Fort Lauderdale's Sky-High Runway: Looks Like They're Actually Going to Build This Thing
| Broward County Aviation Division |
| IT'S A BIRD! IT'S A PLANE! It's a plane. Eyes on the road, Ethel. |
The theory goes that there are too many delays at the Fort Lauderdale airport due to planes waiting for a spot on the one active runway, 9L/27R, which runs parallel to I-595. We've never experienced any to speak of, but that's the theory. A fact is that there are contractors in Broward County who would like very much to sell a lot of cement and bulldozer work to government buyers. Here's what the airport looks like now:
| Broward County Aviation Division |
Which brings us to the selected option, AKA "the best idea in the world:"
| Broward County Aviation Division |
Or, was wetland. After a groundbreaking on Monday morning attended by the County Commission and several federal officials including Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood and Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, workers have started moving the plants from the wetland to prepare it for the onslaught of dirt, which will look like this:
| Broward County Aviation Division |
The whole runway-over-a-road thing isn't completely novel: It's used in Las Vegas and L.A., among other cities, and in a recent expansion project at Seattle-Tacoma airport. But combine a major road with railroad tracks under a 1.3 percent slope and you get a record-setter.
For reference, see this airport in Portugal, which features an ocean that's disconcertingly close to the top of the ramp. So if we ever get any direct flights to Funchal, the pilots will be well-prepared to land on this thing.
Don't worry. It all falls within the FAA's acceptable limits -- and officials say passengers won't feel a thing when the plane goes up the ramp.
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