See allLatest Trade Alerts

Brokerage Partners

Flying Car Takes Off at New York Auto Show

NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- If you are going to build a street-legal airplane, it pays to have good insurance.

Insurance is Richard Gersh's thing. I met the 22-year veteran of the insurance business, an affable risk and policy wonk, on the floor at the New York International Auto Show on Wednesday. He was getting a kick out of the media horde tweeting, posting and shooting his latest exercise in risk management -- the Terrafugia Transition.

A plane that's a car. And a car that's a plane.

The first road-ready personal flying car, the Transition by Terrafugia, is shown off at the New York International Auto Show on Wednesday.

"I was at a lunch for a local flying club back in 2006 and a couple of MIT grads stood up and described this marvelous idea they had for a plane that can also drive down the road," Gersh said. "I walked up to those MIT engineers after the meal and said, 'What are you going to do about insurance?' And here I am."

Gersh was the first non-engineer hired by the 25-person firm based in Woburn, Mass. Terrafugia creates what is probably the world's first "roadable aircraft." This hybrid car/plane is without question the most exciting, innovative and downright daring idea here at the auto show, and it stands in stark contrast to the pathetic "me-too" engineering from Ford, GM, Chrysler, Toyota, Nissan and the rest.

Gersh is adamant that Terrafugia's kind of grand-scale thinking is what will solve the world's problems.

First You Screw Up, Then Lie and Finally Die

"We are the little company living the big American Dream," Gersh said. Forget Spare Tires, Try Parachutes

As the vice president for business development at Terrafugia, Gersh does the gritty regulatory blocking and tackling to make sure that a plane that's also a car is legal both in the sky and on the road.

Usage of this site is governed by TheStreet's Terms of Use available here. Information collected on this site may be collected by TheStreet and OC Register. TheStreet's use of information collected on this site will be governed by TheStreet's privacy policy available here. OC Register's use of information collected on this site will be governed by OC Register's privacy policy available here. If either TheStreet's or OC Register's privacy policy have provisions that are more restrictive than the provisions of the other party's privacy policy, such more restrictive provisions shall not apply to such other party.

Copyright © 2012 Orange County Register Communications. All Rights Reserved.
Site Help | Site Map