Skip to main content

Road planing

In New York, a pilot and his two passengers had a lucky escape when the engine of their light aircraft failed. And road construction workers played a key role in ensuring that there were no casualties in the incident. When the road crew spotted the Piper Cherokee gliding in, dead stick, towards the Major Deegan Expressway they realised what was about to happen and parked their vehicles so as to halt traffic on the busy roadway. The rapid descent meant that the pilot brought the aircraft down hard onto the s
May 14, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
In New York, a pilot and his two passengers had a lucky escape when the engine of their light aircraft failed. And road construction workers played a key role in ensuring that there were no casualties in the incident. When the road crew spotted the Piper Cherokee gliding in, dead stick, towards the Major Deegan Expressway they realised what was about to happen and parked their vehicles so as to halt traffic on the busy roadway. The rapid descent meant that the pilot brought the aircraft down hard onto the snowy roadway and its undercarriage collapsed with the impact, but the occupants were unharmed, and the aircraft may even prove repairable. The pilot had been treating his passengers to a flypast of the Statue of Liberty when the engine failed and he immediately made a mayday call, with air traffic control trying to guide him into the nearby La Guardia Airport. But the pilot realised he could not reach the airport and, seeing the busy highway just a short distance away, made a split decision to use it as a landing strip instead. His luck was compounded by the quick thinking of the road crew when they stopped the traffic flow to give the pilot sufficient space to land safely. After the aircraft came to a halt the occupants climbed out unharmed and the pilot then used his cellphone to call for a breakdown truck for what was probably its most unusual ever load. The pilot was also concerned that he would be fined for parking the aircraft illegally on the busy Bronx highway but even in this respect he had good luck and avoided a ticket. Motorists stuck in the ensuing traffic jam on the expressway that particular Saturday afternoon had to console themselves with the fact that this was a highly unusual event.

Related Content

  • A macro website launched for microsurfacing processes
    October 9, 2018
    RoadResource.org as a go-to website for surfacing information is now live When RoadResouce.org went live – quietly - in July it was the end of two years of hard work by three major US associations for pavement preservation. But there was no grand party or ceremonial pushing of the “go live” button, says Doug Hogue, vice president and general manager of VSS Macropaver. “For all of us in the industry July is a busy period that left little time to celebrate on the opening day,” says the 51-year-old chartere
  • Bikers and animals
    May 10, 2016
    In the US a kindhearted motorcyclist put her life at risk when she saw a kitten fall out of a vehicle while she waited at the traffic lights at a busy intersection. The woman rider ran forward from her motorcycle, gesturing at vehicles to stop so as to prevent the ginger kitten from being run over. The woman handed the kitten to a passerby before returning to her motorcycle and moving it to the side of the intersection. She then collected the animal and has since taken it home, renaming it Skidmarks.
  • SNAKE SURPRISE
    March 6, 2012
    An American family were driving in their car when a snake suddenly slithered onto the windscreen. The snake slid from a windscreen wiper vent and the couple watched as it moved initially to the right of the screen and then to the left in front of the driver. The husband was a passenger and filmed the snake's progress while his wife drove. The snake finally slid over the door mirror and off the vehicle. Its welfare following the incident is not known but as it fell onto a busy highway it may not have survive
  • Topcon machine control units take the heat off an Alaskan contractor
    December 4, 2015
    Juniper, spruce, cranberry, cottonwood and rose. Most people think of pine trees and berries amid beautiful country fields. But for one contractor based just below the Arctic Circle in the US state of Alaska, the names represent a successful job completed using machine control. Valley General Construction recently finished a US$350,000 contract for the upgrading of country roads in the local borough of Matanuska-Susitna. The colourful names belong to roads in a heavily wooded residential subdivision located