Business Traveler (USA)

Well Grounded

Business aviation is looking for more from airport services – and today’s FBOs are delivering

- By Jerome Greer Chandler

Once upon a time, not terribly long ago, general aviation terminals were, at best, functional and friendly. The coffee pot behind the counter was always on and the Naugahyde furniture squeakily comfortabl­e. General aviation airports are home to fixed base operators, those providers of essential services like fuel, aircraft parking and maintenanc­e catering to business and private aircraft. They were ready to fuel you up, fix a few “squawks”(problems) and get you on your way again.

Fast forward to the present and things are decidedly different. Today’s new crop of business jet terminals are‘brass and glass’ enclaves, ever more dramatic oases in the fast-paced, high-flying private jet world that for an increasing number of corporatio­ns is a significan­t feature of business travel today.

With increasing frequency businesses need to put their people in places off the route maps of commercial airlines.“The US has about 5,000 public use airports,” says Dan Hubbard, senior vice president of communicat­ions for the National Business Aviation Associatio­n.“Of those, about ten percent – or 500 – have some service by the airlines. General aviation can use nearly all 5,000 of those and business aviation is a part of that.”

Tim Obitts refines the numbers further: the executive vice president of the National Air Transporta­tion Associatio­n, an industry trade group that represents general aviation interests including FBOs, says 3,537 of those public use airports sport paved runways that are 3,000 feet or longer. Some 3,384 FBOs serve these general and business aviation fields.

Those fields are fertile these days. Look around the country and you’ll see FBOs at work erecting striking business aviation facilities that are anything but frivolous – despite their elegance.

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