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Norman Manley Airport to double boarding bridges

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  • Norman Manley Airport to double boarding bridges

    When we do tings a suh wi haffi do it boasy - translucent boarding bridges!

    Norman Manley Airport to double boarding bridges - ThyssenKrupp to get $149m contract
    published: Friday | September 28, 2007



    One of four boarding bridges in use by Air [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]Jamaica[/COLOR][/COLOR] at the Norman Manley International Airport. - Contributed
    Norman Manley International Airports Limited is [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]investing[/COLOR][/COLOR] US$2.13 million (J$149.1 million) in five boarding bridges under the upgrading programme under way at the Kingston-based port.
    NMIAL plans to procure the bridges from ThyssenKrupp Airport Systems out of Texas in the United States, but the deal has to pass Cabinet scrutiny prior to its execution.
    The airport operators have already hurdled the National Contracts Commission, which endorsed the contract to Thyssen-Krupp in August.
    Director of projects at the Airports Authority of Jamaica (AAJ), Patrick Saulter, said Norman Manley already has four boarding bridges installed, also supplied by ThyssenKrupp.
    The new purchase will take the complement to nine.
    The airport's master plan had provisions for four bridges initially, and consideration for more later.
    "Since the installation of the four we have seen the demand for the additional five," said Saulter, "and so we are currently negotiating financing."
    Target installation is by February 2008.
    The boarding bridges are revenue earners for the airport.
    Airlines are charged US$95.25, (approximately J$6,667) for the first two hours, and US$56 (J$3,920) per hour thereafter for the use of each bridge.
    To recoup cost in five years
    Based on those rates, NMIAL projects that it would be able to recoup the cost of the bridges in five years.
    With the new boarding bridges, passengers would no longer be exposed to the elements when boarding or deboarding an aircraft at Norman Manley airport, as the finger-like extensions from the terminal building would connect directly at the door of the plane and eliminate the need for steps.
    According to ThyssenKrupp's website, the company has been building passenger boarding bridges for over 30 years and has installed over 2,500 units.
    john.myers@gleanerjm.com


    BLACK LIVES MATTER

  • #2
    I must add that I am not impressed with airport up-grade esp. the boarding gate area so far...not only you have to walk upstairs you are in a hot area waiting to board with no seating. When expanding, they have to think ahead more than a year.

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