In a bizarre incident, a 26-year-old man found himself trapped inside the Talus Dome sculpture in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
Firefighters were called to the scene on Easter Sunday, and the man was arrested soon after his rescue.
The Talus Dome, a monumental roadside sculpture created by Ball Nogues Studio in 2012, is made up of nearly 1,000 handmade stainless steel spheres.
It is located at a major junction of the city’s river valley trail system, making it accessible to a wide range of people.
Connor Schwindt, a passerby who noticed the commotion, said he initially thought the firefighters were attempting to rescue an animal.
When he realized it was a person trapped inside the sculpture, he began documenting the incident on his phone.
Schwindt described the man as “panicking” and compared the situation to a mouse falling into a bucket.
The Talus Dome, a monumental roadside sculpture created by Ball Nogues Studio in 2012, is made up of nearly 1,000 handmade stainless steel spheres.
Three crews, including a technical rescue team, were involved in the rescue operation, which took around an hour and a half.
Firefighters had to use a saw and the hydraulic rescue tool known as the “jaws of life” to cut through the steel structure and remove one of the spheres.
Edmonton Fire Rescue Services district chief Troy Brady remarked that the incident was a first for him.
No injuries were reported during the rescue, but the man was arrested shortly after he was freed from the sculpture.
Police said he had climbed on top of the structure and damaged several spheres before becoming trapped.
He has been charged with one count of mischief over $5,000 and released.
The Talus Dome has long been a divisive piece of public art among Edmonton residents.
Hans Klaver, a fan of the sculpture, said he had always wondered what it would look like from the inside but had never been “curious or stupid enough” to try.
He jokingly suggested that the man should have been left inside overnight, with just a sandwich thrown in for sustenance.
Connor Schwindt, who documented the incident, noted that the Talus Dome had always been a polarizing piece of art.
He found the situation both strange and humorous, stating, “How polarizing the Talus Balls are is already funny and to have some dude slip inside there … I just thought it was humorous.”
The Talus Dome, maintained by the Edmonton Arts Council, is part of the City of Edmonton’s Public Art Collection.
The structure, designed by California-based artists Benjamin Ball and Gaston Nogues, cost around $600,000 to construct.
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