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U. of Iowa Climbing Wall Closed After Student Falls
The rock climbing wall at the University of Iowa is closed indefinitely after a fall landed one student in the hospital on Nov. 9. Business student Spencer Bean, an experienced climber who is also an employee of the Campus Recreation and Wellness Center, fell 30 feet, landing upright on his feet. He remained conscious and coherent for a few moments before passing out.

IowaRec.jpg
Photo By Kun Zhang, Dimension Images

The university is not disclosing any information about the severity of the injuries, but a blog set up by his brother, Josh, and mother, reported that he suffered two crushed vertebrae and underwent an eight-hour surgery on Nov. 10 to extract the broken bone fragments.

“He’s in a lot of pain, but he feels fortunate that he’s able to move his arms and legs,” Josh Bean told The Daily Iowan. “If a bone from his crushed vertebrae had pushed one millimeter farther into his spinal cord, he would’ve been in a wheelchair for the rest of his life.”

The recreation center requires climbers to pass a safety check before climbing and has a belay system in place to help prevent serious falls, but something malfunctioned the night of the fall, reported one observer.
Posted At 8:40 AM • Comments (4)

'closed indefinitely after a fall '
why?
I am certain that this facility has had many participants with a great safety record.

Should a football game stop or close when a player is injured with a broken broken bone or a concussion.
What about the gym when someone runs into the wall , ball standard. Rolls an ankle or has a bad knee injury.
Comment By Brian At 11/13/2012 11:58 AM
@Brian:

They are probably closed to check every component of the belay/safety systems. For example, did he fall because a rope was repeatedly rubbing against an edge without anyone's knowledge? Was he routesetting and clipped into old bolts that hadn't been checked since the wall first opened? Are the harnesses past their retirement date? They'd have to pin down and fix problems like those for the sake of future climbers.

The case here is slightly different than the injuries you have described. A broken bone in football, for example, is not from failure of equipment. At a rockwall, if all the belay equipment is set up right and every component is in good condition, this should *never* happen, or to rephrase, one accident is one too many in the eyes of rockwall staff and managers. The risk of taking the force from a 30 foot fall, with the possibility of paralysis, should be zero. Broken bones, wrenched knees, even concussions, are really bad but can improve with time. Paralysis, if it happens, doesn't.

I've climbed for a few years indoors/outdoors and worked at rockwalls, which does NOT mean I know what I'm talking about, it just means I have rambling opinions.

A lot of people come in terrified to try climbing already so here's to whatever it takes to not scare anyone away from trying this superb sport, even if that means a seemingly absurd level of safety checks.
Comment By F. At 11/13/2012 1:25 PM
Is there any info if this is human belay error or was this an auto belay device failure?
Comment By Scott At 11/13/2012 3:59 PM
Is there any info on what happened, equipment failure or human error? Incidents like this can create panic in the indoor climbing world.
Comment By Rock bergmann At 11/14/2012 12:04 PM
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