Silent airports are a worldwide trend.
Ironically, I’ve just been through four airports as part of a two-day journey to Southeast Asia, and the common denominator was anything but ‘silence’. In fact, if you placed a xylophone, glockenspiel and marimba in a triangle and gave six hyperactive, sugar-loaded toddlers each a set of sticks and told them to go for it, the middle of that triangle would still be quieter than the customs queue at Suvarnabhumi Airport in Bangkok. I could barely hear myself think!
The principle behind silent airports is, obviously, noise reduction, but I’d like to believe it’s all about assuming that people can actually think for themselves.
Not an unreasonable assumption. You’ve already spent a fortune on an airplane ticket, packed your suitcase and gotten yourself to…