Irishmonk
Senior Member
Looks like I should've done more internet sleuthing before running my mouth off. Thanks for the clarifications.
Though it does fly in the face of the idea that Pearson needs to offload some of its private air traffic to free up time/space for more commercial flights.
Banked take-offs and landings. Bombardier is patient, Air Canada is not.Pearson has 5 runways which is a lot for an airport its size. By comparison Heathrow has just 2 despite being nearly twice as busy.
Exclusive: Toronto improves terminal connectivity - Passenger Terminal Today
Tony Crepinsek, associate director of infrastructure redevelopment at the Greater Toronto Airports Authority, tells Passenger Terminal Today about the Pier G project at Toronto Pearson Airport. The Pier G projectwww.passengerterminaltoday.com
im new here...but fly out of yyz a lot! Anyone read the above? I hope it’s true!
Looks like more than that to me. Those renderings show a "real" pier G as planned in the old master plan, not the dinky little holdover thing they just opened. Exciting to see that Pearson is finally moving on it, with the absolutely incredible passenger growth it has seen in the last few years.This it just the 10 gate pier that opened where the gate 193 commuter gates were.
Looks like more than that to me. Those renderings show a "real" pier G as planned in the old master plan, not the dinky little holdover thing they just opened. Exciting to see that Pearson is finally moving on it, with the absolutely incredible passenger growth it has seen in the last few years.
I mean this sure as hell isn't what the airport looks like today:
This includes six additional wide-body (five Code C and one Code E) gates and the upgrade of five existing walk-out gates on the west side of the existing Gate 193 to new, fully bridged gates
What's all that construction in Terminal 1 Domestic? Anyone have any pictures?
If you take a closer look at the planned Pier G, it almost looks like the recently-built stuff is integrated in the middle. Would sort of make sense if they’re trying to avoid a one-time big ticket item like the Terminal 1 re-build and incrementally expand. The only shame is that we won’t get a perfectly symmetrical Terminal 1 as originally envisioned.Looks like more than that to me. Those renderings show a "real" pier G as planned in the old master plan, not the dinky little holdover thing they just opened. Exciting to see that Pearson is finally moving on it, with the absolutely incredible passenger growth it has seen in the last few years.
I mean this sure as hell isn't what the airport looks like today:
A clearer shot of the rendering:
The first sign yesterday that things were different was when Google maps showed a solid green line from Scarborough to the airport midday on Saturday! We went through T3. It was very quiet, but everything was still operational. Staff were all wearing rubber gloves.Anyone here know how Pearson is holding up right now?
Fully expecting another Yellow Ribbon type event if this disease progresses much further.