Home Travel Business-Class Seats Become Private Cocoons With Doors and Walls

Business-Class Seats Become Private Cocoons With Doors and Walls

Business-Class Seats Become Private Cocoons With Doors and Walls
Recaro’s new business class seats with dividing walls, closed doors.

The next generation of business-class seats will come with doors and dividing walls, helping coronavirus-wary passengers cocoon themselves from other travellers as they return to the skies.

The new chair, which manufacturer Recaro Aircraft Seating GmbH will unveiled in June, will also give passengers more shoulder and legroom, Chief Executive Officer Mark Hiller said in an interview at the Singapore Air show. He said “passengers want more privacy in post-pandemic era. With the door closed and the wall extended, the seat effectively becomes an enclosed booth inside the cabin”.

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Hiller said the pandemic has accelerated a preference among airlines and passengers for seats that provide greater isolation. Even Recaro’s newest premium economy seat tries to achieve that goal with a headrest that wraps more around the head, he said.

“The challenge is really to design something that gives you privacy but doesn’t create a claustrophobic feeling,” Hiller said.

Recaro, whose customers include Emirates, Air France-KLM and Cebu Pacific, has already received orders for the new business-class seat, which cost more than 100,000 euros ($113,000) each, Hiller said.

Fitting the door, which is made from lightweight carbon-fibre honeycomb, presented a challenge because it added weight, and must open even after a hard landing, Hiller said. It has been approved by U.S. and European regulators, he said.

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Airlines resuming services after the pandemic have seen surging demand for seats in premium cabins, where travellers are less densely packed. That’s pushed airlines to put a greater focus on these sections, which are typically more profitable.

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Mark Hiller Source: Recaro Aircraft Seating GmbH

Hiller said the comfort gap between economy and premium cabins is getting wider.

“There’s a polarization,” Hiller said. “People either want to go from A to B for the lowest price, or they want something extraordinary.”

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The cheapest seats are getting simpler, and some airlines are asking Recaro to deliver them without in-flight entertainment systems in order to save space and weight, he said.