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Plan for electric 'flying taxis' to be in the skies within 10 years

Plymouth heliport plan would see site evolve into hub for futuristic eVTOL aircraft

Halo Aviation anticipates operating electric vertical take off and landing (eVTOL) aircraft such as this Toyota-backed Joby Aircraft prototype

Plymouth could have a futuristic heliport with electric vertical take-off “flying taxis” operating from it within a decade.

Ambitious plans are being drawn up to create the heliport near the water’s edge, initially with helicopter flights connecting the city to others cities around the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

Halo Aviation, an established helicopter operator with 10 years of experience. is behind the plan to turn an .

The house is on a raised plot of waterfront land surrounded by, somewhat in incongruously, the Cattedown industrial area.

Victoria House, in Plymouth , could become a commercial heliport

Halo Aviation envisages having about 160 commercial flights a year, which would mean about two or three a week, operating from Plymouth.

The idea is to fly in and out five- to eight-seater helicopters, for primarily business clients to connect the city with the rest of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

But it has its eyes on using the land, as a heliport for advanced electrical vertical take-off aircraft within five to 10 years. This would fit, it said, with the city’s desire to become carbon neutral by 2030.

The plan is to evolve the site from use by helicopters to a landing pad for Electric Vertical Takeoff and Landing (eVTOL) aircraft, such as the Toyota-backed, Joby Aircraft prototype demonstrator. These have been described as “electric flying taxis”.