It’s the new park and fly!

A helicopter company is banking on the “Summer of Hell” getting so bad that frustrated commuters will be willing to cough up $175 to “car pool” in an eggbeater over New York Bay instead of risking delays on New Jersey Transit.

“We think there are a lot of people who would part with $175 to make it to their meeting on time and not have to worry about when the trains will get them there,” said Tim Dwyer, the head of operations at chopper company Blade.

Blade’s new service is modeled after Uber Pool — commuters pay the comparatively cheap fare to share the copter with other riders for a scenic five-to-15-minute trip to Manhattan from helipads in Morristown, Bedminster, Bernardsville, Montclair, Chatham or Short Hills.

The company typically charges $494 to $695 for a by-the-seat trip from Manhattan to the Hamptons — and up to $4,000 for chartered rides around the country.

Blade first came up with the idea for the service after frazzled newscasters covering chronic rail and subway issues started calling for a quick way to move around the metro area.

Dwyer says they don’t expect the choppers to become part of people’s daily commute, but they’re betting that there are enough well-heeled workers willing to occasionally splash a few hundred bucks to get to Manhattan in a hurry to keep the business above water.

And commuters say they’re willing to give it a whirl.

Chase Tilney, a commercial real estate broker who lives in Bedminster, said he would happily drop $175 a couple of times a week to avoid the trains.

“I’m sick of the b——- that is Penn Station and the trains,” he said, adding that an Uber ride to his job usually works out to around $200 anyway.

Blade plans on offering the service until early September and then seeing if there’s still a demand in the fall, Dwyer said.