by JenniferCouttsClay (Author)
This is an essential source of practical information for architects who need to create brilliance and flair within an incredibly disciplined design scenario. This is a visual and fascinating book that focuses on the interior designs of aircraft cabins and how the many challenges faced in the layout of such a tight space can be met with flair and brilliance. It is a design context in which the tiniest detail can change a myriad of aspects. Interior designers continuously express their creative skills through such designs and many of the techniques that are used in building interiors are repeated in aircraft cabins, and vice versa.Jetliner Cabins is introduced by an overview of recent cabin design history and the book goes on to show, in a wealth of colour and black and white photographs, interiors from airlines around the world; great and small, historically significant and modern, lavish and minimal. It also provides examples past and present, of airline branding, from colours and identity, to the ultimate airline dining experience. This is a book to be enjoyed by interior designers, architects and the general flying public who are interested in jetliners.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 224
Edition: 2nd Ed., New, Fully Updated Ed
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Published: 27 Jan 2006
ISBN 10: 0470019336
ISBN 13: 9780470019337
. .. wonderfully illustrated... makes for fascinating reading and looking... (Airways, May 2004)
... wonderfully illustrated with some great shots of the most kitsch interiors ever... an eclectic and imaginative journey... (M2 Best Books, May 2004
... richly illustrated... includes comments from more than 40 international specialists in the field... (Prisma, xvii/80)
.. .the publisher has provided a quality product...a must-read... (Aircraft Interiors Magazine, February 2004)
.. .a very detaile look...you will have a deeper appreciation of what it takes to compete in this industry... (Airliners, May 2004)
... a visual and fascinating focus on the interior designs of aircraft cabins... (Airways, May 04)
It looks like a coffee table book; it could be; but it is much more. The author notes that the aim of Jetliner Cabins is to survey just one small part of the vast legacy that we have inherited from the Wright Brothers and the development of the commercial-aircraft cabin environment from the late 1970s to the turn of the millennium.
Jennifer Coutts Clay notes further that the main topics include product branding, the passenger experience, cabin maintenance and the marketing challenge and include comments from more than forty international specialists relevant to their areas of expertise.
General Architecture and Design (2003) described Jetliner Cabins as a visual and fascinating book that focuses on the interior designs of aircraft cabins and how the many challenges faced in the layout of such a tight space can be met with flair and brilliance. And that successful designs are also integral to staying competitive.
The past and future design of aircraft reminds of an inscribed message on the front of the National Archives Building in Washington, DC: What is Past is Prologue! Or, more colloquially translated by a DC cabbie: You ain't seen nothing yet.
The book breaks down within its four defined areas: Product Branding in 1st Class Luxury, Business Class Comfort, Economy Class Value and Aero Identity. Then, passenger experience as it is provided by Sky Lights, Dining a la Jet Set, Real-Feel Customer Touchpoints and Special Needs and what constitutes required Cabin Maintenance. Finally, there is the Marketing Challenge inherent in all these categories.
Barnaby Conrad's Pan Am, An Aviation Legend, explores Pan Am's contributions to many of the specifics of each of Jetliner Cabins three sections defining how the then marketing challenges were met by Pan Am. Although, as Jennifer Clay points out, The airlines now seek to differentiate themselves by addressing individual passenger comfort, that comfort provided by Pan Am, as the gregarious upstairs dining experience. And, with that, the old-style dining in the sky made famous by Pan Am (which) still lives on in the movies and in the hearts and minds of all premium-fare passengers.
Pan Am was in the vanguard in the irrevocable shift in the use of leather on board aircraft introduced in a dramatic navy blue leather-and-sheepskin seat-cover combination in the First Class cabin of its Boeing B747 fleet. And, at the same time Pan Am relaunched its Clipper Class as an exclusive Business Class cabin. Originally utilized on international operations, it was introduced on Pan Am's transcontinental route, when this was certificated. It is still recalled with fond memories by the legion of Pan Am customers.
In conclusion, questions are raised with the prospective introduction of the 555-seat Airbus A380 and the new challenges it will offer for an industry to remain competitive.
Jetliner Cabins is a treasure not only for its sheer beauty of design, its comprehensivesuperb photos and layout but also for an erudite text.
Editor's Note: Ms Clay's contributions to Pan Am livery and cabin design were nonpareil. ( CLIPPER, A publication of the Pan Am Historical Foundation, Volume 10 Numbers 1-2, 2004)
. .. wonderfully illustrated... makes for fascinating reading and looking... (Airways, May 2004)
... wonderfully illustrated with some great shots of the most kitsch interiors ever... an eclectic and imaginative journey... (M2 Best Books, May 2004
... richly illustrated... includes comments from more than 40 international specialists in the field... (Prisma, xvii/80)
... the publisher has provided a quality product...a must-read... (Aircraft Interiors Magazine, February 2004)
... a very detaile look...you will have a deeper appreciation of what it takes to compete in this industry... (Airliners, May 2004)
... a visual and fascinating focus on the interior designs of aircraft cabins... (Airways, May 2004)