The High Risks of ‘Rooftopping’ on Instagram

The High Risks of ‘Rooftopping’ on Instagram


Remi Lucidi, a sergeant ‌in the French Army, died far from a battlefield. ⁤His body was found last week aside a Hong Kong skyscraper where he had been spotted⁢ near the rooftop.

In his spare time, Mr. Lucidi, 30, was a “rooftopper,” shorthand for someone who takes photos and selfies from the tops of ‍tall buildings, sometimes by trespassing.‌ After his death was reported, some Instagram users ‍debated the value and purpose ​of his art, ​which involved clambering onto ledges ⁤and⁣ antennae in cities across ‌Europe, Asia⁤ and the Middle East.

To⁣ friends and admirers, Mr.⁤ Lucidi’s spine-tingling photos were the work​ of a talented, restless adventurer. To his critics, they were a case study in reckless risk-taking.

That debate mirrors tensions within a broader movement called “urban exploration,” or “urbex,” one that is often associated with people who ⁢trespass in order to tell the stories of abandoned properties. ⁣Rooftopping ⁤is part of urbex, but many​ of its practitioners are more interested in⁢ producing social media content than in exploring marginal urban landscapes ⁤with a quasi-academic spirit.

In an extreme example, the Russian model ⁣Viki Odintcova dangled from a Dubai skyscraper without safety equipment. Her stunt generated more than 1.6 million views after she posted it on Instagram in 2017, and plenty of criticism.

“To Model Viki‍ Odintcova: ‍That Photo Was Really⁣ Not Worth Risking ‌Your Life,” ‍read the headline of ⁤a Forbes​ commentary. (She did not respond to a ⁤request‌ for comment.) Several others around the world have died while rooftopping in recent years.

Criticism⁢ sometimes comes from​ within the urban-exploration movement. A prominent rooftooper, the Toronto-based photographer Neil Ta, quit the practice about a decade ago, saying that he had been disillusioned to see the pastime turn⁢ into a contest over who could take the most dangerous pictures.‌ Other critics are urbex veterans who object to the​ rooftopping ethos.

“Rooftopping is‍ focused more on the thrill and the experience of⁢ being in high, vertiginous and perilous locations, whereas urbex explores abandoned places‍ in a way that​ is safer, more documentational and historical in nature,” HK Urbex, a ⁢collective of masked explorers in Hong​ Kong, said ​in a statement.

HK Urbex, whose members venture into abandoned⁢ or dangerous sites across the Chinese territory as a way of exploring its history, said that rooftoppers​ have died around the world from a combination‌ of inexperience, overconfidence and the desire to take thrilling pictures.

“A⁣ life is not worth a like on social media,” the collective said.

Theo ‌Kindynis, a sociologist who has studied rooftopping,⁣ said that to many urban explorers, young rooftoppers who engage in made-for-Instagram antics are known as “dangle kiddies.”

“Remi’s Instagram is full of the same tropes — legs dangling in front of a cityscape, selfie stick on top ‌of a mast, silhouetted figure on a ledge — that were ‍already becoming cliché in⁢ 2016,”…

2023-08-05 08:00:19
Article from⁢ www.nytimes.com
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