Quick verdict
This page is built like a real editorial lounge review: a clear score, real photos, practical notes, and a verdict based on comfort, food, crowding and usefulness before a flight.
Pros
- Feels huge compared with most lounges
- Great long-layover potential
- Strong premium design language
- Multiple seating and dining zones
Cons
- Long walks are part of the experience
- Peak connection banks can still feel busy
- Access rules can be confusing depending on ticket type
Access & arrival
A good lounge should be easy to find, quick to enter, and clear about eligibility. We judge not just the room itself, but how much friction you experience after security and how confidently staff handle access rules.
Design & seating
The strongest lounges are not just pretty; they give different travelers different choices. We look for bar seats, work counters, private corners, soft chairs, dining tables, charging access, lighting, and noise levels.
Food & drink
We judge food by whether it is fresh, maintained, varied, and useful before a flight. A smaller spread can beat a larger buffet if the execution is better and the bar or coffee service feels premium.
Work & amenities
Wi‑Fi, charging points, bathrooms, showers, quiet spaces, and proximity to gates matter. The best lounges help you reset without making boarding stressful.
Photo gallery


Photos embedded from public lounge review/news pages including The Points Guy and Business Insider.
Final verdict
If you have access, this is the kind of lounge worth checking before your flight. The best parts are the tangible details: where you can sit, whether the food is enough for a meal, whether you can work comfortably, and how crowded the space feels close to departure.