Emirates invites barflies to pull up a seat

FILE PHOTO - An Airbus A380 takes part in a flight display during the 48th Paris Air Show at the Le Bourget airport

FILE PHOTO - An Airbus A380 takes part in a flight display during the 48th Paris Air Show at the Le Bourget airport

Published Mar 11, 2017

Share

Dubai - Flying bars that cater to premium passengers on

the world’s biggest fleet of A380 superjumbos are set for a saloon-style

upgrade as Gulf carrier Emirates seeks to use the sky-high hangouts to lure

affluent travellers.

Out will go the semicircular benches on which passengers have perched since

Emirates introduced the on-board lounges almost a decade ago, to be replaced

by an altogether more comfortable setup featuring a table for four located

either side of the counter and below the superjumbo’s windows.

In addition to the eight seats, the new watering holes will have room for

16 standing guests, so that drinkers can still prop up the horseshoe-shaped

cocktail bar if they prefer. And almost in anticipation of people finding it

harder to drag themselves away, the areas will get soundproof curtains to separate

them from adjoining first- and business-class cabins.

Emirates, the world’s biggest long-haul airline, has “taken inspiration from

private yacht cabins” in revamping its lounges, president Tim Clark said in a

statement, adding that the design will make the areas “more intimate and

conducive for passengers to socialise.” A “champagne” color-scheme and

ambient lighting will also be used to give an “airier look and feel.”

July debut

The upgraded lounge was being shown off to the industry at the ITB Berlin

travel fair from Wednesday, with the first bar due to be being installed in a

new A380 at Airbus Group’s interiors factory in Hamburg and scheduled to enter

service in July. All of the 50 or so double-deckers in the Emirates backlog will

get the same treatment, though the Dubai-based airline doesn’t currently plan

to retrofit the 90 planes already delivered.

The company’s existing bar featured prominently in a 2015 TV ad, in which

actress Jennifer Aniston was shown being offered a bag of peanuts and a hand

towel by American-accented flight attendants after asking for her plane’s

lounge and shower - only to be transported to an Emirates A380 where she sipped

a martini while describing her “nightmare” to the barman.

On-board lounges had their heyday in the 1970s, when faltering economies and

occupancy levels as low as 50 percent prompted carriers to remove seats from

their brand new Boeing 747s and McDonnell Douglas DC-10s and fit room-sized drinking

dens in a bid to lure travellers and boost revenue.

The luxury touch wasn’t restricted to premium cabins, with American Airlines

even installing Wurlitzer electric pianos in its coach-class lounges.

Once the economy picked up more seats were added and the bars began to

disappear, with their demise hastened as the 1973 Oil Crisis put capacity at a

premium.

Virgin revival

Richard Branson’s Virgin Atlantic Airways brought back the lounge for its

Upper Class customers decades later, though only a handful of other carriers -

among them Qatar Airways, Korean Air Lines and Etihad Airways - have followed its

lead.

Emirates has said that it plans to carry on enhancing its cabins even amid a

year of anticipated flat growth in 2017 as the oil price slump continues to

crimp travel to Mideast states.

The airline already provides in-flight showers for first-class passengers on

its A380s, as does Abu Dhabi-based competitor Etihad, which has taken the

luxury push a step further with its Residence suites featuring a lie-flat bed, living

area complete with 32-inch television -- and a private butler.

BLOOMBERG

Related Topics: