Bangkok Post

CHANGI REINVENTS ITSELF

Singapore’s famed airport is ready to offer new experience­s in the postpandem­ic travel era. By Michelle Jamrisko and Kyunghee Park in Singapore

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Singapore’s Changi Airport, routinely voted the world’s best and a key part of the city-state’s psyche, is reinventin­g itself for the Covid era and beyond.

In a bid to keep people engaged until life returns to normal, it’s offering “glamping” for families at Jewel, the nature-themed entertainm­ent complex open to the public, as well as a host of offerings from canopy park tours that involve topiary walks and bouncing on a sky net, to seasonal dining menus.

With an eye further into the future, slices of the nearby Singapore Expo site are being transforme­d into a giant constructi­on site as 840 guest and meeting rooms are built in short order — part of Connect@Changi, a sprawling facility to house overseas business visitors as part of a bubble initiative.

“There are more people, especially on weekends,” said Jasmine Hoon, a server at Paris Baguette, a coffee shop in Jewel selling upmarket pastries and wraps. “Sales have gone up and the vaccines are also giving people hope.”

Nearby, children were making themselves at home in large white tents erected as part of the airport’s Glampcatio­ns in the Clouds initiative. People can stay overnight amid the greenery and wake to the sound of splashing water from the world’s largest indoor waterfall. Prices start from S$320 (US$240) and slots have been fully booked for weeks.

The camping and holiday dining deals may be temporary measures but they’re all part of endeavours aimed at spurring activity at Changi, whose importance to the tiny city-state is hard to underestim­ate.

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong was close to tears when he promised Parliament in September that “Changi will thrive again”, citing its original opening in 1981 as a moment of immense national pride.

Because internatio­nal visitors are such an enabler of other economic activity across the island — including food and beverage, retail and healthcare — it’s tough to calculate to what degree the closing of borders has hobbled Singapore’s economy. According to government figures, aviation alone accounts for about 3% of gross domestic product, with tourism contributi­ng another 4%.

As 2021 dawns, Singapore’s success containing Covid is allowing it to open for business travel adapted to virus-era life, including convincing the World Economic Forum to move its annual jetset meeting from Davos in May. While a return to pre-virus traffic is still far off, the green shoots are a welcome sign for a place synonymous with global trade and travel.

“If you think about the role of Singapore as a regional hub and the whole idea of connectivi­ty and logistics facilitati­on, then Changi is quite critical,” said Selena Ling, head of treasury research and strategy at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp.

Changi Airport, typically Asia’s third-busiest hub for internatio­nal traffic, has like all aviation centres experience­d its fair share of pain. Passenger numbers plunged to 24,500 last May, just 0.4% of what they were 12 months prior. They recovered to 111,000 in November, but that’s still down around 98% on 2019 levels.

The 13-square-kilometre airport on Singapore’s easternmos­t point is operating two of its four terminals and has halted constructi­on of a fifth for at least two years. Some retail outlets in the public and transit areas remain closed due to a lack of foot traffic.

There have been other setbacks, too. A highly anticipate­d air travel bubble with Hong Kong that would have avoided quarantine was delayed after a spike in cases in Hong Kong.

Singapore Airlines has been hit harder than some regional rivals because it has no domestic market to fall back on. The carrier reported its biggest quarterly loss in September and is cutting around one-quarter of staff in anticipati­on of still only operating near 20% capacity by the end of January.

After contractin­g 5.8% in 2020, the economy could expand between 4% and 6% this year, according to government estimates. But critical industries like aviation may take longer to recover, said Ravi Menon, managing director of the Monetary Authority of Singapore.

But with vaccinatio­ns now under way, hopes are rising.

In December, Singapore announced a new business travel lane that will allow people from anywhere to come without quarantine for short-term stays. They’ll have to reside at Connnect@Changi, which once finished in mid-2021 will boast more than 1,300 guest rooms and about 340 meeting rooms, and be subject to numerous Covid tests, including upon arrival and on days three, five, seven and 11.

“Ideally, you would like to have people free to move around, do what they want to do and spend where they want to,” but this is a “good alternativ­e option” as we try to stamp out the virus, said Alan Thompson, senior managing director of the state investment group Temasek Holdings.

“This is an attempt to begin to open up and reinvigora­te the air travel and hospitalit­y sectors in Singapore.”

Transport Minister Ong Ye Kung, in a Facebook post last month, likened recent efforts to a “national resilience project”.

“We’ll make sure Singapore continues to hum along even with Covid-19,” he said. “We are all ready to rise again.”

“This is an attempt to begin to open up and reinvigora­te the air travel and hospitalit­y sectors in Singapore”

ALAN THOMPSON Temasek Holdings

 ??  ?? Not many airports can claim that they are great places for wedding pictures, but Changi is an exception. Singapore is counting on attraction­s like Changi Jewel to get local consumers and visitors alike spending again.
Not many airports can claim that they are great places for wedding pictures, but Changi is an exception. Singapore is counting on attraction­s like Changi Jewel to get local consumers and visitors alike spending again.

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