
As part of $145 million in renovations, designed by a consortium led by Queen’s Quay Architects International, the airport is isolating all vehicular traffic from its three terminals. Blast barriers and shrapnel protectors, disguised as planters, will guide cars toward a remote facility where passengers will disembark and undergo security checks. “It’s probably going to be the only airport in the world that doesn’t allow cars to stop in front of the terminal,” says Peter Pascaris, a principal at Queen’s Quay.
Nairobi might seem an odd place for such a high level of protection, but recent terrorist incidents elsewhere in the world have overshadowed Kenya’s deadly past. More than 200 people died during bombings at the U.S. Embassy in 1998, and 13 people died in a hotel bombing four years later. “Nairobi is in a higher threat environment, and the focal point from day one was to make sure the terminal is as safe as possible, where protection is taken most seriously,” says Gordon Hamilton, managing director of Jacobs Consultancy Canada, an international airport consultant that is contributing to the JKIA project.

read more at source: http://archrecord.construction.com/news/daily/archives/070828airports.asp
And this is good because?
ReplyDeletefunctionally it is a good security measure. Aesthetically it provides an opportunity for great landscaping at the pedestrian only terminal accesses.
ReplyDelete