Skip to Content
Streetsblog Los Angeles home
Streetsblog Los Angeles home
Log In
Streetsblog USA

Someone Has Built the Ultimate 1950s Fantasy Vehicle All Over Again

Terrafugia's prototype blocks the bike lane . Photo: Mary Jordan/Flick
Congestion? This flying car will fix it! Photo: @Mary Jordan
false

This photo pretty much says everything that needs to be said about the absurdity of the flying car.

I wouldn't even bring it up except a flying car salesman was the man of the hour at an otherwise (mostly, er, somewhat) serious daylong forum on transportation issues yesterday sponsored by the Washington Post. The flying car in question was parked outside the building, blocking a bike lane on 14th Street.

Carl Dietrich of Terrafugia ("escape the earth" in Latin) worked hard to convince the audience that what he acknowledged has long been a "pop culture joke" was a real, serious answer to the real-world problem of traffic congestion.

Not that we need to get into the numbers, but a Terrafugia plane required a third of a mile of empty runway to take off when it first -- ahem -- launched in 2009. More recent reports put it at 100 feet. I tried calling Terrafugia to confirm the figure, but no one picked up. I'll let you know if I get a response to my email.

Indeed, all of Terrafugia's promotional materials show personal airplanes flying above farmland, and when the wings retract the pilot retreats home to a suburban single-family McMansion where the vehicle fits conveniently inside a standard-size garage.

Hi honey, I'm home... in my completely ridiculous contraption! Photo: ##http://www.terrafugia.com/aircraft/image-gallery##Terrafugia##
Hi honey, I'm home... in my completely ridiculous contraption! Photo: Terrafugia
false

Terrafugia's model runs on regular automotive gasoline, not aviation fuels, making it "one of the greenest, most environmentally-friendly airplanes in the world," according to the company. Of course, it also has just a two-person capacity, and perhaps we should be comparing its greenness to the forms of land-based transportation it seeks to replace.

Challenging the audience to tackle big problems like congestion with "bold," "radical" solutions instead of "small incremental changes," Dietrich suggested that flying cars had the ability to "fundamentally increase the capacity, flexibility, robustness, and speed of personal transportation" -- with a marked emphasis on the word "personal." It's a door-to-door solution, he said, and it operates on your own schedule.

However, Dietrich does recognize that the cost of the flying car is prohibitive for most households, so he suggests a fleet of flying car taxis. Terrafugia: It's like Uber, but for flying cars...

...and nothing at all like Moulton Taylor's Aerocar, "at home on highways or skyways" back in the 1950s:

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog Los Angeles

Pomona North Metro Station to get Protected Bike Connection

The two-way cycle track will run a little under two miles, and also link with bike facilities in Claremont.

November 19, 2025

Wednesday’s Headlines

ICE, Vermont Ave. rail, 710 Freeway stub, LAX, Long Beach, SB79, Studio City, Boyle Hts, car-nage, rain, and more

November 19, 2025

Tuesday’s Headlines

ICE, ESFV rail, TAP-to-Exit, ULA, L.A. River, Glendale, rain, OC Streetcar, car-nage, and more

November 18, 2025

This Week In Livable Streets

The War on Cars, Burbank-Chandler bike path, Long Beach backbone bikeway, Metro meetings, CicLAvia Things get Stranger, and more.

November 17, 2025

Monday’s Headlines

ICE, Orange Avenue Long Beach, Burbank, Measure HLA, Melrose CicLAvia, LAPD, Jesse Marquez, La Cañada, car-nage, and more

November 17, 2025
See all posts