Apologies for this late update. I had got back on June 18th and was going to fill you guys in on what had transpired at FCO. Was in and out of FCO all up on four occasions flying SQ and A3 so got to use T3 and T1. On arrival from SIN baggage delivery took 20-30 minutes. An arrival from YUL (Montreal) that landed later somehow snuck in and got priority! Walking out to the exit just before Customs I noticed an area behind carousels 10 and 11 boarded up. Just above this area is where the scanners and metal detectors are in Departures (on Level 1). On the day of my final departure from FCO I checked-in around counters 374-431. Here I had the opportunity to speak to the checkin operators about the conditions. Some were wearing dust masks. A security guard I recognised from a previous time at FCO avoided the mask. He said he didn’t want to fall asleep on the job. I was also told that 40 flights had been cancelled to alleviate congestion. Anyhow the place didn't smell that bad on first arrival two weeks earlier and since had got better. I had heard and seen TV reports about the acrid smell that was around in the days following the fire and the many protests from workers and unions. Mind you that was just over a month ago. Security Screening, Passport Control and access to Gates G and H were only around the corner. This point of access was there before the fire but was not used. I can't recall exactly how many metal detectors and scanners there were, maybe three all up. The others were located between checkin counters 225-248 and 201-224 where the screening and passport control was done before the fire. This area and the shopping strip is closed off. When I got through the access point you could only go left towards Gates G and H. If I were able to turn right I would be going back towards the main Passport Control and the e-gates.
I won’t go into detail about how the fire started etc., but I did read an interesting article in weekly magazine L’Espresso (18 June) given to me by one of the Singapore Girls. The article confirmed what a worker at FCO had alluded. That it was (in a nutshell) negligence. It is alleged that some electrical work was not carried through or completed. Examination of the ceilings also brought to light (pun not intended) the shonky workmanship of the electrical contractors on successive tenders. This also may have been the reason why the fire alarm system went off late, according to witnesses. Finally, in the area under investigation there was no sprinkler system installed! Regardless of all this, this has been a real setback for FCO at a time when they are trying to get things right, first by completing an extension to Terminal 3 with a new pier which had been delayed and the fast tracking of other expansion plans. As per usual things in Italy will drag on: investigations, courts, misappropriation, nepotism, favouritism and shonky work, etc.
Update: Molo D (Pier D) is operational from midnight July 18.