Definition
The reinforced structural locations on an airplane where the landing gear assemblies are mounted to the airframe. These areas are built up with extra material and structural members to carry the concentrated loads from taxi, takeoff, and especially landing impact, then transfer those loads into the surrounding wing or fuselage structure.
Plain English
The strong, beefed-up spots on the airplane where the wheels and their support legs are bolted on. They have to be tough enough to take the shock every time the airplane touches down.
Context Anchor
A pilot encounters this term during preflight inspection, especially when checking the wings, fuselage, or nearby structure around the landing gear.
Why Pilots Care
These areas absorb and distribute the high forces of touchdown and taxiing; undetected damage can lead to structural failure.
Intuition Check
Do not read “attachment areas” as just the visible bolts or the exact joint. In this context, it means the connection points plus the nearby airplane structure that supports the landing gear loads.
Example Sentence 1
After the firm landing, the mechanic inspected the landing gear attachment areas for cracks or deformation before signing the airplane back into service.
Example Sentence 2
Design drawings show the landing gear attachment areas aligned with the wing spar to carry vertical loads directly into the primary structure.