Sad. Two people in a C150 at 5,500 ft field elevation. Imboden Rd appears to be about a mile from the end of RWY 26.
For those of us who live & fly here, 5500 ground is our normal. No big deal. We learn from Day One how to manage weight,temps, fuel, leaning, etc. The owner of the airplane, if he was in the 150 and learned to fly out here. He has COMM and AGI but unknown if CFI.
Imboden road (N-S) is the west boundary of the airspace and the beginning of Class B surface for DIA. It's not practical to land on it due to the construction and telephone poles. All roads in the area have the same limitations. DIA (KDEN for aviation folks) is 5-6 nm NW of the airport. In the photo, the horizontal white thing just above the airplane is DIA's terminal. You can just barely make out the E-W line of high-voltage power lines along 56th Ave.
That being said, there's lots of empty space surrounding the airport. There's two small communities (SW and S) that are fairly easy to avoid with all the empty space. But due west of the airport there are multiple sets of N-S high-voltage power lines. One set is along Imboden Road just inside the FTG airspace - and it was a battle with the utility company to get lights & orange balls installed. As you come in on base for 08, you're just inside the lines. The next set of lines, again N-S, is about 2 miles west of that road, along another road.
I just spoke with the airport, none of the runways are shut down. It appears the airplane went down west of FTG, inside DIA's airspace.
Weather last night about midnight was odd - winds off and on where I live (about 20 nm sw of FTG), no moon, very little traffic at DIA that time of night. Temps in the 50s and a 150 with 2 people.
Due to the flat, sparse area, there's very little to see at night other than the traffic on I-70 (just south) but the lights of Denver and DIA are very obvious. I'm thinking if they took off on 26, the rule is to turn S until outside the first ring of DIA, then head west just south of I-70 to stay out of DIA airspace.
If they didn't make the turn (and at this time there's no indication that DIA gave permission to enter the airspace altho that time of night it's not unusual to get permission) and weren't high enough, they may have hit one of the set of power lines/towers. FTG airspace is 5500 (runway) to 7000 except for the tiny cutout on the south side where the circle ends and .... nevermind, go look on the DEN terminal and see the problem. Unless we're practicing IFR we stay at 6500 until outside the first ring of DEN even inside FTG airspace.