Toronto Star

How to pass time at airports across the U.S.

You might be surprised at the fun you can have between destinatio­ns

- HANNAH SAMPSON THE WASHINGTON POST

Between holiday trips, extra crowds and winter weather delays, chances are good travellers will spend more time at airports than they’d like over the next month. But some airports across the United States might not be so bad to get stuck in (we are not looking at you, LaGuardia).

Beyond the chain restaurant­s, cookie-cutter shops and monitors showing the latest delays, many airports are hiding unexpected delights. Think public art, gardens, yoga studios, movie theatres and — during winter — ice skating.

“You’re going to get to the airport two, three-and-a-half hours ahead of schedule, and you get through security using PreCheck, then you have some time to kill,” says Kevin Burke, president and chief executive of the North America region of Airports Council Internatio­nal. “Airports look at creative ways to keep their customers happy.”

Internatio­nal airports tend to get the most attention, rightly, for their innovation­s. We are all aware that Singapore Changi Airport has a butterfly garden and giant slide. But Burke says decades-old U.S. airports can’t quite deliver the same bells and whistles as flashy global counterpar­ts.

“They’re newer and they’re able to build around customer needs,” he says. “What we’re doing is adapting older airports to the needs of customers now... You can’t put a rainforest inside of LaGuardia.”

Harriet Baskas, a writer and creator of the blog stuckatthe­airport.com, says airports know they’ll get blamed when something goes wrong, even if it’s the fault of an airline or the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion. So they are invested in trying to make things go right whenever possible.

“It’s the first place you see and the last place you experience when you visit a city,” she says. “They’re recognizin­g that they are an attraction for their cities.”

Here are some unexpected airport attraction­s to look for around the United States:

Art exhibition­s

Several airports have robust art programs. Baskas says San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport is home to an accredited museum, while Miami Internatio­nal Airport has curators for its art. Seattle-Tacoma Internatio­nal Airport, Baskas’ hometown airport, has been amassing a collection for decades and even has pieces made out of recycled soda cans in a bathroom.

Yoga spaces

More airports have added yoga studios or rooms in recent years, including Chicago O’Hare and Chicago Midway, Dallas/Fort Worth Internatio­nal Airport, San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport, Miami Internatio­nal Airport and Burlington Internatio­nal Airport. Most include equipment such as mats, and a private space to breathe deeply away from the masses.

Ice skating

Through Jan. 20, Denver Internatio­nal Airport has a free ice skating rink open at its outdoor plaza every day. Skate rentals are also free, and because the rink is outside the security checkpoint, it’s open to nontravell­ers, too. The TWA Hotel at John F.

Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport in New York opens its “Runway Rink” on Saturday. It will operate daily through the end of February, though times vary. This option is not free: Admission is $15 (U.S.), or $10 for children younger than 12; and ice skates cost $10 to rent for adults, or $8 for children.

Movies An old-fashioned movie house — described as “a first-of-itskind free microcinem­a” — at Portland Internatio­nal Airport shows short films by Oregon filmmakers.

The Hollywood Theatre at PDX is for passengers only, since it’s after a security checkpoint.

Minneapoli­s-Saint Paul Internatio­nal Airport offers the See 18 movie-screening room, featuring short films and documentar­ies by creators from the region.

Golf Vacation is ending, but you still want to practice your swing? Palm Beach Internatio­nal Airport has an eight-hole putting green on the second level of its main terminal. The $3.20 fee lets you “keep your ball for nostalgia.”

Gardens It’s not a rainforest, but Chicago O’Hare Internatio­nal Airport boasts some different greenery: an aeroponic garden, where plant roots are suspended in towers. Produce from the garden includes basil, dill, cilantro, parsley, lettuce, oregano and green beans — some of which is used in O’Hare’s restaurant­s.

The grounds of Daniel K. Inouye Internatio­nal Airport in Honolulu offers Chinese, Hawaiian and Japanese gardens. They’re connected by paths, bridges and stepping-stones, and the design is meant to tell a larger story about the state of Hawaii.

Used books You’ll always have Hudson Bookseller­s. And you may even get lucky to find an outpost of a local bookstore at the airport, like Powell’s Books, at PDX, or Books & Books at MIA. But Renaissanc­e Books, a used-book store located pre-security at Milwaukee’s General Mitchell Internatio­nal Airport, strikes travellers as an actual treasure. “Good excuse to be early... or glad to be delayed!” wrote one TripAdviso­r user.

Music With a nickname like “Music City,” it should come as no surprise that Nashville packs its airport with live music. It’s been doing so since 1988, and hosts more than 1,500 performanc­es a year. The terminal includes six performanc­e areas.

 ?? DENVER INTERNATIO­NAL AIRPORT ?? Through Jan. 20, Denver Internatio­nal Airport has a free ice skating rink open at its outdoor plaza.
DENVER INTERNATIO­NAL AIRPORT Through Jan. 20, Denver Internatio­nal Airport has a free ice skating rink open at its outdoor plaza.

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