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Consistency is (not) key: should an airline’s lounges all be the same?

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For the past decade, Cathay Silver members and their oneworld equivalents have had a choice as they step into the bright terminal of Hong Kong Airport: do they choose the airy, glossy, stone of the Norman Foster-designed The Wing lounges or the warm, wooden, residential aesthetic of the Ilse Crawford-designed The Pier lounges?

With their designer-lead interiors, both have existed in tandem. Each offers diverging visions of what a lounge can be and has different amenities, from private cabanas featuring stone bath tubs to private day rooms with views across the airport.

Sadly, those days are now over. In late May Cathay Pacific closed The Wing First for a complete refurbishment which it said would bring the lounge in line with what is offered at The Pier.

should an airline's lounges all be the same
Cathay’s The Wing First is getting a makeover.

It made me wonder. Isn’t there something sad about standardising the lounge experience, of making the insides of every airport look the same, no matter where you are?

Don’t get me wrong – The Pier First is my favourite lounge in the world, the sort of space that every airline should aspire to: quiet, luxurious, homely. The airline’s design was already tending in that direction, with its London lounges featuring the same green onyx walls and mid-century furniture. New lounges in Beijing and New York will also conform to Ilse Crawford’s vision.

I can see why The Wing has fallen out of fashion: its black and white marble floors and walls (polished to such a gleam that you don’t need a mirror) have long been out of favour. Airlines everywhere are embracing the new fad of ‘residential’ design where everything looks like the lobby of a £1,500-per-night hotel.

should an airline's lounges all be the same
Cathay’s The Pier First

Partly, I think, it’s comfort: soft furnishings, not hard surfaces, make for a relaxing and quiet stay. The Wing First wasn’t always the most comfortable lounge, although it was impressive: I can appreciate the architectural, almost monolithic, aspirations that Foster had.

Also rethinking its lounge portfolio is British Airways. Already overdue is the opening of its new Dubai and Miami spaces, both of which showcase what the airline is calling its new ‘Global Lounge Concept’ and which will, it suggests, be rolled out at its Heathrow home in Terminal 5.

The 2008-era lounges have long needed a makeover and last year the airline committed to one, although progress remains silent.

should an airline's lounges all be the same

Yet with six lounges in Terminal 5 alone and two more in Terminal 3, isn’t there an opportunity for something different? Not all passengers want or require the same amenities – so why are lounges becoming the same?

I’ve written previously about grab-and-go lounges, something that has been embraced by the US carriers (American Airlines has just announced its own concept, Provisions.) There are also opportunities for differentiation in existing lounges as part of the wider lounge experience.

Wouldn’t it be fun to have a grand tea room in one, replete with William Morris interiors and giant parlour palms – think Afternoon Tea at The Ritz or The Langham – whilst others reference different British design styles and traditions? A whisky tasting room, for example, could offer a broader selection of Scotches with tasting flights.

The idea of offering unique spaces for differentiated experiences taps into the current trend of offering limited-time pop-ups. British Airways already does a fair amount of these, with commercial pop-ups in its Gold lounge such as a Don Julio Tequila bar or the Whispering Angel rebrand in its Terminal 5B lounge. But these feel like skin-deep commercial partnerships (because they are) rather than customer-oriented collaborations.

should an airline's lounges all be the same

There will always be a balance between offering differentiated experiences and making sure that the basics are covered.

It’s all well and good having a dedicated tea room or whisky tasting room, but it’s probably true that the majority of people just want a comfortable place to sit and easy access to food and drink. Those designing these spaces will have to think carefully about how they can create new experiences for those that want it whilst still making things accessible for the majority.

Otherwise, you can end up with something like Qatar Airways’ in-lounge Louis Vuitton cafe at Al Mourjan The Garden lounge in Doha, image below.

On all my recent trips through the airport, this space has been empty of customers, who have either been put off by the need to pay extra or simply because the beautifully designed space is empty. Who wants to be the only person in a cafe?

(Ironically, the Vuitton cafe isn’t Instagrammable enough. It’s almost too subtle, with no money shot to post on social media. Another option to woo the social media crowd would be a small unique Vuitton trinket for every customer, unavailable elsewhere.)

Louis Vuitton cafe Doha Airport

The opposite is also true. Returning to Cathay Pacific, its complimentary massage service for First Class passengers and oneworld Emerald members is a victim of its own success and often over-booked, with slots available only at quiet times or bookable multiple hours in advance.

Managing expectations is vital, as is the right level of staffing. There’s nothing wrong with having a little scarcity – often this can make it more exclusive – and you could even tie it in to how you reward frequent flyers.

As always, the challenge is striking a balance between the disparate needs of the customers and the business.

As British Airways and Cathay Pacific embark on a flagship lounge overall program, it’s worth pondering what additions could imbue these spaces with a sense of place and time – things that are so often missing in the generic airport experience.

In the long term, careful cultivation of these ideas and spaces might produce iconic and signature elements that come to be associated with the airline for decades to come.

Comments (139)

  • Barrel for Scraping says:

    Is it Rhys that likes describing things as ‘iconic’ or is it Rob editing that word in? A lot of things have been described as iconic lately, the word is getting a bit overused

    • Rob says:

      Not me!

    • BJ says:

      You could reasonably say there’s iconic stuff everywhere so it is not a volume or overuse thing. With respect to airline lounges I would say that Lufty First or the old Thai First Spa were far more-deserving of the label than Cathay lounges.

      • Rhys says:

        Cathay Pier First IS iconic!

        • BJ says:

          Justify please 🙂

          • Rhys says:

            One of the best and most visually identifiable airline lounges out there.

          • BJ says:

            @Rhys, that’s the building and space you are referring to but it could just as easily be housing a ticket hall, food hall, market etc. From my way of thinking for a lounge to be iconic then it is it’s function as a lounge that needs to be extraordinary, whether it is housed in a DPD depot or St Paul’s Cathedral would not be irrelevant but IMO it should be far from the primary consideration. Happy to agree to disagree 🙂

    • Novice says:

      Agree. I have noticed Rhys use the word to describe a lot of things/places. Surely, if those things were iconic, there wouldn’t be a lot of them everywhere. If everything is iconic then what is truly iconic?

  • Throwawayname says:

    95% of the time, I am happy with a standard SEN lounge. Quite often these sorts of projects go for form over function and you end up with beautiful spaces that create problems to those using them (Barajas T4S anyone?), so I’d rather they stuck to the knitting of providing a space with armchairs, drinks, and snacks in a location that works.

    • Rhys says:

      What’s wrong with the T4S lounge?!

      • Throwawayname says:

        The T4S lounge is fine, you just don’t have time to use it as a departing passenger because you’ve spent three quarters of an hour to get there and the flight’s already boarding!!

        • Sevy says:

          For my use case as a Priority Pass user, the Barajas T4S lounge is infinitely better than those available at T5. They even serve bottled water, not to mention wine that is actually drinkable and freely available.

          • Throwawayname says:

            The lounges are both great, the problem is that they, and the gates, are extremely far from the check in area. It’s a huge time sink unless you’re connecting from one non-Schengen flight to another.

      • Kp says:

        I find it way too bright! Hurts my eyes

  • Andrew. says:

    The soft furnishings all look really grubby quickly, always stained, the edges of the Cathay chairs pictured above appear filthy.

    Sofa style chairs have little support and are far too low, for taller people the choice is to sit like Verity Treacle or to fold your legs so they aren’t a trip hazard.

    Give me something taller, with a super firm cushion. Must be a way to do it without appearing to be a nursing home.

  • SS says:

    Please just redesign with usb ports and plug sockets in mind especially when dining! And make sure they work! I was in the BA lounge at T5B last month and a section of nearly 20 ports of which 50% were not working. Raised it with the staff and as told just to move to one that works and no one seemed to care about addressing the issue

    • JDB says:

      It’s hardly a BA only issue to have non functioning USB sockets; they seem quite problematic generally. Anyway, electricity sockets charge so much more quickly.

    • Paul says:

      Its the rat traps behind he chairs that get me.

      • JDB says:

        You will find rodent traps in almost any public venue. I’m more concerned about the sorts of pigs you find in lounges loudly munching crisps then wiping their fingers on the seats to add to all the other mess they create.

        • Londonsteve says:

          I’d wager you’ll see many more of those going forward in J lounges after BA gutted TP earning, just about the only incentive to fly Club Europe for cash. I’ve noticed a softening of prices to get people into the cabin along with cheap cash upgrades and the recent reward seat sale making it a relatively cheap place to fly. At least TP runners were ‘professional’ frequent flyers, now we’re likely to get a lot more clueless folks there on a rare ‘treat’ while seeking to fill their boots to maximise the experience.

        • Cicero says:

          That may be true for the public venues you frequent, but not for clean ones.

  • Andrew J says:

    Correction: Cathay Diamond members and their One World Equivalents have access – not Cathay Silver.

  • AJA says:

    The biggest issue with BA’s lounges is the thing that’s wrong with T5 – it’s just too long and the lounge complexes are located at either end. Which is fine if your flight happens to be departing from the lounge you choose but awful if you then have to leave early in order to walk amongst the throngs of ordinary travellers to get to your assigned gate in time. If I was designing from scratch I’d have a single large lounge complex as close to the centre of the terminal so that wherever your flight departs you don’t have to walk a long way.

    The other issue is the Club lounges aren’t equal in size which potentially leads to overcrowding as people try to go to the lounge closest to their arrival point, now exacerbated by BA bizarrely locating Club /BAC Silver check in at the northern end and First / BAC Gold at the southern end.

    As a result I usually try to go into the North lounge as it’s closest to the Club check in unless it’s overcrowded and there’s a queue just to get into the lounge.

    But if I know at check in that my plane is likely to leave from a gate closest to the south lounge or the B or C gates I will go to those lounges. What really annoys is then finding your plane has a gate change and is departing from A5 when you are in the south lounge or you are in the north lounge and the flight goes from A21! I’ve had that scenario happen 5 times!

    As for the lounge decor I think a common theme is good as it’s reassuring to find the same layout and design wherever in the world you may be. I just want comfortable seats and easily accessible tables and plug sockets and appealing food and varied drink choices. And I want the place to be cleaned (and often) I also want BA to install urinals in the men’s loos and ditto with the cleaning! I also think the ability of the decor to hush the hubbub is a plus point so no hard flooring and a few dividers so that you aren’t exposed to fellow passengers having loud video calls goes a long way to making me happy. A view of the outside is a plus point too.

    • Charlie says:

      It is a 5 minute walk end to end at T5A! You can walk from the south lounges to the B gate lounge in circa 10 minutes if the moving walkways are being friendly with you, and only a few minutes more if they are not! 🙂

      • Skywalker says:

        …assuming everyone has the same walking speed and ability as you…

        • Charlie says:

          This is a fair comment, however I am not some sort of athlete, just an average bloke with two working legs. My 87 year old mother was with me a few weeks ago, and we only slowed that pace by a minute or so across T5A (and with no transportation). Clearly as a sky walker, however, you’d be even quicker!

          • AJA says:

            What time of day were you doing the walking? It can sometimes take 5 minutes just to get to the oyster bar at the bottom of the escalators to the south lounge complex.

          • Charlie says:

            All times of day! It really is only five minutes from the top of the escalator at the south lounges to the (typically, but not always) domestic gates A1-A6. And the B lounge really is only a 10-15 minute walk too. The latter is free of people. T5A typically has more people obstacles, but if you keep to the sides, and are polite, you can easily do it in 5 minutes, arguably less if you are a sky
            walker 🤣

  • Charlie says:

    For short haul, I’d argue the case for something along the lines of the Senator Cafe at Munich. Decent coffee, decent fizz, decent grub. Also, whilst the Cathay lounges, in general, are better than most, American, JAL and Qantas are giving Cathay a good run for their money if you are OWE. And if you are OWS, Oman Air’s Muscat lounge, with at table dining, is far better than the above carriers equivalent. And if you are flying biz or first, the Doha Qatar lounges aren’t too shabby, to say the least. Hands down though, in my view, one of the most overrated lounges (in addition to the Aspire airline side lounge at NCL, which Geordies seem to drool over), is the Etihad lounge at Abu Dhabi. Nearly on a par with the pair of Turkish Istanbul lounges for ‘meh’ level.

    • Throwawayname says:

      I quite like the Turkish lounges because of the round-the-clock opening and the freshly made food (unless they’ve enhanced that away, I haven’t been for 3-4 years), but they’re miles away from the gates so you only get to have a glimpse of them unless you’re on an annoyingly long connection (similar issue to the T4S one above).

      • Bagoly says:

        The Turkish lounge gets rave reviews but I found it a nightmare for food: batch making so have to queue, at multiple stations, no clear list of ingredients, thick glass screen so difficult to ask questions and receive answers (and that’s assuming English spoken), even worse as a single traveller because tables for 2/4 rather than counters so not easy to accumulate plates without them being whisked away.

        • Novice says:

          I don’t eat anything that isn’t cooked or i hated the Turkish lounge as well. Design was all over the place and there seemed to be no coherent way to make your way through the lounge. Hardly anywhere to sit if you don’t want to or have time to go to the far off areas. Felt more like a food hall in a shopping mall. I was amazed when they won awards or whatever. I don’t mind big lounges but they have to have a good layout so everyone can actually access everything in a timely and orderly manner.

          • Novice says:

            Ignore the first line 😂 I was replying to someone else and then decided to not reply but then replied to this and it seems to have gotten added to this reply.

            My statement starts from the Turkish lounge part.

    • redlilly says:

      Agree. There is a lot to be said for the Aegean lounges at Athens both Schengen and non Schengen.

      Good fresh food, good variety of alcoholic and non alcoholic drinks, light and airy, plenty of seating (tables and sofas etc.).

      • Throwawayname says:

        The best A3 lounge is the SKG one which has all that plus direct boarding to the plane without mixing with the hoi polloi at the gate!

      • Charlie says:

        There is much to praise about Aegean, in general, however the Lufty lounge on the Schengen side of Athens is more likely to avail you of somewhere to sit, I find.

        • Throwawayname says:

          It’s got huge peaks and troughs, I have been turned away more than once.

  • Domo1915 says:

    Never understood why so few lounges do actual dining tables and chairs. Nearly everyone is eating and your forced to sit eating your food off your lap or the arm of a chair

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