New technology preserves speed, convenience KC air travelers have come to expect (in unexpected ways)

February 21, 2023  |  Martin Rosenberg

Would-be passengers walk through the new KCI terminal; photo by Tommy Felts, Startland News

Editor’s note: This story was originally published by Kansas City PBS/Flatland, a member of the KC Media Collective, which also includes Startland News, KCUR 89.3, American Public Square, The Kansas City Beacon, and Missouri Business Alert.

Click here to read the original story.

You land at Kansas City International Airport a half hour early.

Until now that has been a mixed blessing.

You idle on the jetway twiddling thumbs and waiting for an open gate.

Next week, that is going to be history as KCI becomes one of few airports boasting leading-edge technology that transforms the final moments of plane movements on the ground with dazzling software technology that would make a gamer drool.

Digital, responsive restroom signage at the new KCI terminal; photo by Tommy Felts, Startland News

That’s not the only marvel awaiting Kansas City travelers when the new $1.5 billion KCI terminal throws open its doors on Feb. 28.

Hustling business travelers will be amazed when their last-minute hunt for a parking spot is eased by a nifty new “red light-green light” signal system directing them speedily to a vacant spot.

Those restroom visits to hell that left you clutching your bladder on a line wending back through Starbucks — even that will be fixed. Bathrooms will be more spacious. Stall occupancy will be identified by “red lights” and “green lights” just like the parking spots in the massive new parking garage.

As the three-ring pretzel terminal that has been your gateway to Kansas City for 51 years goes away, Kansas City will be wowed by a new gateway that will boast novel technologies that will go along with the public art, fountains, shops and fresh paint and carpet.

Topping the list is a $7.6 million virtual aircraft ramp control system acquired from Saab, the Swedish automaker and industrial giant.

“Saab views its digital tower solution as ‘green solutions’ and generally believes that they cost less to build and maintain than traditional ‘brick and mortar’ towers,” according to spokesperson Kevin Borland.

Saab’s digital ramp tower technology at the new Kansas City International Airport will increase the speed and safety of aircraft movement to and from the new $1.5 billion terminal; photo contributed by the Kansas City Aviation Department

Robert Brown, director of product management and strategy at Saab, in Syracuse, New York, said this Saab technology is deployed at Orlando airport and George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston. Rival firms have similar technology at maybe one or two additional airports out of the 5,217 public airports in the country, he said.

In other words, KCI will be a standout.

Here is how it will work. Two digital camera towers with 14 cameras will be erected at either end of the new terminal with a commanding 360-degree view of plane taxiing approaches, Brown said.

The system will feed information to ramp controllers who will have greater knowledge of what is happening around the aircraft.

Tarmac at the new KCI terminal; photo by Tommy Felts, Startland News

“It will reduce radio calls, things move smoother, planes will move in and out faster,” Brown said. “There is a lot of choreography that happens when a plane pulls in.”

For instance, the vehicles that move planes in and out of gates will be more efficiently deployed.

Baggage may be off-loaded faster, Brown agreed, saying: “Possibly…Hopefully. Everything should run better.”

Planes that arrive early or late can be directed to more gates, which will provide operational flexibility, said Justin Meyer, Kansas City Aviation Department deputy director of aviation.

Old KCI had 35 gates and 31 of them were leased to airline companies, Meyer said. Four gates were available for use by any aircraft.

The new KCI terminal will have 40 gates, with 7 of them unleased and available to any airline, Meyer said.

Since all arriving planes will be at one terminal, this will provide more open gates when needed. Those gates are graced with electronic signs that can be used for multiple logos, airline names and other information.

Digital signage at the new KCI terminal; photo by Tommy Felts, Startland News

Currently, a Delta flight that arrives early or late and is destined for Terminal B cannot be directed to an open gate at Terminal C. That inefficiency will go away, Meyer said.

Travelers — primarily business travelers — who wish to park in a garage close to the terminal also will find it much easier to do so. In recent years, that has been a nightmare.

Often Southwest Airlines flyers, for example, needed to fly out of Terminal B but had to park in the Terminal C garage and take a bus or a hike to and from Terminal B. That conundrum will end.

The public should not fret about any potential huge jumps in parking rates, even though they have not been raised in seven years. The rate may go up $1 or $2 a day at the garage, Meyer said.

There also will be more garage spaces at the new terminal. The garages at Terminal B and C currently offer 4,500 spaces. The new parking garage will have 6,219 spaces, Meyer said, “more than enough to meet demand.”

The parking garage at the new KCI terminal; photo by Tommy Felts, Startland News

Many customers will continue to want to use the less costly economy satellite parking. But they will be whisked to and from the terminal in electric buses and buses powered with compressed natural gas.

For starters, 14 EV (Electric Vehicle) buses will be equipped to be recharged on-the-fly as they take on and drop off passengers at the terminal, Meyer said.

Some dazzling strategizing has gone into the garage configuration and capabilities.

The red and green lights above each space will mean drivers do not have to circle endlessly up and down parking aisles to find a vacant spot.

To “future proof” the new terminal, Meyer said, airport planners have prepared for the day that may arrive sooner than many suspect, perhaps, when self-driving cars will allow us to arrive at the airport and then send our driverless cars home, Meyer said.

KCI could then offer up space in the parking garage to car rental companies eager to get closer to the terminal for their customers, he said.

As adoption and use of electric vehicles ramps up, the garage will increase the availability of EV charging spots. To start out, there will be fewer than 100, Meyer said.

Martin Rosenberg is a Kansas City journalist and host of the Grid Talk podcast on the future of energy.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2023 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Bradley Gilmore, co-owner of Lula, celebrated his 40th birthday signing a long-term lease for his restaurant

    New lease on life: ‘Southern cookhouse’ bringing fried flavor to former sushi space in Crossroads

    By Tommy Felts | April 12, 2022

    Editor’s note: The following story was originally published by CityScene KC, an online news source focused on Greater Downtown Kansas City. Click here to read the original story or here to sign up for the weekly CityScene KC email review. Brad Gilmore celebrated his 40th birthday last week with the gift he always wanted, the opportunity to run his…

    The Greeting Committee

    ‘Beats, beer, biologics’ coming to KC: Check out the bands set for Innovation Festival’s debut

    By Tommy Felts | April 12, 2022

    It might look like an indie rock music festival on the outside, but a just-announced, three-day event coming to Kansas City this summer is as much about the heartbeat of innovation in the region as the beats dropped by Grammy-nominated headliner Black Pumas, said Sonia Hall. “What we want to do is start to disrupt…

    Kara Lowe, KC Tech Council

    Kara Lowe taking KC Tech Council helm as longtime CEO Ryan Weber departs

    By Tommy Felts | April 12, 2022

    The KC Tech Council will soon welcome a familiar face as its new leader, the organization announced Tuesday. Kara Lowe, the council’s longtime COO, will succeed Ryan Weber as CEO next month — putting her commitment to Kansas City’s tech sector on full display and allowing her contributions to the regions tech ecosystem to further shape…

    Cara Hennessy, Sarah-Allen Preston, and Morgan Miller, afloat

    Made in KC partners with afloat to provide same-day gifting of exclusive care packages

    By Tommy Felts | April 9, 2022

    Kansas Citians can now get same-day delivery from the city’s largest local marketplace through afloat — a gifting app by one of the metro’s leading startups that allows community members to pick out and send neatly-packaged goods to their loved ones, said Sarah-Allen Preston. “We have always been huge fans of Made in KC, and…