Flight Delayed After Crew Stuck in Airport Elevator

The incident happened at Birmingham Airport in the U.K.; image courtesy of Birmingham Airport via Facebook.

A Qatar Airways flight was delayed January 2 after the pilot and crew members got stuck inside an airport elevator for more than 3 h, Business Insider reports. The crew members of the Boeing 787 Dreamliner that was due to take off from Birmingham Airport in the U.K. became stuck in one of the airport’s temporary elevators. Six people were trapped inside the elevator when firefighters arrived on the scene. A contractor couldn’t get the elevator working, so the fire service had to remove a panel to let the crew out. The source reports that the two temporary elevators at Birmingham Airport, which have been in use since last summer, have been taken out of service, and the cause of the system failure is being investigated.

Get more of Elevator World. Sign up for our free e-newsletter.

Please enter a valid email address.
Something went wrong. Please check your entries and try again.

Deyaar's Downtown Residences; image courtesy of Deyaar

Deyaar Unveils Dubai Downtown Residences Project

The wooden escalator; image © TfL

Last Wooden Escalator in London Underground to be Replaced by Elevator

North America, which requires larger elevators, has some of the most expensive elevator costs in the world, according to the Saanich Council; photo by Martin Pechy via Wikimedia Commons.

Saanich Calls for British Columbia to Allow Smaller Elevators

3rd Avenue-149th street Station; image courtesy of LiftComm

LiftComm Enhances NYC MTA Station Elevator Safety, Security

CEO of EngineeringUK Dr. Hilary Leevers

EngineeringUK CEO Reacts To U.K. 2025 Spending Review

(l-r) Lukas Lesko, Resco's head of support, and Jonathan Taub

FIELDBOSS Receives Top Resco Award at Spain Event

Christ the Redeemer monument in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; image courtesy of Otis

Otis Brazil To Modernize Elevators at Christ the Redeemer

(l-r) Berndt and Davis

ATIS Taps Executives To Accelerate Growth