Cleaning Challenges in Airport & Station Scenarios

 
 1. Sustained Cleanliness Hard to Guarantee Under Massive Footfall
Departure/arrival halls and waiting rooms see thousands of passengers every hour, constantly re-soiling floors with footprints, drink spills, food crumbs, and suitcase-wheel marks. Conventional scrubbers work too slowly; a freshly cleaned aisle is re-contaminated in minutes, making a permanently tidy appearance almost impossible.

 2. One Machine Can’t Match Many Floor Types & Many Soils
Terminals combine polished marble, granite, anti-slip epoxy and textured tile. Soils range from sugary drinks and mud to hydraulic oil from baggage conveyors. A single brush pressure or pad type either leaves films behind or scratches stone, forcing operators to choose between poor results or floor damage.

 3. Tight Gaps & Fixed Equipment Create Constant Blind Spots
Under check-in desks, inside security lanes, between shop façades, beneath seats, ticket kiosks and stair turns, aisle widths drop to < 60 cm—too narrow for ride-on scrubbers. Conveyor belts and escalator pits collect dust and wrap films that only manual detailing can reach, consuming labor hours and still leaving hygiene in the hard-to-reach corners.

 4. 24/7 Operations Leave No Window for Quiet, Fast Cleaning
Flights and trains run around the clock; cleaning must coexist with passenger flow and strict scheduling. Large floor areas, noise limits, anti-slip requirements and safety rules mean big machines can’t simply “clean when empty.” Daytime passes risk passenger complaints and trip hazards, while short night windows are insufficient for full-coverage programs.

 
 
 
 
Key Points for Airport & Station Cleaning Solutions
 
 
 
1. Compatibility of Cleaning Equipment with High-Footfall Areas
Operations must guarantee passenger safety: machines need “low-noise, low-dust, tight-turn” capability, plus rapid scrub-and-dry performance to meet the twin demands of safety and traveler experience in crowded spaces.
 
2. Matching Special Zones to Professional Clean Standards
These areas impose the strictest floor-care requirements: dust removal, soil extraction and disinfection in one pass. Heavy-duty stains in baggage reclaim and cargo corridors demand high cleaning power.
3. Controlling Operating Costs Under High-Frequency Use
Equipment runs almost continuously, so brush wear and hose blockages are frequent; energy draw is high and purchase prices can be steep. The goal is to satisfy round-the-clock cleaning while cutting component wear and overall cost of ownership.

Recommended Products