0 Comment(s) 23/05/2008 +0100 GMT
by Nick Grecian
The opening of Heathrow’s new Terminal Five continues to generate
many column inches of editorial comment. Initial descriptions of “one
of the most breathtaking man-made spaces in modern Britain; a gleaming
steel and glass silver machine”, gave way on its first day of operation
to bitter howls of “Baggage Armageddon” by stranded passengers.
Of
course, teething troubles are a predictable hazard with the
inauguration of any new facility, but events industry professionals
experienced cracks in the operation at T5 at least two weeks before the
first passengers flew in from Hong Kong. On 14 March the Queen
officially opened the terminal to an audience of 800 guests. Those of
us involved in the preparation for this launch event lived through a
logistical nightmare generated by the most basic lack of co-ordination
and communication. It took a week for Gallowglass and production crews
to put the hardware in place for the 26-minute ceremony, and people
with 20 years of events industry experience described it as the most
frustrating job they had ever worked on.
Ridiculous extremes
So
what went wrong? The operational aspects of British Airports
Authority’s (BAA’s) famously ‘robust’ new security measures had not
been thought-through and the regulations had not been clearly
communicated to the staff, because the rules changed daily and were
taken to ridiculous extremes. Staging, lighting and sound equipment had
to be unloaded land-side for the production that would be taking place
air-side. This meant that earlier off-site checks had to be repeated,
even down to the wooden flats that were scrupulously checked for
possible explosives in the sap.
The excessive time required to
gain security clearance meant that crews working 12-hour shifts often
only managed to get two hours’ work done in any one day. And in spite
of the fact that the building had been designed with plenty of lifts,
few of them were working during the pre-opening phase and, forbidden
from using escalators to travel between levels, frustrated crews had to
wait for engineers to travel from Oxford to repair the lifts.
Priorities
The
BAA was evidently aware of these problems and was apparently so
concerned about delays in the completion of major mechanical and
electrical work that it had applied to the Civil Aviation Authority to
suspend Heathrow’s normal service quality obligations for several
months. These are the targets on security queues and the availability
of lifts and escalators, which, if not met, can normally result in
Heathrow being fined.
The children’s nursery rhyme that tells
how a battle was lost ‘all for the want of a horseshoe nail’ has a
modern-day resonance with the priorities applied in the preparations
for T5. Pre-opening press stories praised the design of its interior
colour palette, the Gucci and Prada boutiques, and the Gordon Ramsay
restaurant. If only the BAA could have applied the same degree of focus
to the basic logistical cornerstones, such as adequate systems testing,
staff training and parking facilities for baggage handlers. Then maybe
British Airways wouldn’t have seen its share price nosedive
dramatically, and the architectural and engineering triumph that is T5
might have escaped demonisation in the media as a ‘national
humiliation’.
Nick Grecian is managing director of Gallowglass







































