Better late than never, poetic pontificators might argue. However, it took a half-dozen missed deadlines for the new integrated terminal at Kolkata’s Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose International Airport to commence even trial runs. A ‘modern’ edifice that looks like nothing so much as a glorified aircraft hangar, the terminal hopes to be fully operational in October — to international flights. Domestic airlines must apparently wait for winter.

Officials are making much of its superior architecture and cultural attributes, the former including a pillar-free, tress-supported roof. Of the latter, the less said, the better: scribbles by Bengal’s favourite poet are to be rendered in topiary, presumably to be read from the air; they also dangle from the ceiling amidst. It would appear that — like the Bengali’s worship of Tagore — the airport is determined be a cliché.

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