Yesterday I reported on the new Terminal 5 at London's Heathrow Airport (LHR). Today I share the news that Terminal 3 is about to open at Beiji

Again, I write fortunately, because all of China's mind-blowing construction projects -- whether the Three Gorges Dam on the Yangtze, the railroad to Lhasa, Tibet, and now this terminal -- come at untold human cost. The villages are gone and an unknown number of villagers dispersed, and the feng shui principles reportedly used in the terminal's design that melds Eastern and Western styles didn't do them much good. Twenty-seven airlines will be at home there. The massive building -- ironically

China is banking on the upcoming Olympics and projects like this impressive terminal to raise its stature in the eyes of the world. But the production tainted pet foods, questionable medicines, potentially hazardous toys and most significantly, the current brutal suppression of Tibetan protests snag the headlines from what the country hopes to accomplish.
British Airways and Qantas have already moved into the new building with four other OneWorld alliance airlines (Cathay Pacific, Dragonair, Finnair and Japan Airlines) joining them by the end of the month. In decidedly un-Communist fashion, premium passengers of these six carriers will share the luxurious OneWorld lounge, and for Cathay Pacific and Dragonair will be soon open their own lounge soon. Also moving their operations to the new terminal in the next few weeks are Air China, Shanghai Airlines and Star Alliance airlines (including United).
The new terminal appears to be visually stunning, but I do wonder whether the villagers who were dislocated in order to build it have been moved someplace from which they can see it, and if so, what they might think. It is impressive, to be sure, and it's all in the name of progress, Chinese-style, regardless of the cost to its people.
They probably built it with all those U.S. dollars that they hold.
ReplyDeleteThe mind boggles when there are so many homeless.
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