viernes, 28 de junio de 2013

FAA INVEST IN NEW LOGAN AIRPORT RUNWAY SAFETY IMPROVEMENTS



The U.S. Department of Transportation's Federal Aviation Administration(FAA)
and the Massachusetts Port Authority (Massport) today unveiled two significant
safety enhancements to Logan Airport's longest runway. FAA Airport Improvement
Project (AIP) grants totaling $50 million helped fund a crushable concrete safety
barbarea at the harbor end of Runway 33L that is designed to prevent planes from
overrunning the runway. The FAA also installed navigational aid improvements
that will help planes land safely in bad weather.

"Safety is our highest priority," said U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood.
"These investments at Logan Airport will improve the safety of passengers and
airline employees by providing an important backstop in case a plane overruns
the runway."

The new runway safety area includes a 300-foot-wide concrete pier that extends
470 feet into Boston Harbor. The crushable concrete area is installed on top of
the pier and covers an area 170 feet wide and 500 feet long. The Engineered
Material Arresting System (EMAS) bed is designed to quickly and safely stop
and aircraft as large as a 747 in the event the plane moves past the end of the
runway.

"These two safety projects are the latest example of the critical partnership between
the FAA and Massport, which has one mission - enhancing the safety of the flying
public and the air crews that depend on Logan airport," said FAA Administrator
Michael Huerta.

The FAA approves the use of EMAS beds at airports where water, city streets or
other factors limit the available size for a safety area at the end of a runway.
The beds have safely stopped aircraft that overran a runway eight times since 1999.

Massport began the $63 million project in 2011, using $50 million in FAA AIP
funding and $13 million of its own funds. According to Massport, the project
created about 70 construction jobs.

As part of the runway work, the FAA worked closely with Massport to speed
up the installation of an upgraded instrument landing system that provides
precision guidance to help pilots land in strong crosswinds and winter operations
when snow is on the ground. The new system also serves as a backup to another
Category II/III approach.

Massport funded the $15 million instrument landing system project, and FAA
technicians installed it as part of an aggressive seven-month construction schedule.



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