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

  • Brisbane’s new airport link is an engineering success
    April 12, 2013
    Financial troubles for Brisbane's new Airport Link overshadow its construction success – Adrian Greeman writes. Political argument and legal dispute is likely to rage for some time yet over the bankruptcy of Australian road operator BrisConnect, which went into receivership this February with A$3 billion in debt. Toll paying users for its new Airport Link have been less than half the predicted numbers since it opened in July last summer. But if its nancial engineering is being questioned, the same is not t
  • Police stop
    February 24, 2015
    A Russian police officer recently underwent an unwelcome adventure when he tried to stop a suspect vehicle. Officers wanted to stop the car for a routine check and had set up a roadblock with a police vehicle. But the driver knew he was committing an offence and used his car to shove the police vehicle out of the way and attempted to elude the policemen by driving off at speed. One officer however ended up clinging to the front of the car as it tried to flee from the police. The officer had to hold on for a
  • Boy racer
    September 29, 2014
    A driver in the UK recently caused something of an upset while at the wheel of his girlfriend’s VW. The lad managed to sneak onto the Brands Hatch racing circuit while a race was actually underway. The youth drove through the pits area and as security was lax, made his way onto the track. His friend, also a passenger in the vehicle, filmed the escapade while his girlfriend screamed at him to get off the track. The youth was heard on the video saying to his passengers that he would claim he had become lost w
  • Fly or drive
    February 22, 2012
    A US manufacturer aims to meet international demand for a car that can also fly. The vehicle is rather snappily called The Transition and is being built by a firm called Terrafugia. The vehicle requires a conventional airstrip for take-offs and landings, however its wings can also be folded back so that it can be driven on the road like a car and even parked in a garage. Its single engine drives the propellor when the vehicle is in the air and also turns the wheels when it is being driven on the ground. The