Airport designs point to future of flight?

A design contest for architecture and engineering students from around the world shows airports powered by tidal energy and “pocket airports” built into tall urban buildings.

The pocket airport
(Credit: Alexander Nevarez/Fentress Architects)

A jury of architects and airport design experts have selected the three top entries in the 2011 Fentress Global Challenge, an international competition in which students from around the world offered their ideas and concepts for airport designs.

The competition was sponsored by Fentress Architects, a firm that specialises in designing airports — its portfolio includes Denver International Airport and Incheon International Airport near Seoul, South Korea — and other public spaces, including museums and convention centres.

The students were encouraged to think big, with no restrictions on the proposed sites or sizes of the design concepts. The top prize was given to a design for an airport built on “prefabricated, mass-produced islands” that would sit in the Thames Estuary, upstream from London. The designer, a student at London South Bank University named Oliver Andrew, said the airport would ease the overcrowding of the surrounding airports because it would be accessed only through public transit. The lack of runways in his design means only planes with vertical take-off capabilities would access it. Energy harvested from tidal currents would help power the airport.

If that sounds terribly futuristic, well, that’s the idea. But the concept behind the third-place winner, a “pocket airport” that Alexander Nevarez, a student at Art Center College of Design, in Pasadena, California, is something that could have some real currency. Pocket airports would be constructed directly within an urban area, and it’s something that a NASA partner, the Comparative Aircraft Flight Efficiency Foundation (CAFE), has been showing interest in for a number of years.

Pocket airports would serve what might best be described as flying cars. Think of these as the next-next-next (and maybe one more next) generation electric vehicle. But work is underway to build small, nimble aircraft that could serve suburban commuters looking to travel by air. Proponents see this as a way to reveal highway congestion without robbing people of their personal vehicles, and last year CAFE held a Google-sponsored Green Flight Challenge in which prototypical electric and gas-electric hybrid planes took flight.

(Credit: Martin Sztyk/Fentress Architects)

The Fentress Global Challenge was held, in part, to drum up content for an upcoming exhibit at the Denver Art Museum. Called Now Boarding, the exhibit will provide multimedia descriptions of the past, present and future of airport design. The top three designs as well as many of the other finalist designs will be included in the exhibit, which opens on 15 July.

Oliver Andrew was awarded US$3000 in cash and a paid internship at Fentress Architects. The runner-up and third place winners receive cash awards of US$1000 and US$500, respectively.

Via SmartPlanet

Views: 0

You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

Leave a Reply

Powered by WordPress | Designed by: Premium WordPress Themes | Thanks to Themes Gallery, Bromoney and Wordpress Themes