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WorldVideo

Parkour athletes switch off Paris lights one by one

In Paris, young parkour athletes, whose sport involves running, swinging and vaulting in urban spaces, are using their skills in night-time escapades dubbed 'Lights Off' operations.

Group says their actions help enforce city orders requiring signs be turned off at night

Using parkour to fight climate change in Paris

2 years ago
Duration 0:57
In an operation they call 'Lights Off,' parkour athletes in Paris run, swing and vault to shut off what they see as energy wasted in the powering of overnight storefront lights.

Hadj Benhalima sized up the building in front of him then took a run at the wall, pushed off its surface with one foot, twisted around in mid-air and reached out to flick a switch a few metres off the ground.

A clunk and a brief second later, the glaring outdoor sign of the currency exchange store went dark, one of many shop-front illuminations the wiry 21-year-old and his fellow parkour athletes switched off one night last week in a bid to combat energy waste.

"There are many shop windows lit up at night and for no good reason. So given I can turn them off, I try to do it as much as possible," Benhalima said between leaps.

The young athletes whose parkour sport involves running, swinging and vaulting in urban spaces dub their night-time escapades "Lights Off" operations.

They make use of kill switches regularly placed on the outside of buildings in France to let emergency services cut off power in the event of a fire.

They say their actions help enforce Paris City Hall orders that stores extinguish all signs and window displays in the middle of the night. Patrolling police offer little resistance.

Capturing public imagination

Passing through chic neighbourhoods near the Garnier Opera House and the Champs-lyses, Benhalima and his friends pick off barbers, cafs and local stores. Boutiques belonging to Rolex, Tiffany & Co and Swatch are shown no deference.

Kevin Ha, from the On the Spot parkour team, answers questions on a night when they turn off the lights on dozens of storefronts to raise awareness on saving energy and reduce light pollution in Paris. (Benoit Tessier/Reuters)

"We set ourselves little challenges, like the earlier 360-degree wall run and high wall runs. The point is performance and sticking to our sporting DNA," said Kevin Ha, a 30-year-old engineer and parkour enthusiast.

The Paris-based On the Spot collective is just one of several parkour groups that have been acting against light pollution and wasteful energy use in cities across France for the past two years.

Their actions have caught the public's imagination at a time when the government is urging households and businesses to cut power consumption ahead of a winter energy crisis across Europe.

"It's beautiful to see," digital creator Umud Tekinalt said. "People congratulate us. Some even try to imitate us."

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