Skip to main content

BEST AIRPORTS IN THE WORLD

I've flown around 3 million miles and have been to many, many airports.  Here is one of my postings where two years ago I  commented on THE WORLD'S BEST/WORST AIRPORTS.

Condé Nast Traveler just reported on the Best Airports in the World.

  • They've done this now for 37 years.
  • #10  Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Internation Airport (BOM) in Mumbai.
  • #  9  Indira Gandhi International Airport (DEL).  Read my posting of what happened to me the last time I was here.  I had a mixed stay in India, and one of my blogs said INDIA SUCKS.  Want a few laughs?  Read the resultant comments from this second posting.  I thought some official took it personally, for I was asked to accompany an official to the bowels of this airport for questioning. 
  • #  8  Tokyo Haneda Airport (HND).  Also called Tokyo International Airport, and you can see Mount Fuji from his location.  On one of my ANA flights, we went right by this symbol of Japan, and I probably took my best photo of Mount Fuji.
  • #  7  Dubai International Airport (DXB).
    • One of my favorite airports.  Here is what I said three years ago.
You wonder why anyone would want to fly to and through Dubai International Airport, but it is the busiest airport in the world for the Airbus38 and Boeing 777, with the largest airport terminal.  Handled 88 million passengers in 2017, #3 to the airports in Atlanta and Beijing.  As new as this airport is, Dubai is building Al Maktoum International Airport to become the largest with 220 million passengers/year.  Hartsfield-Jackson only serves slightly over 100 million passengers/year.
  • Five years ago, this is what I said of this city:
Well, there is no war, no one begs, people speak English, it is not Africa, there is little markup, carries the latest fashions, everything is high tech, eminently luxurious, and the wide variety of international cuisine is becoming legendary.  Having just returned from Paris, with some experience in Dubai, the safety factor is overwhelming.

  • #  6  Hong Kong International Airport (HKG).  There was a time when I regularly visited Hong Kong.  
    • Their old airport was right next to the downtown, and landing was a challenge. 
    • This new one had to level an island, reclaim land, build a new 20 mile highway to town and occur when the British was handing over Hong Kong to China.  Also cost $20 billion, according to Guinness, the most expensive airport project ever.  In Hawaii it takes forever to build anything.  Hong took only six years to complete the whole project.
    • This photo is one I took seven years ago when I was staying at the airport Marriott SkyCity.
  • #  5  Zurich Airport (ZRH).  At the end of our next trip, we fly from Budapest to this airport, to spend two nights in the city.  Then on December 7, we are back at ZRH to San Francisco, then Honolulu.
  • #  4  Hamad International Airport (DOH), Doha, Qatar.
  • #  3  Seoul Incheon International Airport (ICN).

  • #  2  Singapore Changi Airport (SIN).
    • Has for a long time been #1, but Turkey spent a lot of bucks to take over the #1 spot.
    • We stayed at Changi's airport hotel, Crown Plaza, at the end of 2022.  We could catch a light rail train from the hotel to the airport, and walk around the waterfalls at Jewel.  Had a tonkatsu lunch next to that waterfall.

  • #  1  Istanbul Airport (IST).
    • Cost $23 billion.  More than that Hong Kong airport.  Except that the latter was built in 1998, so the value today would be $36 billion.
    • A fleet of robots direct passengers.
    • We were in Istanbul earlier this year, but came and departed by ship.
  • #1 is Doha Hamad and #2 is Singapore Changi.
  • #10 is Istanbul.
  • The highest ranked American airport is Seattle-Tacoma at #24.  We will fly from Honolulu to this airport on Wednesday.
  • Houston Hobby #29, New York LGA #33, Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky #46, San Francisco #47, #60 Los Angeles, etc.

Thus, American airports don't do well in international surveys.  However these are the best ones to connect to another flight in North America.

Hurricane Milton, now at 80 MPH, is expected to head towards the Yucatan, then make a virtual left turn towards Florida as a Category 3.  The current projected path shows landfall just south of Sarasota, with departure into the Atlantic south of Cape Canaveral.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

A NEXT COVID SUBVARIANT?

By now most know that the Omicron BA.5 subvariant has become the dominant infectious agent, now accounting for more than 80% of all COVID-19 cases.  Very few are aware that a new one,   BA.4.6,  is sneaking in and steadily rising, now accounting for 13% of sequenced samples .  However, as BA.4.6 has emerged from BA.4, while there is uncertainty, the scientific sense is that the latest bivalent booster targeting BA.4 and BA.5 should also be effective for this next threat. One concern is that Evusheld--the only monoclonal antibody authorized for COVID prevention in immunocompromised individuals--is not effective against BA.4.6.  Here is a  reference  as to what this means.  A series of two injections is involved.  Evusheld was developed by British-Swedish company AstraZeneca, and is a t ixagevimab  co-packaged with  cilgavimab . More recently, Los Angeles County reported on  subvariant BA.2.75.2 . which Tony Fauci termed suspicious and troublesome.  This strain has also been spreading in

Part 3: OUR NEXT AROUND THE WORLD ODYSSEY

Before I get into my third, and final, part of this cruise series, let me start with some more newsworthy topics.  Thursday was my pandemic day for years.  Thus, every so often I return to bring you up to date on the latest developments.  All these  subvariants  derived from that Omicron variant, and each quickly became dominant, with slightly different symptoms.  One of these will shock you. There has been a significant decline in the lost of taste and smell.  From two-thirds of early patients to now only 10-20% show these symptoms. JN.1, now the dominant subvariant, results in mostly mild symptoms. However, once JN.1 infects some, there seem to be longer-lasting symptoms. Clearly, the latest booster helps prevent contracting Covid. A competing subvariant,  BA.2.86,  also known as Pirola , a month ago made a run, but JN.1 prevailed. No variant in particular, but research has shown that some of you will begin to  lose hair  for several months.  This is caused by stress more than anythi

HONOLULU TO SEATTLE

The story of the day is Hurricane Milton, now a Category 4 at 145 MPH, with a track that has moved further south and the eye projected to make landfall just south of Sarasota.  Good news for Tampa, which is 73 miles north.  Milton will crash into Florida as a Category 4, and is huge, so a lot of problems can still be expected in Tampa Bay with storm surge.  If the eye had crossed into the state just north of Tampa, the damage would have been catastrophic.  Milton is a fast-moving storm, currently at 17 MPH, so as bad as the rainfall will be over Florida, again, a blessing.  The eye will make landfall around 10PM EDT today, and will move into the Atlantic Ocean north of Palm Bay Thursday morning. My first trip to Seattle was in June of 1962 just after I graduated from Stanford University.  Caught a bus. Was called the  Century 21 Exposition .  Also the Seattle World's Fair.  10 million joined me on a six-month run.  My first. These are held every five years, and there have only been