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What exactly is planned?Contract awarded for T1/T3 renewal
Toronto Pearson selects team to lead Accelerator program – ReNew Canada
www.renewcanada.net
Design team includes Weston Williamson + Partners and Woods Bagot
What exactly is planned?Contract awarded for T1/T3 renewal
Toronto Pearson selects team to lead Accelerator program – ReNew Canada
www.renewcanada.net
Design team includes Weston Williamson + Partners and Woods Bagot
Pearson is working on a multi-year plan to expand capacity called LIFT (short for Long-term Investment in Facilities and Terminals).What exactly is planned?
One of their earlier media interviews suggested they were looking at new terminals elsewhere on the airport property, but they seem to have shelved that idea in favour of adding on to Terminal 1.Indeed GTAA held an Industry Forum on 4th December to provide information on their 10-year capital plan. Presentation is here.
The layout of the T1 expansion seems to have returned to new piers:
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This ReNew Canada article doesn't do a great job of explaining things. If you look at the original press release on Pearson's website, it's actually two separate procurements. The Accelerator contract has been awarded for the interim terminal. Meanwhile, a separate procurement process has been launched for the T1/T3 revitalization, but no contract has been awarded yet for that.Contract awarded for T1/T3 renewal
Toronto Pearson selects team to lead Accelerator program – ReNew Canada
www.renewcanada.net
Design team includes Weston Williamson + Partners and Woods Bagot
I was just in Vancouver airport and I travel through there sometimes. I think it looks better than Pearson and is way more neater.
My understanding the interim terminal is really a landside terminal that will service a number of remote stands that will take overflow during the major expansion to T1 (and eventual replacement of T3 post 2035). Accelerator also includes a number of systems upgrades across the airport, and decarbonization initiatives.This ReNew Canada article doesn't do a great job of explaining things. If you look at the original press release on Pearson's website, it's actually two separate procurements. The Accelerator contract has been awarded for the interim terminal. Meanwhile, a separate procurement process has been launched for the T1/T3 revitalization, but no contract has been awarded yet for that
Overflow? Do you mean Gates B1 to B5?Interim terminal? There is already an overflow terminal, literally called the infield terminal.
Overflow? Do you mean Gates B1 to B5?
They are in regular use these days. I always seem to use them for Porter and often Flair too. I wouldn't call it overflow.
There are those gates on the far side of the airport. But I can see lots of reasons to not use it for regular operations. When they built it near a quarter-century ago, there wasn't really a good option for a structure connected to the existing terminals, with all the construction
This CityNews article from last year says the airport is working on developing a "modern" and "modular" interim terminal with capacity for up to 7 million additional passengers per year.Interim terminal? There is already an overflow terminal, literally called the infield terminal. They're not building a new one are they? I'd assume they'd be upgrading the infield terminal in order to accommodate it being used more frequently.
Yes ... the gates on the far side of the airport. I hadn't realized they'd reactivated them permanently. It looks like they did this about a year ago - I don't think they'd been in regular everyday use since around when Terminal 2 was demolished, other than during the Syrian emergency and some summer charters. All I've ever seen of it is by watching Station Eleven.I believe the GTAA refers to gates B1 to B5 as the T3 satellite gates. Gates 521 to 531 are at what the GTAA calls the Infield Concourse (or Terminal) and is located between the 15/33 runway pair. To get to those gates you need to board a bus at T1/T3 depending on your airline and are bussed over to the terminal.
Both see fairly regular use, hence the calls from passengers to expand and the action by GTAA to begin the LIFT project.
Considering where we once were, where the GTAA was considering going ahead with that absolute inadequate and pathetic pier expansion plan over the proper expansion of the terminal footprint, I think we've come a long way. At least they're proceeding in a way that makes much more sense.In an ideal world, Pearson would have been doing small-scale expansions consistently over the last couple of decades, instead of waiting for the current situation of severe overcrowding and a wildly inadequate terminal footprint.
I feel like this is a common Toronto problem: build something major and then do nothing, until conditions deteriorate far enough to require a comprehensive and expensive "revitalization." Rinse and repeat.
I know they built the "connector" or whatever it's called for ground-level US gates at T1, but that thing is so cheap and shonky that it doesn't count.
Canadian airport infrastructure dollars are few and far between.In an ideal world, Pearson would have been doing small-scale expansions consistently over the last couple of decades, instead of waiting for the current situation of severe overcrowding and a wildly inadequate terminal footprint.
I feel like this is a common Toronto problem: build something major and then do nothing, until conditions deteriorate far enough to require a comprehensive and expensive "revitalization." Rinse and repeat.
I know they built the "connector" or whatever it's called for ground-level US gates at T1, but that thing is so cheap and shonky that it doesn't count.
This CityNews article from last year says the airport is working on developing a "modern" and "modular" interim terminal with capacity for up to 7 million additional passengers per year.




