Post by: Mirabela Tiron Posted on 19 May 2014
Every day at work, Laura Gârdu visits an European city. She does not go shopping, she barely has the chance to see the airport, the city stays out of reach. But she works travelling, a dream which occupies the mind of many white collars.
180 hours on helicopters and 3,500 hours on Boeing airplanes. This are Laura Gârdu’s career numbers up to now (she is 32), graduate of the Romanian Aviation Academy and the Faculty of Aerospace Engineering, now airline captain. Her dream is to fly a Boeing 777, a large airplane used on intercontinental flights.
She does not talk much, but says that heights attracted her since she was small: ”When I was a child and I saw airplanes in the sky, I followed them with my sight and I wish I reached them. I had a time in my childhood, when to the question ”What would you like to do when you will grow up?”, my reply was ”Cosmonaut”. Later, I did not stick to this option, but somehow the destiny brought me to aviation” says Laura Gârdu, whom I met at the headquarters of the Blue Air airline, when she was browsing aviation magazines. By the way, one of the key moments in her life was when she discovered the Top Gun magazines in high school. ”Then I wanted to become a pilot”.
For 7 years now, her office is the cockpit of a Boeing 737, where she coordinates two return flights daily, on the routes of the low cost company Blue Air. For 5-6 hours daily she flies the company aircraft, on all company routes. She flew smaller aircraft before. She has 55 hours of flight on Cessna 172S, 20 hours on Diamond Katana Da-20, 20 hours on Piper Seneca PA-24, and 180 hours on Eurocopter EC-120 and EC-155B helicopters.
After graduating the National College ”Cantemir Vodă” in Bucharest in 2000, computer science profile, Laura Gârdu chose to study aerospace at the Faculty of Aerospace Engineering of the University Politehnica of Bucharest (2000-2005), and in 2004-2007 she followed the courses of the Romanian Aviation Academy to become a commercial helicopter pilot.
”Before choosing the faculty, my only flying experience was a Bucharest-London flight, as a passenger. I had a passion for aviation, not something inherited from my family. My parents saw me a medicine student, or a foreign languages one. At the Romanian Aviation Academy admission, I took maths, physics and English tests, eliminatory tests, besides the medical test: ”60% of the candidates failed the medical test. You need a clear motivation if you want to become a pilot. I did my best to become one, I wanted it very much, the personal factor mattered.”
Up to 20 placed are budgeted annually at the Romanian Aviation Academy. The ATPL (Airlines Transport Pilot Licence) enables the operation on passenger aircraft, and the tuition costs like Euro 60,000 and takes maximum 36 months and 220 flying hours (partially on simulators). When graduating the courses, you take theory and practical tests for getting the ATPL licence, which is the highest qualification of a pilot. This licence is valid for 7 years, during which time the pilot must gather 1,500 flight hours, otherwise the licence may be lost.
A graduate of the Romanian Aviation Academy who followed an integrated ATPL program has a co-pilot qualification on multi-engine airplanes and equipped for public air transport, with a possibility to reach Captain after other courses. After school however, every graduate takes additional training at the companies they are hired, to train for the specific airplanes that they are using.
At Blue Air there are 76 pilots, but only 4 are women co-pilots, and 2 are captain pilots. Laura Gârdu’s husband is also a pilot in the company, both of them being recruited in 2007.
Laura Gârdu says that she has working hours like any other employee, but the schedule starts always at different hours. Every time she ends the program, she goes home, to her family. In her spare time, she does spots, roller skating or riding the bicycle.
”To be a pilot means that I have a job that I love, which brings satisfactions, emotions, and a confirmation of the fact that everyone needs to be encouraged to do what they like, because this way they will deliver the best results. Since I decided for a career in aviation, the road to the cockpit seemed not hard, not easy, just natural. I regarded each challenge as a natural step, which must be taken to reach the goal.”
A pilot’s salary stays within Euro 2,000 and 7,000 a month in Romania, according to market data. A captain pilot could make even Euro 10,000 a month.
”A great joy each flight is the pure pleasure of height, a cut from the daily noise, but also the adventure of travel, of covering a large distance in a short time. Not only once I caught myself thinking of returning home from a flight: look at me, it is 3 pm and I have already made to Paris and back.”
Even if she reaches other foreign destination daily in the cockpit, she is not a tourist in the same time, because she does not step down from the airplane. She stays in the cockpit to prepare the immediate flight back. ”When I was reaching to a new destination, we pilots do not have the time to admire the landscapes from above, because we are concentrated on landing. On medium haul flights, we do not even get down from the plane, preparing the flight back instead” says Laura Gârdu.
Laura Gârdu says that aviation challenges match the satisfaction coming out of it. Periodically, a pilot must pass a series of exams and tests, and while flying, he or she must expect anything: ”What does anything mean? Difficult weather conditions and the element of unknown in general, which might occur in any moment, making each flight unique, not even on the same route, at the same hour or on the same weather.”
Jeppesen FIA RAS Contest
As Mr. Sacha Neusser (Jeppesen) and Sorin Roșca, MAEng (RAS) announced on the floor of the Opening of the University Year, we publish <here> the details of the Jeppesen - Faculty of Aerospace Engineering - Regional Air Services contest aimed at faculty students...
Opening 2017
In the Radu Voinea AN010 amphitheater on 25 September 2017, 10 am, the Rector of the University Politehnica of Bucharest, Mihnea Costoiu declared the new University Year 2017-2018 opened, in an enthusiast atmosphere. The Rector pointed out the value and the...
Year 3 Specialization Exchange
Important for Year 3 students who want to change their specialization selection. The four specializations (in Romanian) consist of a full group each (no more vacancies). However, we decided to allow specialization exchanges between two students who agree that...
FAE Rules for Modules Progression
The Faculty of Aerospace Engineering Council in the 14 May 2019 meeting decided the following: The repeal of FAE-1 and FAE-2 Rules (described below) and their replacement with the mandatory attendance at the exam of the students who want to progress at a discipline...
Dassault Systemès Catia for students
Dassault Systèmes Catia V5 Student Edition is offered to students for free! Use code CATIA4FREE17 at Dassault Systemès 3DS Academy until 11 November 2017. Also you may get ICEM Surf Student Edition in the same terms using code ICEMSURF-FREE17 Totodata, avem...
New Student IDs
Important! The Student IDs will be changed from the UY 2017-2018. All Year 2, 3, and 4 Bachelor Students and Year 2 Master, please submit your updated photos to the faculty office to get the new IDs.
Accommodation in Campus 2017
The Faculty of Aerospace Engineering students will be accommodated in Building P27 Regie Campus (including the 5th floor). The students already staying there over summer must check out between 11 and 15 September 2017. On 11 September, the Romanians from Everywhere...
Opening of the New University Year 2017-2018
Th new University Year 2017-2018 will be opened on 25 September 2017 in the Radu Voinea amphitheater starting with 10 am. At 2 pm, the Faculty of Aerospace Engineering organizes the opening meeting in Polizu, in the Virgiliu Constantinescu F024 amphitheater....
Fly Practice 2017
Flying practice in the Year II summer has been a tradition of this faculty since the beginning until the 90s. It matters a lot to an aviation engineer to take the stick in his / her own hand, to understand the difficulty of flying, to feel directly the emotion...
Resit Session Schedule September 2017
Resit Session in September 2017 will follow this schedule: Resit Session Schedule September 2017 Resit Session Schedule for EGD Master September 2017 Mind you, there will be no other reexamination session. All resits will end on 10 September 2017....
0 Comments