Tomskii wrote:JOVAN wrote:Atlantis wrote:I guess Brussels airport is not planning on more flights in the future, just more retail revenue..
May I remind you that BRU will start around 2015 with the extension of Pier A in West direction. Number of gates will grow between 12 and 20 gates, depends long haul or short haul.
Sorry to say but Retail is an important income of an airport, you like it or not. When it is not there, they people will complain that there are no facilities.
Income out of Retail is also a benefit for the airport. Money can be invested in other projects.
Sorry but the time that you have only income only out of aviation related business is long time ago and not of this time.
Retail is doing very well at BRU and this due to the fact that they only want good brands on the airport and that's why it will never look like a mall.
Think further, when Jet Airways will leave the airport, then you lose your aviation related landing rights of that airline, parking fees etc etc. You need more income then that alone.
Sorry to say Atlantis, but I believe Retail would only
benefit from more flights and more passengers.
This is very much of this time. Lot of people, lot of business.
And, maybe BRU makes benefit from the Retail, but the Retailers at BRU for sure not !!
Half of the day BRU is an empty space. Shops are empty.
Only more flights and more passengers, especially in the afternoon would help.
Now, as I already mentioned many times before, BRU is not attractive, not for the airlines and not for the passengers. BRU will loose more PAX to AMS, because there they now that making an airport attractive means 'sexy' image, novelties, original shopping concept with attractions, and...........many flights with many passengers.
In one word: BUSINESS !!
Create an image, create a legend, create a product, create a concept, ...
With the present 'strategy', BRU will not reach 20mio PAX per annum before...2020.
Just one small correction: Yes BRU is quiet during calm hours. But saying retail is not benefiting is just plain old bull****. I've worked at the tax free shops for instance as a student, if you knew how much money I put back in the machine (money counters that store the money in 'exploding' cases). In a 6 hour shift I mostly had +10k EUR in my register only. 4 members of the team that makes +40K EUR only in one shop. When you calculate that there are plenty of (mostly) expensive shops. Yeah they make huge profits.
One thing why I like the connector is that there will be something to do on your way to the pier and that you're not just walking in a boring tunnel with advertisements left and right of you. The connector will make transit also a lot more 'fun'. Whilst I do not like the outside (on the simulation) the inside just looks very nice and functional (in terms of security checkpoint).
I have to state this, but I think that Jovan is right-on.
As to your story of 40.000 EUR per day in revenue
1. it would mean that every departing pax of the airport spends 4 EUR in the duy-free shop you worked as student, if we put aside the fact that the pax departing from the other terminal never see your shop. Even if 50% of all pax buy in your shop, they would have to buy for 8 euro's each... Everybody would move from Rue Neuve and Meir to the airport if that were true!!

And the shops should be crawling full of people...
2. It's not like they're spending their last foreign moneys before leaving back to a far country, it's mostly intra-European travellers.
3. Third point is that it's cash, while normal people pay with cards, be it credit or bank cards.
4. Duty-free shops are duty free but often most products except cigarettes are more expensive anyway as the shops cash-in the part of the taxes for themselves. But if 20 shops are going to sell duty-free cigarettes...
5. Probably few shoppers bought a lot of highly valuable and easily resellable stuff.
Do I need to spell it out? It's no secret that duty-free shops are very often used for money laundrying, be it with the shop owner's consent, or without.
Currency is also smuggled between ports of entry by backpackers, boats and snowmobiles. As well, money launderers reportedly use money exchange services and duty free shops to facilitate money laundering.
http://www.publicsafety.gc.ca/prg/le/bs ... a-eng.aspx
Leaving aside the moral issue, I don't see how more shops will increase this traffic as the revenue will tend to be divided rather than increased unless they want to get the tax office's scrutiny.
Jovan is right, more traffic is more real estate revenue for the airport. I don't think that real estate revenue can be increased at BRU by increasing customer exposure. The current exposure is sufficient and the shops are always empty.