[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":511},["ShallowReactive",2],{"blog-en-led-screen-airport-transport-hub-2026":3,"blog-related-en-led-screen-airport-transport-hub-2026":495},{"id":4,"title":5,"author":6,"body":7,"category":471,"date":472,"dateModified":472,"datePublished":472,"description":473,"extension":474,"faq":475,"hreflangPair":485,"image":486,"lang":487,"meta":488,"navigation":489,"path":490,"seo":491,"slug":492,"stem":493,"video":485,"__hash__":494},"blog\u002Fblog\u002Fen-led-screen-airport-transport-hub-2026.md","LED Screens for Airports and Transport Hubs: 2026 Complete Guide","Pixelight",{"type":8,"value":9,"toc":459},"minimark",[10,14,19,22,45,48,52,184,188,191,197,203,209,215,219,222,225,251,254,258,261,281,284,345,349,352,378,381,385,388,405,408,412,417,420,425,428,433,436,441,444,449,452],[11,12,13],"p",{},"Airports and major transport hubs are some of the world's most demanding environments for display technology. They operate around the clock, handle millions of passengers annually, and depend on information accuracy for safety and operational efficiency. LED screens have steadily displaced legacy LCD departure boards and projection systems in leading transport facilities worldwide — and for compelling technical and commercial reasons.",[15,16,18],"h2",{"id":17},"why-transport-hubs-are-switching-to-led","Why Transport Hubs Are Switching to LED",[11,20,21],{},"The limitations of legacy display technologies in transport environments are well documented:",[23,24,25,33,39],"ul",{},[26,27,28,32],"li",{},[29,30,31],"strong",{},"LCD FIDS boards"," with bezels create reading gaps and require back-of-house maintenance access that is increasingly incompatible with modern terminal layouts",[26,34,35,38],{},[29,36,37],{},"Split-flap (Solari) departure boards",", still found in a handful of European stations, have replacement parts scarcity and create noise in expanded modern terminals",[26,40,41,44],{},[29,42,43],{},"Projection systems"," in large concourses struggle with ambient light levels and require regular lamp changes that interrupt operation",[11,46,47],{},"LED video walls address all three limitations simultaneously: seamless bezel-free display, front-access maintenance, and brightness performance that exceeds even the most challenging terminal lighting conditions.",[15,49,51],{"id":50},"application-map-screens-by-terminal-zone","Application Map: Screens by Terminal Zone",[53,54,55,74],"table",{},[56,57,58],"thead",{},[59,60,61,65,68,71],"tr",{},[62,63,64],"th",{},"Terminal Zone",[62,66,67],{},"Screen Function",[62,69,70],{},"Typical Pixel Pitch",[62,72,73],{},"Typical Brightness",[75,76,77,92,106,120,134,146,159,171],"tbody",{},[59,78,79,83,86,89],{},[80,81,82],"td",{},"Kerb \u002F landside entrance",[80,84,85],{},"Arrival\u002Fdeparture summary, advertising",[80,87,88],{},"P4–P6 outdoor",[80,90,91],{},"5,000–8,000 nits",[59,93,94,97,100,103],{},[80,95,96],{},"Check-in hall",[80,98,99],{},"Airline zone indicators, advertising",[80,101,102],{},"P2.5–P4",[80,104,105],{},"800–1,500 nits",[59,107,108,111,114,117],{},[80,109,110],{},"Security queuing",[80,112,113],{},"Queue status, wayfinding",[80,115,116],{},"P2.5–P3",[80,118,119],{},"600–1,200 nits",[59,121,122,125,128,131],{},[80,123,124],{},"Departure lounge",[80,126,127],{},"Gate information, advertising, dwell content",[80,129,130],{},"P2.0–P3",[80,132,133],{},"600–1,000 nits",[59,135,136,139,142,144],{},[80,137,138],{},"Departure corridor \u002F pier",[80,140,141],{},"Continuous information strip",[80,143,102],{},[80,145,105],{},[59,147,148,151,154,157],{},[80,149,150],{},"Gate boards",[80,152,153],{},"Flight-specific FIDS, boarding status",[80,155,156],{},"P2.0–P2.5",[80,158,133],{},[59,160,161,164,167,169],{},[80,162,163],{},"Baggage reclaim",[80,165,166],{},"Belt assignment, transfer connections",[80,168,102],{},[80,170,133],{},[59,172,173,176,179,181],{},[80,174,175],{},"Arrivals hall",[80,177,178],{},"Meeting point information, ground transport",[80,180,102],{},[80,182,183],{},"800–1,200 nits",[15,185,187],{"id":186},"fids-integration-technical-architecture","FIDS Integration: Technical Architecture",[11,189,190],{},"The integration of LED screens with flight information data systems is a multi-layer technical challenge. The architecture typically comprises:",[11,192,193,196],{},[29,194,195],{},"Layer 1 — Data source:"," The airport's FIDS database receives flight data from airlines, the ATC system (via AMOS or similar), and ground handlers. This data is updated in near real-time as aircraft land, depart, or encounter delays.",[11,198,199,202],{},[29,200,201],{},"Layer 2 — Content management system:"," The LED CMS subscribes to FIDS data via API. A template engine maps incoming data fields (flight number, destination IATA code, status, estimated time, gate) to the visual template. Status codes (On Time, Boarding, Final Call, Departed, Cancelled) trigger colour changes and priority formatting in the template.",[11,204,205,208],{},[29,206,207],{},"Layer 3 — Display network:"," The CMS distributes rendered content to each screen via the airport's secure LAN. Critical FIDS screens operate on a dedicated VLAN, isolated from the advertising and wayfinding network, with QoS prioritisation.",[11,210,211,214],{},[29,212,213],{},"Layer 4 — Redundancy:"," FIDS displays require dual data paths. If the primary FIDS feed fails, screens switch automatically to a secondary feed within 500 ms. Controller cards carry hot-standby partners that activate without human intervention.",[15,216,218],{"id":217},"ultra-wide-formats-engineering-the-corridor-experience","Ultra-Wide Formats: Engineering the Corridor Experience",[11,220,221],{},"One of the most architecturally distinctive applications of LED in airports is the corridor information strip — a continuous LED installation running the length of a departure pier, providing passengers with gate information, wayfinding, advertising, and ambient content throughout their walk.",[11,223,224],{},"These installations use custom aspect ratios often exceeding 32:9. Engineering challenges include:",[23,226,227,233,239,245],{},[26,228,229,232],{},[29,230,231],{},"Pixel-perfect alignment"," across 15–30 m of continuous installation, with zero visible joints or brightness discontinuities between cabinets",[26,234,235,238],{},[29,236,237],{},"Content management"," across the full width: some zones display local gate information while others show network-wide advertising, all within a single visual composition",[26,240,241,244],{},[29,242,243],{},"Structural attachment"," to terminal ceiling and fascia structures, coordinated with MEP services (sprinklers, HVAC, lighting)",[26,246,247,250],{},[29,248,249],{},"Cable management"," in finished architectural spaces without exposed conduit",[11,252,253],{},"Pixelight has delivered ultra-wide corridor LED installations in transport environments, drawing on 19 years of integration experience from its bases in Tourcoing and Monaco. Each installation is pre-engineered with a full BIM coordination model to resolve clashes with building services before any on-site work commences.",[15,255,257],{"id":256},"advertising-revenue-the-commercial-case","Advertising Revenue: The Commercial Case",[11,259,260],{},"Airport LED advertising is one of the highest-yielding DOOH inventory categories. The audience characteristics that drive premium pricing:",[23,262,263,269,275],{},[26,264,265,268],{},[29,266,267],{},"Captive dwell time:"," Average airport dwell time post-security in European airports is 90–120 minutes — far exceeding any other DOOH environment",[26,270,271,274],{},[29,272,273],{},"Affluent demographic:"," Business and premium leisure travellers index highly on income and purchasing intent for luxury, travel, automotive, and technology categories",[26,276,277,280],{},[29,278,279],{},"National and international reach:"," Major hub airports deliver national coverage in a single installation",[11,282,283],{},"A monetised LED screen network in a regional French airport (1.5–3 million passengers\u002Fyear) operated under a JCDecaux or Clear Channel concession generates approximately:",[53,285,286,299],{},[56,287,288],{},[59,289,290,293,296],{},[62,291,292],{},"Screen Location",[62,294,295],{},"Revenue per Screen per Year",[62,297,298],{},"Notes",[75,300,301,312,323,334],{},[59,302,303,306,309],{},[80,304,305],{},"Landside entrance (12 m²)",[80,307,308],{},"€60,000–90,000",[80,310,311],{},"High traffic, mix of greeters and travellers",[59,313,314,317,320],{},[80,315,316],{},"Check-in zone (6 m² ×4)",[80,318,319],{},"€40,000–70,000 each",[80,321,322],{},"Airline zone targeting possible",[59,324,325,328,331],{},[80,326,327],{},"Departure lounge (6 m² ×6)",[80,329,330],{},"€35,000–60,000 each",[80,332,333],{},"Captive post-security audience",[59,335,336,339,342],{},[80,337,338],{},"Baggage reclaim (4 m² ×4)",[80,340,341],{},"€25,000–45,000 each",[80,343,344],{},"Arrivals, high emotional engagement",[15,346,348],{"id":347},"reliability-maintenance-and-service-agreements","Reliability, Maintenance, and Service Agreements",[11,350,351],{},"Airport operations cannot tolerate visible screen failures. A darkened FIDS board creates passenger confusion, staff burden, and regulatory implications for safety-critical information. Maintenance agreements for airport LED installations should specify:",[23,353,354,360,366,372],{},[26,355,356,359],{},[29,357,358],{},"4-hour emergency response"," for complete screen failures on FIDS positions",[26,361,362,365],{},[29,363,364],{},"Front-access module replacement"," without scaffolding or terminal closure",[26,367,368,371],{},[29,369,370],{},"Remote health monitoring"," with proactive alerts before visible failure occurs (temperature anomalies, pixel group failures, power supply variance)",[26,373,374,377],{},[29,375,376],{},"Spare parts on-site"," for common failure components: power supplies, controller cards, and a stock of LED modules",[11,379,380],{},"Pixelight's airport maintenance contracts include 24\u002F7 remote monitoring via the PixelMonitor platform, with push alerts to the client's facilities management team and automatic ticket creation in the client's CAFM system.",[15,382,384],{"id":383},"procurement-and-certification-for-airport-projects","Procurement and Certification for Airport Projects",[11,386,387],{},"Airport LED procurement typically falls under European public contract regulations (above the EU threshold of €431,000 for works). Technical specifications should include:",[23,389,390,393,396,399,402],{},[26,391,392],{},"EN 62368 (audio\u002Fvideo and IT equipment safety) certification",[26,394,395],{},"EN 55032 \u002F EN 55035 electromagnetic compatibility",[26,397,398],{},"IEC 60529 IP rating appropriate to zone (IP20 minimum indoor, IP65 for landside\u002Foutdoor)",[26,400,401],{},"CE marking and EU Declaration of Conformity",[26,403,404],{},"REACH and RoHS compliance for hazardous substances",[406,407],"hr",{},[15,409,411],{"id":410},"faq","FAQ",[11,413,414],{},[29,415,416],{},"What reliability standards are required for LED displays in airports and transport hubs?",[11,418,419],{},"Airport and transport hub operators typically require LED displays with a minimum MTBF of 100,000 hours and specify 99.5% or higher annual availability, equating to fewer than 44 hours of downtime per year per screen. Many major airport operators mandate IEC 62368 electrical safety compliance, EN 55032 electromagnetic compatibility, and front-access maintenance capability. Critical information displays (FIDS, departure\u002Farrival boards) additionally require N+1 controller redundancy with automatic failover under 500 milliseconds.",[11,421,422],{},[29,423,424],{},"How are LED screens integrated with FIDS departure and arrival data systems?",[11,426,427],{},"Flight information display systems (FIDS) integrate with LED screens via standard data protocols — typically REST or SOAP APIs, or the IATA SSIM\u002FaDIF data formats for flight data. The LED content management system subscribes to the FIDS data feed and populates pre-designed templates with live flight data: flight number, destination, status, gate, and time. Changes propagate to the screen within 5–15 seconds of the FIDS database update. Redundant data paths ensure displays remain accurate even if one feed fails.",[11,429,430],{},[29,431,432],{},"What brightness level is needed for LED screens in airport terminal lighting conditions?",[11,434,435],{},"Airport terminal interiors present mixed lighting conditions: skylight zones adjacent to glazed facades can reach 5,000–10,000 lux of ambient light, while check-in halls and departure lounges typically operate at 300–800 lux. For general information screens in medium-brightness terminal zones, 800–1,200 nits is sufficient. Screens positioned near natural light ingress should be specified at 1,500–3,000 nits with automatic brightness control to maintain legibility in all lighting conditions.",[11,437,438],{},[29,439,440],{},"How do airports monetise LED screens through advertising revenue?",[11,442,443],{},"Airport advertising is managed through concession agreements with specialist OOH media operators or directly by the airport authority. LED screens enable programmatic DOOH selling: multiple advertisers rotate on 10–15 second slots, with premium positioning during peak passenger flow periods. A well-positioned 6 m² LED screen in a major European hub terminal can generate €80,000–150,000 in annual advertising revenue. Advertisers pay a premium for airport inventory due to the affluent, captive, dwell-time-rich audience profile.",[11,445,446],{},[29,447,448],{},"What are the typical dimensions and formats for LED screens in airport corridors and terminals?",[11,450,451],{},"Airport corridor LED installations favour ultra-wide formats that exploit the long, narrow geometry of departure piers and terminal corridors. Common formats include 32:9 aspect ratio strips (typically 10–20 m wide × 1.2–1.8 m tall) installed at ceiling level, providing continuous information corridors that passengers read naturally as they walk. Check-in hall overhead arrays often use custom aspect ratios — 48:9 or wider — to span the full check-in row. Departure gate screens are typically 2:1 to 16:9 format, 40–120 m² for primary gate screens in large international terminals.",[11,453,454],{},[455,456,458],"a",{"href":457},"\u002Fcontact","Contact Pixelight to discuss your airport or transport hub LED display project",{"title":460,"searchDepth":461,"depth":461,"links":462},"",2,[463,464,465,466,467,468,469,470],{"id":17,"depth":461,"text":18},{"id":50,"depth":461,"text":51},{"id":186,"depth":461,"text":187},{"id":217,"depth":461,"text":218},{"id":256,"depth":461,"text":257},{"id":347,"depth":461,"text":348},{"id":383,"depth":461,"text":384},{"id":410,"depth":461,"text":411},"secteurs","2026-05-16","How airports, train stations and transport hubs are deploying LED screens for passenger information, advertising and wayfinding in 2026. Reliability, FIDS integration and ultra-wide formats.","md",[476,478,480,482,484],{"q":416,"a":477},"Airport and transport hub operators typically require LED displays with a minimum MTBF of 100,000 hours and specify 99.5% or higher annual availability, equating to fewer than 44 hours of downtime per year per screen. Many major airport operators (ADP, Aéroports de Lyon, hub operators across Europe) mandate IEC 62368 electrical safety compliance, EN 55032 electromagnetic compatibility, and front-access maintenance capability. Critical information displays (FIDS, departure\u002Farrival boards) additionally require N+1 controller redundancy with automatic failover under 500 milliseconds.",{"q":424,"a":479},"Flight information display systems (FIDS) integrate with LED screens via standard data protocols — typically REST or SOAP APIs, or the IATA SSIM\u002FaDIF data formats for flight data. The LED content management system subscribes to the FIDS data feed and populates pre-designed templates with live flight data: flight number, destination, status, gate, and time. Changes propagate to the screen within 5–15 seconds of the FIDS database update. Redundant data paths (primary feed + backup from a secondary FIDS server) ensure displays remain accurate even if one feed fails.",{"q":432,"a":481},"Airport terminal interiors present mixed lighting conditions: skylight zones adjacent to glazed facades can reach 5,000–10,000 lux of ambient light, while check-in halls and departure lounges typically operate at 300–800 lux. For general information screens in medium-brightness terminal zones, 800–1,200 nits is sufficient. Screens positioned near natural light ingress — skylight zones, terminal entrance facades — should be specified at 1,500–3,000 nits with automatic brightness control to maintain legibility and prevent energy waste in lower-light areas.",{"q":440,"a":483},"Airport advertising is managed through concession agreements with specialist OOH media operators (JCDecaux, Clear Channel, Lagardère Travel Retail in France) or directly by the airport authority. LED screens enable programmatic DOOH selling: multiple advertisers rotate on 10–15 second slots, with premium positioning during peak passenger flow periods (06:00–09:00 and 16:00–20:00). A well-positioned 6 m² LED screen in a major European hub terminal can generate €80,000–150,000 in annual advertising revenue. Advertisers pay a premium for airport inventory due to the affluent, captive, dwell-time-rich audience profile.",{"q":448,"a":451},null,"\u002Fimages\u002Fblog\u002Fecran-led-outdoor-dooh.jpg","en",{},true,"\u002Fblog\u002Fen-led-screen-airport-transport-hub-2026",{"title":5,"description":473},"en-led-screen-airport-transport-hub-2026","blog\u002Fen-led-screen-airport-transport-hub-2026","U0-pk6b-FwcbklbHU9yuv6CR00liRqjMgvgtReJAdj0",[496,501,506],{"title":497,"description":498,"date":472,"category":471,"slug":499,"path":500},"LED Screens for Broadcast & Studio XR: Virtual Production Guide 2026","Complete guide to LED walls for TV studios, XR stages and ICVFX in 2026. Pitch, refresh rate, genlock, Brompton & Novastar processors — ROI vs green screen.","en-led-screen-broadcast-studio-xr-virtual-production-2026","\u002Fblog\u002Fen-led-screen-broadcast-studio-xr-virtual-production-2026",{"title":502,"description":503,"date":472,"category":471,"slug":504,"path":505},"LED Screens for Casinos and Entertainment Venues: 2026 Complete Guide","How casinos, nightclubs, concert halls and entertainment centres use LED screens in 2026. Immersive environments, curved walls, DJ booth LED, high refresh rate and content integration.","en-led-screen-casino-entertainment-venue-2026","\u002Fblog\u002Fen-led-screen-casino-entertainment-venue-2026",{"title":507,"description":508,"date":472,"category":471,"slug":509,"path":510},"LED Video Walls for Control Rooms, NOC & SOC: 2026 Buyer's Guide","How to design an LED video wall for control rooms, network operations centres and security operations centres. 24\u002F7 reliability, fine pitch, bezel-free displays and ergonomics.","en-led-screen-control-room-noc-soc-2026","\u002Fblog\u002Fen-led-screen-control-room-noc-soc-2026",1779228682403]