The Pet Tree House - Where Pets Are Family Too : Have You Heard About The Worlds First Airport Terminal for Animals? The Pet Tree House - Where Pets Are Family Too : Have You Heard About The Worlds First Airport Terminal for Animals?

Monday, January 19, 2015

Have You Heard About The Worlds First Airport Terminal for Animals?


Air travel can be such a nightmare, but one airport is determined to improve the experience… for animals, that is.

John F. Kennedy Airport is set to open the first privately-owned animal terminal in the world. It will be called, naturally, The Ark.

The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey has signed a 30-year lease deal with Ark Development, an affiliate of the real estate company Racebrook Capital, to design and build a 178,000-square-foot animal cargo facility at the Queens, New York-based airport.

The $48m project will create 180 jobs and generate $108m in revenues over its 30-year span, the organizers said.

“For the animals who [will] pass through The Ark, as well as the people who own them, air travel can be stressful and confusing,” said Cliff Bollmann, an architect at Gensler, one of the firms designing the facility. “Aligning the needs of quarantine with kennelling and elevating the experience for animals and their owners, our design team sought to create a comfortable, healthy environment for them all.”

The Ark, which is scheduled to open in the early months of 2016, will include a departure lounge with comfortable places to sit, eat and drink (Costa Coffee for critters?), individual climate-controlled bedrooms for horses and cattle, a vet, an aviary and a Paradise 4 Paws for cats and dogs.

JFK is one of the busiest airports in the world, with some 50m people a year landing and taking off from its runways.

John J. Cuticelli, Jr, the chairman of Racebrook Capital, said the concept tackles “unmet needs” of travelling companion, sporting and agricultural animals. The terminal “will set new international airport standards for comprehensive veterinary, kennelling and quarantine services.”

If only someone would think of a way to make the flying experience that pleasant for humans.










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