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AMARETTO-old
September 28th, 2006, 17:39
Thailand opens huge new airport

Thousands of passengers have passed through Thailand's new international airport on its opening day...

Despite some delays in handing baggage, no major problems were reported.

By 0900 (0300 GMT) more than 100 flights had landed and taken off successfully.

"For the first day, it's pretty good. I thought there would be a lot more confusion," Australian tourist Stephen Gordon told the Associated Press.

Suvarnabhumi - which means Golden Land - is about 30km (20 miles) east of Bangkok.

A 28km (17 mile) rail link to connect the airport with central Bangkok is scheduled for completion in November 2007.....

Source : http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/5387526.stm

AMARETTO-old
September 28th, 2006, 18:26
UPDATE Airport opens with minor glitches


(Compiled by Bangkokpost.com)

The new $3.9 billion Suvarnabhumi international airport opened early Thursday as most citizens were asleep, with little hoopla - and none at all from the project's final backer, ex-premier Thaksin Shinawatra who was ousted in a coup.

"We are 75 per cent satisfied," said Airport Authority of Thailand (AOT) President Chotisak Asataviriya. "There were some minor problems that have upset us."

"It looks really nice and checking in was very smooth," said Ron Kirschnick, an American businessman who will not miss the tatty arrival halls of Don Muang, mothballed after its final arrival on Wednesday evening. "Overall, I'd give it a nine or 10 out of 10," he said.

Among the problems were computer crashes at several checkin counters, leaky roofs and delays in getting baggage from the airplanes to the departure terminal, which Chotisak in part blamed on torrential rains Thursday morning.

And of course there were the terminally confused, pun intended.

"I don't have any information," said one man who showed up at the old airport at Don Muang on Thursday morning for a flight. "I didn't know what happened," the unidentified befuddled passenger told iTV.

Teething problems with the baggage handling system led to some delays.

"It appears there weren't enough carts to carry the luggage from the plane," said Hemant Chattopadhyay, an IT professional from Bangalore in India, who had to wait two hours before being reunited with his bags.

Others complained about a lack of signs to the baggage halls. "The signs weren't very clear and so we had some problems finding the baggage hall and kept on getting lost. Eventually they had to let us through some secret door," said a 19-year-old South African backpacker, Gerald Neves.

"Still, they were all very friendly and we got an unofficial tour of the place," he shrugged.

Hans-Joachim Klohs, an operations planning expert from Munich Airport International, which is a consultant for the Suvarnabhumi project, was mostly satisfied.

"In the beginning we had some problems with the baggage handling because some of the equipment had not arrived yet from Don Muang," he said around midday. "But overall things went pretty well, although we need to wait to see how it goes at peak hour this evening."

The 206 passengers on the first commercial flight landing at Suvarnabhumi -- Aeroswit flight VV 171 from Kiev, in the Ukraine-- had to wait more than one hour to collect their baggage from the new automated baggage handling machines.

"The delay was caused by the delay of moving Thai Airways ground handling equipment from the old airport to the new one," said Mr Chotisak. "It's just a minor error, and it will be the only one.

"We will never let this happen again," he insisted.

But it wasn't the only one, of course.

At Thai Airways International check-in counters, the computers crashed before the first flights out. Airline workers were prepared, and issued handwritten boarding passes and baggage claim tags.

This caused long lines. But passengers seemed prepared for inevitable first-day glitches, on a day when around 800 flights will land and take off.

One passenger said exactly that: "Today is the first day, so we don't expect everything to go well," said Paul Millar, a 46-year-old British man who works in Bangkok.

"Fortunately we arrived early just in case," he said.

The airport opened with little official fanfare, but a staff celebration, with the arrival of Lufthansa cargo flight LH 8442 from Frankfurt via Mumbai at 3:02 am Thursday (2002 GMT Wednesday). The touchdown was confirmed by a control tower official.

The smooth landing of the first official flight sparked cheering and celebration among ground staff and technicians in the control tower, according to airplane captain Stephan Mack, who has been flying to Bangkok for more than 20 years.

``It's a big improvement,'' Mack said in an interview at Suvarnabhumi today. ``You should see the lights from up there, it's like a festival the way it's lit.''

The new airport, an airy and futuristic structure designed by German architect Helmut Jahn, features an oval-shaped concourse, energy-efficient temperature control systems, and several superlatives in airport construction.

Thai authorities boast it has the world's largest terminal building under one continuous roof at more than 560,000 square metres (138 acres). The 132-metre (433 feet) control tower is the world's tallest. Overall, the airport covers 132 sq km, (20,000 rai, 8,000 acres).

The new airport can handle the Airbus A-380, the world's biggest commercial plane, on its two four-kilometre (2.5-mile) runways, although the plane itself is not yet even certified for commercial flights.

More than 800 flights carrying 120,000 passengers were to pass through the airport on its first day.

Moving the stair trolleys, ramp buses and about one million other pieces of equipment from one airport to the other required a huge logistical effort and about 1,000 trucks clogged up Bangkok's roads Wednesday and overnight. Motorists were given special traffic warnings and urged to stay off roads and expressways.

Source : http://www.bangkokpost.com/breaking_new ... ?id=113222 (http://www.bangkokpost.com/breaking_news/breakingnews.php?id=113222)

September 29th, 2006, 01:13
hopefully in next 9 days they will get up to speed!

September 29th, 2006, 06:43
hopefully in next 9 days they will get up to speed!In your dreams. Read the thread called "Second-hand report - new airport"

September 29th, 2006, 09:41
Poor Homi, desperately looking for his schadenfreude.

Get over it, dear, the airport opening was a huge success. A few delayed bags does not schadenfreude make. We know you were hoping for crashed planes and blood running in the aisles.

September 29th, 2006, 10:33
http://www.bangkokpost.com/News/29Sep2006_news01.php (Headline: First-day fliers left irked)
http://www.nationmultimedia.com/2006/09 ... 014935.php (http://www.nationmultimedia.com/2006/09/29/headlines/headlines_30014935.php) (Headline: Touchdown - into chaos)

September 29th, 2006, 10:39
Yes, minor glitches universal to ANY airport opening. I'm so sorry you're disappointed.

September 29th, 2006, 11:32
I love the irony of the airport opening soon after Thaksin was booted out. That was to big his big public relations coup (ha ha).