It may seem like an extreme way to check-out of a hotel, but a man has jumped off the roof of the Four Seasons in Denver, Colorado with the help of jet pack.

Daredevil Nick Macomber strapped into the hydrogen- and nitrogen-powered jetpack made by Go Fast at sunrise and took off from the 45 floor, making a loop of the building and then landing safely back on the hotel roof. In total, Macomber was airborne for around 30 seconds.

Macomber’s brief journey yesterday was a test flight for a world record attempt from the tallest structure in the Southern Hemisphere planned for later this year.

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Macomber is no stranger to jet pack travel. In 2012 he carried the Olympic torch whilst flying past the National Space Centre in Leicester.

Jet packs are powered by a pressurised blast of non-flammable hydrogen peroxide and nitrogen.

Arguably the most famous flight took place at the opening ceremony of the Los Angeles Olympics in 1984, when Bill Suitor jet packed into the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in front of 100,000 people.

In May, a man used a jet pack to navigate around Washington, D.C.’s Ronald Reagan Building as part of the Smithsonian Magazine’s Future Is Here Festival.

Last year, the “world’s first practical jetpack” was cleared by aviation regulators in New Zealand to allow for manned test-flights.