Brasil: La nueva terminal del Aeropuerto Internacional de Florianópolis será inaugurada en agosto de 2019

La nueva terminal de pasajeros del Aeropuerto Internacional de Florianópolis, Estado de Santa Caterina, Brasil,  será inaugurada en agosto de 2019. La información proviene de Zurich Airport, empresa suiza administradora del aeropuerto.

Las obras comenzaron el 15 de enero y la inversión es de R$ 550 millones. Cuando se inaugure el nuevo terminal, el terminal antiguo se desactivará.

El aeropuerto de Florianópolis fue concedido a la iniciativa privada el año pasado y el aeropuerto de Zurich, que también gestiona el Aeropuerto Internacional de Zurich en Suiza, lo gestionará durante 30 años. El contrato de concesión preveía  la puesta en marcha de la nueva terminal en octubre de 2019.

Según el presidente ejecutivo del Aeropuerto de Floripa, Tobias Markert, la nueva terminal tendrá 49 mil metros cuadrados, cuatro veces más grande que la actual, con 10 pasarelas de embarque (actualmente no hay ninguna) y dos pisos – uno para embarcar y otro para desembarcar. La pista del aeropuerto también se ampliará porque uno de los objetivos es que el aeropuerto comience a recibir vuelos más grandes y para mayores distancias, como los vuelos internacionales a Portugal.

Actualmente, el aeropuerto de Florianópolis está estructurado para recibir 2 millones de pasajeros por año, pero ya opera con el doble de capacidad. El año pasado, 3,8 millones de pasajeros pasaron por ella. Con la nueva terminal, la capacidad alcanzará los 8 millones de pasajeros al año.

El Aeropuerto de Zurich ya invirtió R$ 5 millones en la renovación de la antigua terminal, que recibió mejores billetes y en la ampliación del área de embarque, que fue, segundo ejecutivo de la empresa, el mayor de los pasajeros.

Viracopes
El CEO del Aeropuerto de Zurich en América Latina y el Caribe, Stefan Conrad, dice que el grupo está estudiando la compra del aeropuerto de Viracopos en Campinas, en el interior de São Paulo. Conrad nos dice que no se le permite dar más detalles sobre la negociación, pero que la intención es que se defina hasta finales de este año. «Si no hay señales de que formaremos parte de la solución hasta finales de este año, debemos replantearnos nuestro compromiso», dijo, en una reunión de grupo celebrada a primera hora de la tarde con periodistas en São Paulo.

La adquisición del aeropuerto debe tener lugar, en su opinión, a través de una asociación con IG4 Capital. Actualmente, el aeropuerto, administrado por Aeroportos Brasil Viracopos, está en proceso de recuperación judicial.

Fuente: Aerolatin News

St. Lucia to upgrade international airport passenger capacity to over one million

Prime Minister of Saint Lucia, Allen Chastanet, has revealed that the construction will begin this fall at the Hewanorra International airport which will provide it with the capacity accommodate over one million passengers.
“So it means that we are going to be commencing construction of the new airport this fall and the new airport is going to be able to have the capacity of one and a half million passengers,” Chastanet told.

Some the new systems to be adopted in the enhancing the Hewanora airport facility, according to the prime minister, include facial recognition technology and a system where people’s bags are delivered to their hotel. ‘On property’ satellite offices will be also be created where people will be able to check-in their bags at their hotels instead of doing so at the airport.

At present, there are two airports operating in Saint Lucia: the George F. L. Charles Airport in Castries and the soon to be upgraded Hewanorra International Airport in Vieux Fort.

Source: St Lucia News

Mapping Africa’s biggest airport projects

Airport development is surging across Africa, as a number of factors drive aviation demand across the continent. With IATA projecting a 5.1% growth in passenger numbers across the region by 2035, what are some of the most exciting African airport projects set to drive further growth across the continent?
Cape Town International has received the green light for a host of works, including expansions at both its domestic and international terminals.
Until recently, Africa’s aviation market was faring poorly, due to several decades of underinvestment and mismanagement, as well as poor safety records in air transportation.

But with sweeping changes brought in by regional and global development banks, including the World Bank and the International Finance Corporation in the early 2000s, accountability and transparency flourished, along with foreign investment.

In 2015, the International Air Transport Association’s (IATA) director general Tony Tyler highlighted the true potential for growth across the continent, stating that aviation is the “lifeblood of Africa”, supporting 6.9 million jobs and $80bn in GDP.

In the same speech, at the IATA Africa-Middle East Aviation Day in Nairobi, he also acknowledged the challenges and troubles that remained, such as ill-conceived regulation, poor safety oversight, inadequate and costly infrastructure, and restrictive air-service agreements.

This year, that potential was officially recognised by the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between IATA and the African Airline Association (AFRAA), with the two committing to work together to deliver capacity building projects, promote regional air connectivity, and encourage data exchange among aviation stakeholders – all with the view to advance the sector.

New Addis Ababa International Airport

Africa’s flagship aviation project is currently taking place in Ethiopia, where a brand new $4bn airport is being built in the capital city Addis Ababa.

Estimated for completion in 2024, the New Addis Ababa International Airport will be built at a yet undisclosed location, but with four runways, it aims to be bigger than London Heathrow and serve as many as 120 million passengers every year.

The new airport is hoped to consolidate the market position of the country’s most profitable airline Ethiopian Airlines, while also turn Ethiopia into a major aviation hub for East Africa.

The city’s current airport, Bole International, is also currently undergoing a $350m restoration, expected to be ready later this year.

Cape Town International Airport

As Africa’s third largest airport, Cape Town International got the green light for a host of works, including expansions at both its domestic and international terminals, as well as runway rehabilitation at a cost of $540m. The scheme is expected to spell new growth not just for the airport, but for the whole region, as well as accommodate extended passenger processing capacity in South Africa.

As part of the undertaking, the existent runway is to be realigned, and it will receive new parallel and rapid exit taxiways. The improvement works will allow some of the world’s largest aircraft to land, spurring new tourism and freight transport into South Africa.

Johannesburg OR Tambo International Airport

As South Africa’s biggest international airport, Johannesburg Tambo handles around 1.2 million passengers per month.

In June, UK-based consultancy Mace announced a new contract with Airport Company South Africa for airport improvement projects, valued at $70m. These will refurbish two of the region’s most prominent airports, namely OR Tambo International and Cape Town International Airport. According to a press release from the consultancy, the improvements will include five new seating areas, and the renovation of a portion of its airside corridor at Tambo.

Next year will mark a decade since Tambo completed its biggest renovation project to date, which turned it from a disjointed series of buildings to the global hub it is today.

Beyond the current restoration, the Ekurhuleni Aerotropolis vision plans to put Tambo at the heart of a bone-fide aerocity, complete with retail outlets, hotels, leisure and entertainment, conference, convention and exhibition venues, office buildings, medical facilities and industrial, manufacturing and distribution complexes.

Casablanca Mohammed V International Airport

Morocco’s Mohammed V International Airport is currently preparing to open its doors to millions more passengers as soon as a decade-long refurbishment of its Terminal 1 building wraps up in July.

The revamped facility is expected to double the airport’s capacity from seven to 14 million passengers. According to local news sources, the terminal consists of 84 check-in counters and 17 boarding gates, while Moroccan tourism giant Atlas Hospitality plans to build two hotels in the airport’s vicinity.

On 1 July, Oman Air opened a new route into the airport, between Casablanca and Muscat, which is hoped to strengthen the bilateral relationship between the two countries. The news comes after the annual Airport Service Quality awards rated Mohammed V International the best in Africa.

Entebbe International Airport

Uganda’s Entebbe International Airport is also undergoing vast expansion works at a total cost of $552.9m, the first phase of which is currently nearing completion, according to the Civil Aviation Authority.

The project, backed by the Export Import Bank of China, includes runway construction and rehabilitation, terminal construction and modernisation, airfield lighting and communication solutions.

In July, the airport will celebrate the completion of the first phase, which involved the bulk of the works, such as the construction of a new passenger terminal building, the relocation and expansion of the cargo terminal building and the lengthening of the main runway, among others.

The last phase, to be completed in 2033, will also bring a new control tower and the rehabilitation of the current runways.

Source: Airport Technology

Melbourne Airport plans A$3.5bn upgrade works

Melbourne’s Tullamarine Airport has revealed an A$3.5bn redevelopment plan that includes the construction of a new runway, an expanded international terminal and a transport hub, in an effort to meet the increase in passenger traffic expected for the coming decades.

“The vision for the terminal is to get to 100 million passengers, so to be able to meet that 70 million passengers by 2038 we absolutely need another runway, that is part of the planning,” Melbourne Airport parking and ground access chief Lorie Argus told 3AW.

Argus said that the airport will launch a consultation with the community airlines about the project, which will also overhaul how passengers reach and leave the airport. He added: “For anyone who arrives into Melbourne today, that area the arrivals hall is quite constrained, so we’re looking at a large expansion there of the international terminal to really bring us up to the world’s best class.

“We’re looking at a completely new transport hub which will see all of the pick-up and drop off integrated into the front of the terminal, actually using some of the car park you see today in T1, 2, 3.”

Melbourne Airport said it is expecting 68 million visitors a year by 2038, having registered over 30 million passengers and around 250,000 tonnes of freight in 2016/2017.

Melbourne Airport chief executive Lyell Strambi told ABC Radio Melbourne that the first changes will be seen within 12 months, when moving walkways will be installed in some parts of the airport.

“The scheme is to really have flyovers all the way from the Tullamarine Freeway, sweeping by the various terminals and then having them run off to each of these terminals,” he said.

As part of the project, a 3km third runway is to open by 2023, while the existing east-west runway will be extended in the next nine years. A fourth runway, running north-south, is also included in the scheme, meaning the airport will be able to handle 100 departures and arrivals every hour. Strambi added that the plan will be entirely funded by private enterprise and will not receive the government’s financial support.

However, the hub failed to provide information on the construction of a rail link to the airport, which both the federal and state governments have recently been pushing for.

The Public Transport Users Association (PTUA), one of the rail link’s loudest advocates, expressed disappointment towards the lack of a plan. “With growing numbers of travellers, and tens of thousands of workers in the airport precinct, this is one of the biggest employment centres in Melbourne with no high capacity public transport,” said PTUA spokesman Daniel Bowen.

“Tullamarine is one of the world’s busiest airports with no rail link, so it’s no surprise that despite repeated road upgrades, traffic congestion is a continuing problem.”

A spokesperson for Victorian Transport Minister Jacinta Allan said that the state was “working constructively with the Commonwealth on a preliminary business case” for the construction of a rail link between the city and Tullamarine Airport.

Source: Airport-technology