The Peterborough Examiner

Dashing to make a flight? Order food to your gate

- TARA DESCHAMPS The Canadian Press

TORONTO — P.J. Mastracchi­o is used to dashing through airports only to arrive at his gate and have a terrible feeling start to sink in: hunger pangs.

The frequent business traveller’s routine rush often leaves him with no time to grab a bite. Now, he’s betting his experience is so common it will help get his recently-launched airport delivery service AtYourGate off the ground.

The delivery service, powered by Montreal-based mobile platform GOLO, allows travellers to place orders from restaurant­s or convenienc­e stores in the airport through the AtYourGate app. The items get delivered to the passenger’s gate, cutting out the need to wait in line for food or walk far distances through the airport to fulfil cravings. For those tight on time, orders can be scheduled in advance to arrive just as you board or deplane.

So far, AtYourGate is only available at San Diego Internatio­nal Airport, but it has lofty ambitions to roll out across Canada as it tries to tackle what could be the next frontier for delivery apps: airports.

AtYourGate faces competitio­n from app-based food delivery pioneer Uber Eats, as well as smaller startups and even airports themselves.

Uber Eats Canadian general manager Dan Park said it is experienci­ng an increase in orders made to airports, though the company can’t make deliveries past security yet. Airport Sherpa launched at Baltimore/Washington Internatio­nal Airport in July. A spokespers­on for the Edmonton Internatio­nal Airport said it hopes to launch a similar offering and the Halifax Internatio­nal Airport Authority said it has explored such a service, but doesn’t have anything in the works.

The idea of delivery services at airports is growing in popularity and something travellers could find very useful, said David Soberman, a University of Toronto marketing professor.

“(Airports) are crowded, often the stores aren’t where your gate is, and it can be challengin­g, especially if you are a family travelling with kids or if you are an older person. There are all kinds of people that would find this convenient,” he said.

When it launched in January, AtYourGate was only available for airline employees — ticket agents, runway and baggage crews — that often can’t find time to stop for food or are too far from airport restaurant­s. Southwest Airlines has allowed AtYourGate on board planes to make deliveries to flight attendants that don’t deplane during very short stopovers.

Within two months, Mastracchi­o said it expanded to include passengers and has since seen sales growing by 20 per cent per week on average.

“We see passengers arrive at their gate, sit down, look around and realize there is not much there, so they open the app and order. We even got an order at

3:11 a.m. the other day for an 8 a.m. Chinese food delivery,” said Mastracchi­o, AtYourGate’s chief executive officer.

“Saturday night we served 20 teenagers, 13- and 14-year-old boys, flying back to Boston from Spring Break with their chaperone. The guy bought 20 meals and was thrilled and the kids were thrilled. Those are things we are finding every day at the airport.”

AtYourGate charges customers $2.99 at every vendor they order from, which is divided between the company and the airport.

GOLO chief executive office Jean-Francois Noel hopes it will be a formula that can be replicated beyond San Diego. He said AtYourGate is contacting all major airports in Canada about the app and is hopeful that by the end of the year it will have lured at least one major airport in the country to launch the service.

“We are also in discussion­s to bring this concept into office towers, hospitals and universiti­es,” he said. “Everywhere you have a building, merchants and users you can create an e-commerce based community.”

The potential to turn any gathering space into a food-delivery opportunit­y is a page out of Uber’s playbook. In Canada, the company has seen deliveries to plenty of unconventi­onal spaces including airports, sports centres, hotels, beaches, parks and cultural landmarks.

Park said thousands of orders have made their way to Canadian hospitals, including St. Michael’s, Mount Sinai and the Women’s College Hospital, all in Toronto. Park said colleges and university communitie­s have also proved to be “fantastic” for Uber Eats.

“When you see those things in those kinds of markets, it starts opening up opportunit­ies,” he said, adding that it is also looking into partnershi­ps with schools and for meal plans.

When it comes to unconventi­onal spaces, he said business travellers are “probably the biggest use case,” given that hundreds of Uber Eats orders are coming every month from airports.

 ?? DOUG IVES THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The AtYourGate app allows customers to place an order for food at airports and have it delivered to your gate.
DOUG IVES THE CANADIAN PRESS The AtYourGate app allows customers to place an order for food at airports and have it delivered to your gate.

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