STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- New university study calculates value of standing-room-only cabins on planes
- Vertical seats could lead to 21% increased passenger capacity and 44% lower ticket prices
- Airlines such as Ryanair have been touting the concept for years
- While vertical seat designs have been developed, none have yet been approved for commercial transport
The vertical passenger
seat -- or "standing cabin" -- may be the next big cost-cutting move in
aviation, according to a new report whose author says the concept could
be here within five years.
"I stumbled across the
idea when I was looking (into) ways to reduce the flight ticket price,"
Fairuz Romli, who authored the report published in the IACSIT
International Journal of Engineering and Technology, tells CNN by email.
Romli, an aerospace
engineering professor at the Universiti Putra Malaysia, says his
motivation is to lower the cost of air travel to a level competitive
with buses and trains.
Using the popular Boeing
737-300 as an example, his study calculates that a standing cabin would
lead to a 21% increase in passenger capacity while dropping ticket
prices by as much as 44%.
"I'm a frequent flier and
most of the times during domestic flights, it feels like the flying
time is very short that the aircraft is already descending for landing
before you can unfasten your seatbelt after takeoff," he says.
Could, and should, this be replicated in the air?
"Hence the big question came to my mind: in such a short duration of flight time, do we really need to sit down?"
Romli quickly discovered
that the idea had already been researched -- most notably by Airbus,
China's Spring Airlines and Ireland's Ryanair.
The SkyRider
(pictured top), developed by Aviointeriors S.p.A. and unveiled at an
expo in 2010, is a perching saddle, while Ryanair once flirted with the
idea of a "flat-padded backboard" with a seatbelt over the shoulders.
Cost or comfort?
In 2012, Ryanair CEO Michael O'Leary floated the idea with his characteristic bluntness:
"The problem with aviation is that for 50 years it's been populated by
people who think it's a wondrous sexual experience when it's really just
a bus with wings."
However, a spokesperson for Ryanair tells CNN that the airline has since abandoned its vertical-passenger plans.
"We have no plans to trial or introduce standing flights," says the spokesperson.
Hong Kong's Civil Aviation Department voiced caution.
"There are very
stringent requirements for the aircraft and the passenger seat to meet
before the aircraft or the configuration is certified to carry
passengers," a spokesperson tells CNN.
"This novel
standing-room design and the mentioned restraint system are early
concepts. It may take much time for them to materialize."
Ryanair CEO Michael O'Leary once flirted with the idea of standing cabins. And charging passengers to use the toilet. The airline hasn't followed through with either idea.
Manufacturers have also expressed doubt about the concept's feasibility.
"We don't believe there
are good market opportunities for this idea," says Mark Hiller, CEO of
Recaro Aircraft Seating, one of the world's major suppliers of
commercial airplane passenger seats.
"From our point of view,
passengers will not accept to travel that way. Even if such a seat
would pass certification tests, we would see it as a great sacrifice for
passengers in terms of comfort and living space, even for very short
flights."
Fly, don't ride
Romli, whose report contains some intriguing designs for vertical seats, thinks the concept still has legs.
"The idea seemed to be
nixed before it was properly analyzed because I couldn't find any
published study about it," he says. "After some initial study, it
appears that this is not a bad idea after all and has some potentials to
be highlighted."
His study concludes that
while savings increase as distances get longer, the concept is best
optimized on short-haul flights, with tolerance for standing depending
on the age and health of individual passengers.
"I've seen people stand
on buses and trains before throughout a journey of maybe close to an
hour," says Romli. "So if that's possible, then standing on an aircraft
(shouldn't) be a far-fetched idea.
"If the option available
to reach my destination is either sitting on a bus or train for six to
seven hours or standing for an hour and half on an aircraft, I believe
there are many people who would opt for the latter if the flight ticket
price is reasonably low."
Romli admits his concept
is likely to be greeted with skepticism, not least from aviation safety
authorities who would have to sign off on the concept.
Nevertheless, he believes that his vertical seating concept could win approval in five or six years.
"Airlines like to reduce operational costs and given this option, I believe they have a big interest for it as well.
"The only major
challenge is to obtain the approval from the aviation authorities and if
the concept has proven to satisfy all necessary requirements in terms
of passenger safety, there shouldn't be much problem for it to become
reality."
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