A British free climber who <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/world/europe/man-seen-climbing-up-london-s-310-metre-tall-shard-skyscraper-1.883935">scaled The Shard in London two years ago</a> took his life into his own hands again on Friday when he reached the top of one of Europe's tallest skyscrapers in Barcelona. George King made his way up the 116-metre Melia Barcelona Sky Hotel without any ropes or safety measures. As he returned to the ground, he was arrested by the Mossos d'Esquadra, the Catalan regional police. Mr King now faces a fine but said he had "felt in another dimension of bliss" when he was at the top of the building. "When I met the police on the way down my head was still in the clouds," he told <em>Reuters</em>. Crowds watched as Mr King scaled the Barcelona hotel in about 20 minutes. The 21 year old climbed the 310-metre Shard in London in 2019, scaling the UK's highest tower without any safety apparatus. The feat earned him six months in a young offenders' centre for breaching a civil injunction taken out by the owners of the building. After his release from prison in January 2020, he said that he "would never let adversity extinguish my spirit". Since then, developers of a new London skyscraper project called Gotham City say that <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/world/europe/youtube-thrill-seekers-target-london-s-gotham-city-skyscraper-1.1193211">some of their sites have been targeted by urban explorers</a>. A High Court judge acknowledged last week that the £875 million ($1.20 billion) office and retail project was likely to be a “tempting challenge” for adventurers in London. The judge agreed to a ban on any trespasser climbing higher than five metres at the site. Mr King, who is from Oxford but and is travelling around Europe in a van, has also climbed the 144-metre Agbar Tower skyscraper in Barcelona.