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Stansted Airport submits plans for new terminal extension

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London Stansted airport has submitted a planning application for a major extension of its terminal.

Under the scheme, which looks as if it will be seamlessly bolted on to the existing Norman Foster-designed modular building, a three bay extension will be added to the rear of the current structure.

You can see it here:

Stansted Airport terminal expansion

Yay, more shops!

The airport is promising:

a more spacious departure lounge for passengers, including new shops, bars and restaurants, state-of-the-art check-in equipment, increased baggage system capacity and an enlarged security hall with additional space for more security lanes fitted with next-generation scanners.

There is no mention of new lounge facilities, but it would be crazy if such a substantial extension did not include replacing or adding to the existing overrun Escape Lounge. (Our last review of the Escape Lounge is here.)

Stansted has served 26 million passengers in the last 12 months and is expected to pass its pre-pandemic passenger level this year. The airport has not been a one way growth story – passenger numbers hit 23 million in 2007 but then started a sharp decline, bottoming out at 17 million in 2012.

Stansted Airport terminal expansion planned

This is very much Plan B

Back in 2018, Stansted submitted plans to build two new taxiway links to the existing runway and nine additional aircraft stands. This was designed to lift airport capacity to 274,000 aircraft movements and 43 million passengers.

The plans also included a brand new Arrivals building, separate from the existing terminal. This would have made Stansted the only UK airport to have departing and arriving passengers using separate facilities:

After an acrimonious legal battle, which involved the local authority approving and then attempting to withdraw permission, the decision was settled on appeal in favour of the airport.

However, post pandemic, it appears that the airport is no longer going forward with the taxiways, additional stands or separate Arrivals building. The airport Managing Director said yesterday that:

the terminal extension is an important part of our plans for making best use of Stansted’s existing capacity

What may be driving the extension is the move to larger aircraft by its major customers, which will increase passenger volumes without increasing aircraft movements. Ryanair, for example, has just placed a major order for Boeing 737 MAX 10 aircraft. With 228 seats, these have 16% more seats than the MAX 8200 aircraft currently being delivered.

Work on the extension is expected to begin next summer, subject to approvals, and take three years to complete.

Comments (48)

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  • Dubious says:

    Nice.
    The extensions look narrow for too many shops but I wonder if they will have one of the small ‘Coffee Hut’ stalls. Though they always seem to be closed…

  • George says:

    Not quite on the same scale as Stansted but Bournemouth Airport does have separate arrivals and departures terminals

    • Dan says:

      …and on an even smaller scale, Exeter does too!

    • JR says:

      Was about to say same as George.
      Bournemouth has separate arrivals area. And definitely not on the same scale as Stansted!
      BOH probably max out at 10-12 arrivals on a summers day.

    • yorkieflyer says:

      So does LHR T3

      • Mark says:

        I was going to make the same comment. It does have a separate arrivals building, opened in 1970 and linked to the gates via the arrivals level in the sprawl of piers. The arrivals building itself is used for immigration, baggage reclaim, customs and the post-arrivals public area including Virgin and AA arrivals lounges.

  • Andrew says:

    Presumably the “train” (they don’t run on rails”) are now inside so take up the first of that row of extra bays?

  • Tankmc says:

    I can see the trains going and new walkways added

    • PeteM says:

      Fun fact – Stansted is the last place in the world to still use the original Adtranz C-100 rolling stock from 1991, pretty much as originally delivered.

  • Michael Jennings says:

    The big issue with Stansted has always been the immigration hall, which is just hideous and has seemingly endless waits at busy times. I’m happy enough to depart from Stansted but I avoid arriving there, particularly in the evening.

    I hope this extension does something about this.

    • Chris W says:

      It’s the reality of being Ryanair’s biggest base. In summer, there are lots of flights landing in the evenings, before the planes are parked overnight and depart again first thing in the morning.
      If the immigration hall isn’t being widened, there won’t be extra gates added and the queues won’t be processed faster.

      • Rhys says:

        Depends how they configure the space in the terminal, I suppose.

  • PB says:

    Minor point. The FR 737 MAX-10s have 16% more space than their 737-800s which have a maximum pax evacuation limit of 189. The new 737 MAX-8s being delivered to FR are, as you say MAX 8200s, with an evacuation limit of 200. This is achieved by an extra pair of emergency exit doors.

    • Mark says:

      I was going to say I can’t see Ryanair not cramming in the maximum 200 seats, but they apparently only have 197. So the Max 10s will actually have 15.74% more seats – close enough to 16% 🙂

      Compared to the 787-800 its over 20% more.

  • Richie says:

    Are the doing anything to attract QR, TK?

  • TimM says:

    “There is no mention of new lounge facilities, but it would be crazy if such a substantial extension did not include replacing or adding to the existing overrun Escape Lounge.”

    This is Manchester Airport Group – they run their lounges full and turn people away rather than have excess capacity with empty seats.

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