How Curation and Scale Battle for Dominance Inside the World’s Busiest Airport Hubs

Every Gulf hub airport is a three-dimensional foreign policy document, and the design choices each one makes — what to curate, what to scale, what to borrow, what to commission — reveal more about each country’s theory of national relevance than any white paper or tourism strategy could.
I arrived at this watching the concourse last week at Hamad International past midnight, five hours into a Doha layover on the way from New York to Riyadh, jet-lagged and walking the terminal for something to do. My half-formed thought bubbles became clearer in a way that a daytime transit through any of these hubs never quite allows.
These airports are also, each of them, proof of concept for what I would call the sovereign conversion subsidy: national wealth converted into terminal capacity converted into routing share converted into brand. The Gulf states have spent three decades turning the accident of geography — positioned between Europe, Asia, and Africa — into

