The story appears on

Page A3

June 20, 2019

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » Metro

New satellite terminal wins steel structure award

PUDONG airport’s new satellite terminal building, scheduled to open in September, has received China’s top steel structure award for its intricate and innovative design.

The world’s largest satellite terminal building, known as S1 and S2, is connected with Terminals 1 and 2 by an underground shuttle, and will provide faster transfers and better punctuality, Shanghai Airport Authority said yesterday.

Upon completion, Pudong airport will be able to handle 80 million passengers annually, 6 million more than last year.

The sprawling H-shaped terminal built by Shanghai Mechanized Construction, with 83 boarding bridges and 125 aprons, features huge glass curtain walls and a large inner space without a single supporting pillar.

More than 35,000 tons of steel has been used in the project, equal to the total amount used for the Nanpu, Yangpu and Xupu bridges across the Huangpu River.

Work began in May 2016 and took two and a half years. The structure has won the gold award of the China Construction Metal Structure Association.

The glass curtain wall is 6 kilometers long and will offer a great view for waiting passengers. Long, thin beams which can resist typhoons were used to create the wall.

The triangular rooftops of S1 and S2 were built with more than 20,000 steel beams. QR codes on each beam provide all necessary information for workers. Previously, a huge amount of design charts were required.

Interior decoration work has started along with preparation of commercial facilities. The operational system is being tested ahead of the opening in September.

New subway trains are also being put through their paces. The subway is designed to carry 9,000 passengers per hour. Each train is about 94 meters long with four compartments, two for domestic flight passengers and two for international flight travelers. Screens for flight information and luggage racks have been installed. Passengers will check in at one of the two existing terminal buildings and then take the subway — a ride of about three minutes — to the new facility. The subway train will run every two minutes.

Shanghai’s two airports have become overburdened with passengers and cargo. Together they handled more than 117 million passengers in 2018, a 5.2 percent increase, making it the world’s fifth-busiest air hub after London, New York, Tokyo and Atlanta.

A series of expansions and renovations, including the building of the satellite terminal and a three-year renovation of Terminal 1 at Hongqiao International Airport, completed in October 2018, are helping to make services more efficient.




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend