All Pain, No Plane: My Grim Experience With Indoor Skydiving

The popular team-building activity that literally broke me

Ashwin Rodrigues
Human Parts

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An iFly Indoor Skydiving Facility in Rosemont, IL. Photo: Scott Olsen/Getty

I was never particularly curious to experience the sensation of falling out of an airplane. But in the summer of 2015, out of a sense of obligation, I stood in front a vertical wind tunnel in Tukwila, Washington.

At the time, I was working at Amazon as a marketing specialist, and our team had signed up for a corporate group activity at iFLY, an indoor skydiving facility. For roughly 60 seconds, iFLY simulates the sensation of free fall via a system of fans circulating air through a plexiglass tube, known as a vertical wind tunnel. For this, the company charges $45.

iFLY is the largest company operating in the indoor skydiving industry. It owns, franchises, or licenses 67 wind tunnels in 13 countries, with locations in Australia, Britain, France, and the United Arab Emirates. iFLY even has facilities on select Royal Caribbean cruise ships. And while professionals skydivers do use them for practice, 80 percent of the company’s business comes from new participants: field trips, birthday parties, and team-building events like my own.

But I was about to feel another sensation, this one much less pleasant.

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