Cleaning skyscraper windows is not a job for the faint-hearted.
The year-end is the busiest time for window cleaners. On Ho Chi Minh City’s high-rise buildings and skyscrapers, the risks are higher as they have to work in more difficult conditions – high above the ground, on scaffolding or suspended platforms. |
To Van Huynh, 27, who moved to Ho Chi Minh City from the Central Highlands province of Dak Nong, is an 8-year veteran window cleaner. “It is a job for which little or no education is necessary, but it is absolutely not for the faint-hearted. Window cleaners are not afraid of great heights working with a great deal of concentration. We are not a bunch of unskilled workers,” said Huynh. |
“It might look dangerous, but the safety belt can hold up to 1.7 tons. Although the potential dangers can be terrifying, the safety gear means the chance of death is low,” said Huynh. |
“A newbie starts out with low-rise buildings. As he becomes more experienced, he will get to do larger and higher commercial buildings. It took me a year to find the guts to clean high-rise windows. Despite working at great heights for quite a while, sometimes when I look down, I feel dizzy,” said 25-year-old Truong Van Thanh. |
For others, they don’t look down, not because they are afraid, but because they simply don’t have time to look down and watch people on the streets. As with any job, they get caught up in their work. |
During the off-peak season, a window cleaner works eight hours per day. The job is more difficult than it sounds. “It is tiring sitting high above the ground for several hours. Sometimes halfway through the job, I have to hold off visits to the bathroom,” said Phan Van Ut. |
Window cleaners said they are aware of the potential dangers involved. “We bet our life on the job,” said Huynh |
The year-end is the busiest time so they work longer hours to earn a few extra bucks. “For the rest of the year, our monthly income ranges from VND5 million to VND9 million ($220 – $390),” said 30-year-old To Van Duc. |
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