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Recrafting the cabin: Airlines add, adjust amenities inside jets

The updated first class section of a United Boeing 777 offers more leg room, seats that go completely flat for sleeping and nicer remote controls for movies, audio.

By Gregory Karp, Chicago Tribune –

CHICAGO — After decades of relatively little change, aircraft cabins in the United States are undergoing a renaissance that promises to make the flying experience more comfortable and enjoyable for passengers, especially for those at the front of the plane.

Major airlines are taking delivery of new airplanes with well-thought-out cabin amenities. At the same time, they’re spending hundreds of millions of dollars to upgrade the interiors of existing planes.

“We’ve seen in the last year or so some tremendous improvements in the passenger experience,” said Mary Kirby, editor-in-chief of Airline Passenger Experience magazine. “Airlines were rather stagnant for many years in terms of what they offered.”

Some seats on long flights will recline into flat beds. Some overhead bins will be better-designed and larger. Seats will have on-demand movies and television, in addition to power outlets. Cabins will be equipped with wireless Internet access and mood lighting.

And, yes, some seats on these new and updated planes will have more legroom.

But airline executives facing stiff competition and high fuel costs are not making pricey changes out of benevolence. The best goodies are reserved for passengers toward the front of the plane, sanctuary for travelers willing to pay more or those with elite frequent-flier status.

“This really boils down to a desire to win high-value customers,” said Rob Friedman, American Airlines vice president of marketing, referring to his airline’s attempt to woo mostly frequent-flying business travelers.

Upgrades in some cases mean economy-class, believe it or not, will become more cramped. Fortunately, some in-cabin perks will trickle back to coach to distract attention from snug confines.

Here’s a look at cabin upgrades becoming widely available across U.S. airlines now and in the near future.

LEGROOM LOGISTICS: Personal space is the most coveted of passenger amenities — and the most expensive.

“What people care first and foremost about is getting the best possible price, and then they want to make sure that when they stand up from their airplane ride they can still feel their knees,” said Henry Harteveldt, a travel industry analyst with Atmosphere Research Group.

An aircraft fuselage has only so many square feet, so seat configuration is a zero-sum puzzle. If an airline gives more space in one section, it must recover it from somewhere else or forego revenue by removing seats.

“Airlines personify the saying ‘robbing Peter to pay Paul,’ ” Harteveldt said. “If Paul wants more legroom, Peter is going to have less.”

Many airlines now allow you to pay for more legroom. United Airlines was the pioneer and calls it Economy Plus. American calls it Main Cabin Extra, Delta Air Lines calls it Economy Comfort, and JetBlue Airways calls it Even More Space. Some airlines throw in a few extras too. For example, American allows priority boarding with upgrades to Main Cabin Extra, which it sells for $8 to $108 per flight.

In reality, this new class of seat is what business class used to be.

“Legroom is clearly what people value,” said Joe Brancatelli, a business-travel writer and editor of JoeSentMe.com. “They want it for free, of course, but they will pay for it.”

Business class is the next step up in overall amenities, and increasingly, the only other choice. Many airlines are eliminating traditional first class.

“Business class has become so elaborate, you don’t need first class anymore,” Brancatelli said.

The ultimate in legroom is lying down. For international and some coast-to-coast domestic flights, airlines are adding seats that recline into beds. Early versions had the head somewhat elevated, but the new standard is full-flat seats that recline parallel with the cabin floor.

“Now, the cost of doing business for long-haul business class is fully flat seats, and we’re seeing that across the board,” Kirby said.

Kent Craver, Chicago-based Boeing’s regional director for passenger satisfaction and revenue, is in charge of plane interiors for the plane-maker.

“Airlines are improving (their) product in the areas where passengers are willing to pay for it. Real estate on an airplane is some of the most expensive real estate in the world,” Craver said. “You have a lot of people in economy, but it hasn’t really changed significantly.”

After eliminating many economy-class services, such as free food and free checked bags, some U.S. airlines are squeezing even more from coach, further reducing legroom as they install more chairs or yield the space to higher-paying customers.

“Everybody’s upgrading their business-class cabins, but it’s coming at the expense of coach,” Brancatelli said.

Perhaps losing a few cubic inches here or there wouldn’t matter as much if you were likely to have an empty seat next to you, so you can spread out. But that is decidedly unlikely. U.S. airlines, as a business strategy, are flying much fuller planes nowadays, which means fewer empty seats for elbow room.

TECH FOR ALL: As people carry more mobile devices and expect to be constantly connected — even flying isn’t the refuge from the office it once was — airlines are adding wireless Internet and standard power outlets in the seat to keep those devices functioning at 30,000 feet. For those off the clock, airlines are offering on-demand movies and television, usually for an extra charge.

The good news is that many of the technology upgrades are available in coach too.

“All this in-flight entertainment and connectivity give the airlines the ability to distract passengers’ brains from the pain of being in these ultrasnug seat pitches in economy class,” Kirby said.

Wi-Fi, in particular, is becoming a standard offering on mainline aircraft; regional jets generally don’t offer Internet access, with Delta a notable exception.

“It will be increasingly available and, importantly, it is increasingly expected by the traveler, especially business travelers,” Harteveldt said. But Wi-Fi today can vary in speed quality and sometimes be unbearably slow if too many people use it at once, he said.

SENSORY SHIFT: In-cabin ambience will be improving on many flights.

For example, new workhorse Boeing 737 planes are likely to have the Boeing Sky Interior, which evokes a greater sense of space. The interior, developed as an outcrop of the 787 Dreamliner cabin design, has been ordered as an option on more than 90 percent of new planes and first started showing up in the U.S. in late 2010 on Continental Airlines, Craver said.

“It was really a step change in our interior philosophy,” Craver said, adding that passengers have an emotional reaction to the airplane simply based on the way it looks.

A tremendous amount of research went into the design, which when tested seemed to affect how pleasurably humans perceived the cabin. Boeing used a psychologist, a cultural anthropologist and focus groups all over the world to go beyond what passengers say they want to what passengers don’t even know they need.

The Boeing Sky Interior includes sophisticated LED color-changing lighting, along with new side panels and overhead bins, all of whose lines and contours are designed to work together.

The interior is meant to make passengers feel calmer, connected and more welcomed — a diffuser for the stress created by traffic en route to the airport, security-line hassles and boarding bungles.

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