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Janice Kaspersen Janice Kaspersen Stormwater Editor

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SW Editor's Blog

June 29th, 2009 2:02pm PST

Underground

Posted By Janice Kaspersen Comments

When people climb up the sides of buildings using only their bare hands, it’s known as urban climbing or buildering—and they’re often arrested for their trouble.

Alain Robert  is one of the more notorious practitioners, having climbed the Empire State Building, the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur, and the Sydney Opera House.

There are also those who do what might be considered the exact opposite—they go underground. In Dallas  and some other cities, it’s become fashionable to venture into the storm sewers. The practice even has its own name: urban spelunking. (“Spelunker,” incidentally, has become a pejorative term, used by experienced cave explorers, who call themselves “cavers,” to describe amateurs who don’t know what they’re doing.) Going down into the sewers is less visible than climbing buildings, arguably less risky, and often done in groups. Some people are curious to see the hidden underground systems that we usually take for granted; others are interested in the historic tunnels, some of them a century or more old. Still others, probably, are just bored.

A recent article in the Dallas Morning News quotes the city’s stormwater manager, Susan Alvarez, saying the activity is “perfectly legal, and it’s also perfectly not a good idea”; she cites the risks of falls, contaminated discharge, methane gas, and rats. Still, because the sewers are public infrastructure, members of the public who enter them aren’t actually trespassing, she notes.

Are you aware of anyone doing this in your city’s storm sewer? Have you ever ventured in there yourself—either as part of the job, or just for the adventure?

 

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