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Monday, May 9, 2011

With All Due Respect, I'll Pass

(From the Toronto Star)

Life on the edge is about to get real scary. Like 116-storeys-up scary. On an open walkway circling the outside of the CN Tower.

Introducing EdgeWalk, “the most extreme experience” in the tower’s 35-year history, according to public relations people.
Opening Aug. 1, the attraction will be “the world’s highest full circle hands-free walk” on a ledge 356 metres above the ground, tower officials announced on Monday.

It will offer thrill seekers a heart-stopping, 360-degree panorama as they walk a 1.5-metre-wide platform a distance of 150 metres around the top of the main pod.

Here’s how it will work:



Adventure lovers will walk hands-free in groups of six to eight while connected to an overhead safety rail via a trolley and harness system. The walk will last 20 to 30 minutes with the entire experience running 1.5 hours.



“Trained guides will encourage visitors to push their personal limits, allowing those who dare to lean back over Toronto, with nothing but air beneath them,” said a news release.



“During our 35th anniversary year we are excited to introduce visitors to the most exciting attraction in our history,” said Jack Robinson, chief operating officer of Canada Lands Company, which owns the tower.



Several staffers admitted last week it would be too wild a walk for them.



“It’s scary,” one restaurant worker shuddered. “You wouldn’t catch me up there.”



“It’ll be pretty windy out there,” another offered. “I hope they’re taking that into account.”



“It’s going to be a thriller,” added a co-worker. “But it’s not for everyone. It’s an adrenalin thing.”



Spokespeople assured would-be walkers that every aspect of the attraction “has been developed with the utmost safety and security in mind.”



One employee compared EdgeWalk to a similar attraction at Auckland Sky Tower in New Zealand.



Still under construction, the steel grated platform will be supported by 36 arms linked to separate rails for the tour guide and group of walkers. The support arms can be seen as a series of rods protruding from the roof of the 360 Restaurant.



The walk will cost $175, which includes a video of the experience, taken by the guide. Tickets go on sale June 1. The attraction will be offered until October this year and reopen in May 2012.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

No, no, no, no, no and I repeat no!!

Anonymous said...

The glass floor leaves me queasy enough. Thanks, but no thanks.


Ed