Landside | Airside

£69.99

Landside | Airside

Why Airports Are the Way They Are

Theory of architecture History of architecture Society and culture: general Human geography Highway and traffic engineering

Author: Victor Marquez

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Language: English

Published by: Palgrave Macmillan

Published on: 18th January 2019

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 8 Mb

ISBN: 9789811333620


Why do we love and hate airports at the same time?

Have you been a victim of tiresome walks, congestion, long lines, invasive pat-downs, eternal delays and so on? Perhaps no other technological system has been challenged by continuously changing paradigms like airports. Think a minute on rail stations; think of how successful are the rail networks of the world in connecting nations, with just minimum security measures. Why aviation and airports are so radically different in this regard?

Airport history and planning

In order to answer those questions the author embarks on a thorough revision of airport history and airport planning that in the end builds up a new theory about how airports are formed from the outset. Within its journey from the early airfield to the newest hubs of today, Dr. Marquez identifies for the first time the Landside–Airside boundary as the single most important feature that shapes an airport. In this sense, his finding challenges the “historical linearity” that, until today, used to explain a century of airports.

Reinvention of airports

From both an analytical and theoretical S&TS stance, Dr. Marquez assures that it is only when airports needed to be fully reinvented (LaGuardia, Dulles and Tampa) when they become transparent and we may be able to understand their lack of technological stability.

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