Roofman Bd5 ((install)) (LATEST — Playbook)

The story, as told in underground zines from the late ’90s, begins in a decommissioned airpark on the edge of a rust-belt city. A mechanic known only as Roofman —real name expunged from all but one police blotter in 1997—acquired a damaged BD-5 kit. Instead of restoring it for flight, he stripped it down to its carbon-fiber bones, mounted it on a motorized rooftop track, and began “flying” horizontally across the rooftops of a six-block radius. Witnesses described a low, insectoid silhouette skimming the skyline at 3 a.m., engines silent (the BD5’s piston variant, not the jet), propelled instead by a salvaged electric scooter motor.

In the liminal geography between city infrastructure and aviation folklore, the name Roofman BD5 drifts like a half-remembered dream. To some, it’s the ghost of a failed prototype—a miniature jet-powered BD-5J Microjet that never touched a runway, but instead lived out its days atop parking garages and residential high-rises. To others, it’s a persona: a nocturnal urban climber who retrofitted a broken BD-5 fuselage onto a rooftop gantry, using it as a wind-sculpted shelter. roofman bd5

By 2004, the sightings stopped. The original rooftop track was dismantled, its rails sold for scrap. But every few years, a blurry photo surfaces on obscure forums—a sleek, tiny fuselage perched on a cornice, bathed in sodium-vapor light. Believers say Roofman didn’t disappear. He simply found a taller building. The story, as told in underground zines from

The BD5 became his signature. Roofman never claimed to fly—he “transitioned,” moving from roof to roof in a machine that was neither aircraft nor vehicle. Local lore says he left cryptic notes in drainpipes: “Altitude is a state of mind. The BD5 is just the key.” Witnesses described a low, insectoid silhouette skimming the

Whether legend, hoax, or melancholic poetry in metal, Roofman BD5 endures as a symbol of beautiful uselessness: a man who built a flying machine only to keep it tethered to the ground—but just barely.