USA TODAY US Edition

Airport shoeshine stands are still on their feet

- Harriet Baskas Harriet Baskas is a Seattle-based airports and aviation writer.

In the days when people dressed up to fly, shoeshine stands were an airport staple.

“People used to spend time getting ready to travel,” said Hector Diaz, who has managed the five locations of the Shoe Hospital at Chicago’s O’Hare Internatio­nal Airport for 10 years. “Now they just get up and put on gym shoes, sandals or whatever. Some mornings customers are still wearing pajama bottoms when they come in to have their shoes shined.”

With travel attire so informal, shoeshine services at airports may seem, like payphones, to be on the way out. But in the most recent passenger amenities survey conducted by Airports Council Internatio­nal-North America, the number of airports with shoeshine stands (about 50) exceeds those with business centers and TSA PreCheck enrollment stations.

Time-crunched business travelers are helping to keep most airport shoeshine stands in business, but in many airports it’s a long-held tradition of fast, friendly, inexpensiv­e and, in some cases, compliment­ary services, that keeps customers coming back.

At Louis Armstrong New Orleans Internatio­nal Airport, the two Like New Shoe Shine stands have been run by Wayne Kendrick’s family for about 40 years. Kendrick, who began helping his dad at the airport 33 years ago, now operates the stands at Louis Aarmstrong with his brother. He charges $7 for a shine, up just $2 from the $5 his dad charged years ago.

“He’s been called ‘the mayor of the airport’ on more than one occasion,” said airport spokeswoma­n Michelle Wilcut. “Some people drop off their shoes before traveling and pick them up on their return. Wayne has also been known to walk out to the curb to pick up a bag of shoes from customers that are not traveling but need a shine.”

Javier Anchondo has been operating the Los Amigos Shoe Shine at El Paso Internatio­nal Airport for a dozen years and has been charging $4 for a full shine for shoes or boots since 2005.

At Chicago O’Hare Internatio­nal Airport, the Shoe Hospital not only shines shoes ($6) and boots ($8), it also offers repair services for shoes, luggage, purses, bags, jackets and other leather items and sells accessorie­s such as shoe laces, arch supports and shoe cushions, often to pilots and flight attendants. Passengers can drop off items in need of repair and pick up them up on their return trip or have repaired items mailed home.

“Shining shoes is a dying art,” says Denise Pullen, owner of the Classic Shine Company. “But I’m trying to keep that art in the forefront and bring it to venues — like airports — where it’s a convenienc­e.”

Classic Shine operates at five airports, including Dallas/Fort Worth Internatio­nal, Kentucky’s Louisville Internatio­nal; McGhee Tyson, near Knoxville, Tenn.; Northwest Arkansas Region Airport; Greenville-Spartanbur­g Internatio­nal Airport in South Carolina; and, soon, San Diego Internatio­nal Airport.

The company charges $8 across the board for its service.

“We perform the same steps whether we do shoes or boots, so we’re not going to charge more for one,” said Pullen. “Plus, boot customers are some of our best customers — and our best tippers.”

In keeping with the “Keep Austin Weird” mantra, passengers at Austin Bergstrom Internatio­nal Airport have asked the staff at the Love Shines stand to shine everything from fancy boots to casual Keens.

“I’ve heard a band give them a shoutout from the airport music stage,” said AUS airport spokesman Jim Halbrook. “The singer had gotten his shoes shined there and was very happy with the quality.”

Another singer happy with the way his shoes and boots look after visiting an airport shoeshine stand is Lyle Lovett, who penned an essay for the Hous

ton Chronicle about his deep appreciati­on for the shoeshine stand in Terminal C at Houston’s George Bush Interconti­nental Airport.

Although he says he’s capable of caring for his own footwear, “even on days I wish I didn’t have to fly, I look forward to getting to the airport early enough to get a shine. There’s just something extragood about a profession­al shine, something important,” Lovett writes.

And it’s not just the excellent shoeshine that Lovett likes. As the shine men and women are improving his boots, Lovett says he enjoys their stories and always benefits “from the pride they take in their work.”

 ??  ?? At Chicago O’Hare, the Shoe Hospital not only shines shoes ($6) and boots ($8), it also offers repair services for shoes, luggage, purses, bags and other items. CHICAGO DEPARTMENT OF AVIATION
At Chicago O’Hare, the Shoe Hospital not only shines shoes ($6) and boots ($8), it also offers repair services for shoes, luggage, purses, bags and other items. CHICAGO DEPARTMENT OF AVIATION

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