The 28 year old Glasgow professional
street trials rider Danny MacAskill is performing a gravity-defying new trick
in an abandoned tourist village in Argentina. The mind-blowing “Bum Front Flip”
in Epecuen a lakeside resort that was submerged under flood waters in the
1980s. After riding up a specifically constructed ramp, MacAskill flips his
bike over a sign, and turns 360 degrees in the air, and lands on his back wheel
on the other side.
He managed to perfect the trick
just before a huge dust storm swept into the village. He has also riding across
the roofs of abandoned buildings and along the branches of dead trees, which
have been turned white by the lagoon's salt water, and then navigating rusting
train tracks and jumping over the tops of concrete tunnels.
MacAskill has been preforming street
tricks for more than 17 years and got his first bike at the age of 4. He had wanted
to go to Epecuén for the past two years so approached Red Bull with his idea to
film a series of tricks there. The Argentinian town was once a lively lakeside
resort but it was flooded without warning after a long period of heavy rains directed
the lagoon bursting over its banks, plunging the small community in 1985.
The crew filmed there for 2 1/2
weeks to get the finest shots of the exclusive landscape, which appearances
almost post-apocalyptic. Rusting cars, broken appliances and crumbling homes
dot the landscape, which has once again become a popular tourist destination
for people willing to drive at least 6 hours form Buenos Aires to get there.
MacAskill said this was a town that was a lot
of people's homes and they’ve been forced out by the flood so at first it was
strange. After a while I settled into the place and respected how attractive it
was despite what happened there. His favorite part was he rides across a series
of rooftops. The sequence was filmed from the air and in fact shows off the
scale of the village. He was also fortunate
to avoid any injuries during the shoot, and also had a few near misses riding
the skinny beam coming off the side of one of the building’s roofs so I had a
few ten foot jumps to the ground without my bike as I missed my spot!
One of resident 83 years old,
Pablo Novak still lives on the edge of the town. He spends his days cycling around
the ruins, welcoming people who wander into the wrecked streets. Whoever passes
nearby cannot go without coming to visit here. It's getting more people to the
area, as they come to see the ruins.