LAX has built a new terminal designed for the wealthy

For all those celebrities and wealthy travellers who don't want to wade through the morass of paparazzi and regular passengers, a security company is debuting a unique LAX terminal with an exclusive entrance, luxury suites, well-stocked refrigerators, private bathrooms and even daybeds.

The $29.4 million facility, called the Private Suite at Los Angeles International Airport, is the first terminal of its kind in the nation. In addition to the fancy fringes, terminal users get access to a dedicated team of security screeners before they are whisked to their plane in a shiny new BMW sedan.

But all that privacy and comfort comes at a steep price: a $10,000 annual membership plus $3606 for each domestic flight or $4007 for each international flight. The cost covers a posse of up to four people.

Open to the public, for a cost

Nonmembers can use the terminal by paying $4675 for a domestic flight and $5434 for an international flight - in each case accommodating up to three people.

The terminal, which officially opened this month, was built by Gavin de Becker & Associates, a security consulting firm, at no cost to taxpayers. The Los Angeles firm expects terminal operations to generate $46.7 million in revenue for the airport over the next nine years.

Drama- and delay-free

Gavin de Becker, chief executive of the firm that bears his name, said the airport also benefits because the terminal reduces the potential for drama and delay from celebrities and other VIPs traipsing through the public terminals. Plus, de Becker said, the Private Suite is used to screen international crews flying out of the airport, which frees space in the Tom Bradley International Terminal to screen passengers.

De Becker estimates that only 10 percent of people using the service will be celebrities. Most members will be executives and others who want to get through LAX without causing a stir.

"Our members have an extremely predictable experience," he said.

The kid-glove treatment begins at the Private Suite entrance, where visitors must show identification to armed security guards when they arrive. Tall gray gates make it nearly impossible for photographers and fans with selfie sticks to get up close to the rich, famous and well-connected.

Famous folk such as Kanye West and Russell Brand, who have both tangled with the paparazzi at LAX, would be able to zip into the new terminal and go directly to a private room where they can eat, drink and nap before it's time to depart.

What's inside

Inside the Private Suite, users are escorted to one of 13 private lounges. The suites vary in size and shape, some designed for families and others for smaller groups. The amenities include:

- a daybed

- a flat-screen TV

- a food pantry stocked with nuts, jelly beans, peanuts and chocolate-covered almonds, among other snacks

- a refrigerator stocked with soft drinks and alcoholic drinks

- a private bathroom stocked with deodorant, aspirin, Chapstick and mouthwash

- a room for infants with a changing table and bottle warmer

- a room for Middle Eastern clients with prayer mats, a Koran and medjool dates.

The Private Suite includes an area where officers from the Transportation Security Administration screen passengers and luggage and a separate section where international travellers are cleared by U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents.

Chauffeured to your flight

Once their flight is ready to take off, travellers are escorted to a BMW 7 series sedan and driven on service roads around the airport's runways to their waiting plane.

To get on their plane, travellers can either board via a private staircase directly from the tarmac. In some cases, they will be able to use a separate staircase attached to the public jetway.

De Becker said having the BMW sedans driving around the runways to access private staircases on the tarmac won't delay flight landings or departures at LAX. Airport spokesman Frederick Badliss said the new service would have "little to no effect" on air traffic because the BMWs will use the same service roads used by airport fleet vehicles.

De Becker said his business will not ask the airlines to delay any flights for customers of the Private Suite, who are urged to arrive at the private terminal just as early as they would for any other LAX flight.

VIP around the world

A facility at London's Heathrow Airport that offers private high-end service for members was the inspiration for the Private Suite at LAX, de Becker said.

The service at Heathrow, originally dubbed Heathrow by Invitation but now called Heathrow VIP, was launched in 2013 and created to serve heads of state. It costs about $4672 for a group of up to three people and includes private lounges and chauffeur service directly from a passenger's home.

Private terminals also can be found in Dubai; Munich, Germany; and Zurich, Switzerland, among other airports. De Becker said he is in negotiations to open a private terminal at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York.

The price of luxury

The facility cost $29.4 million to build and de Becker's firm pays the airport $333,373 a month in fees. Staffing costs an additional $4.9 million a year, he said. De Becker's firm also pays the U.S. Customs and Border Protection for screening services, but the TSA doesn't charge the company.

The Private Suite already has 1200 members; many memberships have been purchased by corporations for their executives or have been given to de Becker's clients. De Becker said his goal is to serve an average of at least 25 groups of travelers a day.

"I'm optimistic that we will do well and the aviation industry will do well," he said.

LA Times