Airports around the world have the simplest possible layout, while could invest more to upgrade travel experience operating as Art Galleries.

Airports, as hubs of activity, connect people and places around the world. As an intermediate stop on a journey they dominate human consciousness while being identified with an amalgam of mixed emotions. Farewells, welcomes, nerves, stress, sadness, excitement… For some, it’s just a pick-up point but for many, it serves as a second home.

Traveling by plane is one of the most popular and fastest ways of transportation, especially when you wish to be at your dream destination while enjoying a relaxing on-air travel experience to the fullest.

Airports, ensuring a peaceful stay for travelers in their spaces, could upgrade their overall aesthetic image by operating like Art Galleries with the assistance of GEN AI (Generative Artificial Intelligence). An open window into a futuristic world with artworks, on many levels, bathed in light, connecting art with life and creating both surprising and exciting images.

By highlighting the artistic side of airports, travelers are encouraged to communicate more, to express themselves, to take a break from the routine of everyday life and their professional obligations by living the magic of the moment surrounded by unpretentious beauty that they would not have the opportunity to experience in other conventional waiting areas.

The images below, created using artificial intelligence, summarize this dynamic, where airports can focus on creating welcoming spaces, transcending the trivial and adopting a lighthearted, almost playful, more outgoing and communicative style.


Did you know?

Here are a few fun facts about airports we think you have never known of :

As per reports from FlightAware, there are an average of 9,728 planes in the air at any given moment, carrying 1,270,406 people. This places the sky ahead of Cyprus, Fiji, and many other countries in terms of population.

San Francisco International Airport recruits a therapy pig to assist travellers with travel stress. Lilou is her name, and she offers massage therapy to pilots, crew members, and airport personnel.

Some years back, a Houston airport received a lot of complaints from passengers stating that they spent “too much” time waiting for their baggage making it the worst travel experience ever. The airport staff decided to shift the arrival gates away from the main terminal and conveyor belts to the outermost carousel to tackle this issue. For this reason, passengers were made to walk a little further to receive their baggage, and complaints were nearly non-existent.

The Hong Kong International airport has a nine-hole golf course adjacent to Terminal 2 and a 350-seat IMAX theatre that shows both conventional and 3D films. 

If you find yourself in Singapore airport and want to do something more relaxing, go to the world’s first butterfly garden in an airport, which boasts over 1,000 tropical butterflies.

Bird-strike prevention measures are provided at Montreal-Trudeau International Airport, Toronto Pearson International Airport, and many other airports as well. Various raptors, such as bald eagles, hawks, and falcons, operate around the clock to persuade other birds to leave that region.

Source: Unacademy.com

2 thought on “Airports: Can operate as Art Galleries upgrading travel experience?”
  1. Thank you for breaking down complex concepts so clearly. Thank you for breaking down complex concepts so clearly. I’ve been searching for information like this for a while. The content in this blog is truly eye-opening. This blog stands out among others in this niche.

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