After a decade of persistent turbulence within the airline
industry, it is no surprise that scarcely a year goes by that one of the big carriers
merges with a second, or a third files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy
protection. Among industries that
the American Customer Satisfaction Index evaluates, airlines elicit some of the
lowest scores—if not the absolute lowest, as they did in 2011. (They performed a bit better in 2012, but still lagged in relation to other industries like shipping,
restaurants, or hotels.) Within the past 18 months, carriers of widely varying sizes have filed
Chapter 11, from regional contractors like Pinnacle to high profile global names like American, while the military/postal contractor Ryan International liquidated just a few weeks ago.
Less publicized is the spillover customer dissatisfaction
directed toward airports themselves. While the airlines have responded to the industry’s
contraction by slicing away at amenities and embedding new fees, many of the
major airports are continuing to renovate (or even completely rebuild) their terminals
as if they’re flush with cash.
Maybe they are, though the FAA and municipal governments typically share
the funding for upgrades, while occasionally forging partnerships with the
tenant airlines. At any rate, the
public dollars that fund the majority of improvements don’t seem to be in
recession just because the economy is.
But J.D. Power and Associates’ North America Airport Satisfaction Study reveals that the operations at the airport
terminals still receive lower ratings (690 on a 1,000-point scale) on average
than affiliated services such as hotels (756) and rental cars (733).
During peak travel times in the busy core of major airports
(those with over 30 million passengers per year), neither consumer malaise nor shrinking
demand are likely to stand out.
But what about off-peak times at airports that, while prominent, fall
short of the top ten busiest?
Sometimes it doesn’t take a great deal of scrutiny to see how little floor
space these airports are using.
Take Cleveland-Hopkins International (CLE), for example: in Calendar Year
2011 it ranked as the nation’s 39th busiest airport, with 4.4
million enplanements. But you’d never guess it’s a busy airport from a trip through Concourse D.
As the Terminal Map reveals, this concourse is noncontiguous from the other three, linked only by a
pedestrian tunnel. Perhaps that’s
why it seems to suffer the red-headed stepchild treatment. United Airlines persistently uses the
gates immediately adjacent to the tunnel, generating enough foot traffic to support
a few fast-food and full-service restaurants, such as Gordon Biersch,
Obrycki’s, Sbarro, and Subway. But
as one walks further to the edges of the concourse, everything thins out
considerably.
Or it thins out completely. Perhaps New Year’s Day (the day I took these pictures) is a
slow travel day, but my hunch regarding people’s vacation schedules would
suggest the exact opposite. Yet
the conditions of the gates here show no indication United has any flights
scheduled for later in the evening.
(As always, my apologies for the poor quality of the photo.)
This wing of the concourse is deserted, and other telltale
details suggest this is business as usual.
The image almost recalls one of the many dead malls I have
visited in the past. Where are the
kiosks or the restaurants? While
there are none to be found, the design of the terminal clearly would allow for
them to flourish. The second of
those photos shows a door to a room that apparently contains “technical
publications”, most likely a back-of-the-house feature that oddly sits in one
of the farthest reaches of the terminal.
Why sequester it from all the other administrative operations? I’m not an expert on airport
facilities, and it’s highly possible that the far reaches of Concourse D never
intended to host any major customer services, since foot traffic would
inevitably thin the further one gets from the center of the terminal, much like
a bell curve. But a vibrant
concourse usually still hosts at least a few retail options all the way to its endpoint. The terminal map of CLE certainly
indicates that Concourses B and C offer shopping all the way to their outer
edges. But the underutilized
Concourse D is empty at either wing.
The above pictures revealed one side of the large hallway; here’s the
other:
The final room is storage. If CLE put these gates to use for conventional enplanements,
it would logically follow for the authorities to lease this room to a
restaurant tenant, transforming it into revenue generating floor space instead
of highly inefficient storage in an otherwise public area.
I could be dead wrong in my assumptions regarding the
organization of a concourse: it’s possible that storage facilities for certain
emergency equipment must exist at particular intervals. But the numbers for CLE suggest that
the airport’s passenger traffic has lagged for some time. The Federal Aviation Administration
does not appear to release a trend analysis of passenger or enplanement, though
Wikipedia takes FAA data and aggregates it for ease of analysis across multiple
years. The chart reveals that CLE’s
enplanements have plummeted in recent years, from 5.5 million in CY 05 (when
the airport was ranked 35th in the nation) to its CY 11 ranking of
39, with 4.4 million enplanements.
This 20.4% decline doesn’t necessarily distinguish CLE, since a precipitous
decrease in enplanements characterized a number of airports during the last
decade, including 40th ranked Sacramento (SMF) that dropped 14.4% in
the same time frame, and 41st ranked Memphis (MEM) plunged a
staggering 22.8%. But notice that
booming Austin experienced a considerable gain in enplanements at its Bergstrom
Airport (AUS) during the same time frame.
Unfortunately, CLE also claims the dubious distinction of
resting in the middle what has for the last decade been one of the more
economically stagnant major metropolitan areas in the country: not only is the
population within Cleveland city limits projected to be the second-fastest shrinking in the country (behind only Detroit) between July
2011 and the April 2010 Census, but the entire Cleveland-Akron-Elyria Combined
Statistical Area, including the majority of the population of northeast Ohio,
lost 2.2% of its population between 2000 and 2010. Population loss within historic city boundaries is hardly
uncommon; a number of cities across the country suffer the same predicament as
Cleveland. But only a handful of
the most depressed regions are enduring such outmigration that even the suburbs
cannot compensate for the core city, resulting in a net loss. Cleveland is not only one of those
cities (most of which are concentrated in the Rust Belt region in close proximity to Lake Erie), but metro Cleveland reported population losses in the 1970s and 1980s as
well. Only in the 1990s did the
metropolitan area enjoy a net increase, but its 2.9 million count in 2010 still registers as a loss from its 3.1 million peak in 1970. Gross Domestic Product growth
from 2007 to 2010 has been, at 2.2%, generally average (middle quintile) —an impressive
feat in light of Metro Cleveland’s pervasive population loss. But average gains during a slow
economic period scarcely compensates for significantly below economic gains
during the relatively flush period of 2002 to 2008.
In short, Cleveland’s current socioeconomic trajectory
obviates the need for significant amounts of the space at the Cleveland-Hopkins
International Airport Terminal. I’ve blogged in the past on how the significantly smaller airport of Woodrum Field (ROA) in Roanoke,
Virginia recognized after September 11, 2011 that demands on airport security superseded
those of managing enplanements, particularly when considering the
near-calamitous drop in passenger traffic after the fateful terrorist
attack. As a result, authorities
at ROA eliminated one of its six gates to make room for the enhanced needs of
the Transportation Security Administration. CLE has surely long since adapted to changing
counter-terrorism measures, but it does not seem to have found a use for the
tens of thousands of square feet in Concourse D for which it no longer has enough
air traffic or passengers. One can
only hope that the airport’s authority, as a good steward of federal tax
dollars, bears this in mind when pursuing capital improvements, as well as any
long-term plans that account for the maintenance and use of this underutilized
space.
While it is possible that future growth in metro Cleveland
will once again justify the full use of Concourse D (or other excess space
elsewhere in the terminal) to accommodate passenger demand, the current
condition begs for a creative overhaul, in pursuit of an adaptive re-use of
what is likely highly specialized, inflexible space. Perhaps the airport’s leadership could consolidate
commercial flights in the main portion of the airport (Concourses A through C)
and D could serve as a freight hub?
The challenge is formidable, but presumably it is also painful to bear
the cost burden of supplying an empty airport wing with security, custodial
services, functional restrooms, full IT, telecomm, and electricity. And with such modest foot traffic in
even the active portions of the concourse, it’s only a matter of time before
Sbarro and Subway could bail as well, if the current conditions worsen. It will be interesting to see if a
future of persistently fewer passengers at airports requires local authorities
to seek advice from other property management agencies…such as those trying to
breathe life in dying malls.
2 comments:
Ostatnio czytałęm coś zupełnie innego.
Wybacz mój polski, bo nie znam języka. Ale ja jestem zainteresowana, jeśli chcesz wyjaśnić więcej.
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