The new job for the airport CEO: It's more challenging - and more uplifting - than ever | Fortune
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The new job for the airport CEO: It's more challenging - and more uplifting - than ever | Fortune
"The Sunday after Thanksgiving is expected to be the busiest air travel day of the year in the United States. Crowds will swell, schedules will bend, and many passengers will spend far more time in terminals than they planned, whether because of staffing shortages, weather, or system strain. In moments like these, a simple truth becomes clear: what happens inside the airport matters as much as what happens on the plane."
"I learned that lesson early in my career. More than four decades ago, when I was a young architect, Art Gensler himself asked me to rethink the firm's concept for Delta's new terminal at LAX the night before a major presentation. After reviewing my sketches the next morning, he took me with him to the meeting and then asked me to present my ideas to Delta's chair. Approval came the same day."
The Sunday after Thanksgiving brings peak U.S. air travel, producing crowded terminals, disrupted schedules, and delays from staffing shortages, weather, and system strain. Airport interiors now shape traveler experience as strongly as onboard factors. A late redesign of Delta's LAX terminal, prompted by Art Gensler and approved rapidly, resulted in a lasting entrance for Delta in Los Angeles. Over forty years, airport leadership roles expanded beyond operations, runways, gates, and safety to include passenger experience, community relationships, sustainability outcomes, financial resilience, and accountability to airlines, retailers, investors, and broader stakeholder groups.
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