A still-unnamed female pilot made an emergency landing in the middle of a major thoroughfare in Calgary, Canada, on Wednesday morning.

The small, two-engine plane experienced engine failure just 5 kilometers from its final destination at Calgary International Airport.

The plane carried two pilots and four passengers, all of whom walked away from the ordeal uninjured.

Other than clipping a light post during the landing, the plane managed to avoid colliding with any structures or vehicles on the ground.

In a feat that could easily become the plot of a based-on-a-true-story action film, a pilot managed to safely land a small, two-engine plane in the middle of a major thoroughfare in Calgary, Canada, on Wednesday morning.

The emergency landing became necessary after the Piper Navajo aircraft lost engine power, CBC reported. The plane, which carried two pilots and four passengers, was just 5 kilometers from its final destination at Calgary International Airport — and somehow, everyone on board walked away from what must have been a terrifying ordeal unscathed.

Calgary EMS spokesman Stuart Brideaux told The Daily Mail the lack of injuries to both the plane’s occupants and those on the ground was “quite extraordinary.”

The plane clipped a light post as it approached the makeshift runway, but otherwise avoided doing any damage — an impressive accomplishment, considering the plane landed close to a light rail passenger train and residential neighborhood.

Witness Jarrett Stobbe told CBC he had just gotten off the train and was walking to work when he saw the plane flying overhead.

“It was coming in at kind of an angle and clipped that light post, then landed,” Stobbe said. “The pilot did a heck of a job to get it down like that."

Security cameras at a nearby car dealership captured the extraordinary landing on video.

The still-unnamed female pilot who performed the landing is rightly being hailed a hero on social media.

—Camping In Style (@bushcamp2) April 25, 2018

An investigation is underway to determine the cause of the plane’s power failure, but the four passengers — all of whom work for Calgary-based Connacher Oil and Gas Ltd. and were traveling to the area on business — will at least get a few days off for their trouble.

"They will not be returning to work this week," Connacher Oil and Gas Ltd. CEO Merle Johnson said in an interview with CBC. "Our main focus is on their safety, and we are very grateful that there were no physical injuries sustained to the passengers or the crew."

We think some time away from the office is well-deserved in this case.

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