While airports have always had to maintain high hygiene standards, according to Veovo’s Christian Bugislaus Carstens, the pandemic has forced a renewed focus on how high-touch, high-traffic areas are used, cleaned and sanitised.

Previously, it might have been enough to ensure all facilities were regularly cleaned, on schedule, to maintain a predetermined standard of hygiene. Now the challenge is significantly more complex. Restrooms must be kept clean and free of crowds. An influx of passengers can no longer be left to their own devices to find their way to the nearest facilities.

Airports must ideally understand facility usage, react quickly to ensure sanitation and reduce crowding, and have the ability to plan custodial tasks more efficiently.

Bugislaus Carstens underlines that many airports are turning to a combination of sensors and machine learning to track and analyse people’s movements within the airport to manage restroom usage.

Occupancy and density analysis enables operators to understand how many people may use a specific restroom at a particular time, based on counting and controlling the situation of each bathroom in real time.

When presented with live occupancy data, passengers can make informed decisions about which facility to use – including information on the walking times to alternative, less crowded restrooms.

By combining live occupancy data with passenger flow analytics, operators can also measure and predict crowding events ahead of time. This enables the airport to direct the flow of passengers across restroom facilities before they become too busy – for example, including messages on digital displays to encourage dwell time in less active zones or dynamic directions via wayfinding apps.

Shifting to need-based cleaning

Rather than a static, rota-based cleaning and sanitising schedule, airports would benefit from moving to a needs-based system.

Armed with historical usage insights, custodial service managers can align cleaning plans to forecasted usage and flight schedules while monitoring staff activity for accurate cleaning-time display.

Deploying custodial resources to the busiest facilities, as needed, makes sense. Therefore, services that can adapt easily to being responsive, even predictive, to shifting flight schedules and people movements will be the most efficient and effective.

A straightforward extension for passenger flow platforms

For many airports, especially those that already have passenger flow systems in use, it’s a simple matter of expanding their data-capture capabilities to include restroom facilities or, in many cases, integrating existing sensor outputs into one common platform.

This extension fits neatly with the already proven benefits of airport flow management, including real-time responsiveness to handle challenges on the go, predictive analysis that improves efficiency, and cost savings by ensuring resourcing matches demand.

For example, airports can understand the impact of gate changes on restroom crowding. They can predict how security bottlenecks affect lounge dwell time and facility usage and determine the optimal custodial response.

Understanding how events affect passengers’ show-up profiles, movement, dwell habits and facility usage throughout the airport makes it possible to automate the appropriate responses.

By using programmes such as Veovo’s airport-wide flow management technology, airports can connect passenger flow analytics, occupancy, and density analysis with operations. The technology means airports will also have the appropriate tools for more intelligent, predictive decision-making from passenger arrival to departure and at every point in between.

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