Tag Archives: Helsinki Airport

SRV starts renovation work at Terminal 2 of Helsinki Airport as an alliance project

SRV and Finavia Corporation have signed an implementation-phase agreement to start the renovation project at Terminal 2 of Helsinki Airport. The renovation work will start immediately and is scheduled to be completed in 2023. The total value of the alliance agreement for the renovation project is about EUR 27 million, of which SRVโ€™s share is around EUR 26 million. The project will be recognised in SRVโ€™s order backlog in August. The renovation project will start immediately and it is expected to be completed in 2023.

The renovation work, covering approximately 35,000 square metres, is part of the extension of Terminal 2 at the Helsinki-Vantaa Airport. The renovation will completely revamp the existing departure hall and arrivals hall as well as integrate them into the gate area and centralised baggage claim hall. The extension under construction will house the impressive main entrance to be opened in 2022, as well as new entrance and departure halls. The project is implemented by an alliance that includes SRV and Finavia, with the design team consisting of Arkkitehtitoimisto ALA Oy, Arkkitehtitoimisto HKP Oy and Ramboll Finland Oy.

The extension and alteration of Helsinki Airport seeks to create a new kind of service area for passengers in front of Terminal 2. The extension will be used for check-in, security control, baggage drop and greeting passengers. The extension will also include a travel centre combining different forms of transport. The new building and renovated area total 75,000 square metres, of which the extension that will be completed in the autumn accounts for around 40,000 square metres.

 

Helsinki Airport to use COVID-19 sniffing dogs

Finavia has made this announcement:

COVID-19 dogs will soon start working at Helsinki Airport. The dogsโ€™ sensitive noses are expected to speed up the process of identifying those infected with COVID-19. The city of Vantaa believes that the dogs will be an efficient method of ensuring health and safety at airports.

โ€œThe pilot that will be kicked off on Tuesday is unique and a world first. No other airport has attempted to use canine scent detection on such a large scale against COVID-19. We are pleased with the city of Vantaaโ€™s initiative. This might be an additional step forward on the way to beating COVID-19,โ€ says Airport Director Ulla Lettijeff from Finavia.

Detecting COVID-19 is easy for dogs and results have been encouraging. According to preliminary tests conducted by a research group at the Veterinary Faculty of the University of Helsinki, dogs are able to smell the virus with almost 100% certainty. They can also identify the virus days before the symptoms have even started. This is something that laboratory tests fail to do.

Dogs are also able to identify covid-19 from a much smaller sample than the PCR tests used by health care professionals. The difference is massive, as a dog only needs 10-100 molecules to identify the virus, whereas test equipment requires 18,000,000.

The Helsinki Airport COVID-19 dogs are trained by Wise Nose. Nose Academy, the research groupโ€™s start-up company, is running the operation at the airport. In the future, customs dogs might replace the current operatives. Official COVID-19 testing with trained dogs can only begin once a corresponding legislative amendment has been passed.

โ€œWe are working with Finnish Customs to prepare for a potential scenario where it takes charge of the operation,โ€ says Susanna Paavilainen, CEO of Suomen hajuerottelu – WiseNose Ry, and research coordinator of University of Helsinkiโ€™s DogRisk research group.

Taking a COVID-19 dog test at Helsinki Airport will not include direct contact with the dog. Instead, the dog will perform its work in a separate booth. Those taking the test will swipe their skin with a test wipe and drop it into a cup, which is then given to the dog. This also protects the dogโ€™s handler from infections. All the tests are processed anonymously.

If the test result is positive, the passenger will be directed to a health information point maintained by the city of Vantaa, which is located at the airport.

Koronakoira Kรถssi on rodultaan vinttikoiramix ja kykenee tunnistamaan koronaviruksen nopeasti nรคytteistรค.

COVID-19 dog Kรถssi learned to detect COVID-19 in seven minutes from samples.

In the future, four dogs will work at the airport during a shift. The duration of each shift depends on the dogs. A total of 10 are being trained for the job.

โ€œDogs need to rest from time to time. While two dogs are working, the other two are on a break. The service is mainly intended for passengers arriving from outside the country,โ€ Paavilainen says.

Almost all of the dogs have done scent detection before. How long it takes to learn to identify COVID-19 depends on the dogโ€™s background. One of the dogs that will soon work at Helsinki Airport is an 8-year-old greyhound mix called Kรถssi, who learned to identify the scent in just seven minutes.

โ€œNot all dogs can do it as they operate in different ways. Kรถssi has a lot of experience from identifying biological samples.โ€

Video: Skateboarding in HEL

No one equates skateboarding with secure airports, until now…

Video by Match Made in HEL:

For two days in October 2014 some of the best skateboarders from East and West were connected to share their passion on the top of the world at Helsinki Airport. This first-ever skate session was hosted by Arto Saari and his world-class crew. See the amazing footage of when these skaters got access to totally unique skate spots to test the limits of the gateway between East and West.