An American climber took on Taiwan’s tallest building yesterday, becoming the first person to scale Taipei 101 without a rope, harness or safety net.
Hundreds of spectators gathered at the base of the 101-storey tower to watch Alex Honnold, 40, embark on his daredevil feat, which was also broadcast live on Netflix.
After an hour-and-a-half, he successfully made it up 1,667 feet before triumphantly rappelling down to reunite with his wife, Sanni McCandless Honnold.
Speaking at a press briefing afterwards, Honnold said "time is finite”, and people should "use it in the best way”. "If you work really hard... you can do hard things,” Honnold added.
Honnold has conquered some of the world’s most intimidating rock faces and rose to global fame in 2017 after he climbed Yosemite’s "El Capitan”, lauded among his peers as the pinnacle of technical difficulty on the massive granite monolith.
It had always been a dream of Honnold’s to add scaling Taipei 101 to his list of achievements he told reporters, adding that his first request had been rejected. He did not offer more details about why this was the case.