BIAL Official Updates December 2007
Construction progress update for December 2007
As the new Bangalore International Airport nears opening date on March 30, 2008, trials began in December 2007. Designated Airport Readiness Experts (AREXs) are testing basic processes post which, the basic trials will begin on January 15, 2008. During the trial phases facilities, procedures, systems and trained staff will be tested.
A number of “Train the trainer programmes” have been completed successfully and trainers are preparing their training sessions for airport owned equipment and systems for the various trial phases. Facilities are operational, information(rules/regulations) is specified, systems are available and human resources have been employed and trained. In addition, the elementary processes are established and signed off.
The Terminal Building
All the check-in counters are installed. Installation of the Universal Flight Information System (UFIS), Flight Information Display System (FIDS) monitors, speakers, terminal building lights, CCTV cameras, etc are in progress. Installation of all elevators and escalators is complete and installation of furniture in the terminal building has commenced.
Airside Works
The concreting of the pavement layer in the apron, the construction of the airside perimeter road and the painting of the markings on the runway, taxiways and the apron is nearing completion.
Airport Rescue & Fire Fighting
The airport rescue and fire fighting team has reached a high degree of airport readiness and is ready to participate in the basic trials. The four heavy duty crash fire tenders arrived at the project site.
Other Buildings & Infrastructure
The grading and road construction works around buildings, pavement layers, duct banks and cable trenches are in progress. The finishing works, mechanical and electrical works in the landside office building are in progress.
- Printer-friendly version
- Login or register to post comments
- Forward this Book page
Praja.in comment guidelines
Posting Guidelines apply for comments as well. No foul language, hate mongering or personal attacks. If criticizing third person or an authority, you must be fact based, as constructive as possible, and use gentle words. Avoid going off-topic no matter how nice your comment is. Moderators reserve the right to either edit or simply delete comments that don't meet these guidelines. If you are nice enough to realize you violated the guidelines, please save Moderators some time by editing and fixing yourself. Thanks!
Comments
March 29, 8:00 pm - First landing at BIAL
Wonder which plane gets to land first and how the first passenger will be. Any enthusiasts planning to be there to record the landing of the first flight?
8 landings before first flight
Deccan Herald
Marking a decisive shift in its status, the Bengaluru International Airport will become "operational" with the first flight set to take off exactly at midnight on March 30.
But even before this “international” first flight, a domestic airliner will record the airport’s maiden landing anytime after 8 pm on March 29.
Seven more landings will follow this first touchdown, before midnight. For the HAL Airport, the shift will be abrupt. The curtains will fall right after 8 pm on March 29, the deadline set for all landings to cease there. “All flights after 20.00 hours will land at Devanahalli. The new airport will have to handle seven to eight domestic landings and 16 international flight landings before the morning of March 30,” an official at HAL Airport said.
With 25 landings and take-offs scheduled between 8 pm on March 29 and early morning on March 30, Bengaluru International Airport will feel the pressure from day one. Not less than 4,000 passengers are expected to experience the new airport in the first few hours of its operation.
Almost seven weeks ahead of its formal launch, BIAL has already advised air passengers to contact different airlines on their March 29 schedule. If their flight lands after 8 pm, they could be in for an entirely new experience, and a different road journey to their home or hotel, 40 kilometres away in Bangalore.
Despite demands to retain the HAL Airport at least for domestic flights, the new airport’s operationalisation would mean an end to the old aerodrome. “It will be an absolute shutdown for HAL airport, and an absolute opening for the Bengaluru International Airport,” said a BIAL spokesperson.
Disaster Management
BIAL Changes
New Logo
Updates
Source: Times of India epaper Jan 18, 2008 (FOR TAKE-OFF Check in at the new airport!)
The upcoming Bangalore International Airport at Devanahalli is bustling with activity. Passengers hurriedly going through the check-in, completing other formalities and finally passing through the boarding gate. Only what is missing is an aeroplane!
Dedicated mock trials for handling passenger traffic have begun at the airport. To ensure a smooth opening of the much-awaited greenfield airport, the BIAL has set up a start-up team that has put together a pool of mock passengers — volunteers — to test the different functions and standard operating procedures at the airport.
The start-up team had approached many event management companies to get volunteers, who according to BIAL, “are an ideal mix that typifies actual passengers as best as possible.”
The trials, held twice a week, are conducted during peak-hour traffic. Volunteers have been a given a script to follow for the departure process: checkin at 10 am with or without baggage, use the various boarding facilities, security check and finally pass through the boarding gate before departure time. A similar script is followed for the arrival processes.
“These trials will test the capacity of different sub-processes and eventually show critical areas and possible obstacles. Based on the feedback of their (mock passengers) experience, BIAL will improve and finetune the processes,” said an official spokesperson of BIAL. The airport is expected to handle 10.5 million passengers a year.
“If the trial performance does not reach the required quality standards, it will have to be repeated on another day of the week,” added the spokesperson.
However, it is still not sure whether these mock passengers would be boarded on a plane and taken for a ride. Airport officials are still discussing the idea. BIAL has approached various airlines requesting them to land some of their aircraft at the airport, which would help test the landing and takeoff facilities, and also assist in these mock passenger trials.
A CAT I instrument landing system has been put in place, which allows pilots to go in for a touchdown at 200 ft above the elevated portion of the runway with a visibility range of not less than 1,800 feet. This landing system is geared to allow safe landing of flights during fog as well.
“Airline ground staff and concessionaires will also be part of these trials to make sure that their staff members and systems have been checked out and can guarantee smooth operations from the first day,” said the spokesperson.
Cauvery Water For Airport
Source: Deccan Herald(Cauvery water for airport soon)
Preparation for Cauvery water supply to the airport has already been completed & BWSSB is geared up to supply 1 MLD (million litres per day) of Cauvery water to BIAL. BWSSB did a trial supply on December 23, and the result was satisfactory.
BIAL has to rely on Cauvery water supplied from BWSSB as the Mines and Geology Department had restricted sinking of fresh borewells in airport area.
BWSSB has set up the pipelines at a cost of Rs 23 lakh. The water charges for airport would be 10% higher than that collected from industries in Bangalore City limits. However a final agreement on prices is yet to be signed.
BWSSB is also demanding that the airport bear the cost of the pump set up exclusively to supply water to BIAL. Its rationale: The water has to be pumped at five places before it could reach Devanahalli. Cauvery water is now brought to Bangalore City through pumps at TK Halli, Harohalli and Tataguni. To take water from the city to Devanahalli, two more pumping stations were set up at Jagganahalli and GKVK (UAS).
BWSSB and BIAL are expected to sign an agreement on the water supply within two weeks.
T J S George: Should an airport become anti-passenger?
Source: newindpress
WHAT the salaried class is to income tax hunters, passengers are to aviation mandarins: Helpless, captive milch-cows. The way Air-India overcharges and ill-treats Gulf travellers is a case in point. It has had a monopoly in this sector for long and it has shamelessly used that exclusivity to exploit passengers.
Now the Bangalore International Airport is becoming a landmark example of how airport companies can squeeze the Mickey out of air passengers. It wants to impose a user fee. And no chhotta-motta thing either. It has specified an avaricious Rs 675 for every domestic passenger and an avaricious Rs 955 for every international passenger. The CEO of the company says this inflated user fee “is the core of our revenue stream without which the operations would not be viable”.
There is something fundamentally wrong when a company sees monopoly-based exploitation as the basis of its core revenue. What the Bangalore company's CEO has projected is a bankrupt business model. On his logic the new Hyderabad airport's CEO must be a dimwit for Hyderabad is levying no user fee. Mumbai and Delhi airports, recently privatised, have no user fee either. How come their operations are viable? Will they open their floodgates if the Bangalore company sets the wrong example?
Kozhikode airport made itself notorious once by charging a user fee. Passengers raised a hue and cry. The Malabar Chamber of Commerce took the lead in coordinating the protests. The boycott that followed seriously dented the load factor in departing flights and forced authorities to drop the user fee system completely.
Cochin Airport company, the first “private” operator in the country, imposed a user fee in early 2001. Protests were strong and the authorities there also abandoned the idea five years later. They gave the excuse that user fee was no longer needed because the company was profitable.
That company continues to be nicely profitable. Which shows that an efficiently run airport does not need usurious levies to build up a healthy revenue stream. It is lazy managements that resort to such anti-passenger shortcuts. Let's not forget Kozhikode and Cochin imposed user fees only on departing international passengers. It's the Bangalore CEO who has the brainwave to fleece domestic passengers as well.
That's unconscionable when the new Bangalore airport's aggravation count is already heavy. Frequent fliers from heartlands like Electronic City will need three hours to reach the airport. And they must reach one hour ahead of the flight. So we are talking of a four-hour ordeal for a 45-minute flight to Chennai.
It's about time that oversmart CEOs and companies looking for easy money are told that this is a country where people's interests count. Governments both in Delhi and Bangalore as well as business organisations must insist that (a) no extortionist user fee will be allowed, and (b) Bangalore's geography demands that the option to allow short-haul flights from the present HAL airport is retained.
The failure to provide speedy and comfortable access to the airport is something for which passengers must be compensated, not penalised. If passengers are used for artificial profit-making, then the airport company should pay the passenger a user fee. How about Rs 998?
PM to Inaugurate BIAL
Source: Deccan Herald (PM to open B'lore airport)
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has agreed to inaugurate the new Bangalore international airport coming up at Devanahalli either on March 28 or before, reports DHNS from New Delhi.
“I have requested him to inaugurate the airport at a date of his convenience on or before March 28”, Governor Rameshwar Thakur said.
BIAL Updates
Source: The Hindu (BIAL landing trials likely in February , Bangalore airport may stick to user development fee)
pictures
exclusive train for air travellers only?!
Security Preparations
As the countdown begins for the launch of Bangalore International Airport at Devanahalli on March 29, the police plan to establish three new police stations and create a North-East Police Division headed by a Deputy Commissioner of Police to provide security to the airport and surrounding areas.
Bangalore Police Commissioner Neelam Achutha Rao told The Hindu that to ensure better security and traffic management, Devanahalli and some of its surrounding areas that were now part of the Bangalore Rural district, would soon be brought under the jurisdiction of the city police.
Formal proposal soon
The police will make a formal proposal to the State Government about the new police division and establishing two police stations — one each for law and order and traffic— at the Devanahalli airport as well as a traffic police station at Chikkajala, Mr. Achutha Rao said.
The existing law and order police stations at Devanahalli and Chikkajala, now under Bangalore Rural district, would become part of the city police unit and would be upgraded.
Division of labour
As the Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) took care of the internal security of the airport, the police would provide peripheral security, he said.
Explaining the need for heightened security around the airport, Mr. Rao said commercial activity would take place in the area once the airport became operational.
Besides, there would be frequent and heavy movement of VVIPs. Bangalore International Airport Ltd (BIAL) had agreed to provide space on the airport premises to house the two police stations and an office of the Assistant Commissioner of Police, he said.
The Emigration Desk at the airport would be handled by the local police until the Intelligence Bureau eventually took over.
The BIAL had agreed to allot space to accommodate 18 tables each at the arrival and departure terminals.
“We had sought space for 20 tables and they were initially willing to provide space for only 15,” the Police Commissioner said.
Land for quarters
The BIAL had been asked to provide land to build residential quarters for the emigration staff as it would be difficult for them to commute from Bangalore everyday.
“As the BIAL has said the Police Department should buy land from it at the market price, the Government is negotiating with the company,” Mr. Achutha Rao said.