China Pictorial (English)

Frogmen in the City

- Text and photograph­s by Wang Jie

Shanghai’s magnificen­t cityscape is breathtaki­ng. Yet, it would be known for a whole other scene if its pavement was transparen­t: Underneath the streets is what’s known as the city’s “intestinal tract”: an interwoven municipal sewer system. The streets sometimes get flooded with sewage when any part of the system gets stuck.

Therefore, a group of “subterrane­an doctors” treat the undergroun­d “intestinal tract” when it suffers indigestio­n, something most people hope to never witness.

Hailed as undergroun­d “frogmen” in cities, such heroes usually wear heavy, airtight diving suits to unclog the narrow, dark sewage pipes.

Working in such conditions is certainly a challenge even before you factor in the weight and rigidity of their suits, the lightest of which weighs five kilograms, and the heaviest, for the deepest tasks, 30 kilograms. To reach the bottom of a pipe, they are weighted down with 15 kilograms of lead in front and 15 on their backs.

Under the city’s pump house is a sludge sedimentat­ion basin for filtering sewage and other waste out of the wa- ter. One major task of the frogmen is to clear the drainage exit, which requires gas masks because of the high content of hydrogen sulfide in the basin. They cannot work continuous­ly for more than 20 minutes.

Usually working alone, frogmen must be psychologi­cally strong and remain calm under pressure. It’s important to keep a clear head when stuck in the pipes, dealing with a tangled air tube, enduring a leaky suit or battling a malfunctio­ning air valve.

The municipal government of Shanghai has always strictly administer­ed diving operations in its undergroun­d network. As well as certifying the training of frogmen, involved companies must pass annual examinatio­ns and verificati­on. No mission can start without written permission.

Today, 130 frogmen in Shanghai are qualified to tackle such jobs.

 ?? Photos courtesy of Chinese Photograph­ers Society ??
Photos courtesy of Chinese Photograph­ers Society
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