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May 7th, 2008

Which is the biggest airport terminal in the world?

Editor writes:  This interesting question with its corresponding answer will settle the honour of which is the largest airport in the world currently.   

There are three mega airports recently opened - Singapore’s Changi International Airport Terminal 3, Britain’s Heathrow Airport and China’s Beijing Capital International Airport.  Which is the biggest of them all? 

The answer: Beijing Capital International Airport. 

To understand the scale of this airport, the following information was taken from the article “Beijing opens world’s largest airport terminal”, The Press Trust of India Limited, dated 29 February 2008, extracted from the Factiva database:

China today unveiled the highly futuristic and world’s largest new airport terminal in the capital in preparation for a deluge of passengers for the Olympics and for meeting the country’s booming air traffic demand.

The roof of the swanky new terminal looks like a dragon from the air with its wing spread running 3.25 km. The structure has 175 escalators, 173 lifts, 437 travelators, 64 restaurants, 300 check-in counters and an ultra modern baggage handling system on 50 km of conveyor belts.

Passengers on board a flight from east China’s Shandong province alighted in the morning, marking the opening of the Terminal Three of Beijing Capital International Airport that can handle 76 million passengers a year or 208,000 passengers a day. 

Nearly 40,000 workers built the new terminal working on eight-hour shifts round the clock to complete the colossal project, a great showpiece of China’s urge to show its futuristic face to the world.

“To get an idea of the scale, imagine Heathrow (London) terminals 1,2,3,4 and 5 together under one roof and then add an extra 17 per cent of floor space.

It is so big that under a certain amount of light you can’t see one end of building from the other,” British architect Norman Foster, who designed the terminal, said.

“It has taken 50 years for Heathrow to grow to its present scale. In Beijing, the process should be completed in less than five. Here is a society changing by the power of 10,” Foster told the state-run China Daily.

(The world’s biggest Airbus 380 can be handled by the airport which has an automated Montreal-based Bombardier Inc built train system to navigate the passengers to the international departure area.

With a floor space of 986,000 square metres, more than the double the total area of the first two terminals, the new terminal building is the largest of its kind in the world, Construction project manager Fan Jun was quoted as saying by official Xinhua news agency.

Construction on the new terminal began in 2004 with nine villages moved and 10,000 people relocated. It will enable the capital airport to handle 76 million passengers a year, against 53 million passengers in 2007.

Beijing is expected to receive more than five million people during the 2008 Olympic Games to be held in August. Three highway roads are also under construction to connect the new terminal to the existing traffic system, and are planned to be opened before the Olympics.

roymugshot-new.jpg  Answer by Roy Won, Librarian, Adult and Young People’s Services.

 

Filed under ..Adults, Factiva, Travel Comments (1)
5,387 views
August 1st, 2006

Factiva Quickie

What is Factiva?
Factiva.com is an online database, which provides access to 10,000+ leading news and business publications from around the world, including a collection of regional and industry publications.

What is Factiva useful for?
Factiva is a great resource for students or the general public who are looking for newspaper (be it local or international) articles on any topic, for project work, essays or general information. You can read/email/print full articles from local publications like the Straits Times, the Business Times, The New Paper etc. Full coverage for the Straits Times is available for all issues since 1 January 1995, for the Business Times it’s 30 April 1994 and for The New Paper it’s 17 June 2004.

Factiva is also useful for more in-depth information needs such as business research, company/industry research, media tracking etc.

How and where can I access Factiva?
Currently, the full version of Factiva is only accessible at the multimedia stations (PCs which provide Internet access) in the libraries. A Digital Libraries account is needed to use the multimedia stations, you can register for a free account at the libraries or from home. After successfully acquiring an account, proceed to log-in at a multimedia station. Usage of the multimedia stations at the libraries is charged is 3 cents per minute (or $1.80 per hour), payment is done via cashcard. Please refer here on how to locate Factiva after logging in.

You can also access a “lite” version of Factiva from your home PC. You would still need a Digital Libraries account. In addition, please download the English .exe file (size: 2.8MB) from the Citrix website before trying to access. Please refer here for steps on locating Factiva from our main website. This “lite” version does not include many search features of the full version and has limited content. It allows printing but not saving/emailing of articles. [ASK!Editor: Update as of 4th Jan 07, Factiva can NOT be accessed from home for the time being, a further update will be posted when the technical issues are rectified. Please access Factiva from the multimedia stations in the libraries]

How do I use Factiva?
This is the initial screen:
f1.JPG

Basically, all you have to do is enter keywords into the Free Text box, and the search will generate a list of articles that match those keywords. Boolean operators should be used with keywords to improve searches. For example:

  • If the keywords input are [coffee powder], all articles that are found will have the exact phrase “coffee powder”.
  • If the keywords input are [coffee AND powder], all articles that are found will have the word “coffee” and the word “powder”, but not necessarily the exact phrase.
  • If the keywords input are [coffee OR powder], all articles that are found will either have the word “coffee” or the word “powder”.
  • If the keywords input are [coffee NOT powder], all articles that are found only have the word “coffee”; articles where “powder” is mentioned are omitted.

For more in-depth keyword tips, please download the Factiva Search Quick Reference Card.

You can specify the time-frame (dates searched), source (publications searched), language as well as many other factors to improve the accuracy of your search.

For in-depth guides to using Factiva, please visit the Factiva Resource Library.

For a step-by-step example of using Factiva, read on!

(more…)

Filed under ..Adults, ..Teens, Factiva Comments (3)
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