Guide: How to design your airport space to maximise revenue
Enhanced sense of place and passenger satisfaction equals increased revenue and ROI. Learn how to utilize design to attract visitors, make them stay and spend.
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Enhanced sense of place and passenger satisfaction equals increased revenue and ROI. Learn how to utilize design to attract visitors, make them stay and spend.
Whether working with a blank canvas or retrofitting a terminal, we will help you bring a comfortable experience from check-in to gate.
Green Furniture Concept’s sustainable modular furniture offers are increasingly in demand, due to today’s unique challenges with social distancing and hygiene under COVID-19.
“Placemaking is turning a public space from a place you can’t wait to get through, to one you never want to leave.” Fred Kent, Founder of Project for Public Spaces. "Placemaking" seems to be everywhere these days and it has become an even bigger buzzword in architecture and airport development as…
To protect our communities from the spread of contagions in high-traffic environments, it is essential for public furniture to be properly and regularly cleaned, disinfected and maintained by the local facility managers.
With wood being one of the highest trending materials, Green Furniture Concept sees it as an easy and natural choice when designing for the future.
Green Furniture is shifting public spaces away from band-aid solutions by offering design-driven social distancing measures that maintain safety without sacrificing community.
Green Furniture Concept has launched a social meeting point with space for distancing, while keeping the feeling of community.
The new Ascent Series from Green Furniture Concept launches at a small, invitation-only event at the GFC showroom in Malmö, Sweden.
Jonathan Nilsson, CEO of Green Furniture Concept, discusses how airports should implement placemaking through design.
With their customisable shapes and scalable sizes, Green Furniture’s seating designs are made for any type of terminal. Green can supply more seats in less space (an increase of 44 per cent in some terminals) yet also know how to keep passengers on the move.
Passenger numbers are increasing faster than airports can expand to accommodate them, challenging the industry to find solutions that work.