Travel

House Running: Frankfurt

Two years ago, my siblings gave me an adven­ture vou­ch­er as a gift. Sin­ce then, it had been lying in some cor­ner of my room. When I was rear­ran­ging it, I dis­co­ver­ed it again and noti­ced that it was only valid until the end of 2020. So wit­hout fur­ther ado, I regis­tered on the web­site of the vou­ch­er and deci­ded to take part in the House Run­ning in Frank­furt, whe­re I was sup­po­sed to go down 100 meters on a wall.

Jochen Schwei­zer gift vou­ch­er box worth €99.99

In house run­ning, you run downhill along the wall of a house. The­re are seve­ral loca­ti­ons with dif­fe­rent heights all over Ger­ma­ny. I cho­se the 100- meter Leo­nar­do Roy­al Hotel in Frankfurt.

Leo­nar­do Roy­al Hotel with a total of 28 floors

Before takeoff

An hour befo­re the “take­off” I arri­ved at the hotel. I wan­ted to have some spa­re time to men­tal­ly prepa­re mys­elf. Howe­ver, I was allo­wed to get star­ted right away. I was pre­sen­ted with a pie­ce of paper that I was sup­po­sed to sign. Then they put the equip­ment on me, and I was sup­po­sed to take the ele­va­tor up to the 25th flo­or and walk up ano­ther three floors.

Com­ple­te equip­ment with chest camera

Down­s­tairs, I deci­ded to let mys­elf film by the crew of the house run­ning event, which had an extra cost of €30. One video was shot by a crew mem­ber on the other side of the buil­ding and the other was atta­ched to my chest strap and film­ed my face. Wher­eby the recor­ding of the face was not suc­cessful. At least the­re was one good video and two 8 GB SD cards for free.

Crew came­ra­man and my nose

Bad Company

Arri­ving at the roof, I heard one of my favo­ri­te songs boo­ming out of the boom box, which is “Bad Com­pa­ny” by Five Fin­ger Death Punch. It was the per­fect song for this moment! On the roof­top, things got down to busi­ness quick­ly. I was gree­ted by a woman who imme­dia­te­ly clip­ped a cara­bi­ner to my chest and explai­ned that pushing off the wall would give me the most kick. Then I moved on to the scaf­fol­ding and the­re a man fidd­led with my gear. I was alre­a­dy stan­ding on the top of the wall of the buil­ding, loo­king into the abyss. That was the moment when I did­n’t know why I deci­ded to do some­thing like this three weeks befo­re. With the vou­ch­er, I could also have had a half-day march with a llama at my side in Italy….

The 100 meter high abyss

The woman remo­ved the front cara­bi­ner from me, and then I heard the man tell me to put my arms under the came­ra and move away to the front. I lea­ned for­ward, took a few steps and found that I felt pret­ty secu­re in the equip­ment. So I tried pushing off the wall and from the­re the thrill real­ly started.

0% thoughts 100% adrenaline

The Fall

I fell and screa­med like a real man (not). Arri­ving at the wall, I pushed off again stron­gly and then fell straight towards the bal­co­nies. I thought that was it with me, but then I was slo­wed down. That made me spin, and I flew with my arms against the wall and kept spin­ning. I could­n’t find my balan­ce any­mo­re so ins­tead of run­ning I flew down the rest of the way. When I rea­ched the bot­tom I was so hap­py that I did­n’t choo­se the llama in Italy.

Here I test the wall for stability

Conclusion

That was an awe­so­me expe­ri­ence, and it gave me a big adre­na­line rush! Even if it only las­ted just under a minu­te. The­re are many things that only last a minu­te that feel good. House run­ning was com­ple­ted and the­re was also a litt­le “gra­vi­ty win­ner” cer­ti­fi­ca­te at the end. I high­ly recom­mend this run to everyone!

Hap­py with my new certificate

P.S. On my Insta­gram account you can find a short video about this. 🙂

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