Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Partnership aiming for airship development
Barry Prentice has been telling everyone who will listen for more than 10 years that there is a future for lighter-than-air airships, especially for heavy cargo transportation and especially in Canada's North.
One person who Prentice convinced was Dale George, a pilot, airship enthusiast and the industrial designer who invented, among other things, the plastic playground slide more then 25 years ago.
Last week George, a graduate of Georgian College in Barrie, Ont., was named a winner of the prestigious Premier's Award for Ontario College Graduates, along with five others.
A year and a half ago, George moved to Manitoba and joined Prentice in forming Buoyant Aircraft Systems International, a company that intends to design and hopefully build large LTA airships and help solve the infrastructure deficit in Northern Canada.
"My natural talents is finding ways to improve products or come up with brand new ones," George said. "I have always been interested in airships. Barry and I knew of each other but we'd never met and I never thought we would be in business. He is a professor and I am an entrepreneur."
Prentice is thrilled George agreed to join him in his visionary pursuit.
"It's amazing that he won such a prestigious award," Prentice said. "It was also amazing that he agreed to come to Manitoba to design airships. What will really be amazing is if I can convince him to stay."
Prentice decided to form Buoyant Aircraft Systems and try to build his own airship after spending about a decade unsuccessfully trying to attract a manufacturer to Manitoba.
He had started a non-profit group called ISO Polar in 2005 as an airship research institute to do economic and engineering studies, co-ordinate demonstrations and facilitate tests and other activities.
But he found that as a non-profit, there were certain funding opportunities he was unable to go after.
That is not to say his for-profit company is flush with cash. The opposite is more accurate. But the two partners believe a demonstration of their rigid-framed concept will eventually attract funding to take it to the next level.
The firm owns three other small airships and while putting the rigid design concept together, the company can conduct various services for third-party customers using its smaller airships.
Prentice is frustrated at the lack of support he has received from local government, but he takes solace that over the last two years, about $1 billion has been spent on developing airships by various branches of the U.S. military
"One day this will be so commonplace people will not even look up," Prentice said. "It may not be in my lifetime but I see this industry grow continuously once it starts."
Their enthusiasm is particularly strong these days because a California company called Aeros is getting ready to fly the first rigid-design airship in 75 years.
George's design model that is currently being developed is for an aluminum-skinned airship about 200 metres long (perhaps as big as 400 metres) that could lift 50 to 60 tonnes of cargo and maybe up to 80 tonnes with gas cells enclosed inside, electric engines and safety equipment on board.
"I'm going to make a 100-foot model," said George. "People will see it and then Google or someone like that will say they want to fund that to the next round. This will do what Dr. Barry Prentice has talked about for 20 years."
One of the first things they will need to invest in with that first round of funding will be a hangar big enough to build the massive vehicles they have in mind.
Prentice is committed to the idea of using airships as a way to enhance development in Canada's North and as such, all the design work factors in cold-weather operating conditions.
"I believe we are ahead of the competition when it comes to cold weather operation," Prentice said.
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition December 5, 2012 B5
More Business
- Back to Top
- Return to Business
More Business
(1 of 9 articles for today)
Canada and Pacific Alliance trade bloc size each other up for trade prospects
3:03 AM 0CALI, Colombia - The leaders of Canada and the Pacific Alliance will be sizing each other up today to see ...
Poll
Most Popular Business
- New owner for lumber stores
- New downtown tower could be 42 storeys tall: developers
- Housing slowdown to worsen, cost 150,000 jobs, says mortgage group
- Creative industries can fuel a city's economic engine
- Pollard Banknote signs ticket deal with Western Canada Lottery Corp.
- Emerging economies seen as key
- Temple Hotels buys hotel in Sherwood Park, Alta., for $15.15 million
- Developers to unveil plans for bold downtown tower
- Paying bills and consumer consumption hurting Canadians' ability to save: study
- Microsoft reveals Xbox One as all-in-1 entertainment console, last of 3 major systems unveiled
- Mounties say crooks passing fake polymer bank notes in British Columbia
- New owner for lumber stores
- Holiday pump jump debated
- 2 men arrested in killing of Las Vegas teen who refused to give up his iPad
- New downtown tower could be 42 storeys tall: developers
- Creative industries can fuel a city's economic engine
- Microsoft reveals Xbox One as all-in-1 entertainment console, last of 3 major systems unveiled
- Bridging the gap
- Housing slowdown to worsen, cost 150,000 jobs, says mortgage group
- Apple uses companies outside US to avoid paying billions in taxes, Senate inquiry finds
- Target opens its first Manitoba stores Tuesday
- New structure to be king of downtown?
- Transcona transformation
- Target opens Manitoba stores
- Mounties say crooks passing fake polymer bank notes in British Columbia
- City to get a touch of glass
- Canad Inns property has personal meaning for owner
- New owner for lumber stores
- Holiday pump jump debated
- Border-fee idea doesn't fly
- New owner for lumber stores
- Developers to unveil plans for bold downtown tower
- New downtown tower could be 42 storeys tall: developers
- There are lots of I's in 'team'
- Canadian telecom company Telus signs deal to buy Mobilicity for $373 million
- Bridging the gap
- Manitoba Movers
- Creative industries can fuel a city's economic engine
- Arizona restaurant becomes poster child for dark side of online customer reviews
- Housing slowdown to worsen, cost 150,000 jobs, says mortgage group
- New owner for lumber stores
- Ex-'Pegger seeks to grow local businesses
- Developers to unveil plans for bold downtown tower
- Bridging the gap
- Late deal in workplace sex-harassment case
- There are lots of I's in 'team'
- More than a new boss
- New downtown tower could be 42 storeys tall: developers
- Diversification spurs Exchange Income's growth
- Viterra plans $20 million capacity upgrade at four Saskatchewan grain terminals
- Transcona transformation
- New owner for lumber stores
- New structure to be king of downtown?
- CEO, execs terminated at TCIG
- Target opens its first Manitoba stores Tuesday
- Canad Inns property has personal meaning for owner
- Winnipeg's got the REIT stuff
- Older and jobless? Resource on hand
- Winnipeg Boeing plant set to expand
- Local boy leads Great-West
Ads by Google











You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.
Have Your Say
New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.
The Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. These terms were revised effective April 16, 2010.