If you’re a regular traveler like me, you already know this: most airports are awful. You’re constantly rushing through a crowded terminal, competing with a harried mess of humanity, only to then cram yourself into a narrow seat for a few hours until you get to your next terminal purgatory—meanwhile, dragging your luggage the whole way. Germs waft through the air. Couples argue about holding each other up in the TSA line. As I write this, I’m sitting in the F concourse at Minneapolis Saint-Paul listening to a kid whine at NASCAR-engine levels about not getting soft serve ice cream and his Chick-fil-A nuggets.
Airports are the worst.
Except…not all of them. Around the world, there are a growing number of destinations that are making their airports, well, welcoming. A shocking idea, I know. I’ve been to a handful of these miraculous creations (compared to the usual dreadfulness)—international airports like Vancouver, Zurich, and Munich. They’re clean, organized, and, best of all, have a place to get some fresh air before your next long-haul flight. With this new wave of amenities (and your travel sanity) in mind, here are the best airports in the world, from Asia and the Middle East to right here in North America, that offer incredible open-air areas to soothe your traveling stress.
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Singapore Changi Airport, Singapore (SIN)
✈️ Don’t Miss: The Indoor Climbing Area Changi Airport is a perennial winner of the world’s best airport award, thanks to a seemingly never-ending list of Disneyland-like attractions, including a sport-climbing facility onsite, a swimming pool and jacuzzi on the roof of Terminal 1, and the world’s tallest indoor waterfall, at seven stories high. There’s even an indoor forest, called Shiseido Forest Valley, with walking paths and a glass walkway that rises 23 meters above the terminal floor, allowing you to trek amongst the treetops. (To see how impressive the full list of attractions is, you can scroll through it here.)
For nature lovers, though, the true gem is Changi’s series of gardens, including Cactus Garden, Sunflower Garden, Enchanted Garden, Petal Garden, and Butterfly Garden. Together, they offer the most complete botanical adventure you’ll get at any airport on earth. And even though some of the gardens are indoors, it’s hard to tell.
The Butterfly Garden, for example, is set in a large conservatory designed as a tropical forest, with an 18-foot high grotto waterfall. It’s home to over 1,000 butterflies from as many as 40 species and, on your way to your gate, you can stop by and stand amidst the flora as the butterflies flutter around you. For a splash of yellow, the Sunflower Garden is worth a quick stop if you have some time to kill in terminal 2, and the Enchanted Garden, also in Terminal 2, is designed to offer Shangri-La-like atmosphere, with the sounds of a forest pumped into is a large room dominated by four giant glass bouquet sculptures that are filled with a variety of flowers and ferns.
Perhaps most Zen of all, though, is the Cactus Garden on the roof of Terminal 1, which features over 100 species of arid plants from Asia, Africa, and the Americas—everything from prickly pear cactus to giant ponytail palm trees. It also has a bar and shaded tables, so it may just be the best place to grab a local Tiger Beer while you hope for another hour delay on your flight out.
Denver International Airport, Colorado (DEN)
✈️ Don’t Miss: The Ice-Skating Rink This pick comes with a minor asterisk: the primary outdoor area is before you go through security, so you’ll need to enjoy the al fresco offerings in advance of your flight, but the options are worth the early arrival. The space is called the Park on the Plaza, and it’s a large synthetic turf located between the Jeppesen Terminal and the Westin Hotel, underneath the airport’s famous faux mountain peaks.
In summer, the turf is set up with cornhole games and wooden benches for lounging, and there’s often live music or other events throughout the season (all of which are free to the public). In the winter months, typically from Thanksgiving to New Year’s, the area features an open-air ice rink with free loaner skates.
Of course, don’t fret if you’re running on time and need to get through the TSA line: inside the airport there are three outdoor lounges with seating and fire pits, at Concourse A-West near gate A15; on Concourse B-West at gate B7; and at gate C67 on Concourse C-East.
Zurich Airport, Switzerland (ZRH)
✈️ Don’t Miss: The Outdoor Walking Paths If you find yourself craving one last view of the Alps before your flight home, Zurich Airport, the primary hub for Swiss International Airlines, has an executive lounge with an outdoor terrace that has impressive views of the mountains beyond. The Aspire Lounge at the Midfield Terminal is open to all travelers for a fee (roughly $50) and, in addition to the outdoor terrace views, you get access to all of the lounge’s food and drink options, and other amenities.
But the real reason Zurich Airport is on this list is because of its adjacent Der Park Flughafen Zürich, a 20-acre park filled with forested walking paths and a modest hill with good views from up top. It’s a great place to unwind during a long layover or if you get caught waiting for a delayed flight. You’ll need to leave the terminal to access it, but the short walk and fresh air are worth it. During much of the week, there are park rangers who will take you on a 90-minute walking tour, explaining the flora and fauna and how it was designed for maximum relaxation (check the rangers’ availability in advance). There’s even a free cable car to whisk you into the park in the most Swiss way possible.
From the arrivals area, walk across the parking area to the Circle, the large building adjacent to the terminal that hosts restaurants, hotels, and stores. From there you can take the cable car into Der Park.
Vancouver International Airport, Canada (YVR)
✈️ Don’t Miss: The Digital Light Show For most passengers headed through Vancouver Airport, their first introduction (or last farewell) to British Columbia is YVR’s Chester Johnson Park, located directly adjacent to (and underneath) the Canada Line train station. The park is designed to feel like an urban shoreline, with rock-lined paths, native trees, driftwood benches, and a large wooden sculpture—the Musqueam Welcome Figure—curving throughout its length. It’s also home to the Green Wall, a 17-meter-high vegetated art installation made up of, at last count, 27,391 individual plants.
As for inside the airport itself, there’s a new 47-foot-high open-air atrium in the international terminal, with three full-grown hemlock trees in the center. Until recently, the glassed-in atrium was only visible to passengers as they commuted past, like looking into a giant terrarium, but you can now open a door and walk out into the atrium for a breath of fresh air. At night, the trees and rock landscape are lit up by digital light projections—faux waves crashing over the rocks, for example—and a corresponding soundscape. The whole experience is designed to showcase the sights and sounds of B.C., and it does just that and more. It may be the most successful attempt of any airport in the world to bring a little bit of the region’s natural landscape into the airport itself.
Incheon International Airport, South Korea (ICN)
✈️ Don’t Miss: The Indoor Gardens Among the many attractions for passengers flying into or through South Korea’s Incheon Airport—the country’s main international gateway and one of the busiest airports in the world—is a sprawling, conservatory-like seating area in Terminal 2.
The green features are spread throughout much of the large space, with a mix of flowers, trees, ferns, and bamboo growing from planters situated throughout—in the floors, dividing walls, large garden spaces, and above kiosks’ ceilings, with strands hanging down. Smaller water, rock, cactus, and pine gardens are strategically located across the airport campus, too. Technically, none of these areas are outdoors, but the enormous roof above the main area, with translucent panels in the center, makes it feels as such, which is why we’re including it on this list.
We’re also including Incheon because of the airport’s ongoing plans to add even more green spaces that utilize a variety of plants to create a living, breathing indoor space with healthier air for all visitors. As part of its ongoing upgrades, the airport also plans to add a terrace with an outdoor garden, so passengers can decompress before their (likely long) overseas flight.
Long Beach Airport, California (LGB)
✈️ Don’t Miss: The Palm Treed Courtyard LGB, bills itself as “America’s coolest airport,” and while that moniker is a bit of a stretch, it does have an impressive courtyard with a series of tall palm trees and a drought-tolerant garden. The airport, one of the five major commercial airfields serving the greater Los Angeles metroplex, is the second smallest, with just 11 gates. In such a tiny airport, the 4,200-square-foot courtyard is definitely a unique amenity, one that punches well above its weight.
The courtyard is also ringed by dining options from local establishments, so it’s an excellent place to grab a bite to eat while you wait for your flight out. For those heading to this side of L.A. or points south along the coastline, LGB is definitely a good choice over LAX (see below).
Los Angeles International Airport (LAX)
✈️ Don’t Miss: The Private Lounges For anyone who has traveled through LAX recently, you know it’s a mess, thanks to a $30 billion overhaul one of the world’s busiest airports is getting ahead of the 2028 Summer Olympics, in L.A. By the time construction is done, it will almost be a brand new airport, with new terminals, an elevated train, and an on-site rental-car facility to help eliminate the shuttles current clogging up the passenger pickup/drop-off areas. Already some of the upgrades are beginning to appear, including a series of new lounges with outdoor terraces.
The Star Alliance Lounge in Tom Bradley International Terminal (Terminal B) has a large outdoor deck with fire pits, trees, running water, and great views of the Hollywood Hills in the distance ($75 for standard access). The United Club in Terminal 7 is much smaller—more a balcony than a lounge—but it’s spacious enough to get some fresh air and does have good views of the tarmac ($59 for a single-entry pass).
The new Delta One Lounge, which is open to Delta customers traveling with a Delta One ticket, is the company’s premium lounge, with table service at every seat, a sushi bar, and eight relaxation pods. It also has a large private Sky Deck on the roof, with a landscaped terrace full of chairs, sofas, and enough plants to keep it feeling like a lounge, rather than an extension of the tarmac.
LAX will remain a very urban airport, but with a few spots to sneak in some last-minute SoCal sun, these lounges are worth it, if you can afford them.
Hamad International Airport, Qatar (DOH)
✈️ Don’t Miss: The Indoor Tropical Garden Yes, this is another entry highlighting a space that is not, technically, outdoors, and yet we promise that visiting Hamad Airport’s “The Orchard” will feel more like being in nature than just about any of the other places on this list.
It’s a massive, 64,000-square-foot tropical garden set beneath a soaring, translucent roof shaped like the inside of a shell. More than 300 trees and 25,000 plants were sourced from around the world to create the indoor garden, and at its center is a “water feature” that is best described as a spiraling waterfall emerging from a slanted halo. At points the faux forest is so lush that you almost forget that you’re surrounded by roughly five dozen shops, lounges, and restaurants, with hundreds of rushing bodies scrambling to catch their flights. It’s almost worth a trip to Doha just to see it—or at least a long layover.
Munich International Airport, Germany (MUC)
✈️ Don’t Miss: The Next-Door Surf Park This wouldn’t be Bavaria without beer, so it’s fitting that not only does Munich Airport have a beer garden onsite, it’s also an open-air one, with a covered glass roof. Called the Airbräu, it’s the first brewery in an airport on earth. It has an indoor tavern for drinking, but the patio offers both fresh air, protection from the occasional rain shower, and food and beers, like the Fliegerquell Lager and the Kumulous Wheat.
Munich Airport also has a 900-square-meter observation deck, with seating and binoculars to take in the alpine views on clear days. Across from Terminal 1 is Visitor’s Park, an extensive outdoor area with grass lawns and trails, a playground area, interactive exhibits, benches for sitting, and a 90-foot-high hill overlooking the area. It’s an excellent place to stretch the legs before a long flight or burn off some of the kids’ energy before boarding.
Oh, and just in case you have half a day to kill, there’s a brand-new surf park, O2 Surftown MUC, just around the corner from the airport. It’s Germany’s first wave pool and the largest in Europe, at over 215,000 square feet, capable of churning out waves seven feet high. Getting there is a cinch: it’s just a five-mute car ride away, literally in the shadow of landing flights.
Bonus Picks: Other Noteworthy Outdoor Areas in North American Airports While these airports do have notable outdoor areas, they really cant compare with our picks for the best airports in the world featured above. That said, theyre still worth calling out on honorable mentions—especially for domestic travelers—for these specific reasons.
✈️ Austin-Bergstrom International Airport, Texas (AUS) The Chase Sapphire Lounge, accessible to Sapphire Reserve cardmembers, has a large outdoor terrace with seating overlooking the tarmac and Hill Country beyond. The Delta Sky Club, directly adjacent to the Sapphire Lounge, also has outdoor seating, and more outdoor areas are in the works as part of the airport’s multi-billion-dollar expansion.
✈️ San Francisco International Airport, California (SFO) For ticketed passengers, there’s a free outdoor terrace in the international terminal with seating and excellent views of the airfield and beyond. Three bronze sculptures by local artist Woody Othello decorate the space, at the end of Boarding Area G. For plane-watching, there’s also the SkyTerrace, located atop Terminal 2. It’s a good, free place for the public to come (no ticket necessary) to see some of the largest aircraft serving SFO. The SkyTerrace is open Friday through Monday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
✈️ Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, Georgia (ATL) The Delta Sky Club in Concourse F has an outdoor deck for its club members, with seating for roughly 40 guests and a free bar. As with all of Delta’s clubs, there’s free food and drinks, as well as WiFi.
✈️ John F. Kennedy International Airport, New York (JFK) For travels heading through JetBlue’s Terminal, there’s a roughly 4,000-square-foot post-security rooftop lounge with green spaces, seating, a children’s play area, and even a dog-walk area. The rooftop lounge also offers passengers views of the Manhattan skyline and of the iconic TWA terminal, which is now the TWA Hotel. The T5 Rooftop and Wooftop Lounge, as it’s called, is open daily from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. and the entrance is across from Gate 28.
Ryan Krogh is a freelance writer and editor based in Austin, Texas. He mostly covers the subjects of travel and the outdoors, and is always looking for a way to get some fresh air in airports worldwide.
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