. When completed, it will yield a net increase of more than 2 million in square feet from the existing terminals and provide 23 international gates, 22 of which will be designed to accommodate larger, wide-body aircraft.

The new terminal will contain at least 24 security screening lanes; more than 230,000 square feet of retail, dining and other concessions; 116,000 square feet of airline lounges; and 55,000 square feet of interior green space, children’s play areas and cultural exhibits. The complex will be operated by Munich Airport International and also be connected to the existing Terminal 4, which initially opened in 2001 and has been expanded twice since then, most recently in 2013.

On the airport’s north side, the proposed new $3 billion, 1.2-million-square-foot terminal will be developed by JetBlue. JetBlue plans to demolish functionally obsolete Terminal 7 and combine it with the vacant space where Terminal 6 was demolished in 2011 to create a world-class international terminal complex. The complex will  be connected to the airline’s existing Terminal 5 and be occupied by the airline and its various partners currently spread throughout the airport. Terminal 5 opened in 2008 and is the newest of JFK’s current six terminals.

The new north terminal will have 12 international gates, all of which be able to accommodate larger, wide-body aircraft. It will feature 74,000 square feet of retail; 30,000 square feet of airline lounges; and 15,000 square feet of recreational space. Construction is expected to begin in 2020 with the first new gates opening in 2023 and substantial completion expected in 2025.

An additional $2 billion in private non-Port Authority funding will be allocated to an array of critical infrastructure upgrades laying the foundation for these world-class new terminals, Governor Cuomo’s office said.

“World-class terminals and best-in-class customer service will go hand-in-hand at John F. Kennedy International Airport under Gov. Cuomo’s leadership,” said Port Authority Executive Director Rick Cotton. “The reimagined, modernized JFK Airport will be the gateway that New Yorkers deserve, enabling continued passenger growth in the decades to come.”

The plans for the two terminals still must be submitted to the Port Authority’s Board of Commissioners. Once lease terms are finalized, the leases will be subject to final Board approval. Additional discussions with multiple other airlines and terminal operators remain ongoing to further advance the goals of the Vision Plan, the governor’s office said.

Following the two terminal projects, PANYNJ will seek proposals to develop the new Kennedy Central hub. The authority plans to issue a Request for Information in the coming months to determine the most effective and functional way move forward on the project. Options might include, but aren’t limited to, public open and recreational space, conference centers, cultural uses and other amenities for the traveling public and the airport’s workforce.

Source: Airportxnews

The Palermo airport will begin work on the terminal in February 2019

In 2018 Palermo airport will close the year with 7 million passengers, an increase of 15%. This was announced by Fabio Giambrone, president of Gesap, speaking at the Open Forum «+ TOURISM in SICILY, between affirmation and aspiration», organized by Travelnostop.com on the occasion of the World Tourism Day that Unwto celebrates every year on 27 September.

«It is an increase – explained Giambrone – which is the confirmation of how the digestion company has been able to meet the needs of the city and the airport to grow and passengers and routes and at the same time be able to stay within the regional routes.

At the beginning – he said – it was difficult to talk to the carriers. Today they are looking for us. And the fact that this year Palermo is hosting Manifesta has helped a lot in relations with airlines. Today we can clearly say that the airport is no longer in an emergency situation. For 5 years the Gesap has had profit balances and today the airport of Palermo has 99 routes and has assumed an international dimension with a significant increase in passengers from abroad».

But it does not end there: «in February – Giambrone anticipated – work will begin inside the Terminal. It will be three years of work, but with certain dates of beginning and end of work. So far we have always respected dates and deadlines, sometimes even anticipating them. In the coming months we will announce new important routes for tourism and new infrastructures adapted to the constant increase of passengers inside the airport».

Source: TNS Sicilia

Chile: Se inicia licitación para ampliar el aeropuerto de Arica

Una ampliación que duplicará la capacidad actual del aeropuerto internacional Chacalluta, es lo que promete el nuevo proceso de concesionamiento del terminal aéreo nortino, según lo anunció el ministro de Obras Públicas, Juan Andrés Fontaine al iniciar su visita a Arica.

El secretario de Estado confirmó que desde el 21 de septiembre está abierto el segundo proceso de concesionamiento de este recinto. “Esta es mi primera visita a la Región de Arica y Parinacota. La licitación de la gran ampliación del aeropuerto, significa duplicar la capacidad de metros cuadrados de terminales, con una mayor capacidad para recibir más pasajeros y para atenderlos con mucho mayor comodidad que hoy”, indicó.

Las obras que deberá construir la futura concesionaria, implica el aumento de 2 a 5 puentes de embarque, la expansión de los estacionamientos para vehículos y aeronaves, y la construcción de una torre de control y un edificio corporativo para los servicios de la Dirección General de Aeronáutica (DGAC). De los actuales 5.200 metros cuadrados, con la ampliación el terminal aéreo llegará a 11.600 metros cuadrados.

“Esto se inserta dentro de Plan de Aeropuertos que estamos desarrollando desde el MOP y la Dirección General de Aeronáutica. Esto se hace cargo de que el tráfico aéreo está creciendo muy rápidamente, más del 10 por ciento por año. Esto está reflejando el progreso del país y la irrupción de las líneas aéreas de bajo costo que abre mucho más la posibilidad para que las personas utilicen este medio de transporte y para los productos. Significa para regiones extremas como Arica y Parinacota una manera de acercarse al resto del país”, expresó el secretario de Estado.

El próximo 20 de noviembre se conocerán las ofertas técnicas, mientras que el 20 de diciembre se abrirán las ofertas económicas de las empresas que califiquen para este proceso y se conocerá el ganador de la licitación.

La nueva concesión, que se extenderá por 15 años, deberá iniciarse en abril del próximo año. La empresa que se adjudique el contrato deberá administrar el edificio actual y tendrá que financiar las obras nuevas previstas en la ampliación, cuya inversión se calcula en 60 mil millones de pesos aproximadamente.

Previo al desarrollo de la construcción, la concesionaria dispondrá de 570 días para presentar el diseño de éstas ante el MOP. El ministro Fontaine estimó que la fase constructiva involucrará la creación de 150 empleos.

Hasta abril del próximo año se mantendrá la concesionaria integrada por Cointer Chile S.A. y Azvi Chile S.A. en el aeropuerto de Chacalluta, tras haberse adjudicado una concesión por 15 años el año 2004 y que modificó por completo el antiguo diseño del terminal.

El ministro anunció que el 2019, el MOP licitará las concesiones de los aeropuertos de Punta Arenas, de Balmaceda en la Región de Aysén, y el de La Florida en La Serena.

Fuente: La Tercera

Chile: El aeropuerto de Punta Arenas planea su expansión ante aumento de pasajeros

El director regional de Aeropuertos, José Luis Hernández, explicó que “la actual concesión termina en el año 2025. Sin embargo, por un tema del modelo económico de ganancias que tiene asociado, podría finalizar en 2020“.

“La Dirección de Aeropuertos ya realizó el diseño de este anteproyecto referencial para lo que se va a considerar como futuro crecimiento del lugar”, puntualizó.

Actualmente, el terminal Carlos Ibáñez del Campo posee una superficie total de 6.000 metros cuadrados en total, los que se ampliarían a 16.000 con la presentación del anteproyecto: Magallanes presenta la mayor inversión en este tipo de infraestructura, con un total de 83 millones de dólares (más de 55.400 millones de pesos).

Fuente: biobiochile.cl