UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — When the Penn State College of Engineering opened its brand-new Engineering Design and Innovation Building (EDI), Kate Myers and Tyler Henderson saw a unique marketing opportunity. Myers, the creative director at the College of Engineering, knew that her colleague, Henderson, had extensive experience in shooting drone footage, including indoors.
“We thought the best way to showcase the building when it opened would be an indoor drone flight. So Tyler started to custom-build the drone,” Myers said. “The only problem was that we wanted to capture the drone video before students returned and the building was mostly empty. We decided to go all in and staged it — bringing in 80 volunteers, along with engineering and research projects, placed them in different areas to set up the shots, flew through five floors, and put together a final video. It got such a great response that we started thinking about how this could benefit other businesses.”
In March 2024, Myers and Henderson decided to take the leap and launch AmpliFLY Video, an indoor drone video production company servicing businesses interested in showcasing their unique spaces.
Henderson, who studied film production at Penn State, has been interested in aviation since childhood. He eventually got into skydiving and became an instructor and freefall videographer.
“Skydiving shuts down in the winter, so I needed a hobby to keep me in the air,” Henderson said. “I started buying cheap drones and broke a lot of them. I learned how to repair them and then began building them from scratch.”
Thanks to Henderson’s expertise in both building light and nimble drones and flying them in small, tight spaces, AmpliFLY Video can provide clients with indoor drone footage in areas where most drones and pilots can’t operate.