535
Senior MemberSenior Member
535

PostJan 05, 2022#6751

pdm_ad wrote:
Jan 05, 2022
RuskiSTL wrote:
Jan 05, 2022
pdm_ad wrote:
Jan 05, 2022
Takeaways so far, single terminal with 62 gates, 110' wide, new security building after domes, departures elevated and 4 lanes, arrivals at grade with baggage and 7 lanes, new approaches from I-70 and new consolidated garage. I like it!
How many gates are in T1 currently?
Wiki says 68. 18 in T2.

For comparison, new KCI will be 39 gates.
So 28% (24 gates) decrease and WN loses its own Terminal.

9 gates come from empty Concourse B. But still seems hard to believe WN is happy with this, I wonder what sort of concessions Rhonda is making for them.  

2,929
Life MemberLife Member
2,929

PostJan 05, 2022#6752


708
Senior MemberSenior Member
708

PostJan 05, 2022#6753

^ She explained that it helps everyone when TSA and immigration is consolidated and that's why, in preliminary discussions, they are onboard. Nothing set in stone and no agreements in place at this point.

6,120
Life MemberLife Member
6,120

PostJan 05, 2022#6754

gone corporate wrote:
Jan 05, 2022
Has the presentation been put online yet? Anyone have a link to it? Thanks
If it has I can't find it, but here's a couple of my screen grabs adding to what CityScene already shared. (Mostly the same, but larger versions.)




PostJan 05, 2022#6755

gone corporate wrote:
Jan 05, 2022
Link to today's presentation (PDF): 
Airport Layout Plan Update, Airport Commission Briefing, January 5, 2022
Quick work! Thank you.

PostJan 05, 2022#6756

RuskiSTL wrote:
Jan 05, 2022
pdm_ad wrote:
Jan 05, 2022
RuskiSTL wrote:
Jan 05, 2022
How many gates are in T1 currently?
Wiki says 68. 18 in T2.

For comparison, new KCI will be 39 gates.
So 28% (24 gates) decrease and WN loses its own Terminal.

9 gates come from empty Concourse B. But still seems hard to believe WN is happy with this, I wonder what sort of concessions Rhonda is making for them.  
That 68 figure for T1 includes all the mothballed gates. So the new concourse would have a slightly smaller number of gates, but they would have contemporary hold areas and circulation. And the plan leaves room for expansion. They went through some advantages and they're pretty significant: consolidated baggage handling means you don't have to truck bags between T1 and T2 for international connections. Consolidated checkpoints means you don't ever have one understaffed while another has no customers going through. Southwest would get a nice, modern, double loaded terminal with shorter walks between gates. You put the FIS gates smack in the middle so they're convenient to everyone and connections are easy when necessary. Everyone would get access to all the concessions. And it would, go figure, make pushback easier. All in all I think I like this plan. The only drawback I see is an exceptionally small one: You'll probably lose your views between the airfield and the ticket hall. But I'll live with that. I bet Southwest is entirely on board with this. And the room is there to extend the thing east and add more gates for quite a distance. You could probably get another thirty gates without too much trouble. (Though it would be a heck of a long concourse.)

sc4mayor
sc4mayor

PostJan 05, 2022#6757

I like it!

535
Senior MemberSenior Member
535

PostJan 05, 2022#6758

pdm_ad wrote:
Jan 05, 2022
RuskiSTL wrote:
Jan 05, 2022
pdm_ad wrote:
Jan 05, 2022
Takeaways so far, single terminal with 62 gates, 110' wide, new security building after domes, departures elevated and 4 lanes, arrivals at grade with baggage and 7 lanes, new approaches from I-70 and new consolidated garage. I like it!
How many gates are in T1 currently?
Wiki says 68. 18 in T2.

For comparison, new KCI will be 39 gates.
Am I missing something? Slide 29 seems to say the existing gate total is 54. 

sc4mayor
sc4mayor

PostJan 05, 2022#6759

^ Probably not including the mothballed gates in B, C and D.

6,120
Life MemberLife Member
6,120

PostJan 05, 2022#6760

Also a small observation . . .


They're using ma pictures! *does little dance*

1,026
Expert MemberExpert Member
1,026

PostJan 05, 2022#6761

New construction gates are designed for larger airplanes with higher load factors. You cannot compare gates to gates alone. Slide says 18 gates today vs a need for 22 domestic + 3 FIS in terminal 2 in 2040. Not as much growth as I had hoped for by Southwest. During the Q&A they mentioned Southwest operational difficulties with having such a long walk between their gates. They need the double-sided concourses a new terminal would offer to continue growing here. So Southwest supports the new project and seems likes its required if they are going to grow here. I believe they also mentioned that the T2 baggage expansion will still be needed. 

The new terminal plan is going to move next into further financial analysis. If prices are good, Southwest and the airlines will continue to back it but expect changes. My worry is that working around existing, active terminals will be VERY costly and time-consuming. KC, IND, and New Orleans each spent $1-1.5 billion to build 35-40 gates + supporting infrastructure away from their existing terminals. STL wants to build 50% more gates + all of that supporting infrastructure like those cities but on top of existing facilities that must stay open during construction. I would imagine it will realistically be $2-2.5 billion for everything they are saying.

535
Senior MemberSenior Member
535

PostJan 05, 2022#6762

ldai_phs wrote:
Jan 05, 2022
New construction gates are designed for larger airplanes with higher load factors. You cannot compare gates to gates alone. Slide says 18 gates today to 22 domestic + 3 FIS in terminal 2 in 2040. Not as much growth as I had hoped for by Southwest. During the Q&A they mentioned Southwest operational difficulties with having such a long walk between their gates. They need the double-sided concourses a new terminal would offer to continue growing here. So Southwest supports the new project and seems likes its required if they are going to grow here.
I'm quite ignorant about T2, is there anyway to add a moving walkway in there?

1,026
Expert MemberExpert Member
1,026

PostJan 05, 2022#6763

RuskiSTL wrote:
Jan 05, 2022
ldai_phs wrote:
Jan 05, 2022
New construction gates are designed for larger airplanes with higher load factors. You cannot compare gates to gates alone. Slide says 18 gates today to 22 domestic + 3 FIS in terminal 2 in 2040. Not as much growth as I had hoped for by Southwest. During the Q&A they mentioned Southwest operational difficulties with having such a long walk between their gates. They need the double-sided concourses a new terminal would offer to continue growing here. So Southwest supports the new project and seems likes its required if they are going to grow here.
I'm quite ignorant about T2, is there anyway to add a moving walkway in there?
I don't think the concourses are wide enough. Circulation space already gets cramped as is. The call just mentioned issues with the customer experience and missed connections but having such a long singe sided concourses also creates issues with moving bags, equipment, and staff.

7,806
Life MemberLife Member
7,806

PostJan 05, 2022#6764

symphonicpoet wrote:
Jan 05, 2022
RuskiSTL wrote:
Jan 05, 2022
pdm_ad wrote:
Jan 05, 2022
Wiki says 68. 18 in T2.

For comparison, new KCI will be 39 gates.
So 28% (24 gates) decrease and WN loses its own Terminal.

9 gates come from empty Concourse B. But still seems hard to believe WN is happy with this, I wonder what sort of concessions Rhonda is making for them.  
That 68 figure for T1 includes all the mothballed gates. So the new concourse would have a slightly smaller number of gates, but they would have contemporary hold areas and circulation. And the plan leaves room for expansion. They went through some advantages and they're pretty significant: consolidated baggage handling means you don't have to truck bags between T1 and T2 for international connections. Consolidated checkpoints means you don't ever have one understaffed while another has no customers going through. Southwest would get a nice, modern, double loaded terminal with shorter walks between gates. You put the FIS gates smack in the middle so they're convenient to everyone and connections are easy when necessary. Everyone would get access to all the concessions. And it would, go figure, make pushback easier. All in all I think I like this plan. The only drawback I see is an exceptionally small one: You'll probably lose your views between the airfield and the ticket hall. But I'll live with that. I bet Southwest is entirely on board with this. And the room is there to extend the thing east and add more gates for quite a distance. You could probably get another thirty gates without too much trouble. (Though it would be a heck of a long concourse.)
The question is do you go east or go west to better utilize the TWA Foley runway 11/29? 

6,120
Life MemberLife Member
6,120

PostJan 05, 2022#6765

RuskiSTL wrote:
Jan 05, 2022
ldai_phs wrote:
Jan 05, 2022
New construction gates are designed for larger airplanes with higher load factors. You cannot compare gates to gates alone. Slide says 18 gates today to 22 domestic + 3 FIS in terminal 2 in 2040. Not as much growth as I had hoped for by Southwest. During the Q&A they mentioned Southwest operational difficulties with having such a long walk between their gates. They need the double-sided concourses a new terminal would offer to continue growing here. So Southwest supports the new project and seems likes its required if they are going to grow here.
I'm quite ignorant about T2, is there anyway to add a moving walkway in there?
There are already moving walkways at the end in the portion that used to be D. Adding more would, as Idai_phs says, probably be difficult. But oddly, people don't necessarily move faster on moving walkways, as people figure they're moving anyway so they slow down or stop and actually end up moving slower overall. (Though obviously if you're in a hurry they're a big help.)

7,806
Life MemberLife Member
7,806

PostJan 05, 2022#6766

ldai_phs wrote:
Jan 05, 2022
RuskiSTL wrote:
Jan 05, 2022
ldai_phs wrote:
Jan 05, 2022
New construction gates are designed for larger airplanes with higher load factors. You cannot compare gates to gates alone. Slide says 18 gates today to 22 domestic + 3 FIS in terminal 2 in 2040. Not as much growth as I had hoped for by Southwest. During the Q&A they mentioned Southwest operational difficulties with having such a long walk between their gates. They need the double-sided concourses a new terminal would offer to continue growing here. So Southwest supports the new project and seems likes its required if they are going to grow here.
I'm quite ignorant about T2, is there anyway to add a moving walkway in there?
I don't think the concourses are wide enough. Circulation space already gets cramped as is. The call just mentioned issues with the customer experience and missed connections but having such a long singe sided concourses also creates issues with moving bags, equipment, and staff.
Make sense. That's why in the TWA/AA heydays most connections ran through C while it seemed like D concourse was for St. Louis flights.

2,685
Life MemberLife Member
2,685

PostJan 06, 2022#6767

It felt like there was a consistent hint in messaging throughout the presentation (especially from Rhonda) that this isn’t a plan they intend on sitting with or waiting to implement.
We’ll know more Q2, but I wouldn’t be surprised to hear it’s full throttle 2024 - 2026.
With infrastructure, settlement, airlines… we could avoid obscene amounts of debt or massive increases in landing fees?

1,026
Expert MemberExpert Member
1,026

PostJan 06, 2022#6768

Some of the changes will happen in short order I’m sure (airfield, etc) but I got the feeling that terminal work might be more in-line with JShanks 2030+ prediction.

525
Senior MemberSenior Member
525

PostJan 06, 2022#6769

Any indication (or any of this forum's ideas) as to what would become of the current terminal 2 and its infrastructure once everything moves to the new terminal 1 concourse?
Does it get mothballed or demo'd? Remain in use for charters/special flights? Kept in reserve to bring back online if/when flights ever exceed the new concourse's capacity?

1,026
Expert MemberExpert Member
1,026

PostJan 06, 2022#6770

_nomad_ wrote:Any indication (or any of this forum's ideas) as to what would become of the current terminal 2 and its infrastructure once everything moves to the new terminal 1 concourse?
Does it get mothballed or demo'd? Remain in use for charters/special flights? Kept in reserve to bring back online if/when flights ever exceed the new concourse's capacity?
Terminal 2 and infrastructure will get demolished after the move to Terminal 1 per the meeting. The new concourse can be expanded to the east and west as needed. T2 will be hitting its end of life around the design date (2040) anyways.

8,910
Life MemberLife Member
8,910

PostJan 06, 2022#6771

I guess we know now why Southwest didn’t build out more baggage claims.

The east terminal isn’t that old. What is the reasoning for replacement?

Also, isn’t much of c less than 10 years old thanks to the tornado?

1,026
Expert MemberExpert Member
1,026

PostJan 06, 2022#6772

moorlander wrote:I guess we know now why Southwest didn’t build out more baggage claims.

The east terminal isn’t that old. What is the reasoning for replacement?

Also, isn’t much of c less than 10 years old thanks to the tornado?
See my responses earlier in the night.

Terminal 2 is not operationally efficient for connecting operations but sounds like the baggage expansion will still happen. Possible to reuse the site but for now they will bulldoze

708
Senior MemberSenior Member
708

PostJan 06, 2022#6773

_nomad_ wrote:
Jan 06, 2022
Any indication (or any of this forum's ideas) as to what would become of the current terminal 2 and its infrastructure once everything moves to the new terminal 1 concourse?
Does it get mothballed or demo'd? Remain in use for charters/special flights? Kept in reserve to bring back online if/when flights ever exceed the new concourse's capacity?
Options are to demolish or repurpose. Sounded like both may be on the table at this point.

5,705
Life MemberLife Member
5,705

PostJan 06, 2022#6774

Wow, finally a plan with long term vision.  I think it is the right plan for the future.   Yes Southwest might give up their own terminal but gain a lot of efficiencies and a fair number of airports they already operate that way anyways, Denver comes to mind

Just hope they can accelerate even though it will not be an easy construction process and not as cost effective like New Orleans or KC.  However, it has been done before such as being done w Terminal 1 & 2 at SFO or Midway and Houston Hobby as some examples.   

The plus side on construction of single linear concourse is that B is pretty much dead and so you can demo and build out your new screening & initial gates without a huge interference, consolidate some gate over on A or C side, add a temp walkway & then proceed to build out the linear concourse in the other direction.  In that process I can see the last gates to be built out would be for Southwest.  But who knows, I move dirt under water for a living so I can see construction managers a lot smarter then me have it figured out already.

6,120
Life MemberLife Member
6,120

PostJan 06, 2022#6775

^If I had to guess . . . I expect they'll move folks out of A first and temporarily move them into C/D so that they can demolish A and B and build the west half. Once that's done I'd expect they'll move everyone they can into the west half of the new concourse and proceed east until they can finally move Southwest into it and shut T2 down. I bet it will be a madhouse almost comparable to the TWA days for a little while in C/D/E.

Read more posts (2932 remaining)