Thứ Hai, 16 tháng 9, 2013

Baffling Delay on JFK Airport Hotels

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As if we were waiting in the passenger boarding area for news of a delayed flight, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey is providing just the merest trickle of information about the airport hotel it has long promised to bring to John F. Kennedy International Airport.


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View out the window of the Copenhagen Airport Hilton


Compare this to Frankfurt with two hotels the Sheraton Frankfurt Airport Hotel and Conference Center with 1,008 rooms and the Hilton Frankfurt Airport. Or London’s Heathrow with a Hilton in Terminal 4 a Hilton in Terminal 5 and a Sofitel also connected to Terminal 5.  Don’t let me leave out Dallas International with two hotels, the Grand Hyatt at the entrance to Terminal D and the Hyatt Regency


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Delta hotel in Calgary will soon have another hotel as neighbor


What is it that Calgary, Orlando, Istanbul, Tokyo, Milan, Singapore and dozens of other airports know that the aviation authorities in New York do not? That hotels and air travelers go together like white on rice. Not only that, there’s significant money to be made if Orlando is representative. Hotel revenue contributes a large share to the MCO airport budget and that in turn leads to lower airport fees.


Nevertheless, at JFK, the sadly out-of-date, Ramada Hotel has been closed since 2009. An unidentified Port Authority spokeswoman told Crains New York Business, “A marquee airport needs marquee facilities to provide travelers with a first rate airport hotel” but the PANYNJ has been unable to get the Ramada building re opened even after approving hiring a hotel expert at $250,000 a year to make it happen.


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The effort to renovate the historic Earo Saarinen designed TWA terminal, predates even the Ramada plan. The authority requested proposals for the “adaptive reuse” of the building in December 2006. Yes, that would be nearly 7 years ago.


This rant on the Port Authority’s impotence when it comes to accomplishing what other airports haven’t found all that difficult follows the leaking of tidbits of information about PANYNJ’s negotiations with New York hotelier Andre Balazs. The two seem to disagree over how much of the original Saarinen design will be/can be preserved when the TWA building is turned into a hotel, aviation museum and meeting venue. Outside of comments it made in response to the Page Six story, the authority remains mum.


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Each time I pass through JFK, I eye the former TWA hall trying to imagine how it could be turned into a hotel. I’m no architect and even I can see it is a hefty challenge.


The Ramada on the other hand already exists. So before anybody else at the airport authority calls JFK “marquee” they ought to check the dictionary because that means “superlative.” When it comes to providing accommodations for air travelers, the only thing is notable about JFK is how unfavorably it compares to so many other airports.


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Planes right outside my window at the Westin Detroit Airport


(For a detailed list of hotels located on airport property see my travel blog - an expansion of my story in The New York Times. I share the joy of waking up in the morning to a view of jetliners ready for take off, here and here. For photos of some airport hotels I have visited, see below.)


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The Hyatt at DFW
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The cheery airline crew lounge at Malpensa Sheraton


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Lobby of the TAV Airport Hotel at Ataturk Airport in Istanbul


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Airfield view from desk at Tokyo’s Haneda’s Excel Hotel



Baffling Delay on JFK Airport Hotels

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