Baltimore Washington Airport has an Amtrak station on its grounds. It is reached by a shuttle bus. Baltimore's light rail goes directly into the terminal. The city's main Amtrak station is on the light rail line. -----Original Message----- From: Bahadir Acuner [mailto:bahadiracuner@xxxxxxxxx] Sent: Tuesday, December 30, 2003 2:18 PM To: AIRLINE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: Airport Architecture Publication Bob, I thought you were being a drill sergent :) Hahaha... Europe has many of these. The ones that I have been to and used conveniently are FRA,MUC, AMS. In US there is EWR. You get on the sky train to get on Amtrak, but there is a Newark Airport station. I used it once earlier this year when US/UA wanted $600 for a 21 days advance, Sat. night stay fare from Philly. I took the train to EWR, flew out of there for $330.. :) BAHA Fan of being cheap -----Original Message----- From: The Airline List [mailto:AIRLINE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Bob Fletcher Sent: Tuesday, December 30, 2003 2:05 PM To: AIRLINE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: Airport Architecture Publication I am going to add a question to this post; ARE THERE ANY AIRPORTS THAT HAVE A REGULAR TRAIN STATION ATTACHED? No, I was not shouting, Just wanted to get everyone's attention. This question includes any train stations/airports in Europe. Thanks, Bob BOB FLETCHER US ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS Military Design Section, 10th Floor S.W. SACRAMENTO DISTRICT, SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA, 95814-2922 PH. (916) 557-7235 -----Original Message----- From: Kees de Lezenne Coulander [mailto:listbox@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Tuesday, December 30, 2003 12:06 PM To: AIRLINE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: Airport Architecture Publication "Michael A. Burris" <yul@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >My thanks to everyone for responding to this thread. I've investigated >Amazon.com and will beging today or tomorrow with ICAO. I was looking >for a publication similiar to Architectural Record, which is a monthly >publication on the architectural industry covering renovation and new >design on large projects worldwide. I fear however, that airports >themselves, might not be large enough for a publication to devote a >full color periodical on the subject. Well, there is Airports International. It is published more or less monthly by Key Publishing in the U.K. (better known as publishers of Air International and Airliner World). It is free for qualified trade subscribers, just go to http://www.airportsint.com. The magazine covers the aiport industry in the widest sense. Whenever a new terminal is opened at a major airport, it will devote two or three pages with photographs and a write-up. But then the next issue might focus on tow tractors, luggage carousels, or security. Kees de Lezenne Coulander -- C.M. de Lezenne Coulander Aircraft Development and Systems Engineering Hoofddorp, the Netherlands