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Why haven’t ‘grab and go’ airport lounges launched in the UK?

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Airline lounges have remained relatively unchanged for decades. In exchange for a fee (or for buying a business class ticket or having elite status) you get access to a separate space, away from the hustle and bustle of the terminal concourse.

Often that includes a choice of seating ranging from restaurant tables to armchairs and sofas; refreshments and food are included, albeit of varying quality.

What’s the appeal? For business travellers it’s undoubtedly a place to work. Gate areas are designed as high-density waiting areas and not as convenient places to work, with charging ports a happy surprise rather than an expectation. The ready availability of drinks and snacks, meanwhile, means that you don’t have to go through the hassle of justifying every single coffee with your finance department.

Why haven't 'grab and go' airport lounges launched in the UK?

For leisure travellers, it’s the chance to sit in comfort and enjoy a glass of sparkling wine before a flight and snack on some “free” food.

Of course, different airlines and lounges manage to deliver varying experiences and some are undoubtedly better than others.

In small airports, a lounge might consist of tea and biscuits in a room the size of an average-sized living room. At the other end of the spectrum, Emirates’ and Qatar Airways’ cavernous lounges at their homes cater to thousands of transiting passengers every hour.

Why haven't 'grab and go' airport lounges launched in the UK?

Either way, airport lounges are a booming industry. There’s no doubting the format’s success in recent decades with hundreds, if not thousands, of new openings. These have been led by independent lounge operators such as Aspire and Plaza Premium, which pioneered the airline-agnostic lounge in 1998.

You don’t need to be flying in business class, either. Lounge access is bundled in everything from credit cards to package holidays, whilst companies such as Priority Pass and DragonPass will sell you membership cards as if it’s access to a private members’ club.

Have we reached ‘peak lounge’?

It’s hard to argue against the proliferation of airline lounges. More lounges equals more competition and more choice, with different lounges catering to varying markets. Take Gatwick, for example, which in addition to a number of airline lounges also features four unique brands owned by Collinson (co-incidentally also the company behind Priority Pass):

  • MyLounge: the ‘budget’ entry-level lounge offering aimed at holidaymakers with a ‘shabby chic’ / industrial aesthetic
  • Club Aspire: a mid-tier lounge aimed at business travellers
  • No1 Lounge: a mid-tier lounge aimed at families and couples going on holiday
  • Clubrooms: the exclusive, top-tier lounge offering with table service and a greater choice of food and drink

Manchester Airport, which operates its own lounges, is similarly structured. It has the mainstream Escape Lounge complemented by the more-premium 1903 Lounges. Pre-covid Manchester Airport launched PremiAir (sadly still closed) – a standalone private terminal / lounge which could be booked for as little as £100 in a promotion and included being driven to your aircraft.

Unfortunately, despite their best efforts, lounge operators haven’t been able to keep up with the demand.

Space in airport terminals is at a premium and there comes a point when you run up against what is possible without a costly extension of the terminal building.

Why haven't 'grab and go' airport lounges launched in the UK?

This is the problem now faced by Virgin Atlantic, which would like to expand its Heathrow Clubhouse to accommodate increasing numbers of elite SkyTeam passengers but simply hasn’t found a way to do so.

At least in the UK, the cracks are starting to show. It’s not uncommon to have to queue to enter the independent lounges at Gatwick or Luton during peak periods, or even be refused outright.

The problem is less acute across Europe, where credit cards (and therefore bundled lounge access) are less popular.

Are grab-and-go lounges the solution to lounge overcrowding?

Where the US goes, the UK often followers. Lounges are no different.

Capacity issues are a major concern in the United States where credit cards with lounge access are handed out like candy. It’s such an issue that American carriers have moved to a two-tier system of lounges: premium lounges for those actually travelling on a business class ticket (think United’s Polaris or American’s Flagship lounges) and ‘Clubs’ for everyone else.

These Club lounges are often specced to lower standards and serve only basic snacks and drinks. If you want anything more substantial, or an alcoholic drink, you have to pay up.

Lately, US carriers have been trying something new to alleviate congestion: grab-and-go stations. First pioneered by Lufthansa with its ‘Delights to Go’ automated vending concept, the idea is gaining traction across the pond.

Why haven't 'grab and go' airport lounges launched in the UK?

Air Canada was first out of the gate with its ‘Air Canada Cafe’ at Toronto Pearson back in 2019. This offers “customers a wide selection of specialty beverages to Grab & Go or to be enjoyed with complimentary Wi-fi in a relaxed, bistro-type setting.”

This is, as the name suggests, closer to a cafe than a full-blown grab-and-go lounge: it still had seating for 109 passengers, albeit in a more casual, coffee house set up.

Why haven't 'grab and go' airport lounges launched in the UK?

United took the concept a step further with its ‘United Club Fly’ concept in Denver, which launched last year. This is a tiny lounge – a micro-lounge, if you will – designed for passengers on short connections. With just sixteen seats and standing room for an additional eight, you won’t be loitering here long.

What it does offer is pre-packaged food and drinks such as sandwiches, wraps, salads, yoghurt, fruit cups, cereals, crisps and more. The idea is that you pop in, grab what you need and keep going.

Why haven't 'grab and go' airport lounges launched in the UK?

Delta is following with a pilot project, in part to deal with major overcrowding issues at its lounges in New York and Atlanta. Queues to get into the SkyClub are a regular occurrence.

To deal with this issue Delta is issuing vouchers to the Grab and Go station if you are willing to forego the lounge itself. It’s not clear how popular this is or how successful the uptake, but it does at least give passengers a choice.

What about UK lounges?

Oddly, the concept has yet to appear at any UK airports. This is despite the fact that I can, off the top of my head, think of a number of places where a grab and go concept makes sense.

London City Airport

Let’s start with the obvious one first: London City Airport. Whilst convenient, London City has always struggled for terminal space: after all, it’s located on a small strip of land between the Royal Albert and King George V Docks. It has never had an in-terminal lounge (although it did, pre-covid, have a First Class Terminal.)

With plans for the terminal redevelopment in purgatory, the airport is currently modernising and reconfiguring the existing spaces, adding in additional retail and dining space. It is still too small for a fully-blown airport lounge and besides, most passengers arrive 60 minutes or less before departure knowing they can breeze through security and walk onto their aircraft.

Why haven't 'grab and go' airport lounges launched in the UK?

It’s the perfect spot for a grab-and-go lounge offering pre-packaged sandwiches, wraps, salads and drinks for anyone on the go.

The costs would be minimal: all you need is a small corner somewhere, and couple of members of staff to restock and scan any ‘purchases’. The cost of the food would be minimal given that a meal deal is widely available on the high street for between £3 and £5.

Heathrow Arrivals lounges

Arrivals lounges are, it seems, a covid casualty. The British Airways arrivals lounge at Heathrow has over 100 shower pods but never appears full; Plaza Premium, which previously operated arrivals lounges at Heathrow Terminals 2, 3 and 4 has permanently closed them.

But here’s an idea: why not offer a grab-and-go station instead? I can see the value in offering a shower and a breakfast bag with choice of sandwich, some coffee, orange juice etc. This cuts out the ‘lounging’ part of the lounge and strips it down to the bare minimum if arriving from a long haul flight.

I can even see the value in arriving from somewhere and being able to pick something up on my way home, rather than having to worry about fixing dinner or ordering in when I arrive. And a bit of hydration on the long tube journey home wouldn’t go amiss ….

Why haven't 'grab and go' airport lounges launched in the UK?

Heathrow Terminal 5

BA’s terminal is home to some of the busiest lounges I have ever had the (dis-)pleasure of using. No matter what time of day you are flying, they are almost universally rammed. There’s a reason that we haven’t been able to write fresh reviews of most of them for almost a decade.

Some of this is down to capacity – there simply isn’t enough lounge space. Some of it, surely, is also down to the sheer volume of BA Gold and Silver cardholders and any oneworld Sapphire or Emerald members who are travelling in economy.

One solution could involve opening up an additional grab-and-go outlet in the terminal. This could let you pick up a meal deal and, like Delta, rescind your right to the lounge.

I think this could be a very attractive option for anyone with little time to spend and who is also flying in economy, where all you get is a small bottle of water and some crisps.

For the record, I’m not arguing that BA should ban Gold and Silver cardholders from the lounges if they are travelling in economy; simply that they be given an alternative should they want it. More carrot than stick.

It’s certainly an idea they should consider if and when they come to refurbishing their flagship lounges in Terminal 5.

Conclusion

Are grab-and-go outlets the answer to all the airport lounge woes we’ve been seeing recently? Certainly not. Airlines and airports should continue to invest in full-scale facilities where there is demand.

But there are, I think, a number of opportunities for airlines and airports in the UK when it comes to diversifying the existing lounge offering and giving passengers a choice. If it comes with additional benefits (such as reducing lounge overcrowding) then all the better.

It’s also hard to see how the maths doesn’t work for the independent lounge operating companies. Take Priority Pass, for example, which we believe pays lounge operators around £10 – £12 per passenger. You can easily buy a meal deal at Heathrow or Gatwick for about £5, so the lounge operator has significant capacity to play with.

There is, of course, a third option, and one that we’ve already seen Priority Pass do: offer credit in airport restaurants and cafes. Could this also extend to vouchers for Pret a Manger?

I’m somewhat surprised we haven’t seen the idea take root in the UK but with infrastructure investment unlikely to match growing passenger numbers it can only be a matter of time. Let’s see what emerges.


Getting airport lounge access for free from a credit card

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Here are the five options to get FREE airport lounge access via a UK credit card.

The Platinum Card from American Express comes with two free Priority Pass cards, one for you and one for a supplementary cardholder. Each card admits two so a family of four gets in free. You get access to all 1,500 lounges in the Priority Pass network – search it here.

You also get access to Eurostar, Lufthansa and Delta Air Lines lounges.  Our American Express Platinum review is here.

You can apply here.

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American Express Preferred Rewards Gold is FREE for the first year. It comes with a Priority Pass card loaded with four free visits to any Priority Pass lounge – see the list here.

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HSBC Premier World Elite Mastercard gets you get a free Priority Pass card, allowing you access to the Priority Pass network.  Guests are charged at £24 although it may be cheaper to pay £60 for a supplementary credit card for your partner.

The card has a fee of £290 and there are strict financial requirements to become a HSBC Premier customer.  Full details are in my HSBC Premier World Elite Mastercard review.

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Got a small business?

If you have a small business, consider American Express Business Platinum which has the same lounge benefits as the personal Platinum card:

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You should also consider the Capital on Tap Pro Visa credit card which has a lower fee and, as well as a Priority Pass for airport lounge access, also comes with Radison Rewards VIP hotel status:

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PS. You can find all of HfP’s UK airport lounge reviews – and we’ve been to most of them – indexed here.

Comments (166)

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  • The real Swiss Tony says:

    Surely the problem needs to be drawn back to the question “why do lounges exist”. Many years ago I read that they had been developed as a concept so airlines could ensure high paying business customers spent time productively at the airport. That encouraged them to arrive in good time, minimising the number of fully flex seats going out empty. It certainly sounds plausible.

    Implementing lounges that require less time commitment from the user defeats that objective. Obviously the competitive landscape has evolved and there are probably fewer flexible tickets sold now (because there are more non-flex options) but it strikes me that this grab & go concept is fundamentally flawed. Aside from the expenses argument, you might as well go back to making the lounge a quiet room with a coffee pot in the corner.

    • Rhys says:

      ….except that, in many airports such as LCY, there isn’t space.

      • Bagoly says:

        Actually I think LCY is a good illustration of why this is a bad idea.
        From where we are now, would I like to have £5 added to every Business ticket so that one gets a Grab and Go meal?
        No, because on different occasions: I can buy it from Boots, I don’t feel like it, or I want (and buy) a proper meal.

        The main point about a lounge for most of us is that it is less crowded than the common areas, especially during chaotic times.

        • Rhys says:

          I think LCY would be more interesting for an independent Priority Pass style lounge. I’m surprised Plaza hasn’t done anything.

      • The real Swiss Tony says:

        But the whole argument about City was that it was built uniquely(?) as a turn up and go airport, hence the late check in cut off times etc.

        As has been pointed out, there are plenty of grab and go options at City. Having something that 50% or more of passengers would qualify for would 1) require a significant investment in space and 2) decimate the existing revenue lines in the airport.

        Lounges were invented for productivity, not as somewhere for lavish F&B options or kicking off the holiday with a bottle of gin and associated hi jinx – and indeed the world might be a better place if the attempt to head down that route had never started.

  • drdan says:

    No, no, no….

    A Boots meal deal is not part of my business travel!!

    • Londonsteve says:

      I’m with you. A Boots meal deal is practically the most depressing thing you can eat on the planet. At least, in the world inhabited by first world business travellers.

  • TimM says:

    Interesting article, thanks Rhys. I think we may have reached ‘peak-shops’. Everyone I talk to find them over-priced and a nuisance passing through the airport. Everything cost less through the regular channels – e.g. Amazon or eBay. The duty-free maze is especially a nuisance – the only way to avoid it is to book assistance and travel through the staff-accessible only short cuts. Hence the growing number of abandoned wheelchairs airside and the growing holding spaces for those waiting for assistance.

    What about the novel idea of making an airport departure lounge into a lounge instead of a shopping mall?

    • Rhys says:

      …which is sort of what was happening at Paris CDG when I visited earlier this year.

    • Rob says:

      Except bizarrely all of these retailers are happy to pay the crazy rents required. Wonder why?!

      I think people underestimate how retail works, at least at T5. People tend to know what they want and have already decided to buy ‘if its cheap at the airport’. You can be in and out of the shop in 10 minutes, £1k to £10k lighter. Whilst the shops appear empty I would suggest the numbers are more than worthwhile.

      In fact, it is the huge profitability of the shops that stops more space being turned over to lounges.

      • TimM says:

        Yes but how long can fools be parted with their money? There is nothing on sale at an airport than cannot be readily bought at a lower cost elsewhere.

        Once upon a time, when Dixons at the airport simply knocked off the VAT, I used to buy laptops and cameras from them. Now Dixons (now ONLY at airports) only promise be not pricier than John Lewis which itself has abandoned the pledge never to knowingly undersold.

        Silly rents, awful airport experience, over-priced -> peak shops!

        I do remember ‘the duty free shop’ at Manchester airport when it was the only shop. It was like an Eastern European supermarket – ‘minimal’ would be putting it kindly, it was more ‘bleak but cheap’ and the size of the shop in a petrol station now. There were two piers, domestic (now part of Terminal 3) and international (still there but due to be demolished). The duty free shop sensibly was on the way to the international pier. In those days, we were kindly asked to arrive at the airport 60 minutes before departure to check-in (no luggage charges, extra legroom seating allocated free of charge to tall people), security took a minute to get through and then you could idle your time in the Lancaster lounge overlooking a Lancaster bomber on the apron or in the bleak but cheap shop.

        It has all gone downhill from there.

        • Thegasman says:

          Not exactly true. For luxury goods that almost never get discounted (think classic rather than seasonal Gucci, LV etc designs) then the airport is cheaper. Even pre Brexit travelling intra EU it was cheaper as they had one price for all which was roughly splitting the difference between VAT free & inclusive.

          If you’re spending £10k+ then a 10% saving is worthwhile.

          • Londonsteve says:

            But surely now that a UK traveller can buy Paris, for example, and claim back virtually the entire French VAT on departure (certainly as a percentage on big ticket items) the rationale of ‘slightly cheaper’ at the airport would now be pointless anyway? It’s bizarre that if you buy a pair of Gucci loafers at Heathrow you need to pay UK VAT but BA can serve you duty free booze in the lounge. I assume that any alcohol served in F&B outlets at an airport is also excise duty free for the vendor, if not perhaps VAT free anymore.

        • Mike says:

          Dixons is no more – WHSmith bought out most of their sites when they pulled out a couple of years ago. The reason the VAT was ‘’knocked off’ was because tax free shopping was legally permitted by HMRC for passengers leaving the EU. This was scrapped by Johnson as a Brexit benefit so now only ‘duty free’ (tobacco / booze) exists and ‘tax free’ (everything else) doesn’t

      • No longer Entitled says:

        I don’t have visibility of the underlying data but could the argument be made that it is not the profitability of the shops themselves but rather the low profitability (if any) of lounges that keeps the shops in place?

        Shops may also have other metrics (e.g. brand visibility for high-end) that keeps them in situ. I can’t imagine ever being loyal to a lounge.

        • Mike says:

          Lounges are usually located in parts of the terminal that retailers would not be interested in – down corridors / up stairs etc so they don’t really compete for space and the rent will be ‘priced’ accordingly

    • Bagoly says:

      Agree that the duty-free mazes are somewhat insulting.
      But a mind-set change works wonders – I now regard it as airports helping me get to my 10,000 steps a day – and even Gatwick North only takes about 3 minutes to walk through.

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      But who are you talking to?

      Yes for a lot of us living in the UK it can be cheaper to go to the local supermarket for some gin or whatever but in many parts of the world that isn’t an option and DF is a good option for them.

      And think of the visitor who has forgotten to buy something for the kids or people at the office or those that are HBO the only place to buy some products is in DF because of the liquids rule.

      Few weeks ago when I was off to Berlin a friend over there asked me to get them some gin that wasn’t easily available there. I did check the super markets but it was still cheaper in DF. Other than that purchase I spent nowt in DF and felt no pressure to spend on anything.

      And despite the moans not every security channel enters directly into DF. The priority security lane at LHR T3 doesn’t. And even when you come out of normal security turn left next to the travel ex and you’re in a corridor and can pass into the seating area and be no where near the DF shop.

      At LGW S take a left turn instead of going down the escalator et voila no DF maze.

      Shops at airports are an integral part of their financing as well as being something for people to look at but no one is forced to buy!

  • Flyoff says:

    BA have tried store credit before – Silver and Golds could show their BA cards to purchase at Starbucks T5C up to an allowance – was it £10. This hasn’t been offered for many years.

    • Rhys says:

      Was this during Lounge work?

      • Alan says:

        No, it was routine for years as T5C doesn’t have a lounge.

        • Andy says:

          In my experience, it was a case of showing your BP at Starbucks and grabbing a miniature of Moet as the cost was covered.

    • Rob says:

      £15

      Of course what happened there was that people would go to 5B and the Starbucks!

      • Andrew J says:

        They even sold mini bottles of Moet, for £15 on the dot I think, so you could just pop in and get one to take with you as you waited to board your flight – made a nice little nightcap once you reached your hotel.

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      It was stopped because some passengers were abusing it (and bragging about it on flyer talk) and buying coffee beans and mugs and not food and drink as were some of the Starbucks staff adding on extra items (to take the bill closer to £15) that the customer didn’t want (and didn’t get) to bump up the days takings.

      • Rob says:

        When we got a food voucher in Dubrovnik last year, the cafe in the terminal was buying them off us for around half face value if we didn’t actually want any food!

        • Gordon says:

          We were given a 20 USD voucher each at check in at PUJ in June as the lounge was not available for BA status passengers, it was 18 USD entry pp if you wanted to use anyway, Used the vouchers at Wendy’s and they just added a couple of bottles of juice to make it up!

  • BJ says:

    The solution to lounge over-crowding is simple and always has been. Airlines should reserve lounges for the exclusive use only of passengers paying cash or miles to fly premium economy, business or first class. Alternative lounge facilities should be provided by airlines for the real and fake elites flying economy: perhaps grab-and-go would be a good fit here. The rest, such as credit card holders, lounge scheme members , and pay- per- users flying economy can do whatever they like in independent and airport -operated lounges. The bottom line is that a decent lounge experience should be part of the premium cabins travel experience and airlines can best provide that by excluding ALL those flying in economy from premium-cabin lounges. When we fly J we don’t have Y passengers standing in the aisles, sitting on the armrests, and helping thenselves to business class drinks and snacks from the Club Kitchen so why should we have to put up with it in the lounges?

    • memesweeper says:

      As someone who used to pass through T5 for work at least weekly — but invariably in economy — I think looking after genuine frequent fliers should be a priority. We want a space to work in. Cutting out the booze, or removing the F&B altogether from Galleries North to make a “work space” might help business travellers!

      • BJ says:

        I agree, as I ssid in my comment elites should be catered to, only in a different place to premium passengers IMO if they are flying economy. It is up to individual airlines how they show they value elites in respect of lounge facilitie ; if that means better lounges for say BA Silver and Golds than for premium passengers then so be it.

    • Jack says:

      Fake elites oh get real . If you have earned the status then you should be allowed to use it simple as . There is more than 1 lounge people can use at somewhere like T5. Grab and go is for a coffee shop not a airline lounge

      • BJ says:

        I am being real; real elites earn status, fake elites get it via games, gimmicks or short cuts. Many of the former resent the latter for erosion of benefits but in most cases the schemes thenselves are to blame for facilitating it. For example, just ask thosed who stayed 30+ nights at Hilton last year maintaining Diamond what they thought of the tens of thousands who earlier this year extended already fake Diamon for a further year with just one stay. I’m not saying that readers should not take advantage of such (indeed they should!) but doing so is not without consequences for the scheme as a whole.

        • dougzz99 says:

          With BA everyone earns it, there are no TP short cuts.

          • Rob says:

            Depends if you count a couple of BA Holidays trips for double tier points, or a couple of quick return flights to Sofia earning 160 TP each way!

            If you do two long haul holidays per year in Business Class and you book both via BA Holidays, that’s 560 tier points in the bag.

          • dougzz99 says:

            But you flew as required. Double TP holiday has been a short term reaction to pandemic, maybe it stays, maybe not. There are no short cuts via credit cards or other methods like there is with Avios earning.
            My response was more in terms of status gets earned, people flying business redemptions may earn millions of points through credit card spend and things unrelated to flying.

            They’ll always be variation in cost of TP, unless BA go with an entirely revenue system. Someone flying to Sofia is no better or worse.

          • Doug M says:

            I hope you’re wrong about the UK situation, but you’re inside enough to have a much better idea than I do.
            In my experience OW status has been a real help, particularly on USA IROPS. I think FF status is very different to hotel status. I’ve no memory of ever receiving a meaningful hotel status benefit. They can’t even maintain a brand standard, never mind have meaningful status benefits. But, fully accept I’ve never had a meaningful status, if you get everything via a credit card or something without meaningful spend don’t expect much.

          • BJ says:

            Thanks for sharing @Rob, all very interesting.

            I got your point @dougzz, although I was trying to extend, or hoping readers would take a wider view than merely BA or airlines.

    • Thegasman says:

      Ha ha. My father in law travels weekly with work on fully flexible Y/W tickets that are many multiples of my J/F leisure fares. I’m sure as a GGLfL he would take issue with being called a fake elite vs someone redeeming Avios they’ve hussled from Barclays, Curve etc.

      • BJ says:

        Like I said, up to airlines. I just think they should provide different lounges for both groups.

        • memesweeper says:

          Unless you are extremely good at capacity planning, and have very even proportions of both groups in the terminals at the same time, differential lounges will lead to more, not less, overcrowding in at least one of them.

          • BJ says:

            Planning for premium cabins should be straightforward but much less so for elites flying economy.

        • BJ says:

          Just to add, not suggesting your FIL or others achieving status by flying are fake elites.

    • dougzz99 says:

      @BJ. The problem with your suggestion like everyone that wants to change the rules is it becomes entirely about self interest. Golds think Silver is too easy to achieve, people buying cash tickets think too many status people crowd the lounge, GGL think the Gold threshold is too low, and so on.
      Incidentally I wonder if you read your post back, entitled somewhat.

      • BJ says:

        The problem is that in their thirst for numbers and profit, loyalty schemes grow their elites too high and too fast while not investing sufficiently to maintain provision of benefits.

        • Blair Waldorf Salad says:

          @BJ, well done. I’m with you. I think Qatar may have the guts to press on with this concept.

          • BJ says:

            Fab, I hoped there might be one of you but don’t let on to @LadyLondon 😉

          • Lady London says:

            Nah, I agree with you BJ. BISM is what should count.

            Subject to protecting me and memesweeprr and people like us who are forced to fly on cheap Y each week by our work.

            Qatar and LH have, sadly, got exactly the right idea.

        • BJ says:

          The manager of a London DT told me it is not unusual for more than half his guests on any night to be Gold/Diamond.

    • Mike says:

      Isn’t that exactly how airlines do operate their lounges? It’s non airline lounges that let anyone in…

      • BJ says:

        The problem with the airline lounges is largely just too many elites at major airports at peak times, or perhaps
        too few lounges…

  • Peter K says:

    I use lounges as a place to sit in relative comfort and quiet. Having food I can eat is a bonus due to gluten intolerance so I don’t factor that in.

    Maybe it’ll work for some, but I don’t think grab and go fits what everyone wants in the UK. These seem to fall into the ‘peace and quiet’ or ‘have multiple alcoholic drinks’ groups, neither of which would want grab and go.

    • Rhys says:

      Who said it was a one size fits all solution! I think my article is pretty clear that I think it could work in certain locations but I certainly don’t want all traditional lounges to close!

    • BJ says:

      You’re now much more likely to find peace and quiet in an empty gate area than in any lounge at major airports at peak times.

  • Paul says:

    Seems to me that the major flaw in this (aside from the cheapness of the whole thing) is the concept of “go”. Where does one go to for one to two or three hours? Either post security or during transit.
    The cynic in me says “to the shops” (ie just like the duty free experience: enforced by the airport operator; +1 for peak shops).
    For me the whole essence of a “lounge” is to lounge. Not stand around, nor be in more queues, not hunting for a seat in the terminal, and certainly to not snacking on plastic food.

    • Bagoly says:

      Particularly to eat – I like to use a table in front of me for putting the food and the drink.

    • Rhys says:

      Where do you think economy passengers go on transiting flights?!

      To the gate!

  • Simon says:

    The increase in lounge usage, I think is less about wanting to use the lounges as it is a rejection of what’s on offer in the main terminal.

    Using lounges is relatively new for me, we don’t get access as part of credit cards (yet) or membership, we just pay. We pay so we have somewhere nice and (generally) quieter to sit before travel. The food is nice and, as a prolific tea drinker having it on tap is appreciated, but the number one reason is a sofa/arm chair, a power socket and some space to open my laptop and work on some project or another.

    A grab and go lounge just sounds like all the eateries already available in the main terminal build so zero appeal for me.

    Like another commenter has suggested, bin off 90% of the shops (especially the never ending duty free wilderness walk), keep Boots so you can buy/collect toiletries when hand luggage only, change Curry’s to Kindle, head phones and camera vending machines and then 1 department store style shop for typical travel/holiday clothes etc.

    The rest of the space can be turned into lounges, coffee shops. Birmingham has just put a nice Starbucks in the middle of their terminal area, sadly they didn’t create any extra space around the sides but it’s a nice model of what you can do.

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