After some momentary confusion, and a quick look around, I
noted that the new arrival area is curved and narrow, as was the old one, but it
also has new stores and restaurants, a nifty new arrival board,
better lighting, and improved access to the trains/trams that take travelers
into the city. I found out later that
the new arrival area can be as congested as the old one was, but its amenities,
including a Spar grocery store and an assortment on bakeries and places to eat,
make it gemuetlich.
Unfortunately, the sidewalks, roads, and parking lots
outside the arrivals hall are a mess, resembling the tumult of a busy street in
downtown Shanghai, with cars, buses, taxis, and pedestrians converging uneasily
in a small area. Also, the outside walkway is saturated with cigarette smoke
and exhaust fumes: not a nice welcome to Vienna. This area is not a place to
linger. Nevertheless, it has one improvement:
new bus stalls with digital signs providing helpful information about the
destination of each bus and its departure time.
Viewing the airport again a couple of weeks later, when returning for
the flight out, I found that the construction underway at the airport makes
access to the departure halls confusing.
Signs point the way to departure halls 3, 2, 1, and 1a. Choose the correct one if you can. Hall 3 is
not connected directly to halls 1, 1a, and 2. If you need to get from hall 3 to
any of the other halls, you must leave the building and find an obscure
entrance.
Departure hall 3 is new; it is the second floor above the
new arrival area. This hall hosts Austrian Air and its partners. It has a new
configuration in a sleek, clean high tech building.
Other airlines use the old halls in another building. To
know where your airline is located, you need to find a directory of airlines that
lists the building and counter numbers used by each one. (These directories are posted near entrances.) Fortunately, the Sky Team airlines (Delta,
Air France, KLM, and others) are located together in Building 1.
As with Delta Airlines in major US airports (including
Seattle), the Sky Team area has baggage drop-off counters for travelers who
have checked in, either on-line or at kiosks in front of the Sky Team check-in
booths, and want to check their bags. Unfortunately, this system did not
work too well at the Vienna airport because many confused or malicious travelers,
without boarding passes, used the baggage drop counters as check-in lines. The time required
to check in those travelers greatly slowed down the folks who had checked in
and wanted simply to leave their bags.
Of course, most passengers without boarding passes would not
get in the baggage line if some airline agents were around to assist them
to use the kiosks to check in or to direct them to check-in counters. Surprisingly,
I did not see a single Air France agent assisting in this way. (Because Delta does not
operate in Vienna, and my Delta tickets were for Air France code-share flights, I cannot blame Delta directly for poor airport check-in operations).
With an early morning flight, I spent the night
before my trip from the Vienna Airport at the NH Hotel (overpriced high-rise tourist hotel, with pretentions of being more), which is located in the
airport complex. Last year, the NH was directly across from the arrival area.
Now, it is a block up the street from the new arrival hall.
Staying at the NH, I had some time to look around the new parts
of the airport and to figure out how I would get to the Air France check-in
early the next morning. Without this rehearsal, I likely would likely have had a
difficult time finding my way to the Air France counters at 5:00 a.m.
Looking around the airport, I noted that the old arrival
hall is now mostly a hole in the ground, though sledge hammers were working throughout
that afternoon to dismantle it. The fencing
around the old arrival hall construction site takes up a lane or two of the
main road going to chief airport exit and entrance. Because many departing and arriving passengers have to cross this busy
narrow street to get to and from parking decks (the airport has several of them),
they slow or stop traffic on this crucial road. At many times of the day, traffic on this road is congested.
Caffe Ritazza lies across the arrival hall from the doors exiting the baggage area. The restaurant stretches over a long area and has eclectic (at best) furnishings |
Going to a restaurant in the arrival hall at about 7 pm on a
Sunday night, I was astounded by the huge crowd that had assembled around the
doors that passengers use to exit the baggage area. Large numbers of people milled around the
narrow area between the curved barrier that sits a few feet from the exit door
and the shops. Many in the crowd were drivers with signs bearing the names of a
passenger they were supposed to meet. I didn’t envy them the task of
identifying their passengers amid the throngs of people exiting baggage area. Though the arrival area is new, it appears already
to have a congestion problem at peak times.
While the chaos was disconcerting, I did notice two nice
things about the new arrival area. It has
better places to eat, and it has a new, well-marked passageway to the S-bahn and the express train going to the city. In the old arrival hall,
it was difficult to find the S-bahn if you didn’t already know where it was.
One remarkable thing about the Vienna International Airport
is its neighborhood. Within a short walk to the airport terminal are three high-rise
office parks providing space for businesses that need quick access to the
airport. Also, it has a multi-story building occupied by Austrian Air. Around
the attractive office buildings, parking decks holding about 23,000 automobiles
have been constructed. The area is also serviced by banks, restaurants, a
grocery store, and some retail stores – all outside of, but a short distance to
the airport.
Unlike airports in major American cities, the Vienna Airport
is not only a transportation center, with easy access to the city by a regional
train (S-bahn) and buses, it is also a business and economic development
center. In a few years, the airport will have a link with the new Vienna Hauptbahnhof
(Main Train Station), and travelers arriving by air will be able to easily catch
trains for trips to other Austrian cities and European countries. This new
transportation dimension should make the business centers at the airport even
more attractive to some firms dependent on air and train
service.
Right now, the Vienna Airport is a mess, but the huge
investment that Vienna and Austria are making to create modern transportation
centers, and to surround them with high rise office buildings, will likely pay
economic development dividends for the country long after the airport has been
modernized for the coming century. I look forward to seeing the renovated
airport when it is finished.
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