2011 Past Winners

    2011 Airport of the Future

    Students around the globe where invited to envision an airport into the distant future

    1st Place

    Oliver Andrew
    London South Bank University, London, United Kingdom
    Citizenship: English

    LDN Delta Airport

    A delta of prefabricated mass-produced islands situated in the Thames Estuary up stream from London.  A vital new airport to ease the overcrowding of the surrounding London airports.  The Airport has no cars, No runways and no check in desks.  Its served by public transport only.  The flight details are interconnected with the individuals mobile phones allowing the user to know the departure time and assigned skygate.   

    Vertical take off hypersonic jets capable of flying at the edge of space.  Lift off from purpose built landing pads.  The jets are integrated with the autonomous transpods taking the passengers from skygate to sky.  In one seat in an act of “podisation”. The airport uses tidal currents to create sustainable power for the whole airport in a process which uses “hydrogars”.  

    2nd Place

    Marcin Sztyk
    University College London, London, United Kingdom
    Citizenship: American

    The Airport of the Future - Los Angeles, California

    This proposal for the Airport of the Future is self-sustaining through the use of algae grown in nearby farms as a renewable resource. The architecture of the Airport of the Future is experiential as it intends to be a destination in itself. The future of airships and non-atmospheric flight intersects with runways, tarmacs, trains, highways and the conventional infrastructure of Los Angeles. The individual person can navigate through the immense scale of the Airport of the Future as it is designed to be a simple, self-similar system of arched terminals. The linear-axis of the airport’s design allows for vehicular or pedestrian access. Overall, the Airport of the Future has to embrace the past of commercial flying with new technological advances in flight to make flying enjoyable again.

    3rd Place

    Alexander Nevarez 
    Art Center College of Design, Pasadena, CA, United States
    Citizenship: American

    Pocket Airports

    Dreamers and innovators that look far beyond the present have always held the future in such high esteem. It is this optimism that propels ideas into the blue sky for the sake of imagining what is possible given the resources and technology.  Until recently suborbital flight could only be achieved by government space agencies. Virgin Galactic is soon to begin regular flights to space. The EADS promises the VoltAir, a hypersonic all electric airliner that could be flying within 25 years. If we could combine the capabilities these planes: hypersonic flight, electric propulsion, and add vertical take-off landing ability to create the ultimate airline passenger, how would airports adapt to this change?