Quote:
Originally Posted by thenoflyzone
Building up YMX (public transit, a new terminal, new de-icing facility, new parking facilities, etc) will be way more expensive than anything they do at YUL.
If they had chosen YMX as their go to international airport back in the 90s, different story. They didn't. So they're stuck with YUL for the foreseeable future.
Yes, YUL will be a construction site for the better part of the next 20 years. It's the price to pay for choosing the wrong airport, and thinking small until now.
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YUL is bursting at the seams at 20 million ppy. The proposed upgrades would make it comfortable up to say 25, and we'll be back to bursting at the seams at 30.
Meanwhile, sunk costs (including REM) all but guarantee YUL will remain the primary Mtl airport until at least 2060, if not longer. By then, we'll be way over 30 mil. So YUL will need to further transform to accommodate another, say, 20 mil additional passengers, which will require enormous investment beyond this current proposal.
Assuming the end goal is to have an airport capable of accommodating 40-50 mil passengers in 2060, I absolutely believe it would be cheaper to get working on a clean sheet design in YMX today, yes. Pension funds, among which Canadian funds are world class leaders, love these types of large infra projects. You could do a PPP, and enlist consortiums with significant and recent experience building similar clean-sheet airports elsewhere in the world. Doing so without the constraints of ongoing use of existing facilities would dramatically reduce complexity and cost, to the point that the main challenge (cost and complexity wise) would be bringing transit to YMX -- more so than the airport itself. And, look at us, we now have a template for that too, with the existing St Jerome line that could be REM'd.
The political choice to let the next guy in charge worry about this is understandable, but not to our benefit.