Airplane cabin designs that could change the way we fly
7 Articles
7 Articles
Air Canada planes once had a dance floor for flights heading from Toronto to Europe
These days, flying often means earbuds in, tray table down and hours spent in near silence. You might sit beside someone for an entire flight without exchanging more than a polite nod as each passenger tucks into their own digital bubble of streaming, scrolling or sleeping. But there was a time — not too long ago — when flying felt more like an experience than a commute. Strangers struck up conversations, clinked glasses over cocktails, and on s…
Flying in 2030: The Seats, Styles, and Surprises Ahead
Skift Take: The shape of seating for 2030 is now set, but what airlines, designers and seatmakers do within those shapes will make or break their market position. -John WaltonRead the Complete Story On Skift
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