China is building 8 new airports a year

China will become the world’s largest aviation market by 2022, according to the International Air Transport Association, as an expanding middle class and government support for the sector fuel demand for flights and airport construction.
The five charts below show how demand is growing. The first chart illustrates the International Air Transport Association’s prediction that China will add 921 million new passengers by 2036, taking total passengers to 1.5 billion. That compares with 1.1 billion in the US.

To cope with the surge in passengers, the world’s second largest economy plans to build 74 new civil airports by 2020, taking the total to 260. That’s up from 175 in 2010, and amounts to more than eight new airports per year. The data on new airports was revealed in the Civil Aviation Development 13th Five-Year Plan, released by the Civil Aviation Administration of China.

The development underscores how changes in the makeup of China’s population are set to ripple around the globe. The nation’s economic prosperity has resulted in income growth for much of its population, bolstering the middle class. Thirty-five percent of the population is projected to be in the upper-middle-class bracket or better by 2030, up from 10% in 2015.
Some of the more remote regions, including Inner Mongolia, Guizhou, Xinjiang, Sichuan, and Heilongjiang, have seen five or more airports built in the last decade, according to research from DBS Group.

The growth has been in both domestic and international travel and, as this graph shows, there’s room for more expansion:


All that means the nation’s three largest airlines: Air China, China Southern Airlines, and China Eastern Airlines are going to become even bigger international players, challenging the dominant US airlines: American, Delta and United and competing for passenger numbers.
This chart shows the biggest airlines measured by revenue passenger kilometres, RPK, a measure of passenger volumes.

The effects won’t just be felt in China, with increased airline competition potentially pushing down prices and passengers getting used to stopping off in Guangzhou, rather than one of the more traditional major airports for transfers.

Source: The European Sting. Author: Emma Charlton, Writer

Forest-inspired terminal with indoor waterfall planned for Bangkok Airport

DBALP — the architecture firm led by duangrit bunnag — has been selected to design a major new terminal building at bangkok’s suvarnabhumi airport. the scheme references thailand’s lush, vegetation-filled landscapes with a design that immerses passengers within a ‘forest’ environment. between the airport’s passenger and commercial buildings, the design team plans to construct a tropical setting that features a cascading waterfall.

The design comprises two modular structures, that measure 36×36 meters and 18×18 meters respectively. supported by distinctive wooden columns that appear as giant trees, these enclosures cover a total of 348,000 square meters. meanwhile, the indoor forest, which spans 16,132 square meters, is designed to be a ‘live demonstration of how human beings could inherit the natural tropical ecological system’.

Sorce: Design Boom

UPDATE: Winning airport design accused of plagiarizing Kengo Kuma’s Wooden Bridge Museum.

Duangrit Bunnag, the renowned local architect who won the bid to design Suvarnabhumi airport’s second terminal, has denied plagiarising the work of a Japanese architect.

«I didn’t copy anyone else’s work. Those who follow my work will know that I created a similar image in my previous designs, such as for a hotel in Sri Lanka,» Mr Duangrit told The Standard, a local online news portal.bangkokpost.com

Duangrit Bunnag’s firm DBALP Consortium, along with Nikken Sekkei, EMS Consultants, MHPM, MSE and ARJ Consortium, were recently announced as winners of the Suvarnabhumi Airport Terminal 2 Project design contest. Focused on expanding the Thailand airport, the competition design sparked online accusations of plagiarizing Kengo Kuma’s Wooden Bridge Museum in southern Japan.

DBALP Consortium’s winning airport design

Construction of new Mozambique airport to commence in October

Mozambique’s Transport and Communications Minister Carlos Mesquita says work on Xai-Xai Airport in Gaza province is expected to begin in October.The Chinese government granted the Mozambican government US$60 million for construction of the new airport in Xai-Xai city, some 205 kilometres north of the capital Maputo.

Mesquita told journalists on Thursday that two public tenders related with the airport are to be launched, one in China and one in Mozambique.

“The Chinese tender will select a contractor to build the runway while the tender in Mozambique will identify companies to build access roads and install the services to support the airport’s activities,” Mesquita said.

Nepal: Work second int’l airport begins in Pokhara

Construction of two separate terminal buildings, one for international and another for domestic flights, began at the China-assisted Pokhara international airport on Wednesday.

Pokhara, located in western Nepal, is one of the country’s most popular tourist destinations.

Nepali Minister for Culture, Tourism and Civil Aviation Rabindra Adhikari laid the foundation stone marking the start of construction of the terminal buildings which are expected to complete within a year.

The two terminal buildings will be built at an area of 14,000 square meters, according to the Civil Aviation Authority of Nepal (CAAN), the implementing agency of the project. During the ceremony, Mr Adhikari said the work on the runway of the airport would also begin within a month.

“The works are moving ahead smoothly as per the set timetable and the airport will be brought into operation by July 2021 after completing the works,” he said.

Stating that the project will be a game-changer for Nepal’s tourism development and economic prosperity, the minister said the Nepali government would also promote the development of other tourism infrastructure projects such as hotels, restaurants, and roads, among others, citing the possible rise in foreign tourists.

This is one of the three new international airports being built in the country. Currently Nepal has only one international airport in the capital city of Kathmandu.

The CAAN, which is also the regulatory body of the aviation sector, said that the work in the project had been moving forward in a speedy way with strong support from local people.

“We expect to complete 40 percent of work at the end of current fiscal year (Mid-July 2019),” Sanjeev Gautam, director general of CAAN told.

Source: Khmer Times