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Why isn't airport relocation done gradually?



The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InWhy circle an airport after takeoff? (SLC particularly)Why are airport firetrucks painted yellow green?Why is Denver International Airport runway 16R/34L rarely used?What does it mean “the airport has the code A 129” (Nida airport, Europe)?What is the busiest airport?In the US, what can be done at an airport when volunteering hours?Which civil airport has the longest runways in total?What is this airport video?Why are follow-me cars used in Gran Canaria Airport in good visibility for incoming aircraft?Why so much ground time at Frankfurt Airport?










29












$begingroup$


Recently Istanbul airport (IST) was relocated from Atatürk over 2 days. Munich Franz Josef Strauss (MUC) was also moved overnight from Munich Riem. Doesn't it cause chaos, since most employees are new to the place and equipment, work procedures are not well established? E.g. some people do not have badges with correct security clearance.



Why not do it gradually over longer time? Move airline by airline -- smaller first, bigger later.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Kamil Aliyev is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







$endgroup$







  • 17




    $begingroup$
    It would greatly help if you would use recognizable geographic names for the airports, instead of 3-letter codes.
    $endgroup$
    – jamesqf
    2 days ago






  • 29




    $begingroup$
    @jamesqf airports often have several names, and are often commonly referred to by something other than their official name. additionally, cities often have several airports, so while "munich airport" might be unambiguous, "milan airport" is not. on the other hand, MUC is completely unambiguous. it may require a 10-second lookup for people who don't spend a lot of time thinking about / discussing / talking about airports, but on the other hand, this is the aviation stack exchange.
    $endgroup$
    – jbg
    2 days ago






  • 19




    $begingroup$
    @jbg Nobody should have to Google just to find out what the question is about. The IATA code is great for disambiguation and should be included for that reason, but we should never rely on just a code, especially in questions like this one that are likely to be of interest to non-specialists. Quite apart from anything else, codes are easy to typo in ways that completely change the meaning of the question. Write "Munixh" and it's obvious what you meant; write "MUX" and suddenly you're in Pakistan and wasting everybody's time.
    $endgroup$
    – David Richerby
    yesterday






  • 6




    $begingroup$
    @Fattie Some airport codes are well-known. But, come on, when I wrote MUX, did you know what I meant? We're supposed to be communicating more broadly than just the clique who know airport codes. Especially, as I said, on a question that is of interest to people who aren't aviation geeks. And note that I'm not saying we shouldn't use the codes: I explicitly said we should use them, alongside the actual name.
    $endgroup$
    – David Richerby
    16 hours ago







  • 7




    $begingroup$
    @Fattie Know that there are a lot of people like me that reach this site either from sister sites or maybe even Google. These are two reasons to include both a full name and an airport code. Including the actual names increases findability on search engines for anyone (which is one of the primary goals of StackExchange) and makes this quite interesting question more accessible to a broader audience. Your simple fact (1) is just plain wrong. I will gladly be the counterexample thereof. Please tone down the attitude.
    $endgroup$
    – rubenvb
    14 hours ago















29












$begingroup$


Recently Istanbul airport (IST) was relocated from Atatürk over 2 days. Munich Franz Josef Strauss (MUC) was also moved overnight from Munich Riem. Doesn't it cause chaos, since most employees are new to the place and equipment, work procedures are not well established? E.g. some people do not have badges with correct security clearance.



Why not do it gradually over longer time? Move airline by airline -- smaller first, bigger later.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Kamil Aliyev is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







$endgroup$







  • 17




    $begingroup$
    It would greatly help if you would use recognizable geographic names for the airports, instead of 3-letter codes.
    $endgroup$
    – jamesqf
    2 days ago






  • 29




    $begingroup$
    @jamesqf airports often have several names, and are often commonly referred to by something other than their official name. additionally, cities often have several airports, so while "munich airport" might be unambiguous, "milan airport" is not. on the other hand, MUC is completely unambiguous. it may require a 10-second lookup for people who don't spend a lot of time thinking about / discussing / talking about airports, but on the other hand, this is the aviation stack exchange.
    $endgroup$
    – jbg
    2 days ago






  • 19




    $begingroup$
    @jbg Nobody should have to Google just to find out what the question is about. The IATA code is great for disambiguation and should be included for that reason, but we should never rely on just a code, especially in questions like this one that are likely to be of interest to non-specialists. Quite apart from anything else, codes are easy to typo in ways that completely change the meaning of the question. Write "Munixh" and it's obvious what you meant; write "MUX" and suddenly you're in Pakistan and wasting everybody's time.
    $endgroup$
    – David Richerby
    yesterday






  • 6




    $begingroup$
    @Fattie Some airport codes are well-known. But, come on, when I wrote MUX, did you know what I meant? We're supposed to be communicating more broadly than just the clique who know airport codes. Especially, as I said, on a question that is of interest to people who aren't aviation geeks. And note that I'm not saying we shouldn't use the codes: I explicitly said we should use them, alongside the actual name.
    $endgroup$
    – David Richerby
    16 hours ago







  • 7




    $begingroup$
    @Fattie Know that there are a lot of people like me that reach this site either from sister sites or maybe even Google. These are two reasons to include both a full name and an airport code. Including the actual names increases findability on search engines for anyone (which is one of the primary goals of StackExchange) and makes this quite interesting question more accessible to a broader audience. Your simple fact (1) is just plain wrong. I will gladly be the counterexample thereof. Please tone down the attitude.
    $endgroup$
    – rubenvb
    14 hours ago













29












29








29





$begingroup$


Recently Istanbul airport (IST) was relocated from Atatürk over 2 days. Munich Franz Josef Strauss (MUC) was also moved overnight from Munich Riem. Doesn't it cause chaos, since most employees are new to the place and equipment, work procedures are not well established? E.g. some people do not have badges with correct security clearance.



Why not do it gradually over longer time? Move airline by airline -- smaller first, bigger later.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Kamil Aliyev is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







$endgroup$




Recently Istanbul airport (IST) was relocated from Atatürk over 2 days. Munich Franz Josef Strauss (MUC) was also moved overnight from Munich Riem. Doesn't it cause chaos, since most employees are new to the place and equipment, work procedures are not well established? E.g. some people do not have badges with correct security clearance.



Why not do it gradually over longer time? Move airline by airline -- smaller first, bigger later.







airport airport-operations






share|improve this question









New contributor




Kamil Aliyev is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Kamil Aliyev is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited yesterday









rob74

1072




1072






New contributor




Kamil Aliyev is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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asked 2 days ago









Kamil AliyevKamil Aliyev

15123




15123




New contributor




Kamil Aliyev is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Kamil Aliyev is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Kamil Aliyev is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







  • 17




    $begingroup$
    It would greatly help if you would use recognizable geographic names for the airports, instead of 3-letter codes.
    $endgroup$
    – jamesqf
    2 days ago






  • 29




    $begingroup$
    @jamesqf airports often have several names, and are often commonly referred to by something other than their official name. additionally, cities often have several airports, so while "munich airport" might be unambiguous, "milan airport" is not. on the other hand, MUC is completely unambiguous. it may require a 10-second lookup for people who don't spend a lot of time thinking about / discussing / talking about airports, but on the other hand, this is the aviation stack exchange.
    $endgroup$
    – jbg
    2 days ago






  • 19




    $begingroup$
    @jbg Nobody should have to Google just to find out what the question is about. The IATA code is great for disambiguation and should be included for that reason, but we should never rely on just a code, especially in questions like this one that are likely to be of interest to non-specialists. Quite apart from anything else, codes are easy to typo in ways that completely change the meaning of the question. Write "Munixh" and it's obvious what you meant; write "MUX" and suddenly you're in Pakistan and wasting everybody's time.
    $endgroup$
    – David Richerby
    yesterday






  • 6




    $begingroup$
    @Fattie Some airport codes are well-known. But, come on, when I wrote MUX, did you know what I meant? We're supposed to be communicating more broadly than just the clique who know airport codes. Especially, as I said, on a question that is of interest to people who aren't aviation geeks. And note that I'm not saying we shouldn't use the codes: I explicitly said we should use them, alongside the actual name.
    $endgroup$
    – David Richerby
    16 hours ago







  • 7




    $begingroup$
    @Fattie Know that there are a lot of people like me that reach this site either from sister sites or maybe even Google. These are two reasons to include both a full name and an airport code. Including the actual names increases findability on search engines for anyone (which is one of the primary goals of StackExchange) and makes this quite interesting question more accessible to a broader audience. Your simple fact (1) is just plain wrong. I will gladly be the counterexample thereof. Please tone down the attitude.
    $endgroup$
    – rubenvb
    14 hours ago












  • 17




    $begingroup$
    It would greatly help if you would use recognizable geographic names for the airports, instead of 3-letter codes.
    $endgroup$
    – jamesqf
    2 days ago






  • 29




    $begingroup$
    @jamesqf airports often have several names, and are often commonly referred to by something other than their official name. additionally, cities often have several airports, so while "munich airport" might be unambiguous, "milan airport" is not. on the other hand, MUC is completely unambiguous. it may require a 10-second lookup for people who don't spend a lot of time thinking about / discussing / talking about airports, but on the other hand, this is the aviation stack exchange.
    $endgroup$
    – jbg
    2 days ago






  • 19




    $begingroup$
    @jbg Nobody should have to Google just to find out what the question is about. The IATA code is great for disambiguation and should be included for that reason, but we should never rely on just a code, especially in questions like this one that are likely to be of interest to non-specialists. Quite apart from anything else, codes are easy to typo in ways that completely change the meaning of the question. Write "Munixh" and it's obvious what you meant; write "MUX" and suddenly you're in Pakistan and wasting everybody's time.
    $endgroup$
    – David Richerby
    yesterday






  • 6




    $begingroup$
    @Fattie Some airport codes are well-known. But, come on, when I wrote MUX, did you know what I meant? We're supposed to be communicating more broadly than just the clique who know airport codes. Especially, as I said, on a question that is of interest to people who aren't aviation geeks. And note that I'm not saying we shouldn't use the codes: I explicitly said we should use them, alongside the actual name.
    $endgroup$
    – David Richerby
    16 hours ago







  • 7




    $begingroup$
    @Fattie Know that there are a lot of people like me that reach this site either from sister sites or maybe even Google. These are two reasons to include both a full name and an airport code. Including the actual names increases findability on search engines for anyone (which is one of the primary goals of StackExchange) and makes this quite interesting question more accessible to a broader audience. Your simple fact (1) is just plain wrong. I will gladly be the counterexample thereof. Please tone down the attitude.
    $endgroup$
    – rubenvb
    14 hours ago







17




17




$begingroup$
It would greatly help if you would use recognizable geographic names for the airports, instead of 3-letter codes.
$endgroup$
– jamesqf
2 days ago




$begingroup$
It would greatly help if you would use recognizable geographic names for the airports, instead of 3-letter codes.
$endgroup$
– jamesqf
2 days ago




29




29




$begingroup$
@jamesqf airports often have several names, and are often commonly referred to by something other than their official name. additionally, cities often have several airports, so while "munich airport" might be unambiguous, "milan airport" is not. on the other hand, MUC is completely unambiguous. it may require a 10-second lookup for people who don't spend a lot of time thinking about / discussing / talking about airports, but on the other hand, this is the aviation stack exchange.
$endgroup$
– jbg
2 days ago




$begingroup$
@jamesqf airports often have several names, and are often commonly referred to by something other than their official name. additionally, cities often have several airports, so while "munich airport" might be unambiguous, "milan airport" is not. on the other hand, MUC is completely unambiguous. it may require a 10-second lookup for people who don't spend a lot of time thinking about / discussing / talking about airports, but on the other hand, this is the aviation stack exchange.
$endgroup$
– jbg
2 days ago




19




19




$begingroup$
@jbg Nobody should have to Google just to find out what the question is about. The IATA code is great for disambiguation and should be included for that reason, but we should never rely on just a code, especially in questions like this one that are likely to be of interest to non-specialists. Quite apart from anything else, codes are easy to typo in ways that completely change the meaning of the question. Write "Munixh" and it's obvious what you meant; write "MUX" and suddenly you're in Pakistan and wasting everybody's time.
$endgroup$
– David Richerby
yesterday




$begingroup$
@jbg Nobody should have to Google just to find out what the question is about. The IATA code is great for disambiguation and should be included for that reason, but we should never rely on just a code, especially in questions like this one that are likely to be of interest to non-specialists. Quite apart from anything else, codes are easy to typo in ways that completely change the meaning of the question. Write "Munixh" and it's obvious what you meant; write "MUX" and suddenly you're in Pakistan and wasting everybody's time.
$endgroup$
– David Richerby
yesterday




6




6




$begingroup$
@Fattie Some airport codes are well-known. But, come on, when I wrote MUX, did you know what I meant? We're supposed to be communicating more broadly than just the clique who know airport codes. Especially, as I said, on a question that is of interest to people who aren't aviation geeks. And note that I'm not saying we shouldn't use the codes: I explicitly said we should use them, alongside the actual name.
$endgroup$
– David Richerby
16 hours ago





$begingroup$
@Fattie Some airport codes are well-known. But, come on, when I wrote MUX, did you know what I meant? We're supposed to be communicating more broadly than just the clique who know airport codes. Especially, as I said, on a question that is of interest to people who aren't aviation geeks. And note that I'm not saying we shouldn't use the codes: I explicitly said we should use them, alongside the actual name.
$endgroup$
– David Richerby
16 hours ago





7




7




$begingroup$
@Fattie Know that there are a lot of people like me that reach this site either from sister sites or maybe even Google. These are two reasons to include both a full name and an airport code. Including the actual names increases findability on search engines for anyone (which is one of the primary goals of StackExchange) and makes this quite interesting question more accessible to a broader audience. Your simple fact (1) is just plain wrong. I will gladly be the counterexample thereof. Please tone down the attitude.
$endgroup$
– rubenvb
14 hours ago




$begingroup$
@Fattie Know that there are a lot of people like me that reach this site either from sister sites or maybe even Google. These are two reasons to include both a full name and an airport code. Including the actual names increases findability on search engines for anyone (which is one of the primary goals of StackExchange) and makes this quite interesting question more accessible to a broader audience. Your simple fact (1) is just plain wrong. I will gladly be the counterexample thereof. Please tone down the attitude.
$endgroup$
– rubenvb
14 hours ago










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

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$begingroup$

Gradual relocation essentially mean having to staff and equip nearly two full airports during the transition period. It is also annoying for the travelers that want to transfer planes and need to relocate to the other airport. They would then need to get transported to or from the new location and through security again unless a small short hop flight is established during the transition. In IST's case it's 35 km distance between the old and new location.



Having two busy airports close to each other is also a bigger challenge for air traffic control than a really busy one and a calm one.



The solution to the issues you mention can be solved by thorough preparation. Like making sure all the old badges work (or having the new ones passed out as they come in for their first day at the new location), make sure everyone knows where they need to report for work in the new location. Perhaps having some extra trouble shooters on hand to fix teething issues.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Incidentally, the distance between the old and new Munich airports is also ~35 km (by road).
    $endgroup$
    – rob74
    yesterday


















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$begingroup$

Moving airline by airline doesn't help that much:



  • You still have the same chaos, just on a per-airline basis.

  • The airports you mention are dominated by large carriers that have turned them into hubs (Turkish Airlines and Lufthansa). Even if you move all the other airlines one by one, you still have much of the pain of the big move when you move the largest airline.

And it has disadvantages:



  • Connections: A large percentage of traffic through these hub airports are connecting passengers, and thanks to airline alliances and partnerships, many are connecting between flights from different airlines. Very few passengers (and even fewer high-paying business travelers) will willingly break their journey to go for a drive across a famously traffic-congested city to change airports. Customers will abandon your airport and fly other routes while this is going on.

  • Equipment: When Denver International Airport moved, there was a massive overnight caravan "of more than 10,000 baggage carts, plane tugs, fire engines, catering trucks, de-icing machines and untold truckloads of tickets, tags and gift shop sundries" to the new airport. A similar operation occurred in Istanbul. If both airports must operate simultaneously, a fleet of equipment must be maintained at both airports during the overlap period. Much of this equipment is expensive, long-lasting, and will be difficult to sell or dispose of after the old airport is closed down.

  • Staff: There's not an exact linear relationship of airport staffing to the number of flights. Many staff may work for contracted ground handling companies and serve flights from more than one airline. They can't be in two places at once.

This is still done to a limited extent though. Turkish Airlines operated a few flights out of New Istanbul Airport for several months prior to the big move, which allowed them to test systems and familiarize staff with the new airport. Some of these disadvantages can be mitigated by limiting the number of flights and choosing them strategically.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    +1 for the connections point. Passengers don't like having to make their way to the other side of the city because their inbound flight went to one airport, but their outbound flight moved to another.
    $endgroup$
    – reirab
    2 days ago










  • $begingroup$
    I'm surprised that gift shop contents were part of the overnight shift in Denver. I'd've expected that stores could be largely filled in advance at the new locations and then have their remaining inventory sent to the new location's stock room after the main rush.
    $endgroup$
    – Dan Neely
    yesterday










  • $begingroup$
    Zach, that's fasicnating about the "overnight caravan" - good one!
    $endgroup$
    – Fattie
    16 hours ago


















27












$begingroup$

Gradually moving between airports is a living nightmare for connecting travelers.



Exactly that was done at Montreal Mirabel airport, a fabulous, spacious new replacement airport for Montreal Dorval (Trudeau). Montreal used to be Canada's main international hub. International flights were banned from the old airport, as incentive for airlines to move all operations to Mirabel. But they lacked the political strength to fully close the old airport, and never finished the high-speed-rail connection (or even highways) to Mirabel. Passengers needed to take an hourlong bus ride and re-clear security. This was so irksome that instead of consolidating at Mirabel, operators simply sent their international flights to Toronto instead, making it Canada's main hub.



They lost so many flights that Montreal didn't need two airports anymore, and they consolidated back at Trudeau. Mirabel's main terminal was scrapped and it's a race track now. A few cargo operations remain.




Then you have the case of Kai Tak, where they "threw the switch" properly, but due to teething pains, threw the cargo operations back to Kai Tak for a short while.



Then there is Berlin.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    On the other hand, some large cities get along just fine with 2 or even 3 major airports with one being primary for long-haul flights and the other being mostly domestic and regional flights. Off the top of my head, NYC, London, Chicago, Shanghai, Tokyo, Paris, Dallas, Houston, Washington, D.C., and Bangkok all work that way. Granted, the NYC airports aren't exactly an example of efficiency, but that's because each of them lacks sufficient space to build more runways, not because of failing to combine operations.
    $endgroup$
    – reirab
    2 days ago










  • $begingroup$
    @reirab Or Los Angeles, with 5. Yeah, NYC seriously needs to do the Mirabel thing.
    $endgroup$
    – Harper
    2 days ago











  • $begingroup$
    @reirab JKF is primarily international flights while Newark and LaGuardia are primarily domestic, but they're not split cleanly like Mirabel/Dorval were. I can fly IND->EWR->LHR, as opposed to IND->EWR, bus/train to JFK, then JFK->LHR. That would be a nightmare and nobody would use JFK if they could possibly avoid it.
    $endgroup$
    – FreeMan
    yesterday










  • $begingroup$
    @FreeMan I had JFK/LGA more in mind than EWR. EWR is more split from the other airports by alliance than by domestic vs. international. All of United's long-haul operations are at EWR and their hub is there. Delta and American have their hubs at LGA and JFK instead with LGA being entirely domestic/regional and all long-haul operations being at JFK. A lot of Star Alliance airlines fly to EWR in order to access UA's route network, while oneworld and SkyTeam airlines mostly just fly to JFK, where they can access American and Delta route networks from JFK or LGA.
    $endgroup$
    – reirab
    yesterday






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @reirab London doesn't really fit your long-haul vs domestic/regional split, either. City, Luton, Stansted and whatever other airports one might consider as "London" (*glowers at Southend*) are domestic/regional, and Gatwick and Heathrow do everything. If you're connecting from a long-haul flight to a domestic/regional flight in London, you'd typically do that at either Gatwick or Heathrow and wouldn't need to transit to another airport.
    $endgroup$
    – David Richerby
    yesterday



















2












$begingroup$

My experience is when KUL moved from Subang (now SZB) to the new KL Intl Airport (KLIA).



The moving date was declared way in advance, I seem to remember the date was locked more than 6 months before, and a lot of airlines rescheduled their ops especially the nightstopping aircraft. Obviously Malaysia Airlines had to ferry a bunch of planes over but its a 10minute hop and done in the early hours so not much of an issue. Some of the ground equipment was ferried over earlier in the day (of the last day of Subang operations) but everything else was moved over once the last flight of the day was completed. I'm talking motorised stairs, K-loaders, belt-loaders, tractors, trolleys, dollies the works. It was quite a convoy of flat loaders. Stuff that could be driven on public roads were given temporary permits so you saw motorised steps and water/toilet trucks on the public highways!



The biggest change was moving from a host (MH) checkin environment to a homegrown common-use system which was integrated with the Baggage Handling System (BHS). The first days baggage handling was chaos with a lot of bags not making their flights.



A lot of items can't be duplicated not only in terms of equipment but also in manpower and its easier to make a clean cut and manage the problems for a 24hour period than drawing the pain over a period of weeks.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    OK but only your last sentence actually answers the question.
    $endgroup$
    – David Richerby
    yesterday











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4 Answers
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4 Answers
4






active

oldest

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active

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57












$begingroup$

Gradual relocation essentially mean having to staff and equip nearly two full airports during the transition period. It is also annoying for the travelers that want to transfer planes and need to relocate to the other airport. They would then need to get transported to or from the new location and through security again unless a small short hop flight is established during the transition. In IST's case it's 35 km distance between the old and new location.



Having two busy airports close to each other is also a bigger challenge for air traffic control than a really busy one and a calm one.



The solution to the issues you mention can be solved by thorough preparation. Like making sure all the old badges work (or having the new ones passed out as they come in for their first day at the new location), make sure everyone knows where they need to report for work in the new location. Perhaps having some extra trouble shooters on hand to fix teething issues.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Incidentally, the distance between the old and new Munich airports is also ~35 km (by road).
    $endgroup$
    – rob74
    yesterday















57












$begingroup$

Gradual relocation essentially mean having to staff and equip nearly two full airports during the transition period. It is also annoying for the travelers that want to transfer planes and need to relocate to the other airport. They would then need to get transported to or from the new location and through security again unless a small short hop flight is established during the transition. In IST's case it's 35 km distance between the old and new location.



Having two busy airports close to each other is also a bigger challenge for air traffic control than a really busy one and a calm one.



The solution to the issues you mention can be solved by thorough preparation. Like making sure all the old badges work (or having the new ones passed out as they come in for their first day at the new location), make sure everyone knows where they need to report for work in the new location. Perhaps having some extra trouble shooters on hand to fix teething issues.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Incidentally, the distance between the old and new Munich airports is also ~35 km (by road).
    $endgroup$
    – rob74
    yesterday













57












57








57





$begingroup$

Gradual relocation essentially mean having to staff and equip nearly two full airports during the transition period. It is also annoying for the travelers that want to transfer planes and need to relocate to the other airport. They would then need to get transported to or from the new location and through security again unless a small short hop flight is established during the transition. In IST's case it's 35 km distance between the old and new location.



Having two busy airports close to each other is also a bigger challenge for air traffic control than a really busy one and a calm one.



The solution to the issues you mention can be solved by thorough preparation. Like making sure all the old badges work (or having the new ones passed out as they come in for their first day at the new location), make sure everyone knows where they need to report for work in the new location. Perhaps having some extra trouble shooters on hand to fix teething issues.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$



Gradual relocation essentially mean having to staff and equip nearly two full airports during the transition period. It is also annoying for the travelers that want to transfer planes and need to relocate to the other airport. They would then need to get transported to or from the new location and through security again unless a small short hop flight is established during the transition. In IST's case it's 35 km distance between the old and new location.



Having two busy airports close to each other is also a bigger challenge for air traffic control than a really busy one and a calm one.



The solution to the issues you mention can be solved by thorough preparation. Like making sure all the old badges work (or having the new ones passed out as they come in for their first day at the new location), make sure everyone knows where they need to report for work in the new location. Perhaps having some extra trouble shooters on hand to fix teething issues.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 2 days ago









Loong

267214




267214










answered 2 days ago









ratchet freakratchet freak

24.6k468131




24.6k468131







  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Incidentally, the distance between the old and new Munich airports is also ~35 km (by road).
    $endgroup$
    – rob74
    yesterday












  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Incidentally, the distance between the old and new Munich airports is also ~35 km (by road).
    $endgroup$
    – rob74
    yesterday







1




1




$begingroup$
Incidentally, the distance between the old and new Munich airports is also ~35 km (by road).
$endgroup$
– rob74
yesterday




$begingroup$
Incidentally, the distance between the old and new Munich airports is also ~35 km (by road).
$endgroup$
– rob74
yesterday











32












$begingroup$

Moving airline by airline doesn't help that much:



  • You still have the same chaos, just on a per-airline basis.

  • The airports you mention are dominated by large carriers that have turned them into hubs (Turkish Airlines and Lufthansa). Even if you move all the other airlines one by one, you still have much of the pain of the big move when you move the largest airline.

And it has disadvantages:



  • Connections: A large percentage of traffic through these hub airports are connecting passengers, and thanks to airline alliances and partnerships, many are connecting between flights from different airlines. Very few passengers (and even fewer high-paying business travelers) will willingly break their journey to go for a drive across a famously traffic-congested city to change airports. Customers will abandon your airport and fly other routes while this is going on.

  • Equipment: When Denver International Airport moved, there was a massive overnight caravan "of more than 10,000 baggage carts, plane tugs, fire engines, catering trucks, de-icing machines and untold truckloads of tickets, tags and gift shop sundries" to the new airport. A similar operation occurred in Istanbul. If both airports must operate simultaneously, a fleet of equipment must be maintained at both airports during the overlap period. Much of this equipment is expensive, long-lasting, and will be difficult to sell or dispose of after the old airport is closed down.

  • Staff: There's not an exact linear relationship of airport staffing to the number of flights. Many staff may work for contracted ground handling companies and serve flights from more than one airline. They can't be in two places at once.

This is still done to a limited extent though. Turkish Airlines operated a few flights out of New Istanbul Airport for several months prior to the big move, which allowed them to test systems and familiarize staff with the new airport. Some of these disadvantages can be mitigated by limiting the number of flights and choosing them strategically.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    +1 for the connections point. Passengers don't like having to make their way to the other side of the city because their inbound flight went to one airport, but their outbound flight moved to another.
    $endgroup$
    – reirab
    2 days ago










  • $begingroup$
    I'm surprised that gift shop contents were part of the overnight shift in Denver. I'd've expected that stores could be largely filled in advance at the new locations and then have their remaining inventory sent to the new location's stock room after the main rush.
    $endgroup$
    – Dan Neely
    yesterday










  • $begingroup$
    Zach, that's fasicnating about the "overnight caravan" - good one!
    $endgroup$
    – Fattie
    16 hours ago















32












$begingroup$

Moving airline by airline doesn't help that much:



  • You still have the same chaos, just on a per-airline basis.

  • The airports you mention are dominated by large carriers that have turned them into hubs (Turkish Airlines and Lufthansa). Even if you move all the other airlines one by one, you still have much of the pain of the big move when you move the largest airline.

And it has disadvantages:



  • Connections: A large percentage of traffic through these hub airports are connecting passengers, and thanks to airline alliances and partnerships, many are connecting between flights from different airlines. Very few passengers (and even fewer high-paying business travelers) will willingly break their journey to go for a drive across a famously traffic-congested city to change airports. Customers will abandon your airport and fly other routes while this is going on.

  • Equipment: When Denver International Airport moved, there was a massive overnight caravan "of more than 10,000 baggage carts, plane tugs, fire engines, catering trucks, de-icing machines and untold truckloads of tickets, tags and gift shop sundries" to the new airport. A similar operation occurred in Istanbul. If both airports must operate simultaneously, a fleet of equipment must be maintained at both airports during the overlap period. Much of this equipment is expensive, long-lasting, and will be difficult to sell or dispose of after the old airport is closed down.

  • Staff: There's not an exact linear relationship of airport staffing to the number of flights. Many staff may work for contracted ground handling companies and serve flights from more than one airline. They can't be in two places at once.

This is still done to a limited extent though. Turkish Airlines operated a few flights out of New Istanbul Airport for several months prior to the big move, which allowed them to test systems and familiarize staff with the new airport. Some of these disadvantages can be mitigated by limiting the number of flights and choosing them strategically.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    +1 for the connections point. Passengers don't like having to make their way to the other side of the city because their inbound flight went to one airport, but their outbound flight moved to another.
    $endgroup$
    – reirab
    2 days ago










  • $begingroup$
    I'm surprised that gift shop contents were part of the overnight shift in Denver. I'd've expected that stores could be largely filled in advance at the new locations and then have their remaining inventory sent to the new location's stock room after the main rush.
    $endgroup$
    – Dan Neely
    yesterday










  • $begingroup$
    Zach, that's fasicnating about the "overnight caravan" - good one!
    $endgroup$
    – Fattie
    16 hours ago













32












32








32





$begingroup$

Moving airline by airline doesn't help that much:



  • You still have the same chaos, just on a per-airline basis.

  • The airports you mention are dominated by large carriers that have turned them into hubs (Turkish Airlines and Lufthansa). Even if you move all the other airlines one by one, you still have much of the pain of the big move when you move the largest airline.

And it has disadvantages:



  • Connections: A large percentage of traffic through these hub airports are connecting passengers, and thanks to airline alliances and partnerships, many are connecting between flights from different airlines. Very few passengers (and even fewer high-paying business travelers) will willingly break their journey to go for a drive across a famously traffic-congested city to change airports. Customers will abandon your airport and fly other routes while this is going on.

  • Equipment: When Denver International Airport moved, there was a massive overnight caravan "of more than 10,000 baggage carts, plane tugs, fire engines, catering trucks, de-icing machines and untold truckloads of tickets, tags and gift shop sundries" to the new airport. A similar operation occurred in Istanbul. If both airports must operate simultaneously, a fleet of equipment must be maintained at both airports during the overlap period. Much of this equipment is expensive, long-lasting, and will be difficult to sell or dispose of after the old airport is closed down.

  • Staff: There's not an exact linear relationship of airport staffing to the number of flights. Many staff may work for contracted ground handling companies and serve flights from more than one airline. They can't be in two places at once.

This is still done to a limited extent though. Turkish Airlines operated a few flights out of New Istanbul Airport for several months prior to the big move, which allowed them to test systems and familiarize staff with the new airport. Some of these disadvantages can be mitigated by limiting the number of flights and choosing them strategically.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$



Moving airline by airline doesn't help that much:



  • You still have the same chaos, just on a per-airline basis.

  • The airports you mention are dominated by large carriers that have turned them into hubs (Turkish Airlines and Lufthansa). Even if you move all the other airlines one by one, you still have much of the pain of the big move when you move the largest airline.

And it has disadvantages:



  • Connections: A large percentage of traffic through these hub airports are connecting passengers, and thanks to airline alliances and partnerships, many are connecting between flights from different airlines. Very few passengers (and even fewer high-paying business travelers) will willingly break their journey to go for a drive across a famously traffic-congested city to change airports. Customers will abandon your airport and fly other routes while this is going on.

  • Equipment: When Denver International Airport moved, there was a massive overnight caravan "of more than 10,000 baggage carts, plane tugs, fire engines, catering trucks, de-icing machines and untold truckloads of tickets, tags and gift shop sundries" to the new airport. A similar operation occurred in Istanbul. If both airports must operate simultaneously, a fleet of equipment must be maintained at both airports during the overlap period. Much of this equipment is expensive, long-lasting, and will be difficult to sell or dispose of after the old airport is closed down.

  • Staff: There's not an exact linear relationship of airport staffing to the number of flights. Many staff may work for contracted ground handling companies and serve flights from more than one airline. They can't be in two places at once.

This is still done to a limited extent though. Turkish Airlines operated a few flights out of New Istanbul Airport for several months prior to the big move, which allowed them to test systems and familiarize staff with the new airport. Some of these disadvantages can be mitigated by limiting the number of flights and choosing them strategically.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 2 days ago









Zach LiptonZach Lipton

6,76412743




6,76412743











  • $begingroup$
    +1 for the connections point. Passengers don't like having to make their way to the other side of the city because their inbound flight went to one airport, but their outbound flight moved to another.
    $endgroup$
    – reirab
    2 days ago










  • $begingroup$
    I'm surprised that gift shop contents were part of the overnight shift in Denver. I'd've expected that stores could be largely filled in advance at the new locations and then have their remaining inventory sent to the new location's stock room after the main rush.
    $endgroup$
    – Dan Neely
    yesterday










  • $begingroup$
    Zach, that's fasicnating about the "overnight caravan" - good one!
    $endgroup$
    – Fattie
    16 hours ago
















  • $begingroup$
    +1 for the connections point. Passengers don't like having to make their way to the other side of the city because their inbound flight went to one airport, but their outbound flight moved to another.
    $endgroup$
    – reirab
    2 days ago










  • $begingroup$
    I'm surprised that gift shop contents were part of the overnight shift in Denver. I'd've expected that stores could be largely filled in advance at the new locations and then have their remaining inventory sent to the new location's stock room after the main rush.
    $endgroup$
    – Dan Neely
    yesterday










  • $begingroup$
    Zach, that's fasicnating about the "overnight caravan" - good one!
    $endgroup$
    – Fattie
    16 hours ago















$begingroup$
+1 for the connections point. Passengers don't like having to make their way to the other side of the city because their inbound flight went to one airport, but their outbound flight moved to another.
$endgroup$
– reirab
2 days ago




$begingroup$
+1 for the connections point. Passengers don't like having to make their way to the other side of the city because their inbound flight went to one airport, but their outbound flight moved to another.
$endgroup$
– reirab
2 days ago












$begingroup$
I'm surprised that gift shop contents were part of the overnight shift in Denver. I'd've expected that stores could be largely filled in advance at the new locations and then have their remaining inventory sent to the new location's stock room after the main rush.
$endgroup$
– Dan Neely
yesterday




$begingroup$
I'm surprised that gift shop contents were part of the overnight shift in Denver. I'd've expected that stores could be largely filled in advance at the new locations and then have their remaining inventory sent to the new location's stock room after the main rush.
$endgroup$
– Dan Neely
yesterday












$begingroup$
Zach, that's fasicnating about the "overnight caravan" - good one!
$endgroup$
– Fattie
16 hours ago




$begingroup$
Zach, that's fasicnating about the "overnight caravan" - good one!
$endgroup$
– Fattie
16 hours ago











27












$begingroup$

Gradually moving between airports is a living nightmare for connecting travelers.



Exactly that was done at Montreal Mirabel airport, a fabulous, spacious new replacement airport for Montreal Dorval (Trudeau). Montreal used to be Canada's main international hub. International flights were banned from the old airport, as incentive for airlines to move all operations to Mirabel. But they lacked the political strength to fully close the old airport, and never finished the high-speed-rail connection (or even highways) to Mirabel. Passengers needed to take an hourlong bus ride and re-clear security. This was so irksome that instead of consolidating at Mirabel, operators simply sent their international flights to Toronto instead, making it Canada's main hub.



They lost so many flights that Montreal didn't need two airports anymore, and they consolidated back at Trudeau. Mirabel's main terminal was scrapped and it's a race track now. A few cargo operations remain.




Then you have the case of Kai Tak, where they "threw the switch" properly, but due to teething pains, threw the cargo operations back to Kai Tak for a short while.



Then there is Berlin.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    On the other hand, some large cities get along just fine with 2 or even 3 major airports with one being primary for long-haul flights and the other being mostly domestic and regional flights. Off the top of my head, NYC, London, Chicago, Shanghai, Tokyo, Paris, Dallas, Houston, Washington, D.C., and Bangkok all work that way. Granted, the NYC airports aren't exactly an example of efficiency, but that's because each of them lacks sufficient space to build more runways, not because of failing to combine operations.
    $endgroup$
    – reirab
    2 days ago










  • $begingroup$
    @reirab Or Los Angeles, with 5. Yeah, NYC seriously needs to do the Mirabel thing.
    $endgroup$
    – Harper
    2 days ago











  • $begingroup$
    @reirab JKF is primarily international flights while Newark and LaGuardia are primarily domestic, but they're not split cleanly like Mirabel/Dorval were. I can fly IND->EWR->LHR, as opposed to IND->EWR, bus/train to JFK, then JFK->LHR. That would be a nightmare and nobody would use JFK if they could possibly avoid it.
    $endgroup$
    – FreeMan
    yesterday










  • $begingroup$
    @FreeMan I had JFK/LGA more in mind than EWR. EWR is more split from the other airports by alliance than by domestic vs. international. All of United's long-haul operations are at EWR and their hub is there. Delta and American have their hubs at LGA and JFK instead with LGA being entirely domestic/regional and all long-haul operations being at JFK. A lot of Star Alliance airlines fly to EWR in order to access UA's route network, while oneworld and SkyTeam airlines mostly just fly to JFK, where they can access American and Delta route networks from JFK or LGA.
    $endgroup$
    – reirab
    yesterday






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @reirab London doesn't really fit your long-haul vs domestic/regional split, either. City, Luton, Stansted and whatever other airports one might consider as "London" (*glowers at Southend*) are domestic/regional, and Gatwick and Heathrow do everything. If you're connecting from a long-haul flight to a domestic/regional flight in London, you'd typically do that at either Gatwick or Heathrow and wouldn't need to transit to another airport.
    $endgroup$
    – David Richerby
    yesterday
















27












$begingroup$

Gradually moving between airports is a living nightmare for connecting travelers.



Exactly that was done at Montreal Mirabel airport, a fabulous, spacious new replacement airport for Montreal Dorval (Trudeau). Montreal used to be Canada's main international hub. International flights were banned from the old airport, as incentive for airlines to move all operations to Mirabel. But they lacked the political strength to fully close the old airport, and never finished the high-speed-rail connection (or even highways) to Mirabel. Passengers needed to take an hourlong bus ride and re-clear security. This was so irksome that instead of consolidating at Mirabel, operators simply sent their international flights to Toronto instead, making it Canada's main hub.



They lost so many flights that Montreal didn't need two airports anymore, and they consolidated back at Trudeau. Mirabel's main terminal was scrapped and it's a race track now. A few cargo operations remain.




Then you have the case of Kai Tak, where they "threw the switch" properly, but due to teething pains, threw the cargo operations back to Kai Tak for a short while.



Then there is Berlin.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    On the other hand, some large cities get along just fine with 2 or even 3 major airports with one being primary for long-haul flights and the other being mostly domestic and regional flights. Off the top of my head, NYC, London, Chicago, Shanghai, Tokyo, Paris, Dallas, Houston, Washington, D.C., and Bangkok all work that way. Granted, the NYC airports aren't exactly an example of efficiency, but that's because each of them lacks sufficient space to build more runways, not because of failing to combine operations.
    $endgroup$
    – reirab
    2 days ago










  • $begingroup$
    @reirab Or Los Angeles, with 5. Yeah, NYC seriously needs to do the Mirabel thing.
    $endgroup$
    – Harper
    2 days ago











  • $begingroup$
    @reirab JKF is primarily international flights while Newark and LaGuardia are primarily domestic, but they're not split cleanly like Mirabel/Dorval were. I can fly IND->EWR->LHR, as opposed to IND->EWR, bus/train to JFK, then JFK->LHR. That would be a nightmare and nobody would use JFK if they could possibly avoid it.
    $endgroup$
    – FreeMan
    yesterday










  • $begingroup$
    @FreeMan I had JFK/LGA more in mind than EWR. EWR is more split from the other airports by alliance than by domestic vs. international. All of United's long-haul operations are at EWR and their hub is there. Delta and American have their hubs at LGA and JFK instead with LGA being entirely domestic/regional and all long-haul operations being at JFK. A lot of Star Alliance airlines fly to EWR in order to access UA's route network, while oneworld and SkyTeam airlines mostly just fly to JFK, where they can access American and Delta route networks from JFK or LGA.
    $endgroup$
    – reirab
    yesterday






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @reirab London doesn't really fit your long-haul vs domestic/regional split, either. City, Luton, Stansted and whatever other airports one might consider as "London" (*glowers at Southend*) are domestic/regional, and Gatwick and Heathrow do everything. If you're connecting from a long-haul flight to a domestic/regional flight in London, you'd typically do that at either Gatwick or Heathrow and wouldn't need to transit to another airport.
    $endgroup$
    – David Richerby
    yesterday














27












27








27





$begingroup$

Gradually moving between airports is a living nightmare for connecting travelers.



Exactly that was done at Montreal Mirabel airport, a fabulous, spacious new replacement airport for Montreal Dorval (Trudeau). Montreal used to be Canada's main international hub. International flights were banned from the old airport, as incentive for airlines to move all operations to Mirabel. But they lacked the political strength to fully close the old airport, and never finished the high-speed-rail connection (or even highways) to Mirabel. Passengers needed to take an hourlong bus ride and re-clear security. This was so irksome that instead of consolidating at Mirabel, operators simply sent their international flights to Toronto instead, making it Canada's main hub.



They lost so many flights that Montreal didn't need two airports anymore, and they consolidated back at Trudeau. Mirabel's main terminal was scrapped and it's a race track now. A few cargo operations remain.




Then you have the case of Kai Tak, where they "threw the switch" properly, but due to teething pains, threw the cargo operations back to Kai Tak for a short while.



Then there is Berlin.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$



Gradually moving between airports is a living nightmare for connecting travelers.



Exactly that was done at Montreal Mirabel airport, a fabulous, spacious new replacement airport for Montreal Dorval (Trudeau). Montreal used to be Canada's main international hub. International flights were banned from the old airport, as incentive for airlines to move all operations to Mirabel. But they lacked the political strength to fully close the old airport, and never finished the high-speed-rail connection (or even highways) to Mirabel. Passengers needed to take an hourlong bus ride and re-clear security. This was so irksome that instead of consolidating at Mirabel, operators simply sent their international flights to Toronto instead, making it Canada's main hub.



They lost so many flights that Montreal didn't need two airports anymore, and they consolidated back at Trudeau. Mirabel's main terminal was scrapped and it's a race track now. A few cargo operations remain.




Then you have the case of Kai Tak, where they "threw the switch" properly, but due to teething pains, threw the cargo operations back to Kai Tak for a short while.



Then there is Berlin.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 2 days ago

























answered 2 days ago









HarperHarper

4,704926




4,704926











  • $begingroup$
    On the other hand, some large cities get along just fine with 2 or even 3 major airports with one being primary for long-haul flights and the other being mostly domestic and regional flights. Off the top of my head, NYC, London, Chicago, Shanghai, Tokyo, Paris, Dallas, Houston, Washington, D.C., and Bangkok all work that way. Granted, the NYC airports aren't exactly an example of efficiency, but that's because each of them lacks sufficient space to build more runways, not because of failing to combine operations.
    $endgroup$
    – reirab
    2 days ago










  • $begingroup$
    @reirab Or Los Angeles, with 5. Yeah, NYC seriously needs to do the Mirabel thing.
    $endgroup$
    – Harper
    2 days ago











  • $begingroup$
    @reirab JKF is primarily international flights while Newark and LaGuardia are primarily domestic, but they're not split cleanly like Mirabel/Dorval were. I can fly IND->EWR->LHR, as opposed to IND->EWR, bus/train to JFK, then JFK->LHR. That would be a nightmare and nobody would use JFK if they could possibly avoid it.
    $endgroup$
    – FreeMan
    yesterday










  • $begingroup$
    @FreeMan I had JFK/LGA more in mind than EWR. EWR is more split from the other airports by alliance than by domestic vs. international. All of United's long-haul operations are at EWR and their hub is there. Delta and American have their hubs at LGA and JFK instead with LGA being entirely domestic/regional and all long-haul operations being at JFK. A lot of Star Alliance airlines fly to EWR in order to access UA's route network, while oneworld and SkyTeam airlines mostly just fly to JFK, where they can access American and Delta route networks from JFK or LGA.
    $endgroup$
    – reirab
    yesterday






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @reirab London doesn't really fit your long-haul vs domestic/regional split, either. City, Luton, Stansted and whatever other airports one might consider as "London" (*glowers at Southend*) are domestic/regional, and Gatwick and Heathrow do everything. If you're connecting from a long-haul flight to a domestic/regional flight in London, you'd typically do that at either Gatwick or Heathrow and wouldn't need to transit to another airport.
    $endgroup$
    – David Richerby
    yesterday

















  • $begingroup$
    On the other hand, some large cities get along just fine with 2 or even 3 major airports with one being primary for long-haul flights and the other being mostly domestic and regional flights. Off the top of my head, NYC, London, Chicago, Shanghai, Tokyo, Paris, Dallas, Houston, Washington, D.C., and Bangkok all work that way. Granted, the NYC airports aren't exactly an example of efficiency, but that's because each of them lacks sufficient space to build more runways, not because of failing to combine operations.
    $endgroup$
    – reirab
    2 days ago










  • $begingroup$
    @reirab Or Los Angeles, with 5. Yeah, NYC seriously needs to do the Mirabel thing.
    $endgroup$
    – Harper
    2 days ago











  • $begingroup$
    @reirab JKF is primarily international flights while Newark and LaGuardia are primarily domestic, but they're not split cleanly like Mirabel/Dorval were. I can fly IND->EWR->LHR, as opposed to IND->EWR, bus/train to JFK, then JFK->LHR. That would be a nightmare and nobody would use JFK if they could possibly avoid it.
    $endgroup$
    – FreeMan
    yesterday










  • $begingroup$
    @FreeMan I had JFK/LGA more in mind than EWR. EWR is more split from the other airports by alliance than by domestic vs. international. All of United's long-haul operations are at EWR and their hub is there. Delta and American have their hubs at LGA and JFK instead with LGA being entirely domestic/regional and all long-haul operations being at JFK. A lot of Star Alliance airlines fly to EWR in order to access UA's route network, while oneworld and SkyTeam airlines mostly just fly to JFK, where they can access American and Delta route networks from JFK or LGA.
    $endgroup$
    – reirab
    yesterday






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    @reirab London doesn't really fit your long-haul vs domestic/regional split, either. City, Luton, Stansted and whatever other airports one might consider as "London" (*glowers at Southend*) are domestic/regional, and Gatwick and Heathrow do everything. If you're connecting from a long-haul flight to a domestic/regional flight in London, you'd typically do that at either Gatwick or Heathrow and wouldn't need to transit to another airport.
    $endgroup$
    – David Richerby
    yesterday
















$begingroup$
On the other hand, some large cities get along just fine with 2 or even 3 major airports with one being primary for long-haul flights and the other being mostly domestic and regional flights. Off the top of my head, NYC, London, Chicago, Shanghai, Tokyo, Paris, Dallas, Houston, Washington, D.C., and Bangkok all work that way. Granted, the NYC airports aren't exactly an example of efficiency, but that's because each of them lacks sufficient space to build more runways, not because of failing to combine operations.
$endgroup$
– reirab
2 days ago




$begingroup$
On the other hand, some large cities get along just fine with 2 or even 3 major airports with one being primary for long-haul flights and the other being mostly domestic and regional flights. Off the top of my head, NYC, London, Chicago, Shanghai, Tokyo, Paris, Dallas, Houston, Washington, D.C., and Bangkok all work that way. Granted, the NYC airports aren't exactly an example of efficiency, but that's because each of them lacks sufficient space to build more runways, not because of failing to combine operations.
$endgroup$
– reirab
2 days ago












$begingroup$
@reirab Or Los Angeles, with 5. Yeah, NYC seriously needs to do the Mirabel thing.
$endgroup$
– Harper
2 days ago





$begingroup$
@reirab Or Los Angeles, with 5. Yeah, NYC seriously needs to do the Mirabel thing.
$endgroup$
– Harper
2 days ago













$begingroup$
@reirab JKF is primarily international flights while Newark and LaGuardia are primarily domestic, but they're not split cleanly like Mirabel/Dorval were. I can fly IND->EWR->LHR, as opposed to IND->EWR, bus/train to JFK, then JFK->LHR. That would be a nightmare and nobody would use JFK if they could possibly avoid it.
$endgroup$
– FreeMan
yesterday




$begingroup$
@reirab JKF is primarily international flights while Newark and LaGuardia are primarily domestic, but they're not split cleanly like Mirabel/Dorval were. I can fly IND->EWR->LHR, as opposed to IND->EWR, bus/train to JFK, then JFK->LHR. That would be a nightmare and nobody would use JFK if they could possibly avoid it.
$endgroup$
– FreeMan
yesterday












$begingroup$
@FreeMan I had JFK/LGA more in mind than EWR. EWR is more split from the other airports by alliance than by domestic vs. international. All of United's long-haul operations are at EWR and their hub is there. Delta and American have their hubs at LGA and JFK instead with LGA being entirely domestic/regional and all long-haul operations being at JFK. A lot of Star Alliance airlines fly to EWR in order to access UA's route network, while oneworld and SkyTeam airlines mostly just fly to JFK, where they can access American and Delta route networks from JFK or LGA.
$endgroup$
– reirab
yesterday




$begingroup$
@FreeMan I had JFK/LGA more in mind than EWR. EWR is more split from the other airports by alliance than by domestic vs. international. All of United's long-haul operations are at EWR and their hub is there. Delta and American have their hubs at LGA and JFK instead with LGA being entirely domestic/regional and all long-haul operations being at JFK. A lot of Star Alliance airlines fly to EWR in order to access UA's route network, while oneworld and SkyTeam airlines mostly just fly to JFK, where they can access American and Delta route networks from JFK or LGA.
$endgroup$
– reirab
yesterday




2




2




$begingroup$
@reirab London doesn't really fit your long-haul vs domestic/regional split, either. City, Luton, Stansted and whatever other airports one might consider as "London" (*glowers at Southend*) are domestic/regional, and Gatwick and Heathrow do everything. If you're connecting from a long-haul flight to a domestic/regional flight in London, you'd typically do that at either Gatwick or Heathrow and wouldn't need to transit to another airport.
$endgroup$
– David Richerby
yesterday





$begingroup$
@reirab London doesn't really fit your long-haul vs domestic/regional split, either. City, Luton, Stansted and whatever other airports one might consider as "London" (*glowers at Southend*) are domestic/regional, and Gatwick and Heathrow do everything. If you're connecting from a long-haul flight to a domestic/regional flight in London, you'd typically do that at either Gatwick or Heathrow and wouldn't need to transit to another airport.
$endgroup$
– David Richerby
yesterday












2












$begingroup$

My experience is when KUL moved from Subang (now SZB) to the new KL Intl Airport (KLIA).



The moving date was declared way in advance, I seem to remember the date was locked more than 6 months before, and a lot of airlines rescheduled their ops especially the nightstopping aircraft. Obviously Malaysia Airlines had to ferry a bunch of planes over but its a 10minute hop and done in the early hours so not much of an issue. Some of the ground equipment was ferried over earlier in the day (of the last day of Subang operations) but everything else was moved over once the last flight of the day was completed. I'm talking motorised stairs, K-loaders, belt-loaders, tractors, trolleys, dollies the works. It was quite a convoy of flat loaders. Stuff that could be driven on public roads were given temporary permits so you saw motorised steps and water/toilet trucks on the public highways!



The biggest change was moving from a host (MH) checkin environment to a homegrown common-use system which was integrated with the Baggage Handling System (BHS). The first days baggage handling was chaos with a lot of bags not making their flights.



A lot of items can't be duplicated not only in terms of equipment but also in manpower and its easier to make a clean cut and manage the problems for a 24hour period than drawing the pain over a period of weeks.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    OK but only your last sentence actually answers the question.
    $endgroup$
    – David Richerby
    yesterday















2












$begingroup$

My experience is when KUL moved from Subang (now SZB) to the new KL Intl Airport (KLIA).



The moving date was declared way in advance, I seem to remember the date was locked more than 6 months before, and a lot of airlines rescheduled their ops especially the nightstopping aircraft. Obviously Malaysia Airlines had to ferry a bunch of planes over but its a 10minute hop and done in the early hours so not much of an issue. Some of the ground equipment was ferried over earlier in the day (of the last day of Subang operations) but everything else was moved over once the last flight of the day was completed. I'm talking motorised stairs, K-loaders, belt-loaders, tractors, trolleys, dollies the works. It was quite a convoy of flat loaders. Stuff that could be driven on public roads were given temporary permits so you saw motorised steps and water/toilet trucks on the public highways!



The biggest change was moving from a host (MH) checkin environment to a homegrown common-use system which was integrated with the Baggage Handling System (BHS). The first days baggage handling was chaos with a lot of bags not making their flights.



A lot of items can't be duplicated not only in terms of equipment but also in manpower and its easier to make a clean cut and manage the problems for a 24hour period than drawing the pain over a period of weeks.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    OK but only your last sentence actually answers the question.
    $endgroup$
    – David Richerby
    yesterday













2












2








2





$begingroup$

My experience is when KUL moved from Subang (now SZB) to the new KL Intl Airport (KLIA).



The moving date was declared way in advance, I seem to remember the date was locked more than 6 months before, and a lot of airlines rescheduled their ops especially the nightstopping aircraft. Obviously Malaysia Airlines had to ferry a bunch of planes over but its a 10minute hop and done in the early hours so not much of an issue. Some of the ground equipment was ferried over earlier in the day (of the last day of Subang operations) but everything else was moved over once the last flight of the day was completed. I'm talking motorised stairs, K-loaders, belt-loaders, tractors, trolleys, dollies the works. It was quite a convoy of flat loaders. Stuff that could be driven on public roads were given temporary permits so you saw motorised steps and water/toilet trucks on the public highways!



The biggest change was moving from a host (MH) checkin environment to a homegrown common-use system which was integrated with the Baggage Handling System (BHS). The first days baggage handling was chaos with a lot of bags not making their flights.



A lot of items can't be duplicated not only in terms of equipment but also in manpower and its easier to make a clean cut and manage the problems for a 24hour period than drawing the pain over a period of weeks.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$



My experience is when KUL moved from Subang (now SZB) to the new KL Intl Airport (KLIA).



The moving date was declared way in advance, I seem to remember the date was locked more than 6 months before, and a lot of airlines rescheduled their ops especially the nightstopping aircraft. Obviously Malaysia Airlines had to ferry a bunch of planes over but its a 10minute hop and done in the early hours so not much of an issue. Some of the ground equipment was ferried over earlier in the day (of the last day of Subang operations) but everything else was moved over once the last flight of the day was completed. I'm talking motorised stairs, K-loaders, belt-loaders, tractors, trolleys, dollies the works. It was quite a convoy of flat loaders. Stuff that could be driven on public roads were given temporary permits so you saw motorised steps and water/toilet trucks on the public highways!



The biggest change was moving from a host (MH) checkin environment to a homegrown common-use system which was integrated with the Baggage Handling System (BHS). The first days baggage handling was chaos with a lot of bags not making their flights.



A lot of items can't be duplicated not only in terms of equipment but also in manpower and its easier to make a clean cut and manage the problems for a 24hour period than drawing the pain over a period of weeks.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 2 days ago









AnilvAnilv

3,2381012




3,2381012











  • $begingroup$
    OK but only your last sentence actually answers the question.
    $endgroup$
    – David Richerby
    yesterday
















  • $begingroup$
    OK but only your last sentence actually answers the question.
    $endgroup$
    – David Richerby
    yesterday















$begingroup$
OK but only your last sentence actually answers the question.
$endgroup$
– David Richerby
yesterday




$begingroup$
OK but only your last sentence actually answers the question.
$endgroup$
– David Richerby
yesterday










Kamil Aliyev is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









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Kamil Aliyev is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.












Kamil Aliyev is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.











Kamil Aliyev is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.














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