Dallas-based real estate investment trust (REIT) Ashford Hospitality Trust has handed over possession and control of 14 hotels back to the loan servicers.
22.04.2024 - 02:50 / thepointsguy.com
One of the quirkier aspects of flying out of Dulles International Airport (IAD) near Washington, D.C., is getting set for a major face-lift.
Yes, we're talking about Dulles' so-called "people movers." Over the coming years, the airport's fleet of "mobile lounges" and "plane mates" is getting a multimillion-dollar overhaul. It's work that, like it or not, should solidify the notorious — and, dare we say, iconic — vehicles as part of the airport's airside transportation picture for years to come.
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This week, Dulles shared a video on social media of a crane hoisting a plane mate in the air, with the "Star Wars"-esque vehicle precariously dangling in the air.
It was en route to a flatbed truck, which was standing by, out of frame, ready to transport the people mover to Brookville, Pennsylvania, for a two-year renovation.
Last summer, the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority, which oversees Dulles and Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA), approved a plan to overhaul its fleet of 49 people movers.
The Dulles fleet technically consists of 19 mobile lounges and 30 plane mates.
Mobile lounges, which move passengers between concourses, are perhaps best known among Dulles travelers. You're likely to ride on one if you're flying out of United's D gates, connecting between Concourse D and the regional A gates, or arriving from an international flight.
The plane mates act as mobile jet bridges, transporting passengers to remotely parked aircraft.
Each vehicle can move more than 100 passengers at a time. Dulles is, today, the only airport in North America that still uses these types of vehicles as a regular part of airport operations.
The vehicles' age is remarkable, dating back to Dulles' earlier years in the 1960s and 1970s. They're so old that the original manufacturers no longer support the equipment.
Now, they're at the end of their useful life, the MWAA said, and they're in need of a "major rehab."
To kick off that process, crews disassembled one plane mate and one mobile lounge at the airport and then transported it by truck to the facility in Brookville, about 250 miles away from the airport in western Pennsylvania.
There, crews will spend the next two years designing and refurbishing the people movers on both the outside and the inside. The planned price tag: up to $16.4 million.
From there, the MWAA would have the option to proceed with a similar overhaul to the 47 other vehicles at a cost that could top $140 million over six years.
Crews transported the first plane mate to Pennsylvania on March 26, with the first mobile lounge transported this week. Both are now safely at the factory, a MWAA
Dallas-based real estate investment trust (REIT) Ashford Hospitality Trust has handed over possession and control of 14 hotels back to the loan servicers.
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