Quote:
Originally Posted by q12
Some interesting quick estimates:
Halifax Stanfield 's terminal ground floor foot print is in the 400,000 sqft range.
Ottawa Macdonald Cartier's terminal ground floor foot print is in the 300,000 sqft range.
Ottawa's longest walk gate to gate is only about 1,700 ft.
At Halifax Stanfield walking from Gate 2E (flight from Moncton for example) to a connecting U.S. flight at gate 46 (to Boston) is about 2,700 ft gate to gate. Not far from a 1 km walk. A flight coming in from the U.S. connecting to an airline that you would have to check in again for could result in up to a 1.2 km walk (good exercise  ) .
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Interesting numbers. I did a comparison from Google Earth and pasted the two at the same scale below.
At first glance it appears as though the two main terminals are almost the same size, but when the long gates at either end are included then Halifax does appear to have a larger footprint. I would estimate the Halifax footprint to be closer to 340,000 - 350,000 square feet (including the long gates at either end). From end to end, the Halifax airport certainly does appear to be a long walk

. It could possibly become an even longer walk by 2020 if passenger numbers rise; here is the airport masterplan -
http://hiaa.ca/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/Master-Plan-Public.pdf - some of it has already been done such as the main runway extension.
I am not sure of the total square feet on all levels of the two airports. I have never been in the Ottawa terminal (new or old) but from internet images it looks quite impressive.
Not many airports stand out in my mind, although I like the cozy feel to the Halifax airport. By cozy I mean warm, familiar and comfortable (but not small). It is tough to apply the term heritage to a modern airport but I think Halifax has maintained the good parts of the original airport (I love the main food court area).
Here is another image showing a zoomed out view of the Halifax and Ottawa airports -
http://imageshack.com/a/img22/271/o71j.jpg