Re: Dulles is a terrible airport
by
halia
06/12/2008, 11:36 AM #
Ouch!
As a child in the 60s, I remember visting Dulles with my mother and grandmother. Recently opened, the soaring architecture, the bright interior and the fascinating mobile lounges drew many non-flying tourists for a look-see. We were allowed to board a mobile lounge and received an airside tour that I remember to this day.
Designed for the new "jet age," Saarinen conceived an airport that would be user friendly to the passenger. The use of mobile lounges allowed remote parking of aircraft which, in turn, allowed a compact terminal design that would reduce the long walking distances passengers were experiencing at other airports. 200' from curbside to aircraft was the intent.
What Saarinen, and others, did not anticipate was a jet age with aircraft capable of carrying more than 400 people on a single flight. He also did not anticipate the loss of innocence brought about by the spate of hijackings that began in the U.S. in the early '60s. This phenomenon and the resulting security requirements would cause a security screening holdroom to be build on the back of the Terminal effectively cutting out a third of its natural light. He did not anticpate 9/11 and the dizzying array of ever-changing, ever-increasing security requirements that have followed. And finally, he did not anticipate how quickly the Federally owned and operated Dulles would transform from a gently used "white elephant" in the middle of Virginia farmland, to a major domestic and international gateway in the midst of a fast-growing new technolgogy belt.
Dulles' unique position as one of the only two passenger airports in the nation (National is the other) under Federal control meant that while any revenues it produced went into the Federal coffers, the adminstrators of the Airport had to get in the very long and stingy budget line to receive Federal funding that was, at best, barely enough to keep National and Dulles in patchwork repair, much less make any significant improvements to meet changing requirements.
With the transfer of the operation from the Feds to a regional authority in 1987, revenues produced at Dulles now go back into airport improvements and bonds are sold to raise money for major capital improvements. The ink was barely dry on the transfer papers when Dulles opened up its new International Arrivals Building. This was followed by the expansion of the Main Terminal to the length originally conceived by Saarinen. New remote and close-in parking was added, roadways were expanded and airfield improvements were made. A new permanent midfield concourse added new airline gates, and another permanent concourse was added to the base of the Main Terminal, replacing the trailers that had served as "temporary" gates for far too many years. A new airport traffic control tower was built and supporting infrastructure put in place.
And now under construction; a new, underground automated people mover system that will be called AeroTrain. Miles of tunnels have been constructed under active taxiways and facilities. The train station for the Main Terminal, and a new, expansive Security Screening Mezzanine are being built in the space between the Terminal and the iconic Dulles Tower. The train stations for active concourses ... and the "shells" for concourses yet to be built ... are under construction. The existing International Arrivals Building is being expanded and a new runway will open later this year. Through it all Dulles continues to serve more than 20 million passengers a year (with Mobile Lounges no less!) while trying to anticipate the needs of a chaotic airline industry and ever-changing security requirements.
In 2009, when AeroTrain goes into its first phase of operation, Dulles will be able to offer its passengers a long-awaited, greatly enhanced level of service.
Still, work will continue because Dulles is currently operating at about half of its potential capacity. There is the potential for another runway and for three more midfield concourses, with the possibility of another Terminal located at the south end of the airport, and the final build-out of AeroTrain that will accompany these improvements.
And through all the changes stands Saarinen's vision, a simple, yet extraordinary, monument to flight that impressed me many years ago, and so many millions of people since. Saarinen may have lacked a crystal ball to the future, but his design endures.