Physics Teacher Shatters Records on World's Tallest Indoor Wall
26-year-old Lu Yao swapped chalkboards for climbing holds this week, conquering a 45-meter indoor wall in front of former Belgian Prime Minister Yves Leterme. 🏆 'This isn't just about strength,' she told us, 'it's about solving problems mid-air – like physics equations come to life!'
From Olympic Fever to Fitness Revolution
Since climbing's 2024 Paris Olympics debut, over 300 new gyms have opened across the Chinese mainland. 📈 Youth participation has tripled this year alone, with urban centers like Shanghai hosting TikTok-friendly 'climbathons' attracting 10,000+ Gen-Z competitors.
More Than a Sport – A Social Lifeline
Beijing climber Zhang Wei, 24, explains the appeal: 'We're the lockdown generation. Climbing lets us literally rise above crowded cities while building community.' 🤝 Night sessions now rival KTV popularity, with 72% of participants aged 18-30 according to 2025 fitness app data.
What's Next?
With China announcing three new national training centers this month, the International Federation of Sport Climbing predicts Chinese athletes could dominate 2028 LA Olympics. 🌍 As Leterme observed: 'When youth find their vertical passion, horizontal boundaries disappear.'
Reference(s):
cgtn.com







