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Hugh Herr, Climber, Invents Award-Winning Foot-Ankle Prostheses

© Time Inc.
When Hugh Herr was 17 he got severe frostbite in both legs in an accident on New Hampshire's Mount Washington. He and his partner Jeff Batzer were lost for three days in a blizzard. Batzer didn't make it and Herr had his legs amputated below the knee. His doctors told him that he would never climb again. Being a bit of a tinkerer in the machine shop he developed his own prosthetic legs which enabled him to climb harder than when he had his own natural legs eventually making the second free ascent of City Park a 5.13c (8a+) 120-ft thin crack at Index Town Walls, Washington that was first free climbed by Todd Skinner. His story was told by Alison Osius in her 1991 book, 'Second Ascent, The Story of Hugh Herr"

Developing his own prosthetic legs, both rock and ice climbing versions, set Hugh Herr off on a career path that led to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) where he is now a professor and director of the Biomechatronics Group where he has developed PowerFoot One (www.iwalkpro.com), a completely self-contained robotic foot-ankle prostheses. PowerFoot One has battery-powered springs that propel the wearer forward and create a more natural gait. It has built-in microprocessors and environmental sensors that enable it to negotiate slopes, stairs and level ground.

The USA's Time magazine (website and award details) has honoured Herr and his PowerFoot One with an award for one of the best inventions of the year along with the iPhone and the Boeing 787 Dreamliner. The criteria being that the inventions will change people's lives; and Hugh's invention will make a huge difference to those who lose their feet in accidents or as Time magazine's Lev Grossman says, "veterans from the war in Iraq."

You can watch a video about the selection procedure here


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8 Nov, 2007
It gives the owners a massive feeling of deluded self-importance? And a boeing 787, which changes peoples lives in what way, compared to a 747? Is it an invention or a development? The leg is amazing though. I know a guy who lost his leg just below the hip and he has got one of these "intelligent" legs, which is a massive improvement.
8 Nov, 2007
Blimey, that's quite cool. Does anyone have a photo of the prosthesis he uses for climbing?
8 Nov, 2007
8 Nov, 2007
Cheers, the phrase "Hugh grinds his feet super thin for his attempt on City Park" makes my toes curl slightly...
8 Nov, 2007
'king hero!
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