SFO Quiet Airport (2025)

(viewfromthewing.com)

150 points | by CaliforniaKarl 2 days ago ago

95 comments

  • changoplatanero 2 days ago ago

    I had to sleep overnight in the phoenix airport once. All night long a loud speaker was repeating at high volume "Caution: the moving walkway is coming to an end." I remember wishing that it would indeed come to an end.

    • CGMthrowaway 2 days ago ago

      Hit the E-stop button next time. The belt will stop and won't get restarted until the morning when a maintenance guy comes around.

      • SR2Z 2 days ago ago

        I'm sure the belt will stop, I'm less sure the audio will.

      • kstrauser 2 days ago ago

        That sounds like a great way to get tossed out of an airport.

        • CGMthrowaway a day ago ago

          Sir this is hacker news not hall monitor news

          • kstrauser 21 hours ago ago

            I’m not the hall monitor. I appreciate a good hack. But I’ve also been around the hall monitors enough to recognize what behavior is likely to summon them.

            I don’t particularly care if someone shuts up an obnoxious, unused piece of equipment. The armed federal hall monitors running the place probably see it differently.

      • dredmorbius a day ago ago

        Generally the e-stop button will trigger an e-stop alarm of some sort: buzzer or horn, mandated by regulations.

      • a-b 2 days ago ago

        Sounds like ill advice. Have great potential to discover the authentic beauty of Amtrak and Greyhound modes of traveling.

    • josuepeq 20 hours ago ago

      Same problem at LAS, SLC, and DEN.

      Whenever I have an overnight layover in any of these airports I now pack NIOSH certified ear muffs, along with an eye mask.

      I look ridiculous, but I don’t care.

    • enthdegree 2 days ago ago

      No materials on the escalator

      • crooked-v 2 days ago ago

        The white zone is for loading and unloading only. There is no stopping in the red zone.

        • pdonis 2 days ago ago

          The really fun part is that the couple who read those lines in the movie Airplane actually had been announcers at, IIRC, LAX airport. They must have had a great time doing the movie.

        • ternaryoperator 2 days ago ago

          The actual quote, both from the movie and IRL is: "The white zone is for immediate loading and unloading of passengers only."

        • stooart 2 days ago ago

          The red zone is for loading and unloading only. There is no stopping in the white zone.

          • oaktowner 2 days ago ago

            The red zone has always been for loading and unloading. There's never stopping in a WHITE zone.

            • stooart 2 days ago ago

              Oh really? Why pretend, we both know perfectly well what this is about. You want me to have an abortion.

    • m463 a day ago ago

      Female PA Announcer: The white zone is for immediate loading and unloading of passengers only. There is no stopping in a red zone.

      Male PA Announcer: The red zone is for immediate loading and unloading of passengers only. There is no stopping in a white zone.

      ...

    • dinobones a day ago ago

      Those walkways are only in between each set of gates, there aren’t any actually near gates or anywhere near seating. Where did you sleep lol?

  • jessriedel 2 days ago ago

    Besides making the airport more pleasant, targeting announcements to the relevant travelers also means they are much more likely to be heard. When 99% of announcements are irrelevant, we just mentally screen them out.

    • sefrost 2 days ago ago

      I had this experience starting a new company recently.

      Every single SaaS product seemed to have a dozen onboarding floating modals that need to be dismissed. It would have been impossible to read them all. In most cases I had used the product a lot before but I simply had a new corporate email so they thought I was a new user.

      So if any said anything important I wouldn’t know because I had to dismiss them all.

      • jfil a day ago ago

        This is why Intercom and Pendo are in my adblock list. Enough pop overs!

    • llsf 2 days ago ago

      I agree... in early 2000, at Colombo (Sri Lanka) airport, they were calling my name, over and over, but never picked it up. I started to pay attention when some dispatched army guys (it was after the 2001 Tamil Tigers attack at the airport) were screening everyone at the airport asking for my name... ops sorry.

      • bdunks 2 days ago ago

        I feel like you’ve held back on an interesting story

    • _false 2 days ago ago

      I didn't realise that "quiet airport" still means there are targeted announcements

      • bombcar 2 days ago ago

        The idea is they first try to reach you via the app (I believe) and then announce to the area around the gate only - instead of all announcements going to the entire terminal.

    • MengerSponge 2 days ago ago
  • kstrauser 2 days ago ago

    Not exactly the same thing, but I was flying from SFO to the east coast and this stood out to me:

    At SFO: "Welcome to San Francisco! Please feel free to relax in our yoga and meditation rooms."

    At DTW: "Welcome to Detroit. Remember to cover your face when you sneeze."

    Totally different vibes.

    • wat10000 2 days ago ago

      I always like the differences in the ads.

      SFO: "Use our AI startup!"

      DCA: "Buy our warship!"

      • krackers 2 days ago ago

        "In New York, all the advertising on the streets and on the subway assumes that you, the person reading, are an ambiently depressed twenty-eight-year-old office worker whose main interests are listening to podcasts, ordering delivery, and voting for the Democrats. I thought I found that annoying, but in San Francisco they don’t bother advertising normal things at all. The city is temperate and brightly colored, with plenty of pleasant trees, but on every corner it speaks to you in an aggressively alien nonsense. Here the world automatically assumes that instead of wanting food or drinks or a new phone or car, what you want is some kind of arcane B2B service for your startup" - Sam Kriss

        • WalterBright 2 days ago ago

          Late night TV in LA: "It's Cal Worthington and his dog Spot!" He'd buy up every commercial slot and just run the same ad over and over. He's long gone but his ads live on in my head.

          • kstrauser a day ago ago

            Pussy cow, pussy cow, pussy cow!

        • tverbeure 2 days ago ago

          I haven’t lived in NYC for more than 20 years, but I still associate it with Dr Zizmor, a dermatologist. His ads were all over the subway.

          He retired not too long ago. I know because it was notable enough to deserve a feature in the NY Times.

          • saghm a day ago ago

            I didn't grow up in New York but my wife did, and I think she's mentioned this name before. There's also this specific law practice that would advertise everywhere that I forget the name of that used to have two lawyers in the name but now only has one, which apparently is quite jarring a lot of people who grew up here and were used to the old ads.

            Given how I grew up relatively close to here from a regional perspective (in the Boston area), I was not at all prepared for just how many specific cultural references there are in New York that I would not be familiar with. My in-laws were mildly scandalized by the fact that I had not heard of "Fudgie the Whale" when the topic came up in the first year my wife and I dated.

          • caycep 2 days ago ago

            I remember those ads...

            Here, the infamous one are these James Wang, Esq ads on the placemats for Chinese restaurants in the area. I suspect he placed the ad 20 years ago but they never bothered to change the design...

          • kelnos a day ago ago

            I grew up in NJ in the 80s, and his ads were all over network TV as well. Man, that's a name I haven't thought of in a long time.

        • rafram 18 hours ago ago

          Unfortunately, the B2B SaaS ads have started infecting the subway as well.

      • _moof 2 days ago ago

        Ha. Last time I went through DCA the ads were all "Here's why TikTok isn't evil!"

        • temp8830 a day ago ago

          But usually they are "here's why Palantir isn't evil". Actually, they are "Palantir is evil and that's awesome!"

      • oaktowner 2 days ago ago

        Go to Louisville -- it's all BOURBON.

    • traderj0e 2 days ago ago

      Also DTW having everything in Japanese, I'm guessing cause of the auto industry

      • HoldOnAMinute 2 days ago ago

        Detroit sounds really cool. If I were a young person, I would look for a cheap, once-great, up-and-coming city where I could make my mark, with lots of other young people doing the same thing. The other one is Richmond, VA. There is a secret underground of young, smart, kind people moving there.

  • amiga386 2 days ago ago

    But how am I going to know the white zone is for immediate loading and unloading of passengers only. There is no stopping in the red zone. ?

    • kstrauser 2 days ago ago

      The red zone has always been for loading and unloading of passengers. There's never stopping in a white zone.

      • amiga386 2 days ago ago

        Don't you tell me which zone is for loading, and which zone is for stopping!

    • traderj0e 2 days ago ago

      Is that just in LAX or everywhere? Cause that scene was still relevant in 2000s LAX

      • amiga386 21 hours ago ago

        I've been in a lot of airports, not LAX, and I've never heard voice announcements about loading zones. Most airports just have separate directions for drop off vs parking, and since a terrorist attempted to ram-raid Glasgow airport, neither are near the terminal itself in a lot of cases.

        Interesting, the directors of Airplane! couldn't get actors with "authenticity" for the anouncers, so they hired the actual LAX announcers.

  • pnw 2 days ago ago

    This is a nice idea. I don't remember the last time I walked through an airport without noise cancelling earbuds and my own music playing. The noise level definitely adds to the stress if you are a frequent traveler.

    This is my current favorite airport album. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orph%C3%A9e_(album)

    • lawlorino a day ago ago

      I thought you were going to link Brian Eno’s Music for Airports

      > intent of defusing the anxious atmosphere of an airport terminal as an alternative to "canned" Muzak and easy listening styles.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambient_1:_Music_for_Airports

    • natterangell 2 days ago ago

      Thank you for this! Such a sad demise for the composer. Amazing music, added to my playlist.

      • pnw 2 days ago ago

        Absolutely, Johan is one of my all time favorite composers and as prolific and talented as he was, it's terrible that we will never hear new music from him again. :(

  • Patrick_Devine 2 days ago ago

    I wish they would do this when you're boarding the plane. I get that there is essential information that everyone needs to know, but if you're a frequent flier you've probably heard the "put your larger carry-on in the overhead bin and your smaller bag underneath the seat in front of you" hundreds, if not thousands of times.

    • AlotOfReading 2 days ago ago

      There's a large subpopulation of people flying who seem to have no idea how planes and airports work. Maybe they're sleep deprived or it's their first time flying, but these announcements are targeted at them.

      • s0rce 2 days ago ago

        I think its more likely that the people do know they just don't care and it helps them to put their backpack overhead so they do it anyways. There is minimal/no enforcement.

        • floren 2 days ago ago

          I'm very much a we-live-in-a-society, follow the rules kind of guy, but if I checked a bag and only have my backpack in the cabin, you bet your ass I'm going to try and find a place for it in the overhead instead of cluttering up where I want to put my feet. The flight attendants can go scold the passenger with the oversized roller + backpack + 20 liter "purse" instead.

          • s0rce 2 days ago ago

            Yes, the logical rule would be 1 bag in the overhead per person. If they enforced carry-on sizes strictly and charged less for checked luggage the problem would probably go away.

            • bsder a day ago ago

              It has nothing to do with price. I don't check luggage on domestic flights because of the enormous time lag for the airport to give me back my luggage. (There's also "United Breaks Guitars", but that's an independent problem)

              If I could walk from the plane to the luggage area and my luggage was already there 90% of the time, I probably would check more things.

              However, the US airports simply don't employ enough people to move the luggage around fast enough.

              The is 100% correctable by employing more people. But some CEO needs another yacht, so they don't. So, I simply don't check luggage.

      • et-al 2 days ago ago

        Unfortunately there's also a large subpopulation of people flying who wear noise-cancelling headphones and have their eyes glued to their phones; choosing to be disengaged from their immediate surroundings.

      • Gibbon1 2 days ago ago

        I remember one time I had to fly back from a business trip on the Wednesday before Thanksgiving. Made me realize there is something about business travelers, they cut towards situationally aware and self conscientious types. The opposite of people flying the day before Thanksgiving.

        I flew into the Orange County Airport before they tore it down and made it like the others. Felt very civilized. As I get older I find the hostile public spaces and infrastructure more and more annoying.

    • advisedwang 2 days ago ago

      Especially flying with kids at naptime or bedtime. Trying to get an extremely tired toddler to fall asleep on a plane just to hear an announcement about in flight entertainment. OMG.

    • tencentshill 2 days ago ago

      There is a large and growing population of people leaving their home country for the first time ever, let alone by plane.

    • traderj0e 2 days ago ago

      That particular rule kinda depends on the airline and how full the flight is

    • Rygian 2 days ago ago

      There is apparently 10000 people every day who learn about it for the first time, according to https://xkcd.com/1053/

    • insane_dreamer 2 days ago ago

      Much much worse are the repeated advertisement “announcements” about signing up for their credit card or frequent flyer program

  • danielodievich 2 days ago ago

    One of my formative consulting projects in like 2002 or 2003 was in St. Louis, where couple of hundred of accenture and avanade and microsofties got together for like 6 months week after week to hack on a large software project for multiple states. It was a total crazy show but who cares. I had to take a red eye from west coast to Chicago which landed at 5, then take a 7am to St. Louis. I found some places to just lay there for 2 hours in Ohare, which is already hard. But they all had those TVs that were blasting CNN. I was smart and bought a legendary TV-B-Gone https://www.tvbgone.com/ and it would work on those! And on so many other tvs out there, from the sports bars to obscure brands in the airport shuttle buses. Thank you TV-B-Gone!

  • drfuchs 2 days ago ago

    Burbank Airport used to get recognizable celebrities to record the canned public announcements in their own style. I seem to recall Joan Rivers, Henny Youngman, Jerry Seinfeld, etc. It took some of the edge off while you waited around, at least for a bit. Don't know if this continues.

  • gucci-on-fleek 2 days ago ago

    The Calgary and Edmonton airports are also like this, and I agree that it makes being in the airport so much more pleasant.

    (I think that all the Canadian airports might be similarly quiet, but I haven't flown through them recently so I'm not entirely sure)

    • s0rce 2 days ago ago

      I strongly recommend the Dawson City airport because they don't have security. The whole experience is much more pleasant.

      • soperj 2 days ago ago

        All of New Zealand does this internally. You only need to go through security for international flights. You can show up 5 minutes before the flight.

  • misterboo72 2 days ago ago

    My home airport. I can confirm that this is a (relatively) quiet airport. I wish they had a meditation space. Knowing SF, it's probably coming.

    • ac29 2 days ago ago

      There are Yoga rooms in terminals 1, 2, and 3

    • throw03172019 2 days ago ago

      There is the Berman Reflection Room at SFO.

  • dmazin 2 days ago ago

    Has anyone actually heard Eno at the airport? What is it like? Does it actually calm you?

    • have_faith 2 days ago ago

      No, but I’ve heard Aphex Twin in an aquarium once. Bristol (UK) for anyone interested, which fits.

      • dmazin a day ago ago

        Was it in that kind of touristy area filled with children? I didn’t think to go in.

        Is this a regular thing?!

    • cholantesh 2 days ago ago

      I was hoping to see discussion of this - to my knowledge it was sold to a few airports who removed it after it was poorly received: https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/twentieth-century-mu...

      Personally 1/1 has been absolutely sublime for me as a tool for meditation, but I don't know that I could imagine it in an airport.

      • dmazin a day ago ago

        Yeah, 1/1 is one song I always keep downloaded to my phone for this reason!

        Thanks for that article, love to read about well intended design being poorly received.

  • sagarm 19 hours ago ago

    Noise pollution in public spaces is a widespread problem. Maybe given the success at SFO we can institute and enforce of noise limits elsewhere.

  • rahimnathwani 2 days ago ago

    I was waiting for a flight at SFO, trying to get some work done. Two airport employees were sitting at the next table. One of them started watching a video on her phone, on speaker, at loud volume. I politely asked her to use headphones or turn off the sound. Hey retort: "this is an airport!". I replied that it's a 'quiet airport' but her reaction suggested to me that she was not familiar with the concept.

    • traderj0e 2 days ago ago

      "Quiet airport" doesn't mean this

      • rahimnathwani 2 days ago ago

        It is what quiet airport means, at least in the context of SFO.

        SFO's quiet airport policy is described on page 17 of this document: https://www.flysfo.com/sites/default/files/2025-12/2025-10%2...

        Here are two quotations from that policy, directly relevant to the situation I described:

          "The playing of music is prohibited in the following locations: at the podiums, ticket counters, and seating areas adjacent to gates"
        
          "employees may not use mobile devices, including smart phones and tablets, in “speaker mode” in any public area of the Airport"
  • bonsai_spool 2 days ago ago

    The new Berlin Brandenburg airport is the most quiet and lovely I've seen to date: https://onemileatatime.com/berlin-brandenburg-airport-review...

  • dry_soup 2 days ago ago

    The one time I flew from Austin, there was a band playing at a restaurant in the ticketed area. Going through security it was bad (you could only really hear the drums) but once I was through it was downright painful. Really makes you wonder how these decisions get made.

  • markvdb 2 days ago ago

    I'd love to also have a low smell airport.

    So many airports direct passenger flow through a shopping zone drenched in perfume fumes. Disgusting as far as I'm concerned.

    Not to mention the screaming visual pollution of course.

    • musicale a day ago ago

      The smell of jet (and ground vehicle) exhaust is pervasive. It can't be good to breathe.

    • inatreecrown2 2 days ago ago

      Came here to say just that. Smell and visual noise is rampant in most international Airports, especially the duty free areas.

  • jmugan 2 days ago ago

    This is wonderful. I remember I was in Asia in 2000 relaxing at the airport and was puzzled why it felt so nice and peaceful. Then I realized that it was the lack of repetitive pointless announcements.

  • traderj0e 2 days ago ago

    SFO is so nice just because of this. I hope other airports follow.

    • HoldOnAMinute 2 days ago ago

      Harvey Milk Terminal 1 is my happy place.

  • AnimalMuppet 2 days ago ago

    It's not just announcements. SLC (at least) used to have TVs playing the "Airport Channel". Last time I went through there (and maybe the time before?), they were gone. It makes a big difference. You still have announcements, but at least the announcements aren't cutting through some TV noise that you don't care about that is always there.

  • pavelstoev a day ago ago

    SFO is one of the nicest and cleanest airports I frequently transit through. I am from Florida.

  • caycep 2 days ago ago

    the biggest problem with SFO is all the delayed flights from weather/wind or some other logistical hassle. Usually I try to fly into SJC instead

  • bparsons 2 days ago ago

    The international arrivals section of Vancouver airport is a great example of this. Indoor waterfalls, sound dampening on the walls and ceilings, carpeted floors and wide open space is a huge relief after a 5-15 hr flight. It's also an excellent way of making a great first impression on visitors.

  • insane_dreamer 2 days ago ago

    Newly renovated (and beautiful) PDX does this too

  • mudil 2 days ago ago

    I have this theory that all sorts of stimuli exhaust our nervous system: be it auditory, wind stimulation of skin, shaking or even smells. That's why people get tired flying on airplane, spending a day outside seemingly doing nothing, etc etc

  • ChrisArchitect 2 days ago ago

    Title: San Francisco Airport Removed 90 Minutes of Daily Noise — Travelers Say It Changed Everything