USA TODAY US Edition

App caters to those at gate

Meals delivered before takeoff,

- GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O

An app-powered service to be unveiled this week at Baltimore/ Washington Internatio­nal Airport (BWI) — and a similar one set to roll out at San Diego Internatio­nal Airport (SAN) in August — allows passengers to order food, drinks and products for sale anywhere inside the airport and have the items delivered to them at the gate.

If gate delivery catches on, it could be a game-changer for the passenger experience and a big boost for airports’ bottom lines.

The developers of Airport Sherpa (now at BWI) and At Your Gate (soon at SAN) have research showing that American fliers are verified “gate huggers”: Once through the airport security checkpoint, a majority of travelers head straight for their gate, grab a seat in the hold area or nearby and stay put.

It doesn’t matter if their flight is leaving in an hour — or three.

For travelers, gate-hugging can be a problem because passengers miss out on the upgraded dining and shopping options now offered at many airports. Gate-hugging also means airport food and retail outlets miss out on sales. And it is rents and fees generated from those sales that make up an increasing percentage of the operating budgets at airports.

Bringing mobile carts stocked with snacks, sodas, magazines and other items into gate areas is one solution HMSHost has tried in an effort to serve gate-huggers in airports in Honolulu, Maui, Chicago (O’Hare) and Memphis.

Another strategy, first introduced in 2009 at JetBlue’s JFK Terminal 5 and now available in almost a dozen OTG-managed airport terminals in North America, is iPad-enhanced seating areas in gate hold areas where passengers can order food, drinks and products from nearby restaurant­s and shops.

But in an age when people use their mobile phones to get pretty much anything delivered to their doorstep, being able to order something from the other side of the terminal, or from a restaurant or shop in a different terminal, is a welcome “Why hasn’t this already happened?” next step.

Airport Sherpa has partnered with airport retail and food concession operator Airmall to introduce on-demand gate-delivery service at BWI this week. The company plans to expand the service to other airports around the country in short order.

The service “will enhance the passenger experience and give travelers access to hundreds of stores across terminals,” said Patrick DellaValle, CEO of Airport Sherpa.

For passengers, it will mean even more choices, more convenienc­e and more ways to experience the numerous local, regional and national offerings here at BWI Marshall,” said Brett Kelly, vice president of Airmall Maryland. “Now someone traveling out of the D Concourse at BWI can order sushi from the A Concourse, and someone on the B Concourse can get a burger from the D Concourse, whereas before they did not have access between those concourses to go get it themselves,” Kelly said.

Gate-delivery service not only expands the reach of the potential passenger spend for airport vendors, but “it can save a sale that might not have otherwise happened,” Kelly added.

The Airport Sherpa app is free to download, but there is a gatedelive­ry fee of $3.99 to $7.99, depending on how far the delivery person, or Sherpa, has to go to make a delivery in the airport.

Deliveries from At Your Gate, rolling out in August at San Diego Internatio­nal Airport, will initially have a flat $6.99 delivery fee.

Airport Sherpa reps say that for now, tipping the delivery person is “not expected or accepted,” but tipping may eventually be offered via the app “to ensure that all transactio­ns are cashless.”

At Your Gate plans to have a tipping option built into its app.

Both services promise to keep delivery time to a minimum.

Airport Sherpa says it will calculate delivery time for each order based on preparatio­n time from the store and the time it will take the Sherpa to walk from the store to the delivery location. “We also have controls in place to prevent a customer from placing an order that would arrive very close to or after boarding time has begun,” DellaValle said.

At Your Gate plans to give travelers a 10-minute delivery window.

Convenienc­e will outweigh worries about delivery fees for many business travelers.

“I have spent more than my share of time running around airports looking for things I need during a business trip. I can’t imagine anyone who wouldn’t love that service,” said Joel Horn, former president of Pacific Coast Canola.

“On a tight connection I would like this service, especially for a high-test shot of caffeine or a book,” said Rich McClear, a media adviser based in Sitka, Alaska. “And if I could get a quirky souvenir gift that is emblematic of the area, that would be cool.”

For the San Diego Internatio­nal gate-delivery service, At Your Gate is partnering with Grab, a mobileorde­ring app that lets travelers preorder food for pickup at 150 concession­s in 18 airports. The team plans to offer gate delivery in other airports as well.

The At Your Gate project has the seal of approval from SAN’s passenger-experience-oriented Innovation Lab, and “the hope is that the service will provide convenienc­e to passengers, flight crews and employees working at the airport and extend the reach of the individual concession beyond their front door,” said Rick Belliotti, SAN’s director of innovation and small-business developmen­t.

“Gate delivery is a logical extension of the on-the-demand economy that up to now just hasn’t existed in airports,” said David Henninger, At Your Gate president/COO/CMO. “Traveling is really hard. I want this to be the bright spot in the day.”

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GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O
 ?? AIRPORT SHERPA ?? The Airport Sherpa app lets passengers order food, drinks and other products for sale anywhere inside the airport and have the items delivered to them at the gate.
AIRPORT SHERPA The Airport Sherpa app lets passengers order food, drinks and other products for sale anywhere inside the airport and have the items delivered to them at the gate.

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