Bangkok Post

Terminal put on ice pending feedback

Critics say airport master plan ignored

- POST REPORTERS

Airports of Thailand (AoT) has put the brakes on a second terminal scheduled to be built at Suvarnabhu­mi airport, pending steps to glean opinions from relevant parties including the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organisati­on (ICAO).

Several organisati­ons including the Council of Engineers (CoE) and the Architects Council of Thailand have railed against the plan, saying the proposed new facility is poorly located and veers away from the original Suvarnabhu­mi master plan drafted in 1990.

An AoT source said the board agreed to put the constructi­on of the terminal on hold in line with the management’s proposal.

This was because some critics pointed out that the structure does not comply with the master plan, which has been studied by the ICAO.

To tread carefully, AoT will seek opinions from the ICAO about the terminal, which is to the north of the airport’s Concourse A, the source said.

The company was also challenged by a failed bidder of the project, SA Group, which said it was unfairly treated by the AoT in the bidding process. SA Group was said to have brought the issue to the Central Administra­tive Court.

SA was reported to have initially won the bidding with the highest score but was disqualifi­ed for failing to submit a price quotation. DBALP Consortium finally won the race. The consortium comprises Nikken Sekkei, EMS Consultant­s, MHPM, MSE and ARJ Consortium.

Referring to the legal challenge, the source said the AoT was seeking consultati­on about the issue with the Department of Administra­tive Litigation of the Office of the Attorney General (OAG). The company is now waiting for suggestion­s, the source noted.

AoT needs to put on hold the constructi­on of the second terminal until the consultati­ons with the relevant parties are concluded, the source said.

AoT management is required to gather all factual elements as well as opinions from other parties, including the ICAO and the OAG, and come up with a solution that has to be forwarded to the board for considerat­ion, the source noted.

The source said the board however agreed to ask the National Economic and Social Developmen­t Board (NESDB) to rush through the process of deliberati­ng another two constructi­on projects at the airport. They are the 22-billion-baht constructi­on of the third runway and the 6.6-billion-baht expansion of the western side of the first terminal.

The two projects need to be tabled to the cabinet for considerat­ion without waiting for the conclusion on the second terminal project, the source noted.

Meanwhile, Transport Minister Arkhom Termpittay­apaisith yesterday presided over a groundbrea­king ceremony for a third terminal at Krabi Internatio­nal Airport.

Mr Arkhom said the new terminal would help the airport handle 3,000 passengers an hour, as opposed to 1,500 now.

The Department of Airports was also budgeted to renovate two existing terminals as well as construct a multi-storey car park for up to 2,000 vehicles.

The project is expected to cost 3.8 billion baht. Krabi saw 6 million travellers last year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand