Gulf News

No fire risk at proposed Thai terminal — architect

It has wooden cladding, forested landscape

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Bangkok’s main airport is planning to add a $1.3 billion (Dh4.7 billion) terminal with extensive wooden cladding and a forested landscape, spurring concern about fire risk. Its designer says there’s no need to worry.

Tropical forests inspired the blueprint for the building and the aim is to give travellers a feeling of Thailand’s uniqueness, architect Duangrit Bunnag said. He rejected concerns from the Engineerin­g Institute of Thailand that the structure could be a fire hazard.

“Airports tend to have similar features — they’re white, cold and metallic,” Duangrit said. “I wanted a design that immediatel­y gives travellers the feeling they’ve arrived in Thailand. It will be a metal structure covered with wood. Different treatments can be applied to the timber to ensure fire resistance.”

Airports of Thailand PCL, the biggest Asian airport operator by market capitalisa­tion, announced last month that it was awarding the design contract to a joint bid by Duangrit Bunnag Architect Ltd. and Japan’s Nikken Sekkei Ltd.

Expecting boost

The state-controlled firm expects to boost annual passenger capacity by 30 million by building a second terminal at Bangkok’s Suvarnabhu­mi internatio­nal airport. Constructi­on is due to start next year and finish by 2021.

A tourism boom is straining the country’s infrastruc­ture, putting pressure on officials to tackle bottleneck­s. Foreign arrivals could hit 40 million next year — equivalent to more than half the population.

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