This is the most interesting roof in London.

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  • Опубликовано: 4 сен 2022
  • The @royalalberthall is 150 years old; the roof is 600 tonnes of glass and steel. And it turns out that there's a terrifying technicians' trampoline, acoustic-dampening mushrooms, and a complete lack of connections.
    Thanks to everyone at the Royal Albert Hall: www.royalalberthall.com/
    Camera by Jamie MacLeod www.jamiemacleod.co.uk/
    Aerial operations by Phil Conrad and Freddie Conrad from Photodrones www.photodrones.com
    Edited by Taran van Hemert / taranvh
    (The Royal Albert Hall is within the Hyde Park no-fly-zone. Drone operations were specially permitted and approved by the aviation authorities.)
    🟥 MORE FROM TOM: www.tomscott.com/
    (you can find contact details and social links there too)
    📰 WEEKLY NEWSLETTER with good stuff from the rest of the internet: www.tomscott.com/newsletter/
    ❓ LATERAL, free weekly podcast: lateralcast.com/ / lateralcast
    ➕ TOM SCOTT PLUS: / tomscottplus
    👥 THE TECHNICAL DIFFICULTIES: / techdif

Комментарии • 3,8 тыс.

  • @TomScottGo
    @TomScottGo  Год назад +14751

    I wish I'd had a bit more time up on the mesh, to get used to it - but we had to be finished by the time rehearsals for the day started!

    • @MarkRichards4Prez
      @MarkRichards4Prez Год назад +28

      Sick

    • @yuno_me
      @yuno_me Год назад +5

      Hi Scott

    • @elementballs
      @elementballs Год назад +2

      drip

    • @nqcgrapple6557
      @nqcgrapple6557 Год назад +39

      Scott i live in that attic i plant weed there shhh.. dont tell the cops.

    • @operatorcamp4672
      @operatorcamp4672 Год назад +10

      It starts with
      All I know
      It's so unreal
      Watch you go
      I tried so hard and got so far
      But in the end, it doesn't even matter
      I had to fall to lose it all
      But in the end, it doesn't even matter
      One thing, I don't know why
      It doesn't even matter how hard you try
      Keep that in mind, I designed this rhyme
      To remind myself of a time when I tried so hard
      In spite of the way you were mockin' me
      Actin' like I was part of your property
      Remembering all the times you fought with me
      I'm surprised it got so far
      Things aren't the way they were before
      You wouldn't even recognize me anymore
      Not that you knew me back then
      But it all comes back to me in the end
      You kept everything inside
      And even though I tried, it all fell apart
      What it meant to me will eventually
      Be a memory of a time when I
      I tried so hard and got so far
      But in the end, it doesn't even matter
      I had to fall to lose it all
      But in the end, it doesn't even matter
      One thing, I don't know why
      It doesn't even matter how hard you try
      Keep that in mind
      I designed this rhyme to explain in due time
      All I know
      Time is a valuable thing
      Watch it fly by as the pendulum swings
      Watch it count down to the end of the day
      The clock ticks life away
      It's so unreal
      You didn't look out below
      Watch the time go right out the window
      Tryin' to hold on, they didn't even know
      I wasted it all just to watch you go
      I kept everything inside
      And even though I tried, it all fell apart
      What it meant to me will eventually be a memory
      Of a time when I tried so hard

  • @Steets
    @Steets Год назад +19483

    The engineer saying that most people, including the fire brigade, just hold his hand to get across the mesh, and then JUMPING on the mesh to prove its safety is awesome.

    • @Couram
      @Couram Год назад +991

      this was my job when I did stage work, I was on rail and spot. the catwalks were my domain and it was hilarious to see people so scared when you jump in place and everything shakes slightly xD

    • @Drimirin
      @Drimirin Год назад +826

      I was a ski lift mechanic for a decade and trained several other mechanics. I would bounce the tower or work chair on them early on to test their reaction. You don't want overly nervous or overly confident people working at deadly heights with you.

    • @butlazgazempropan-butan11k87
      @butlazgazempropan-butan11k87 Год назад +91

      and then you remember his video abaut riding rollercoasters

    • @ttww1590
      @ttww1590 Год назад +26

      @UC5aWUNV-yRy1BV94MOnIJrA You seem to be trying much harder, and not doing aswell. Kinda sad. Remeber you're choosing to act out in this way, so you can break the cycle.

    • @varisleek3360
      @varisleek3360 Год назад +4

      thousandth like

  • @dodgeman777
    @dodgeman777 Год назад +15664

    If it’s not permanently attached, does that make it technically a lid?

    • @johnathantaylor5913
      @johnathantaylor5913 Год назад +2296

      Perhaps the biggest lid in London -- or the world?

    • @Voltaic_Fire
      @Voltaic_Fire Год назад +511

      I think it does.

    • @Filipnalepa
      @Filipnalepa Год назад +602

      I wonder it will be lifted if filled with helium or hydrogen.
      Please don't do it, but if someone have desire to vandalise monument with tremendous amount of all light gas, that might be a way

    • @SometimesCompitent
      @SometimesCompitent Год назад +222

      It’s pretty common in domed stadiums to have the roof unattached.. I’m pretty sure the USA and Japan both have much bigger ones.

    • @LorgeDelta
      @LorgeDelta Год назад

      I can remove your roof. >:)

  • @xxsimonsxx7907
    @xxsimonsxx7907 Год назад +3682

    I love how Tom gets terrified of walking in the mesh and then the cameraman is just chilling there, already standing on it

    • @aolson5795
      @aolson5795 Год назад +153

      Well, the cameraman never looked down!

    • @NoNameAtAll2
      @NoNameAtAll2 Год назад +383

      cameramen never die, you know

    • @Happymali10
      @Happymali10 Год назад +141

      @@NoNameAtAll2 We just expire and get replaced.

    • @grn1
      @grn1 Год назад +72

      @@aolson5795 He did look down or at least pointed the camera down quite convincingly.

    • @Dan-jp8jr
      @Dan-jp8jr Год назад +9

      @@aolson5795 he did tho

  • @shanerc
    @shanerc Год назад +2820

    So what you're saying, is that every director that has made a scene of London being destroyed by some natural disaster has missed a golden opportunity to show the roof of the Royal Albert Hall being lifted off and cartwheeling through the city? Or maybe they have and now I know to look for it.

    • @NoNameAtAll2
      @NoNameAtAll2 Год назад +102

      saving the idea

    • @Kimblesgarage
      @Kimblesgarage Год назад +340

      I was thinking of a Gru style villain stealing it with a giant magnet on a helicopter 😂

    • @Pax.YouTube
      @Pax.YouTube Год назад +67

      Write it down, write it down!

    • @cindchan
      @cindchan Год назад +18

      Now I want to see that in a movie!! 🤣

    • @leonie7754
      @leonie7754 Год назад +4

      I'm just glad I wasn't the only one to think that!

  • @MaxxMcGeePrivate
    @MaxxMcGeePrivate Год назад +23422

    Kudos to the camera guy who was walking on the mesh too. With no free hands.

    • @worldicez
      @worldicez Год назад +869

      This. I came here to say this.

    • @MakeItWithCalvin
      @MakeItWithCalvin Год назад +1381

      They are the unsung heroes of these videos.

    • @GhostMan407
      @GhostMan407 Год назад +2423

      the camera man is immune to fall damage by default

    • @benoitbvg2888
      @benoitbvg2888 Год назад +519

      He didn't look down...
      Edit : my bad, he did. Man's a natural.

    • @cfstonge
      @cfstonge Год назад +223

      Tom making it looks more difficult than it really is

  • @Lulu-qp4jm
    @Lulu-qp4jm Год назад +3500

    I feel your "this completely illogical" statement Tom. I am a civil engineer. I know how over built bridges are. I still can't walk on anything like glass where I can see down.

    • @engineeringvision9507
      @engineeringvision9507 Год назад +137

      I'm quite happy to walk across a mesh floor and look down. What I am not happy to do is be in a position where I can fall a long way down. Falling down hurts.

    • @MrDavil43
      @MrDavil43 Год назад +144

      @@engineeringvision9507 I think it was Douglas Adams who said that it wasn't how far you fell towards a planet, it was how hard you hit it that was the problem.

    • @buddyclem7328
      @buddyclem7328 Год назад +106

      @@MrDavil43 Heating up several thousand degrees as you break the speed of sound must be decidedly unpleasant too.

    • @M1America
      @M1America Год назад +11

      Its not completely illogical if you consider MI5 blowdarting the Queen through the mesh roof haha.

    • @genoob5843
      @genoob5843 Год назад +28

      @@buddyclem7328 worded it like it was nothing but a mild annoyance lmao

  • @Zebra_Cakes
    @Zebra_Cakes Год назад +1791

    The reaction “oh my god don’t bounce on it!” Was so genuine 😂
    I would be terrified as well

    • @d0n_key
      @d0n_key Год назад +56

      As soon as he started talking about how safe it was, I knew he was gonna bounce to make his point eventually 😂

    • @emptyjay488
      @emptyjay488 Год назад +6

      My heart rate spiked just watching it!

  • @leinadreign3510
    @leinadreign3510 Год назад +547

    I really love how Tom isnt shying away from showing his fear of heights and holding the inspectors arm for safety.
    Something you arent seeing often.

    • @IHateUniqueUsernames
      @IHateUniqueUsernames Год назад +35

      He said this long ago before it is his brand to be truthful, real and authentic; and these instances for human weaknesses help sell that brand - and makes us love him for it.

  • @philipsheehan3754
    @philipsheehan3754 Год назад +1844

    I used to be a theatre tech, the best part of it was seeing how the new techies reacted to the grid. Some would avoid it like the plague, others would use it like a trampoline. It was amazing bouncy

    • @TheBirchCreek
      @TheBirchCreek Год назад +198

      There are all sorts of people. I am not particularly afraid of heights, but sometimes I can feel a bit uneasy about certain structures. Once, we climbed a telecommunication mast, together with my friend, about 30 meters high. The whole structure was gently moving from side to side, swinging in the wind - just a few centimetres to each side, but one could definitely feel it. I assured myself that it was completely normal, given the properties of the structure, but I certainly had no desire to make it move more. However, my friend, as soon as he had reached the top platform a few moments later than me and had also noticed the swinging, started moving his weight in sync with the mast, trying to make it move more to see the limits of the movement. :) I wasn´t too pleased by that experiment, to say the least... :)

    • @alex.g7317
      @alex.g7317 Год назад +6

      @@TheBirchCreek where do you work? what the profession?

    • @thedarkroomlondon
      @thedarkroomlondon Год назад +56

      There's nothing quite like the joy of bringing a bunch of bouncy rubber balls up to a grid. Obviously on an off-day, obviously with the venue empty and secure. But bouncing bouncy balls from >3 stories high is a right laugh!

    • @a20axf
      @a20axf Год назад +12

      @@thedarkroomlondon well that’s not an image I ever thought I’d have in my head 😂👌🏻

    • @sarinabina5487
      @sarinabina5487 Год назад +5

      @@thedarkroomlondon i love that omg

  • @KSchawacker
    @KSchawacker Год назад +2407

    I'm an event production rigger and I can confidently say that that I still experience vertigo above about 50ft. It's completely normal and something that gets easier the more you work at height. No shame in seeking hand holds at those heights.

    • @N1njatortus
      @N1njatortus Год назад +41

      My worst was having to replace confetty up a 7 meter ladder it was so wobbly that if someone walked in the room I felt it

    • @Mikowmer
      @Mikowmer Год назад +24

      My dad's got a 50 ft yacht. I'm the one who has to get hoisted up the 70-80ft mast. While I've gotten used to it, I still move slowly and deliberately when handling tools and stuff.
      It's actually worse halfway up the mast than it is up the top because the wake of other boats can get you swinging more in the middle than at the top.

    • @jacobkudrowich
      @jacobkudrowich Год назад +5

      You experience the sensation of the room moving or you moving ? That's a strange reaction I've never had that to heights

    • @lohphat
      @lohphat Год назад +27

      I wonder if vertigo is an evolutionary adaptation to keep us safely in the trees.
      We don't mind distance above or out laterally, but we get pensive about distance below us.
      I believe there was a study in the 50s or the 60s about putting babies on glass tables and there was a critical age in months where once the infant developed a sense of spacial orientation and abstraction, they became frightened when placed on a transparent surface too high off the floor.

    • @Mikowmer
      @Mikowmer Год назад +33

      @@derektaylor2941 I can't climb the mast, as it doesn't have handholds. So instead I get hoisted up on a rope. In the end, I act like a pendulum. At the top, it's a very short pendulum, so when a boat comes by, the wake only makes the top of the mast sway with me there with it.
      However, halfway up, the pendulum is longer. So, if I'm not holding on and the wake hits the boat, the top of the mast sways, and I get swung out even further. So I have to put in a lot more effort halfway up to stop myself swinging all over the place than I do at the top.

  • @Archgeek0
    @Archgeek0 Год назад +438

    "Terrifying Technicians' Trampoline" is a deeply glorious phrase. Well stated, Tom.

    • @rin_etoware_2989
      @rin_etoware_2989 Год назад +3

      it is also grammatically iffy- oh god i just turned into _that_ guy, didn't i

    • @Axqu7227
      @Axqu7227 Год назад +2

      Im stealing “deeply glorious phrase”

  • @localfloridaman4038
    @localfloridaman4038 Год назад +456

    Tom: I'm scared of heights
    The cameraman: I don't have such weaknesses

  • @bigclivedotcom
    @bigclivedotcom Год назад +3886

    Tension grids are great once you get used to the idea of walking on air. Actually really practical for gaining easy access to lights.

    • @Medic_Chris
      @Medic_Chris Год назад +71

      I loved them when working in theatre world so practical and is much easier than a taliscope

    • @DerCrawlerVomUrAnus
      @DerCrawlerVomUrAnus Год назад +25

      I kinda expected to see you here, good sir.

    • @matthewbooth9265
      @matthewbooth9265 Год назад +34

      How common are they and where do you generally come across them? I wasn't aware of their existance and now i want to bounce until Tom Scott screams.

    • @sauercrowder
      @sauercrowder Год назад +56

      Until you drop your screwdriver, I imagine.

    • @matthewfriend59
      @matthewfriend59 Год назад +56

      @@sauercrowder generally you would tie off your tools so they don't fall like that.

  • @StuffandThings_
    @StuffandThings_ Год назад +2568

    Victorian engineering is just so wild. Some stuff is incredibly overengineered, whilst at the same time some stuff is incredibly underengineered. Its like that awkward point in the industrial revolution where they became confident enough with the new industrial capabilities to start doing some really crazy stuff, but there wasn't enough precedent to really know what was or wasn't enough. The Forth Bridge and the Tay Bridge (the one that collapsed) are a great example of this juxtaposition.

    • @rollthetape88
      @rollthetape88 Год назад +18

      i think you're refering to being a qualified engineer,

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Год назад +73

      The Victorians knew that they needed to engineer stuff to work right. So they just engineered whatever they could and didn't bother about the things they couldn't.

    • @plumeater1
      @plumeater1 Год назад +27

      "Architecture begins where Engineering ends" - Walter Gropius

    • @goekhanbag
      @goekhanbag Год назад +19

      I think we’re at that point now in Software Engineering.

    • @imicca
      @imicca Год назад +1

      its not surprising to see such amazing works because if you are not good at it - off with your head!
      ironically most durable engineering is built under oppression of some kind

  • @Nttmf
    @Nttmf Год назад +433

    Victorian engineering at its pinnacle. I wish more people would acknowledge the workers that constructed these amazing buildings.

    • @ordinarytree4678
      @ordinarytree4678 Год назад +35

      And how many people died either building it or handling and mining and manufacturing the steel.

    • @mijoges6288
      @mijoges6288 Год назад

      I learned about it in my World History class (In America). Absolutism stunning architecture that I hope I get to see in person one day.

    • @chrisanderson2368
      @chrisanderson2368 Год назад

      People did just as amazing things with less. Medieval cathedrals, ancient castles, tombs, and palaces. Amazing in every way in any time period.

    • @hiddenbunny7205
      @hiddenbunny7205 9 месяцев назад

      @@chrisanderson2368 and a lot of sacrifice of human lives

    • @kelrogers8480
      @kelrogers8480 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@chrisanderson2368don't be so bitter and miserable. Other people find it amazing - let them!

  • @violagreene4643
    @violagreene4643 Год назад +172

    I'm terrified just watching this video. I can't imagine how Tom felt. And the calmness of the safety officer is just inconceivable.

    • @topo6790
      @topo6790 Год назад +3

      The safety of the cameraman:

    • @jdubya7139
      @jdubya7139 Год назад

      Job interview for safety officer position: Walk across that mesh.
      If you can do it without flinching, you're hired.

    • @jdjfajfiladjfasdhflkasdksj6280
      @jdjfajfiladjfasdhflkasdksj6280 Год назад +2

      "You keep using that word, I do not think it means what you think it means"

  • @KeithHearnPlus
    @KeithHearnPlus Год назад +1947

    I love how Tom isn't afraid to, well, be afraid on camera. I think it's one of the reasons he has such a great following. He feels more like a friend than a celebrity.

    • @Glaaki13
      @Glaaki13 Год назад +17

      I was thinking the same

    • @Egilhelmson
      @Egilhelmson Год назад +4

      So you think Tom Cruise couldn’t do this?

    • @s70driver2005
      @s70driver2005 Год назад +76

      @@Egilhelmson acting scared and being scared on camera are 2 different things.

    • @christosvoskresye
      @christosvoskresye Год назад +60

      @@s70driver2005 Exactly. And I think most of us believe Tom Cruise is completely insane to begin with.

    • @MijinLaw
      @MijinLaw Год назад +24

      I did find his response hilarious TBH, but not in mean-spirited way, and indeed fair play for being willing to share this.

  • @thecrom777
    @thecrom777 Год назад +142

    My anxiety skyrocketted the moment you stepped on the mesh and the panic set in.

    • @defs8073
      @defs8073 Год назад

      Why? It's a video

    • @jcskyknight2222
      @jcskyknight2222 Год назад +3

      Mine sky rocketed when the camera looked down...

    • @theenami
      @theenami Год назад +1

      fr tho i'm not even there and i felt like i was gonna cry 😭

  • @fish-d6488
    @fish-d6488 Год назад +54

    its so charming watching tom wig out about the tension grid. you get so used to scary heights so fast when you work show tech -- its always interesting to see a new person approach them with, like, normal and appropriate self-preservation instincts

  • @emmarubacava
    @emmarubacava Год назад +2151

    Hello Theatre Lighting Technician here,
    Wire tension grids are a god send! I always feel so much safer and more confident when rigging and focusing from a wire tension grid as opposed to ladders or harness work or more traditional common place grids that are just iron beams with gaps big enough for your foot to slip through. Wire tension grids I’ve worked on in the past have had huge signs up that say “THIS IS NOT A TRAMPOLINE!” however…
    Fantastic video! Thank you for making it and thanks Royal Albert Hall for the backstage tour!

    • @davidjmcgraw
      @davidjmcgraw Год назад +43

      Completely agree. I always feel safer on a tension grid than a catwalk.

    • @sarahprunierlaw9147
      @sarahprunierlaw9147 Год назад +4

      +

    • @engineeringvision9507
      @engineeringvision9507 Год назад +50

      @@davidjmcgraw I'm not scared of heights, I'm only scared of realistic prospects of falling down.

    • @davidjmcgraw
      @davidjmcgraw Год назад +71

      ​@@engineeringvision9507 Falling is easy; it is the landing part that is hard.

    • @Psylaine64
      @Psylaine64 Год назад +25

      dare you to add a sign to every grid that says ' This is 'probably' not a trampoline''

  • @mitchellwalker9839
    @mitchellwalker9839 Год назад +1831

    Can we just applaud Scott’s cameraman for filming him while walking on the mesh

    • @damionlee7658
      @damionlee7658 Год назад +206

      Camera operators... The silent superheroes.

    • @bagnome
      @bagnome Год назад +143

      The cameraman always lives. That's why he wasn't scared.

    • @charlesnathansmith
      @charlesnathansmith Год назад +31

      @@bagnome someone has to remain to tell the tale

    • @simonbone
      @simonbone Год назад +10

      And for being in position in case Tom goes splat.

    • @RainaRamsay
      @RainaRamsay Год назад +2

      +

  • @SaintDuma
    @SaintDuma Год назад +29

    I'm an entertainment technician and my reaction to the grid was "oh an easy one to work on" -- wire tension grids are great, you need no additional safety gear to avoid falling. You just gotta not drop anything.

  • @danjenkinsdesign
    @danjenkinsdesign Год назад +38

    Love it. Saw the thumbnail of a tension grid and said "oh, Tom's visiting a theatre". Tension grids are fantastic and yes they do take a little getting used too, but once you realize that there is a crazy amount of safety and engineering that have gone into the design the fear just goes away.

  • @theshinxhunter
    @theshinxhunter Год назад +705

    I love how Tom both fully admits his fears when confronted with something that terrifies him, and does his best to face them and experience something cool. It’s really admirable.

    • @IanMustafa
      @IanMustafa Год назад

      you should watch Tom Scott Plus then

    • @isaiahromero9861
      @isaiahromero9861 Год назад +12

      @@elainejohnson796 having fears is cringy? Literally what? Horrible take

    • @griffinmckenzie7203
      @griffinmckenzie7203 Год назад +2

      @@elainejohnson796 Then stop watching him? Nobody is going to miss your view and it won't change your life.

    • @soundscape26
      @soundscape26 Год назад +3

      @@elainejohnson796 Most people would have the exact same reaction as him walking over that mesh... not hiding it makes Tom extremely relatable to his audience.

  • @benjaminstanford1436
    @benjaminstanford1436 Год назад +1258

    It cracks me up that Tom has such a rough time looking down, and then two seconds later it shows these historical images with workers just chilling at the top of the metal frame 😂

    • @ishanr8697
      @ishanr8697 Год назад +55

      4:53 you can see the pic of the workers.

    • @Blaqjaqshellaq
      @Blaqjaqshellaq Год назад +21

      True fact: Many of the construction workers who build New York skyscrapers are Mohawk Indians, who have a gift for overcoming fear of heights!

    • @neumdeneuer1890
      @neumdeneuer1890 Год назад +50

      @@Blaqjaqshellaq I have read somewhere that your info is actually an urban myth. They in fact were afraid but in their culture admitting this was not acceptable so they pretend to not be afraid.

    • @ImaginaryChannel
      @ImaginaryChannel Год назад +60

      @@neumdeneuer1890 well, if someone hides their fear of heights and carries on working at that height, wouldn't you call that overcoming the fear? Wouldn't you call that brave? It would be stupid not to feel some fear within at those heights, but the difference is whether you keep functioning. I know I'd probably freeze up like Tom did, unlike those workers who didn't only have to stand there but move around steel beams without safety gear.

    • @Phantomic11
      @Phantomic11 Год назад +1

      bin chillin

  • @FabulousFadz
    @FabulousFadz Год назад +27

    2:20 - I used to do sound setups for various functions as part of a team and at one of them in 2008 I wasn't on active duty but decided to assist in tear down. Some speakers had been suspended above the stage in a conference center and I was directed to the place I could turn a crank and lower them. The moment I stepped out to the area and felt the bounce, I noticed that I was on a mesh and I could see all the way down to the stage where people down there looked so small. My legs just stopped moving. Regardless of my mind telling me it's safe because other people were walking on it I just couldn't move. My legs didn't respond to anything I wanted. No one helped me and I ended up having to lie down and roll to the edge which was only half a meter away. I didn't take down those speakers. But I discovered a fear I didn't know I had.

  • @tradetor
    @tradetor Год назад +13

    2:33 The moment when you understand all the math and it is telling you that it is completely safe but your body still just couldn't trust it

  • @Mysterios1989
    @Mysterios1989 Год назад +2309

    About interesting roofs. If Tom goes back to Germany eventually, he should get into the roofs of the Cologne Cathedral. It is an interesting story. The Cathedral, while construction started in I think the 14th century, had a several century long construction stop and was only finished in the 19th century. The roof, while made look from the outside old, was made with back then modern technology, meaning a massive steel roof construction. This construction was responsible for the Cathedral surviving WWII, as the bomb that did land in the roof did not burn it down like Notre Dame.

    • @rahmspinat
      @rahmspinat Год назад +32

      Nortredam?
      Holy moses my friend. It's Notre Dame.

    • @AldanFerrox
      @AldanFerrox Год назад +21

      Also, its crooked, which you can easily see when you are up there.

    • @rin_etoware_2989
      @rin_etoware_2989 Год назад +19

      France already knows the dangers of burning medieval roofs: Chatres Cathedral's "forest" framework in the roof burned down in 1836 and has since been replaced with metal frame

    • @plootyluvsturtle9843
      @plootyluvsturtle9843 Год назад

      that’s really cool

    • @bytesabre
      @bytesabre Год назад +5

      Was just there, was blown away by how absolutely huge it is

  • @rhettorical
    @rhettorical Год назад +708

    You could tell me that mesh is strong enough to stop a freight train and it still wouldn't make me feel more comfortable walking on it when it's that high. Props to Tom for going out there.

    • @marcussherlock6318
      @marcussherlock6318 Год назад +21

      There's a solid metal mesh on the floor of the observation deck of the Toronto CN Tower. Feels the same way. They now let you strap into a harness and lean your full weight over the edge.

    • @Monkey80llx
      @Monkey80llx Год назад +5

      To be fair, Tom does scare easily. Very easily 😆

    • @DanielBParada
      @DanielBParada Год назад +1

      @@Monkey80llx very easily

  • @o_re_va
    @o_re_va Год назад +7

    At 3:55 bet the cameraman was just like "Tom don't be such a dramatic" 🙄

  • @KinkyTurtle
    @KinkyTurtle Год назад +15

    This video was so fascinating I didn't even care that you didn't explain how many holes it would take to fill the Albert Hall!

  • @kestrel7493
    @kestrel7493 Год назад +816

    The fact that he hedged his bets so much to not even call this the most interesting roof in the UK makes me wonder what else there is

    • @NIDELLANEUM
      @NIDELLANEUM Год назад +22

      with all the places he knows, wouldn't surprise me

    • @Alex-cw3rz
      @Alex-cw3rz Год назад +8

      Might not even be the most interesting in London as the Beatles famous performance on the roof was in London

    • @Poldovico
      @Poldovico Год назад +108

      @@Alex-cw3rz I'd argue "some famous blokes played music here once" is far less interesting than "this gigantic piece of construction isn't actually attached to anything".
      Like, even if we care about star power as much as we do about inherent properties, it's the Beatles that are interesting, not the roof.

    • @Alex-cw3rz
      @Alex-cw3rz Год назад +5

      @@Poldovico I mean the fact is that one is an entire documentary of intrigue of a band falling apart. Whereas one is did you know this isn't attached which is very cool, but then that's it, it's not even unique dry stone structures and walling isn't that unusual in the UK.

    • @Poldovico
      @Poldovico Год назад +53

      @@Alex-cw3rz But none of that stuff is actually about the roof.

  • @ethan-loves
    @ethan-loves Год назад +160

    I'm so grateful that Tom doesn't try to hide his emotions in videos like this. Fear is a natural, healthy response in that situation (at least, until you're desensitized to the height). Showing us his genuine reaction does a lot to destigmatize that fear!

    • @u1zha
      @u1zha Год назад +14

      @@elainejohnson796 I think he's becoming more and more ambitious, battling his fear of heights well.... Note he has some earlier videos like the one about Pulpit Rock where he hardly even approached the edge.

    • @davidhibberd
      @davidhibberd Год назад

      I thought Tom had a head for heights, this earlier video (Why Aren't There More Helicopter Crashes In London?) shows him standing on a wall at risk of falling into the River Thames, without much fear.
      About the fear of heights: it comes from our balance system using the ground as a visual reference so we don't fall over - but when it is a long way down, it doesn't work because there is almost no sideways movement of the ground to feedback. Hence focusing on near objects around instead, or even closing your eyes, helps.

  • @deice3
    @deice3 Год назад +34

    I feel for Tom, its not easy having to face a phobia.
    Its hard to understand how irrational the fear is, you can consciously be 110% certain the situation is safe, but your mind just goes "nope!".
    Mine is wasps, if any of those come at me I'm 10m away before the thinking parts of my brain kick in.

    • @ruzziasht349
      @ruzziasht349 Год назад +6

      A phobia? I think that's common sense.

  • @sameture561
    @sameture561 Год назад +3

    Sorry for your loss Tom

  • @elementalturnip
    @elementalturnip Год назад +275

    I love how Tom showed more fear walking on this mesh than he did when he was strapped to the top of a flying biplane.

    • @fademan77
      @fademan77 Год назад +14

      Or going down a wind turbine backwards!!

    • @guymontag2948
      @guymontag2948 Год назад +2

      I'm terrified of heights, but I love to fly. I think it's a normal thing, but I don't know why it happens that way.

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Год назад +26

      Our caveman ancestors knew, fall from height, bad. Our caveman ancestors never had the need to develop a fear of biplanes.

    • @AstralDragn
      @AstralDragn Год назад +7

      I think its related to the amount of control. On the plane Tom couldn't do anything to affect whether or not he was safe really once they were up, but the mesh is innately determining on his mind if its a safe or unsafe action with clear things that determined it as unsafe right in front of him.

    • @wannabetitan700
      @wannabetitan700 Год назад

      or going into that place without laws (yellow stone)

  • @jamestaliaferro258
    @jamestaliaferro258 Год назад +394

    Tom: The roof of the Royal Albert Hall isn’t actually attached.
    *sound of whirring helicopters in the distance*
    *grappling hooks attach to the roof and start to lift it off*
    Tom: *leaps aboard rising roof, pulls off disguise to reveal red fedora and trench coat*
    “Better luck catching me next time, Player..”
    *Carmen Sandiego theme plays, roll credits*

    • @LeifNelandDk
      @LeifNelandDk Год назад +2

      How many helicopters would that require?

    • @nevreiha
      @nevreiha Год назад +1

      @@LeifNelandDk a lot

    • @jobiden2942
      @jobiden2942 Год назад +7

      @@LeifNelandDk at least 2

    • @Thamstras
      @Thamstras Год назад +7

      @@LeifNelandDk According to Wikipedia, 1 Chinook can lift ~10.8 tonnes, so you'd need at least 56 of them. I have a feeling you'd struggle to fit that many in the airspace above the dome. Lets see... A Chinook is ~645.6 sq. ft, apparently the dome covers 20,000 sq. ft so we can fit at most 30. I didn't include the rotors in that calculation so it probably doesn't matter how you try and arrange them vertically, a cable can't go through a fuselage, so I don't think you can do it.

    • @Game_Hero
      @Game_Hero Год назад +1

      Tom was Carmen Sandiego all along. I knew it...

  • @herzogsbuick
    @herzogsbuick Год назад +1

    Thanks for sharing and scaring Tom! Hanging out on the grid is one of my favorite things. I've never seen anything like that one though. Incredible.

  • @craftthemoon
    @craftthemoon Год назад +7

    I heard the news today… oh boy.

  • @seamusoriely4702
    @seamusoriely4702 Год назад +658

    I always love how Tom is more than willing to put in those moments that show how uncomfortable/scared he is in a given situation and not just edit it out, it makes the videos so much more realistic and raw

    • @soundscape26
      @soundscape26 Год назад +47

      And much more relatable to the audience because most of us would feel absolutely the same if high up there.

    • @seamusoriely4702
      @seamusoriely4702 Год назад +6

      @@soundscape26 without doubt! I don't know if I'd even make it onto the mesh

    • @stowgood
      @stowgood Год назад +10

      Him being terrified of everything is what makes his videos so interesting. (OK everything isn't fair, lots of things)

    • @RainaRamsay
      @RainaRamsay Год назад

      +

    • @cometomyfrontdoor
      @cometomyfrontdoor Год назад

      I'd prefer not to see his over dramatics

  • @gtoger
    @gtoger Год назад +1053

    This is beautiful. I love that the engineering has "just worked" for all these years, and the hall is still regularly used for modern productions.

    • @MickeyMallone.
      @MickeyMallone. Год назад +3

      It's absolutely stunning

    • @ennocramer4703
      @ennocramer4703 Год назад +2

      @GTOger: There are now 542 replies to you asking your community, what might be the reason for you to no longer post any videos - I wonder if that is not yet enough to provide us with an answer?

    • @panda-wk8mv
      @panda-wk8mv Год назад +7

      a lot of stuff in england is like that

    • @mirstong
      @mirstong Год назад +17

      @@ennocramer4703 who are you talking to?

    • @LeifNelandDk
      @LeifNelandDk Год назад +3

      Well, it didn't "just work" acusticly

  • @deathofthemagi
    @deathofthemagi Год назад +1

    What I love about Tom's videos is that he takes topics that I would normally never care about or give the time of day and he makes them fascinating

  • @iangrimshaw1
    @iangrimshaw1 Год назад +6

    Apparently there are only two fears we are born with; a fear of falling and a fear of loud noises. Good job nobody popped a balloon behind you. Great video, as always!

  • @spirit5923
    @spirit5923 Год назад +783

    The fact that Tom is so incredibly smart and interesting and yet also openly afraid to walk on the mesh shows how human he is. We appreciate you, my guy.

    • @clray123
      @clray123 Год назад +43

      What are you talking about? I remember that he was replaced by an android a couple months ago.

    • @travcollier
      @travcollier Год назад +16

      A fear of heights is very common, not universal, but maybe more common than not being particularly scared of heights.
      I did a tiny bit of urban climbing in my youth and had the "I don't know if I can move" moment. I managed to push past it, but can totally sympathize with folks who can't.
      Oh, and there's also the thing where construction companies doing tension structures prefer hiring climbers and training them in the construction instead of the other way around. There were several stories about that when the Millennium Dome was being built

    • @Simon-jv9bm
      @Simon-jv9bm Год назад +1

      Mark Zuckerberg should try it to prove himself

    • @LeifNelandDk
      @LeifNelandDk Год назад +3

      Just imagine it's a tightrope, which he did successfully.

    • @BBTManiac
      @BBTManiac Год назад +11

      you can be an engineer and know exactly the weight tolerances involved of every cubic centimeter of every single bit of material in that structure.
      But when you're up there, seeing the rest of the building bellow you, and seeing the _mesh_ that you're standing on. AND feeling it flex with your movement. Your brain will tell you it isn't safe. Health and Safety Guy has probably been up there thousands upon thousands and thousands of times. His brain is used to seeing the distance bellow, and used to feeling the mesh flex. Knowledge can't make up for trained natural responses, or lack thereof.

  • @td1559
    @td1559 Год назад +1771

    I wonder whether the lack of attachment actually has design benefits, e.g. reducing stresses due to different expansion rates due to temperature of the iron roof and the brick walls.

    • @polerin
      @polerin Год назад +104

      It really explains the creaking too. Literally sliding. Wonder about friction?

    • @a.debree6771
      @a.debree6771 Год назад +115

      It does reduce the stresses due to the different expation rates. That makes this a great design.

    • @Jehty21
      @Jehty21 Год назад +127

      @@polerin I don't think so.
      That creaking sound just sounded like the metal roof expanding. You can hear the same sound by metal carports or sheds.

    • @nanoflower1
      @nanoflower1 Год назад +36

      @@Jehty21 I can hear it every morning when I take a shower. The heat from the shower causes the wood construction behind the wall to expand and creak. One of the oddities of using wood to build many buildings here in the USA.

    • @criollitoification
      @criollitoification Год назад +82

      It seems counterintuitive to learn as I did before I got into construction that all buildings should expand and contract by design, and that the engineers problem is knowing how and at what points within the fabric of the building to implement movement joints to best achieve these characteristics. I know that as a youngster these ideas were alien to me as I would look at buildings being immovable solid masses.

  • @codya30
    @codya30 Год назад +27

    I laughed a lot when Tom stepped out. As a stagehand who's worked at a ton of venues, I'm always curious of places I haven't been to. I thought it would much much further down but it wasn't an unusual height, and much safer with the mesh than just walking out on iron beams or steel/aluminum truss.

  • @raccoon.legion
    @raccoon.legion Год назад +5

    That fear was so genuine that as someone terrified of heights I was feeling it with you

  • @davidhopkins8967
    @davidhopkins8967 Год назад +609

    I’ve been up to the Corona in 2015, when I was assisting a photographer who wanted a photo from the top. I was petrified and not much help at all! Everything, keys, phones, jewellery and even the camera lens had to be left outside in case it fell through the iron mesh. This video took me straight back to that day and the way everything wobbled…

    • @thegrandnil764
      @thegrandnil764 Год назад +3

      I carry my DSLR + camping gear up cliffs daily. It's more of an irrational worry than anything.

    • @davidhopkins8967
      @davidhopkins8967 Год назад +47

      @@thegrandnil764 the issue isn’t about losing something - it’s about it hitting someone working below at very high speed. That’s why we weren’t allowed anything at all in our pockets whilst on the wire mesh.

    • @Suspended4thYT
      @Suspended4thYT Год назад +7

      @@thegrandnil764 It's for the safety of anyone below

  • @SuperVstech
    @SuperVstech Год назад +556

    I’m an electrician in NC, USA, and several schools have similar grid work I have to work in, and I completely understand Tom’s reaction…

  • @D25Bev
    @D25Bev Год назад

    This was really nice to see. My Grandad worked a lot on the Albert Hall roof lighting (mushrooms) & sound systems after the war.

  • @psychomrw
    @psychomrw Год назад +3

    "OH MY GOD! Don't Bounce!" You and me both Tom.

    • @RainbowFlowerCrow
      @RainbowFlowerCrow Год назад

      That's how I used to feel in elevators when people would jump up and down in them! 😬
      Now that I work with and around elevators as a small part of my job, I understand better how they work, so I'm not afraid anymore! I love when our techs come in, because they are cool with nerds like me asking questions to learn about the mechanics of our elevators. I guess the more one learns about something that they're afraid of, the less afraid they become! Unless you're Tom Scott on the mesh at the Royal Albert Hall 🤭

  • @43dl3ntil
    @43dl3ntil Год назад +24

    2:49 As somebody who is scared of heights I felt your fear through the screen.

  • @limerence8365
    @limerence8365 Год назад +502

    Had a dream about Tom last night. I was being interviewed by him about a giant telescope that could move around a giant glass warehouse and tourists could come in, move it themselves and look through it. Then we watched a weird parade. Then Tom took me on a journey jumping over walls into people gardens. Then we broke into someone's house because Tom was secretly investigating someone and I was caught then pretended it was my house and acted hysterical to escape without raising alarm. Weird dream.

    • @bbgun061
      @bbgun061 Год назад +56

      Do you work at a place with a giant telescope that could move around a giant glass warehouse and tourists could come in, move it themselves and look through it?

    • @Toothily
      @Toothily Год назад +5

      Hehe, good dream

    • @limerence8365
      @limerence8365 Год назад +57

      @@bbgun061 In real life no. In the dream I was vaguely aware I was in a dream and had to ask Tom where we were. He kept replying with British place names that I'd never heard of till he showed me on a map and I was like "oh, we're in England". I guess my brain just thought the giant mobile telescope was something Tom would make a video about.

    • @casualdejekyll5168
      @casualdejekyll5168 Год назад +97

      It wasn’t a dream, Tom just erased your memory to get rid of the witnesses.

    • @CzlowiekDrzewo
      @CzlowiekDrzewo Год назад +9

      Tom Scott plus Limerence. Can't wait for that video!

  • @davidjames2910
    @davidjames2910 Год назад

    Thank you! I have been in the Albert Hall many times but this was a whole new perspective.

  • @garycarmody
    @garycarmody Год назад +1

    I'm not afraid of heights at all... but your reactions had my heart thumping. Good Job! Love your videos :)

  • @georgeowen2553
    @georgeowen2553 Год назад +399

    As an orchestral musician I've played in many amazing spaces, including the Royal Albert Hall, but I always zone out in the rests and end up gazing at the roofs of many places, wondering what goes on. Now I have one of the many concert halls ticked off!

    • @UmbrellaGent
      @UmbrellaGent Год назад +17

      What is your opinion on the acoustics there?

  • @Waaaltz_
    @Waaaltz_ Год назад +174

    I like how Tom's confidence quickly drops from 100 to 0 as soon as he looked down.
    I would definitely feel the same because I have fear of Heights as well.

    • @pyropulseIXXI
      @pyropulseIXXI Год назад

      It is somewhat pathetic

    • @Waaaltz_
      @Waaaltz_ Год назад +8

      @@pyropulseIXXI ok edgelord

  • @JohnRay1969
    @JohnRay1969 Год назад +2

    This is far and away one of my favorite of your videos. My absolute favorite is the one about microwaves where you located the scientist and he gleefully told the story of thawing frozen hamsters.
    This one made me sick from heights. I had butterflies in my stomach, I was literally pushing against the back of my chair to get away from the edge. Very nice, good on you for walking out there. I'm now remembering your trip to the top of the wind turbine, so that's another one that made me sick. Love it. 💚

  • @postminchoppa
    @postminchoppa Год назад +1

    There is alot of quality rigging going on there

  • @AlanKey86
    @AlanKey86 Год назад +212

    I have an alternative (musical) solution to the echo problem:
    The echo from the ceiling was ~200 ms, which is equivalent to a crotchet (1/4 note) at 75 bpm.
    Therefore *if all the music played at the Royal Albert Hall* was performed at 75 bpm, the delay produced by the ceiling echo would blend in nicely!
    BONUS FACT: If U2 (who are fond of using a dotted 1/8 note delay) they'd need to play every song at 100 bpm. The Edge would have no need for his delay pedal, just let the building do the echo automatically!

    • @zyaicob
      @zyaicob Год назад +3

      I love you

    • @ahaveland
      @ahaveland Год назад +16

      In some circumstances yes, but not if you're playing chromatic scales that clash with the echoes and make a discordant mess - I'd be out of there like a shot!
      Slapback echoes completely change the original performance into something else, and music is generally composed specifically to take advantage of it, such as JMJ, Pink Floyd etc.

    • @MmadA-lg6ix
      @MmadA-lg6ix Год назад +3

      Bonus Bonus: Here are some well-known U2 songs with a tempo of 100 bpm, give or take:
      Bad
      I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For
      Running to Stand Still
      Angel of Harlem
      All I Want Is You
      Until the End of the World
      Walk On
      Sometimes You Can't Make It On Your Own

    • @charleslambert3368
      @charleslambert3368 Год назад +2

      How long is the delay in Rob Scallon's Rain?

    • @MmadA-lg6ix
      @MmadA-lg6ix Год назад +2

      @@charleslambert3368 About 375 ms. It's a dotted quarter note setting at around 120 bpm - wouldn't quite fly for that echo but it's incredibly cool nonetheless.

  • @andrewkovnat
    @andrewkovnat Год назад +499

    That ending drone shot was AMAZING! The pull-out was sooo expertly done! You have an excellent camera crew, Tom.

    • @thelastcube.
      @thelastcube. Год назад +31

      Mad Cap'n Tom's pullout game has always been strong

    • @bsvenss2
      @bsvenss2 Год назад

      @@thelastcube. Hahahaha

    • @ljones2087
      @ljones2087 Год назад

      Reminds me of GTA when you get wasted.

  • @tonymarselle8812
    @tonymarselle8812 Год назад +1

    That last bit of information is the most wild to me.
    “Let’s drop it right on top then? Count of three?”
    Bolts be damned.

  • @EK-hp9io
    @EK-hp9io Год назад +1

    I fuckin love this guy. He’s probably the most genuine person I’ve ever seen on the internet. Keep ‘em coming, Tom.

  • @SirCatsal0t
    @SirCatsal0t Год назад +241

    I work with rigging productions (concerts, awardshows, television etc.) and I've seen how many people are required to get small simple structures made out of trusses up and standing. So the fact that people managed to construct this 600 tonne iron roof 150 years ago likely without the help of 1 ton motors and the likes is absolutely astounding to me.

  • @BradleyJager
    @BradleyJager Год назад +107

    “The roof isn’t actually attached”
    Boys who wants to help me steal a roof

    • @BQhjort
      @BQhjort Год назад +26

      I carry all my groceries in one trip, so I'm down.

    • @MAYBEMAYNOTBE2
      @MAYBEMAYNOTBE2 Год назад +3

      Can I watch from distance

    • @owenkegg5608
      @owenkegg5608 Год назад +3

      We just need a VERY big helicopter

    • @MAYBEMAYNOTBE2
      @MAYBEMAYNOTBE2 Год назад +2

      @@owenkegg5608maybe 10 regular helicopters or 1000 drones?

    • @MattyEngland
      @MattyEngland Год назад +6

      If it was even remotely possible, then a certain group of people with a liking for caravans, would've had it down the scrap metal dealers years ago 😂👍

  • @mapf7097
    @mapf7097 11 месяцев назад

    Thanks for this view below the roof of one of the most famous buildings in London. Nice to see how simple and reliable it was designed 150 years ago.

  • @jamespink4202
    @jamespink4202 Год назад +2

    I love this stuff. Thank you Tom. I've been an addict for domes, spires, pyramids and towers all round the world, from the Romans, Greeks and later Italians to the O2 and Eiffel, they fascinate me. Thank you for this detail!!!

  • @apjtv2540
    @apjtv2540 Год назад +238

    This feels like one of the most genuine reactions we've ever seen from Tom. Don't get me wrong, he's always seemed honest and nice, but that fear reaction dropped the mask completely.

    • @Zestrayswede
      @Zestrayswede Год назад +106

      You clearly haven't been watching Tom Scott plus

    • @whublah
      @whublah Год назад +7

      Ahh he kinda acts like hes on the spectrum. Seems like he has zero social skills

    • @Tardisntimbits
      @Tardisntimbits Год назад +78

      @@whublah I'm sorry, but how? His interactions with people always seem fine, he was just scared, and rightly so.

    • @araw_buwan
      @araw_buwan Год назад

      Timestamp?

    • @hwren9845
      @hwren9845 Год назад +96

      @@whublah No he doesn't, and having zero social skills (something Tom clearly does not suffer from) doesn't indicate being on the spectrum anyway. Stop pathologizing ordinary human behaviour.

  • @jenniferneve2723
    @jenniferneve2723 Год назад +176

    I shared every moment of his panic. And when the engineer started BOUNCING, I reacted the same way at the same time as Tom. 😱 I also startled my cat.

    • @hwren9845
      @hwren9845 Год назад +7

      I felt my stomach drop a little bit!

    • @AltonV
      @AltonV Год назад +1

      I got a flashback to when I went up the stairs to the main floor of the Eiffel tower (57m), you can see all the way down and it was terrifying

  • @Kazekou
    @Kazekou Год назад +1

    The Royal Albert Hall is my favourite space in the world. I love it so much.
    Thanks for this video. It was really cool and something, I'd likely never seen or known otherwise. Now when I next go, I can stare up in amazement for entirely new reasons

  • @andrewmwells9606
    @andrewmwells9606 4 месяца назад

    This is one of those videos that takes your breath away but you cant stop looking!!

  • @derSascha321
    @derSascha321 Год назад +644

    In Düsseldorf, Germany, there is an art installation that gives you the feeling of this place. It is called "in Orbit" and consists of a steel net placed at a height of 25 meters. It can be found in the official art exhibition "K21" of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia. Have fun, it‘s great…

    • @cosmicreciever
      @cosmicreciever Год назад +8

      I will have to see it next time I go, the last time I was in Düsseldorf it was closed because of the virus :(

    • @microdisturbia
      @microdisturbia Год назад +1

      i live there

    • @jakobvanklinken
      @jakobvanklinken Год назад +4

      it was absolutely terrifying! Great tip

    • @Fnsnsbdbwkqnq
      @Fnsnsbdbwkqnq Год назад +2

      is it still there? found some articles that said it was only until end of 2015

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz Год назад +10

      Damn dude you should have told us while we had 9€ tickets!

  • @kenbrown2808
    @kenbrown2808 Год назад +122

    many years ago, patrons eating at one of our local restaurants during a windstorm found out the roof wasn't attached. then once they recovered from the shock of the roof leaving in the middle of the meal, they went out into the car park and found out where it landed.

  • @bluemalamute
    @bluemalamute Год назад +1

    This made my hands prespire, and I was only watching the video. courageous show, and great video!

  • @PhoenixMF1986
    @PhoenixMF1986 Год назад +1

    Just seeing that and seeing you react is making my anxiety spike. My palms are sweaty. I can only imagine what you must have been feeling.
    I used to help change lighting gels in the roof of my high schools theater and that used to scare me. This is waaaaaaay higher.

  • @kickthejetengine
    @kickthejetengine Год назад +143

    I love how Tom keeps in the bits where is frightened when on the mesh. I would be too. It’s respectable to show that I think.

  • @SolomonSaul
    @SolomonSaul Год назад +176

    You missed the most interesting fact - When they designed the roof, the engineer's weren't sure that it would be able to support itself as it was the biggest of its kind. That's why they built it in Manchester and left it for a year before dismantling it and moving it to London. When they dropped the roof onto the walls, the walls of the hall shifted circularly by roughly 1/2". It's caused cracks and stress marks in the brickwork that you can still see.

    • @FakeMoonRocks
      @FakeMoonRocks Год назад +18

      Another fun fact: They know how many holes it takes to fill the hall.

    • @Jimmyknapp2
      @Jimmyknapp2 Год назад +32

      "It kinda broke the building, just not a whole lot."

    • @QuixoticDucky
      @QuixoticDucky Год назад

      @@FakeMoonRocks How many holes?

    • @VakarisJ
      @VakarisJ Год назад +1

      @@QuixoticDucky 455 holes, probably.

    • @TWKB42
      @TWKB42 Год назад +2

      @@QuixoticDucky let's say it takes 4000 holes to fill blackburn lanchashire, then you could prob do the math to figure out how many holes it takes to fill the albert hall
      hope that helps

  • @gorgewashington1216
    @gorgewashington1216 Год назад

    its amazing to konw that the roof is just there without fixation thanks for this incredible video full of info !

  • @conniehutchins9946
    @conniehutchins9946 Год назад

    Wow that looked terrifying but was also utterly fascinating. Thank you so much. Victorian engineering was magnificent.

  • @carolineconnelly8620
    @carolineconnelly8620 Год назад +76

    At the 4:00 minute mark, when Tom started walking, I was watching him place one foot immediately before the other with his arms spread, and I wondered whether this had been filmed after his tightrope walking episode.

  • @Autoskip
    @Autoskip Год назад +305

    The moment Guy started bouncing was the moment I said “Oh, I like him”
    It's not quite the same thing, but once when I got too fast on a high-ropes course, and had to wait for the person in front of me, I spent the next 5-ish minutes halfway along that section of tightrope, leaning on the rope that was designed to be a terrible hand-rail, and enjoying the view from 2-3 stories up, so I'd like to think I'd be more like Guy than Tom, but I've got no idea how I'd actually go.

    • @Autoskip
      @Autoskip Год назад

      @sourand jaded ...that actually might make sense - if you go over the edge of the steel roof, there's nothing for you to catch onto, but dancing around exposed rafters, you've always got something further over for you to catch (assuming you're not on the end one, but then you've got experience clambering around on individual rafters, which might improve your confidence there anyway)
      As for ropes and ladders, if a ladder moves over a foot or two, you're toppling, but you can swing on a rope to horizontal if the attachment point is strong enough.

  • @claudevieaul1465
    @claudevieaul1465 Год назад +2

    Well done!! Thát grid takes some courage to step out on to the unaware... 👍👍
    I generally trust old constructions far more than newer ones, as the latter usually have far less margin (= cost) on safety.
    The Royal Albert Hall is the most amazing venue I've ever been to - and I have been attending concerts at the RAH a fair bit over the years. But I've never been on the tour around this British icon. Something for the near future!

  • @calciumgoodness4073
    @calciumgoodness4073 Год назад +2

    As an engineer, this was awesome to see. Great video Tom.

  • @tonypang83
    @tonypang83 Год назад +93

    For all the modern skyscrapers we see reaching insane heights, it's these decades and centuries old buildings that really amaze me. It boggles my mind how they did it without modern day technology.

    • @pavelow235
      @pavelow235 Год назад +1

      Did they not have math back then?

    • @tonypang83
      @tonypang83 Год назад +9

      @@pavelow235 I said technology, not maths. You know, things like modern day construction technology, cranes, transport vehicles, computers for simulating and testing ideas in the design stage, etc…

    • @dcarbs2979
      @dcarbs2979 Год назад

      @@pavelow235 I'm more impressed with the Roman technology. They achieved similar results with the Colessium and The Pantheon almost 2000 years earlier. It is the strongest shape geometricly possible in architecture.

  • @JohnRollercoasterJr
    @JohnRollercoasterJr Год назад +58

    The ability for Tom Scott to get me to care about things I’ve never thought twice about is unprecedented

  • @oldaircraftguy8844
    @oldaircraftguy8844 Год назад

    I can no longer do heights having had a bad experience on a ladder years ago. You all have my most sincere respect.

  • @michalpiotrgorecki
    @michalpiotrgorecki Год назад +5

    In reality its a spacehip just resting here ready to fly off when needed. Mark my words.

  • @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache
    @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache Год назад +31

    Human ingenuity when it comes to engineering just keeps evolving and blowing my mind. This is pretty amazing.

    • @Frommerman
      @Frommerman Год назад +4

      The Royal Albert Hall is an example of extremely bad engineering. Sure, it hasn't killed anyone (yet), but it utterly failed at accomplishing the single task it was built to accomplish because the engineers neglected to even check whether their fancy design did the thing it was meant to. All the retrofitting they had to do afterward was a concession that they built a bad building.

    • @agentnull5242
      @agentnull5242 Год назад

      Watch this blow up for no reason :/

    • @YOEL_44
      @YOEL_44 Год назад +1

      @@agentnull5242 What are you talking about?

  • @dh510
    @dh510 Год назад +173

    I demand an entire series of Tom being put in terrifying Situations!! Fighter jets, roller coasters, glass bridges!
    That's the funniest thing I've seen all day!

    • @skele3310
      @skele3310 Год назад +55

      his second channel has videos of him flying and riding rollercoasters and such! it's awesome!

    • @oxybrightdark8765
      @oxybrightdark8765 Год назад +16

      He's flown with the red arrows, and on plus, he's done roller coasters and tight ropes.

    • @Nelo390
      @Nelo390 Год назад +23

      Check out Tom Scott Plus! It's literally that XD, wish granted.

    • @bobdagamer640
      @bobdagamer640 Год назад +10

      Tom Scott plus is what your looking for

    • @timnone2924
      @timnone2924 Год назад +11

      Check out his other channel "Tom Scott Plus", he does just that, the time coaster one was actually really cool, seeing him come around from deathly afraid to almost loving it

  • @emgee44
    @emgee44 Год назад +1

    Another great video I didn’t know I needed to watch but glad I did😊.

  • @mr-dan-coleman
    @mr-dan-coleman Год назад

    Absolutely brilliant! I had no idea!

  • @SocialistRaccoon
    @SocialistRaccoon Год назад +85

    Love the way Tom describes his fear responses as he goes in his more harrowing videos. Great presence of mind.

    • @WS12658
      @WS12658 Год назад +3

      @@elainejohnson796 Agreed. I've noticed it a lot more in recent videos. I suppose because he's doing stuff out of his comfort zone, but the overreacting/surprise (when he knew full well what he was getting into) is quite annoying.

    • @borismuller86
      @borismuller86 Год назад +6

      @@WS12658 I mean, it’s one thing to know you’re going up high and it’s a whole different thing to be up there and suddenly realise that it’s terrifying.

  • @thewpbard
    @thewpbard Год назад +63

    So, if a performer at the Royal Albert Hall says to "raise the roof", this is technically possible?

  • @Mr_Bollie
    @Mr_Bollie Год назад +2

    Very cool! Always wanted to know more about that building. Thank you so much. :)

  • @mikamajlund3622
    @mikamajlund3622 Год назад +3

    Du gör alltid väldigt intressant filmer, tack.

  • @peanuts2105
    @peanuts2105 Год назад +31

    I used to be a freelance lighting technician in London where I worked at this very venue and others such as the Royal Opera House and the O2. I can tell you this: I used to get the serious sweats and nerves climbing lighting truss that is hung from roofs such as this. Now I work in aerospace - phew!

  • @DingusBingus1
    @DingusBingus1 Год назад +83

    I had a second-hand anxiety looking at that footage, but the explanation of the roof and its weight capacity in comparison to how much its currently supporting was actually pretty calming. Made me wanna jump on it too, despite the fact I'd never do such a thing ever

  • @paula200
    @paula200 Год назад

    Fascinating - as always.

  • @alexknight8249
    @alexknight8249 Год назад

    This video is fantastic! I have been to many many concerts in the Albert Hall, and always wondered about the roof and how it worked. Now I know!