- Airport hosts official attempt for heaviest aircraft to be pulled over 100 metres by a wheelchair team
- Money raised in support of charity to help people with disabilities to learn to fly
- Heathrow celebrates new training and wheelchair repatriation processes to help improve passenger journeys
LONDON, UK, 2018-Nov-29 — /Travel PR News/ — On Friday evening, Heathrow hosted a Guinness World Records® official attempt in support of Aerobility’s mission to help people with disabilities participate in aviation. The airport’s ‘Wheels4Wings’ event saw a team of 100 people in wheelchairs pull a 127.6 tonne 787-9 Boeing Dreamliner over 100 metres, beating the previous record of 67 tonnes held by a Belgian team.
Money raised from this event will g towards registered charity Aerobility’s programmes, helping people with disabilities participate in aviation. Aerobility provides ‘experience of a lifetime’ trial flying lessons for as many terminally ill and disabled people as possible. It also provides subsidised flying days for other disability charities and at-cost instruction and qualification flight training to disabled people.
Participants in today’s fundraising event included security officers, volunteers and operational staff from across Heathrow. All have benefitted from the airport’s newly established Dignity and Care training programme, focused on improving the journeys of passengers with hidden and visible disabilities. The event today also celebrates Heathrow’s new mandatory process for airlines, which will see passengers arriving at the airport automatically reunited with their personal wheelchairs at the entrance to the aircraft, when they descend.
The Wheels4Wings event is being held during a year of rapid changes for Heathrow in which investments of £23 million were made in new equipment, resources and technology to improve service for people with disabilities. The airport also introduced innovations like a distinctive lanyard for passengers with hidden disabilities. The airport’s regulator, the Civil Aviation Authority, acknowledged the significant steps Heathrow has taken to improve its service for people with disabilities. With further focus in the area still being applied, the airport is currently ranked ‘good’ in its services and handling offered.
Organiser of the event, Heathrow Aircraft Operations Manager Andy Knight said:
“As a wheelchair user myself, a former pilot and an aviation enthusiast, I am committed to supporting Aerobility and I am proud of the role Heathrow has taken to support its diversity and inclusion goals. I hope today will see the team raise a lot of funds for Aerobility’s fantastic causes, but also foster a greater awareness of the unique challenges people with disabilities face in aviation, and push for improvements for their benefit – whether they choose to be a passenger in an aircraft or at the controls.”
Notes to editors:
Donations for this event and Aerobility’s mission can be made until December 8 2018 via: https://mydonate.bt.com/events/wheels4wings/476745
About Heathrow
Heathrow is Europe’s largest airport and one of the world’s top international aviation hubs. As the UK’s global gateway, Heathrow welcomes more than 78 million passengers every year. The airport is home to more than 80 airlines and is Britain’s most valuable cargo port, helping to drive British trade growth by connecting the nation to more than 200 destinations around the world. Heathrow is currently ranked by passengers as the ‘Best Airport in Western Europe’ for the third year running and the ‘Best Airport for Shopping’ for eight years in a row. Terminal 2 also holds the title of the ‘World’s Best Airport Terminal’ and is one of the first in the world to be powered by 100% renewable gas and electricity
About Aerobility
Aerobility offers disabled and profoundly ill people, without exception, the opportunity to fly an aeroplane, turning the dream of flying into an exhilarating reality. We own and manage a fleet of adapted aircraft, two flight simulators and run a variety of educational and fun ground-based activities, ensuring we have something for people of all ages, with any disability. Established in 1993, we have a long history of making the magic of flight accessible to all. Run largely by disabled people, for disabled people, we know flying can provide a level of challenge and exhilaration that is difficult to find anywhere else. Our name, Aerobility, encompasses who we are as a charity by combining our core attributes: Aerospace and Ability. By removing the barriers our beneficiaries face on a daily basis, we instil a sense of personal accomplishment, pride and often contribute to rehabilitation.
Contact:
Press Office on 0208 745 7224
Source: Heathrow Airport
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