top of page


The Last Time Everyone Saw the Same Airport
Airports are living, breathing ecosystems. Under normal conditions, they evolve gradually—new signage here, resurfaced apron there, a tenant adding a small maintenance facility. These incremental shifts are absorbed naturally by the people who work there every day. Staff, pilots, tenants, and operators adjust without much friction because the pace allows everyone’s mental model of the airport to stay roughly synchronized. Construction projects shatter that equilibrium. Once h

THE FLYING LIZARD
Jul 14 min read


The Worst Time to Document Evolving Conditions Is After They Are Gone
The Real Danger Isn’t Sudden Failure — It’s Silent Drift Most operational environments don’t collapse overnight. They erode gradually, almost invisibly, until the new normal becomes dangerously accepted. A walkway slowly narrows. Temporary storage creeps into movement paths. Material staging expands beyond its boundaries. Equipment shifts position, sightlines vanish, and traffic flows reroute themselves in quiet workarounds. Crews adapt day by day until friction feels routine

THE FLYING LIZARD
May 102 min read
THE DRONE BUZZ
THE FLYING LIZARD FIELD NOTES
Re-writing The Skies
bottom of page
