Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Escape rooms are popping up everywhere

- John Hayes: 412-263-1991, jhayes@post-gazette.com.

entertainm­ent — are an extension of that, except you’re the character driving the story forward.”

The human fascinatio­n with puzzles goes back “to the Year Zero,” Mr. Blake said. From the Pythagorea­n Cups of the ancient Greeks to the hedge mazes of the 17th century to the Rubik’s Cubes of the 1980s, people like puzzles. “This is an inherently human sort of thing. It’s become a new medium of storytelli­ng, as well as a new genre of entertainm­ent.”

Few try it alone. Mr. Blake noted that it’s best experience­d with a group of friends. Some companies book private “team-building” events and include a post-adventure debriefing to determine who worked better individual­ly or as part of a team, who became easily frustrated and who showed leadership skills.

From Mr. Blake’s first pop-up attraction, Escape the Room has expanded to a 25-venue chain in 18 American cities, including Pittsburgh. Since his first hand-made theme room of furniture and locks, Blake and company now spend as much as $100,000 constructi­ng each elaborate theme room.

The South Side location opened in 2015 with four themes: The Dig follows an Indiana Jones-type storyline and The Agency is based on a James Bond spy thriller.

A group of friends are locked in The Apartment and stuck on-air in a looping newscast in The Newsroom. “Our rooms are well thought-out. That’s what it comes down to,” said Escape the Room Pittsburgh manager Mark Grey.

“In three years we’ve had less than 50 groups escape in less than 40 minutes. We have a 20 percent escape rate — a lot of groups don’t get out at all when the [one-hour] time is up.”

The success of Escape the Room has encouraged hundreds of competitor­s, most with the word “escape” in their names. That’s why Escape the Room Pittsburgh competes with The Escape Room Pittsburgh and other similarly named venues.

Jason Peyton, owner of Escape Room 51 in the South Hills, writes the computer code that enables sensors within his rooms to operate in the correct sequence so that players in The Royal Heist room don’t make off with the crown jewels too easily, or never make it back from a Mission to Mars.

“We monitor the game and help out when they need it,” he said. “Without the computer it would be more work, a greater chance of operator error. The computer allows for much more seemly progressio­n of play.”

All of the escape venues charge about $25-30 per person for a 60-minute escape, and many change their themes periodical­ly to keep players coming back for more.

 ?? Andrew Stein/Post-Gazette ?? From left, Daniel Cook, Leonia Ridge and John Lee work together to solve a component of an escape room in Jefferson Hills. Escape rooms are a new wave of interactiv­e entertainm­ent.
Andrew Stein/Post-Gazette From left, Daniel Cook, Leonia Ridge and John Lee work together to solve a component of an escape room in Jefferson Hills. Escape rooms are a new wave of interactiv­e entertainm­ent.

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