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Daredevil climbs 470-foot skyscraper in record time - completely barefoot
  • Adam Lockwood, 19, is no stranger to vertigo-inducing free climbing, having been successfully scaling buildings of up to 200 metres in the UK and Europe for the last two years, without any equipment. But his latest venture earlier this week saw Adam add a new challenge to his climbing. For the first time, Adam took on a skyscraper building - the 144-metre (472 feet) Torre Agbar tower in Barcelona, Spain - completely barefoot. The teen, from Manchester, had to keep stopping to rub chalk on his feet to help his grip, as he climbed the ladder-like structure on the outside of the office block.
  • Adam Lockwood, 19, is no stranger to vertigo-inducing free climbing, having been successfully scaling buildings of up to 200 metres in the UK and Europe for the last two years, without any equipment. But his latest venture earlier this week saw Adam add a new challenge to his climbing. For the first time, Adam took on a skyscraper building - the 144-metre (472 feet) Torre Agbar tower in Barcelona, Spain - completely barefoot. The teen, from Manchester, had to keep stopping to rub chalk on his feet to help his grip, as he climbed the ladder-like structure on the outside of the office block.
  • Adam Lockwood, 19, is no stranger to vertigo-inducing free climbing, having been successfully scaling buildings of up to 200 metres in the UK and Europe for the last two years, without any equipment. But his latest venture earlier this week saw Adam add a new challenge to his climbing. For the first time, Adam took on a skyscraper building - the 144-metre (472 feet) Torre Agbar tower in Barcelona, Spain - completely barefoot. The teen, from Manchester, had to keep stopping to rub chalk on his feet to help his grip, as he climbed the ladder-like structure on the outside of the office block.
  • Adam Lockwood, 19, is no stranger to vertigo-inducing free climbing, having been successfully scaling buildings of up to 200 metres in the UK and Europe for the last two years, without any equipment. But his latest venture earlier this week saw Adam add a new challenge to his climbing. For the first time, Adam took on a skyscraper building - the 144-metre (472 feet) Torre Agbar tower in Barcelona, Spain - completely barefoot. The teen, from Manchester, had to keep stopping to rub chalk on his feet to help his grip, as he climbed the ladder-like structure on the outside of the office block.
  • Adam Lockwood, 19, is no stranger to vertigo-inducing free climbing, having been successfully scaling buildings of up to 200 metres in the UK and Europe for the last two years, without any equipment. But his latest venture earlier this week saw Adam add a new challenge to his climbing. For the first time, Adam took on a skyscraper building - the 144-metre (472 feet) Torre Agbar tower in Barcelona, Spain - completely barefoot. The teen, from Manchester, had to keep stopping to rub chalk on his feet to help his grip, as he climbed the ladder-like structure on the outside of the office block.
  • Adam Lockwood, 19, is no stranger to vertigo-inducing free climbing, having been successfully scaling buildings of up to 200 metres in the UK and Europe for the last two years, without any equipment. But his latest venture earlier this week saw Adam add a new challenge to his climbing. For the first time, Adam took on a skyscraper building - the 144-metre (472 feet) Torre Agbar tower in Barcelona, Spain - completely barefoot. The teen, from Manchester, had to keep stopping to rub chalk on his feet to help his grip, as he climbed the ladder-like structure on the outside of the office block.
  • Adam Lockwood, 19, is no stranger to vertigo-inducing free climbing, having been successfully scaling buildings of up to 200 metres in the UK and Europe for the last two years, without any equipment. But his latest venture earlier this week saw Adam add a new challenge to his climbing. For the first time, Adam took on a skyscraper building - the 144-metre (472 feet) Torre Agbar tower in Barcelona, Spain - completely barefoot. The teen, from Manchester, had to keep stopping to rub chalk on his feet to help his grip, as he climbed the ladder-like structure on the outside of the office block.
  • Adam Lockwood, 19, is no stranger to vertigo-inducing free climbing, having been successfully scaling buildings of up to 200 metres in the UK and Europe for the last two years, without any equipment. But his latest venture earlier this week saw Adam add a new challenge to his climbing. For the first time, Adam took on a skyscraper building - the 144-metre (472 feet) Torre Agbar tower in Barcelona, Spain - completely barefoot. The teen, from Manchester, had to keep stopping to rub chalk on his feet to help his grip, as he climbed the ladder-like structure on the outside of the office block.
  • Adam Lockwood, 19, is no stranger to vertigo-inducing free climbing, having been successfully scaling buildings of up to 200 metres in the UK and Europe for the last two years, without any equipment. But his latest venture earlier this week saw Adam add a new challenge to his climbing. For the first time, Adam took on a skyscraper building - the 144-metre (472 feet) Torre Agbar tower in Barcelona, Spain - completely barefoot. The teen, from Manchester, had to keep stopping to rub chalk on his feet to help his grip, as he climbed the ladder-like structure on the outside of the office block.
  • Adam Lockwood, 19, is no stranger to vertigo-inducing free climbing, having been successfully scaling buildings of up to 200 metres in the UK and Europe for the last two years, without any equipment. But his latest venture earlier this week saw Adam add a new challenge to his climbing. For the first time, Adam took on a skyscraper building - the 144-metre (472 feet) Torre Agbar tower in Barcelona, Spain - completely barefoot. The teen, from Manchester, had to keep stopping to rub chalk on his feet to help his grip, as he climbed the ladder-like structure on the outside of the office block.
  • Adam Lockwood, 19, is no stranger to vertigo-inducing free climbing, having been successfully scaling buildings of up to 200 metres in the UK and Europe for the last two years, without any equipment. But his latest venture earlier this week saw Adam add a new challenge to his climbing. For the first time, Adam took on a skyscraper building - the 144-metre (472 feet) Torre Agbar tower in Barcelona, Spain - completely barefoot. The teen, from Manchester, had to keep stopping to rub chalk on his feet to help his grip, as he climbed the ladder-like structure on the outside of the office block.

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