Where to Sleep in Lax

Stranded at LAX: readers slam “anti‑human” airports and debate hotel rights

TLDR: A stranded flyer tested a quiet-but-flawed sleep spot in LAX’s international terminal after a 24-hour delay. Comments flared: many blasted airports as anti-human, others argued the airline should’ve provided a hotel, and seasoned travelers traded hacks and links to turn chaos into a survival playbook.

One traveler’s 24-hour delay at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) turned into a tile-floor sleep review in Terminal B—complete with the endless PA mantra and midnight cart convoys. Cue the crowd: the top vibe is rage at airport design. “Airports aren’t for humans,” cried one commenter, while another vented about hostile architecture and recalled being approached by Hare Krishnas. The article’s Five Nights at Freddy’s nod became a meme: readers dubbed it “Five Nights at LAX,” with the security announcement as the creepy lullaby.

Then the drama: Should the airline have paid for a hotel? Some insisted a 24-hour delay should mean a bed, sparking a rights-vs-reality spat. Practical folks rolled in with survival hacks—use your sweater as a pillow, hunt shadowy corners—and waved old-school resources like sleepinginairports.net. Nostalgia hit hard: veterans swapped stories of pre-dawn Ryanair scrambles and backpacker nights saved by those crowdsourced guides. Global travelers asked for an Incheon (ICN, Seoul) edition, hinting that some airports actually get sleep design right. In short, one man’s cold floor became a community therapy session: equal parts righteous anger, travel tips, and dark humor about the world’s least cozy living rooms—aka terminals.

Key Points

  • A 24-hour flight delay forced an overnight stay inside LAX without access to luggage or spare clothing.
  • The highest-floor hallway near lounges in Terminal B was quiet and dim, making it a potential rest area.
  • Frequent PA announcements continued overnight; volume was slightly lower in the corridor but still disruptive.
  • The corridor had no benches or soft surfaces; sleeping was on hard tile, with cold temperatures and minimal padding.
  • Nighttime staff traffic to a service elevator caused recurring noise about every 10 minutes, reducing rest quality.

Hottest takes

“Freaking airports are not designed for humans.” — amelius
“Normally a 24-hour delay gets you a hotel room.” — comrade1234
“sleepinginairports.net ... saved me from a night of awful sleep.” — macNchz
Made with <3 by @siedrix and @shesho from CDMX. Powered by Forge&Hive.