UK - Vertigo Rigging lived up to its tag line of 'rigging revolutionaries' by pulling off one of the most spectacular car launches ever staged to mark the start of the 2006 British International Motor Show in London in July.

Flying in the face of everyone who said "it can't be done", Vertigo unveiled Opel's new Corsa to the world's press and industry VIPs by flying the car, suspended beneath a specially modified helicopter, along the River Thames through the heart of the City of London and straight into a big reveal in the Old Billingsgate Fish Market with split-second precision.

The car maker's PR agency had proposed a helicopter-based reveal as a dramatic statement - an idea which was promptly rejected by safety authorities. Undaunted, and convinced that the concept was a winner, Opel brought in events specialist Jack Morton Worldwide to come up with a workable solution. Their team, headed by special project manager Adam Wildi and producer Miles Platt, then called on Vertigo Rigging to make the high-flying and potentially high-risk elements of the launch happen.

The brief had already taken on serious complexity. The plan was to suspend the new Corsa on a platform rigged underneath a helicopter, twirl it over the Thames for a photo call, then fly it across the river to Billingsgate for the VIP launch event, before dramatically flying it out again.

A key element was that the car's arrival at Billingsgate would be a show cue, timed to the second. "When I read that," says Vertigo Rigging MD Becky Loughran, "I thought, 'this is going to be interesting!'"

The Vertigo team held consultations with several specialists, including naval, marine, safety and aviation experts, and formulated a plan. That started with gaining the Port of London Authority's agreement to close the River Thames to all traffic for half an hour, and finding a helicopter rigging solution that minimised environmental noise while meeting the post-9/11 requirement that only twin-engine helicopters may fly over London under load.

Loughran says: "It required a lot of negotiations with ATC (Air Traffic Control) and the CAA (Civil Aviation Authority), and entailed closing central London airspace for 20 minutes. With our team of consultants and working closely with Helicopter Services in High Wycombe we'd resolved all the technical and safety issues and negotiated permissions from everyone concerned.

"We did a test flight at High Wycombe to work out complications arising from the car's centre of gravity, which had to be calculated on the support platform precisely, and we devised a special anti-twist mechanism to prevent the car from spinning under the helicopter. Four crew headed by Tim Roberts rigged the car platform to the helicopter, and the whole rehearsal went perfectly - which was just as well as Opel's management team turned up to watch it.

"Weight then became the next major issue," she adds. "The forecast was for a hot, still day - which unfortunately provides the least possible lift for a helicopter and doing the sums gave us a maximum total weight of 700kg. To do the lift safely, it would have to land on the Isle of Dogs and be stripped of every possible item, including the doors and all but the safe minimum of fuel. It would then fly upriver, pick up the Corsa from a car park by the GLA headquarters, perform the stunt on cue, followed by a second chase helicopter filming the event, return the car to the car park, refuel and fly home.

"And then things got even more interesting. Three days before the event, the GLA revoked all event licences for the car park, so we had to move to Plan B - hiring a giant 90 by 60 foot barge, used as a floating tennis court, from General Marine to use as our car pickup and drop off point. We moved the barge down the Thames to near ExCel, craned the car on board and brought it back upriver to Tower Bridge with the car under wraps.

"At 16:23:30 precisely on the big day, the helicopter


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