Inside heathrow's ghost terminal that's been abandoned for 10 years

Inside heathrow's ghost terminal that's been abandoned for 10 years


Play all audios:


(Image: ROGER ALLEN) It was the ultimate jet-set location, the chosen entry route into the UK for a host of international celebrities wreathed in sunglasses and designer outfits. But now the


pioneering Terminal 1 building at Heathrow Airport stands empty. The tumult of travel has been reduced to cathedral silence and the sound of footsteps echoes eerily around the departure and


arrivals halls once trodden by millions of business people and holidaymakers, as well as the great and the glamorous. While British Airways passengers suffered chaos when computers failed


at the weekend, in T1 regimented rows of disused seats line the once thronging departure hall as decommissioning teams strip it bare and sell off anything from baggage conveyor belts and


flight monitors to fire extinguishers and toilet bowls. READ MORE: THE UNDERRATED UK AIRPORT NAMED 'BEST LOW-COST' - NOT HEATHROW OR GATWICK > This is a historic building and it


 is sad to see it go. T1 is iconic > but Heathrow needs to expand >  > Steven Mearns - Heathrow’s head of engineering for T1 Terminal 1, known as T1 by the people who worked there,


was opened amid global fanfare by the Queen in 1969 but has now been mothballed as Heathrow’s expansion plans, including a controversial third runway, gather pace. Technology has outstripped


T1’s use and it will be demolished over the next five to 10 years. Its first flight was made by a Vickers Vanguard, a 100-seater service to Edinburgh operated by British European Airways –


a forerunner of British Airways – and the last by a BA flight to Hanover on June 29, 2015. Its lifespan covered the golden age of jet travel with huge advances in engineering and mass


passenger capacity combining to make T1 the largest airport terminal in Europe. The Queen, then 43, was taken on a guided tour of the building with its new shops, duty-free outlets and


cutting-edge display pods for the latest fashions. Terminal 1 was opened by the Queen in 1969 (Image: ROGER ALLEN) T1 was the biggest and the best. Steven Mearns, Heathrow’s head of


engineering for T1 and the man who is overseeing the dismantling of a national institution, said at the time: “This is a historic building and it is sad to see it go. T1 is iconic but


Heathrow needs to expand. “There is a lot of nostalgia about it and we are aware of that but we want to improve the passenger journey and Heathrow is changing for the better. T1 has a unique


place in passenger aviation and it is a bit eerie to walk around it now when there is no one around. “These halls and corridors were once full of passengers and staff but now there is


barely a sound.” The terminal has been closed for almost two years and only emergency lighting illuminates the vast areas where passengers mingled in excitement or trepidation as air travel


came within reach of the masses. A skeleton engineering crew has been dismantling the fixtures and the former check-in zone for El Al flights to Israel has become a makeshift holding area


for goods that will be sold on. A collection of red fire extinguishers jostle in front of check-in desks (Image: ROGER ALLEN) A collection of red fire extinguishers jostle in front of


disused check-in desks near a neatly stacked section of toilet bowls and urinals. Flight monitors, waste bins, medical screens, foam mats from the children’s play area and even Christmas


decorations are being stored till they find a new home. “It has been a huge logistical effort but we do not want to dump these fittings as they are perfectly good and there are airports


around the world that will be able to use them,” Mearns added. “There is talk of an entire check-in area being dismantled and shipped to a new airport where it will be installed just as it


was at Heathrow. The configuration worked so well that they want to replicate it exactly. “The whole programme is about doing this safely, quickly and at the least cost so we have employed a


company to sell on what is left.” The terminal building is stripped back to basics. The Tin Goose pub, where you could get a reasonably priced burger (£7.50) before flying, is empty with


only a retro world map hinting at the excitement that ran through customers about to go on holiday or business trips. The coffee shops that once competed with each other for trade are


deserted, the noisy baristas long gone and their proud signage limp and gathering dust. Shelves, once jammed with books and cigarettes, are empty. The polished reception desks of the


exclusive airport lounges no longer bask in mood lighting and welcoming staff. The toughened glass window of a small bureau de change has been removed and the office where a range of exotic


currencies were handed out is populated only by a discarded swivel chair. A neatly stacked section of toilet bowls and urinals (Image: ROGER ALLEN) “It can be a bit spooky walking through


here at night with so many reminders of what the terminal was like yet it being dead quiet,” adds Mearns. “This is a unique job and I feel privileged to be a part of history but also part of


the airport’s future as it will continue to grow as T1 comes down.” The Vanguards are a distant memory as extra taxiway space is being created to allow double decker Airbus A380s – with 525


seats and a 260ft wing span – to pass each other on the way to and from the northern runway as Heathrow aims to regain its crown as the world’s best airport.