The Air Canada check-in area inside Terminal 1 of Toronto Pearson International Airport. The revitalization plan includes improvements ranging from repaved runways to “modernized retail” and possible terminal expansions.Arlyn McAdorey/The Canadian Press
Toronto’s Pearson airport is launching a multibillion-dollar upgrade that aims to boost passenger numbers by more than one-third to 65 million a year by the early 2030s.
The revitalization plan looks to ramp up traffic and tighten on-time performance with improvements ranging from repaved runways to “modernized retail” and possible terminal expansions.
Kicking off Monday, the initial $3-billion phase centres on an expanded airfield, better lighting systems, more electric vehicle charging and new baggage carousels.
Opinion: How selling off Canada’s airports could build tens of billions of dollars of public transit
Airport chief executive officer Deborah Flint is framing the renovations as a gateway to greater global trade and passenger satisfaction.
Pearson, the country’s largest airport with more than 47 million travellers annually, hopes to grow that figure by 35 per cent within about seven years.
The renewal effort comes as the government considers privatizing Canada’s federally owned airports, partly due to the massive cost of maintaining them.
The post Pearson airport kicks off multibillion-dollar upgrade in bid to boost traffic appeared first on World Online.

