Christian Beckert, a Lufthansa pilot based in Munich, agreed, calling the concrete structure “unusual.”
“Normally, on an airport with a runway at the end, you don’t have a wall,” Beckert told Reuters.
Another aviation expert, Chris Kingswood, told the BBC that “obstacles” within a certain distance of the runway are typically required to be “frangible.”
“Aeroplanes are not strong structures — they are, by design, light to make them efficient in flight,” the veteran pilot, who has flown the same type of aircraft involved in the crash, explained to the outlet.
“They’re not really designed to go high-speed on its belly so any kind of structure could cause the fuselage to break up and then be catastrophic.”
Ju Jong-wan, director of the Aviation Policy Division at South Korea’s Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport, explained to the New York Times that the structure was built to install the so-called localizer antenna, which helps enable the pilot to maintain the correct approach path.
He insisted that the concrete wall was found in other airports in South Korea and was built according to regulations.
However, Hwang Ho-won, chairman of the Korea Association for Aviation Security, told the outlet that if the antenna had been made of a different material, the tragedy might have been avoided.
Ju said the government will consider revising the rules in the wake of the disaster.
The collision with the concrete wall caused the airliner to explode, leaving just the tail section of the Bowing 737 intact.
Just two crew members seated in the rear of the aircraft survived.
Minutes before the crash, the pilot — a veteran with nearly 7,000 hours in the cockpit — reported a bird strike to at least one of the plane’s engines, officials told the New York Times.
The pilot told the air traffic control tower that he would abort the landing attempt and circle back around for another pass, but he apparently didn’t have enough time to complete a full circle and instead came in for an emergency landing from the wrong end of the runway.
Neither the landing gear nor braking systems deployed when the plane hit the ground, turning the aircraft into a giant, metal sled that careened past the end of the runway — and smashed straight into the concrete structure.
Aviation expert and journalist Sally Gethin told Sky News that she agreed the structure was ill-placed, but said the tragedy may have occurred regardless.