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Five Killed After Small Aircraft Crashes on Nashville Freeway

Five Killed After Small Aircraft Crashes on Nashville Freeway

BY LUKAS WOERNER Published on March 05, 2024 0 COMMENTS

On March 4, a small aircraft crashed in West Nashville, resulting in an initial five fatalities. The plane crashed on the side of the road near marker 202 on I-40, behind the Costco off Charlotte Pike. No buildings or cars were hit in the crash. Witnesses to the event, which happened around 7:45 p.m. local time, described the scene as "catastrophic".

 

An aircraft similar to the one involved in the crash | Photo: Globalair

 

According to public records, a Nashville airport had cleared a runway for the small airplane. However, the plane could not reach the city's other side. Some of the last audio reports of the pilot were reported to be, "I'm going to be landing -- I don't know where!"

 



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The plane, identified as a single-engine, fixed-wing Piper PA-32RT-300T, flew southbound before its crash in Nashville. The Canadian-registered aircraft's final route was between Mount Sterling-Montgomery County Airport (IOB) in Kentucky and John C. Tune Airport (JWN). The Federal Aviation Administration and the National Transportation Safety Board will investigate the cause of the crash. Currently, no determined cause of the crash has been made public.

 

Although tragedies like this are not an everyday occurrence, they are reminders that disasters can strike at any minute. The mayor of Nashville praised the emergency response of the city's first responders and the air control staff for clearing a runway for the plane.

 

Another one of the same plane | Photo: Piper Owner Society

 

This incident comes as a second plane crash identified in Tennessee over the past few months. In December 2023, a collision in Giles County, Tennessee, claimed the lives of two individuals after a takeoff from Knoxville. The collision involving a single-engine aircraft was identified as a Beechcraft 35-C33. The cause of this crash, also investigated by the FAA and NTSB, was listed as crashing for “unknown circumstances”. 

 

Nashville International Airport (BNA) recently completed its renovation project, called BNA Vision, in a multi-million-dollar renovation to grow and modernize the airport. The project, spanning from 2017 until 2023, was designed to assist the growing population in the 10th fastest-growing city in the US. In addition, the airport has released a follow-on growth project, New Horizon. The addition will cost an additional $1.4 billion and will be completed over the coming years with a scheduled completion date of late 2028.

 



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