FelixDeCat
Lifer
- Aug 4, 2000
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I work on the 9th floor. I use the elevators to get there but walk up them at least once a day. Very nice results.
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How about increasingly difficult logic problems to get to the desired floor? Elevators could use facial recognition, and every time a person gets in, the correct way to get to the desired floor could be harder to discern. See which is greater, their physical laziness or mental laziness :^DEasily defeated by taking elevator up to the 4th floor and then down to the 2nd.
It's the exact same mentality that has people driving around parking lots trying to find the closest space, instead of just parking the damned car and walking an extra fifty feet.
It's the exact same mentality that has people driving around parking lots trying to find the closest space, instead of just parking the car and walking an extra fifty feet.
Actually no it's not at all.It's the exact same mentality that has people driving around parking lots trying to find the closest space, instead of just parking the damned car and walking an extra fifty feet.
Actually no it's not at all.
Taking the elevator is typically faster than walking up stairs (depending how far up you're going) whereas parking and walking the extra 50 feet is going to get you where you are going faster than waiting for a parking spot.
I pretty much always take the stairs down, depending on how many flights, and I typically will take the stairs up if it's 3 or less flights. At my job I typically take the elevator up 4 flights because the stairs are longer and I get in around 6am and am not in the mood to walk up the steps. And half of the days I come to work my legs are sore from deadlifting or squatting, so I'll take the elevator.
Actually no it's not at all.
Taking the elevator is typically faster than walking up stairs (depending how far up you're going) whereas parking and walking the extra 50 feet is going to get you where you are going faster than waiting for a parking spot.
But yet years ago already someone on this forum would not entertain the idea that being fat was related to lifestyle. They only believe it was due to genes. Everyone can get fat except that one girl in Texas: http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Wellness/texas-woman-gain-weight-bullied/story?id=17228529
Really depends how my knees are feeling on a given day. Some days stairs are excruciatingly painful to navigate. Other days they are not. I will do the stairs on the low pain days. Call me lazy after you have had a week with my knees.
apparently my pain which is Arthritis related is not debilitating enough to warrant knee replacement yet. As I said some days are bad but some aren't. Only a problem on stairs and not always. My point is some of us have a very legitimate need for elevators at times even if it is only 1 floor.Don't you have insurance? Doctors can do amazing things with knee surgery these days.
I only go to 2nd floor, I take stairs. I have been on the elevator about 3 or 4 times, but only when going to conference rooms on other floors while walking around with my laptop and a mug of tea or coffee. Hard to do doors with no hands free.
there are middle grounds, like people with weak heart or bad joints, or people not wanting to wet their shirt before getting into an air contioned office if they don't have to.I never use elevators. Unless you are using a wheelchair (or, its an actual bone-fide skyscraper and we are talking 30th floor or above) I don't see why you would. More effort than they are worth (not to mention the one where I am now gets stuck rather frequently). Once lived on a 9th floor and never used the thing even then.
Some Swiss study found that those living above the 10th floor in high-rises had measurably better cardio-vascular health than those on lower floors. Though they don't know if that's due to walking up and down stairs or due to being above the pollution ceiling (and I also wonder if it's a selection-effect - those in poor health maybe don't want to live up there?). Though another study found those on higher floors were much less likely to survive if they _did_ have a heart-attack. Due to the delay in paramedics getting to them.
could also be related to socio-economic status. higher up = more expensive which usually = better job, more money, educated, etc.
I work on the 26th floor. Should I take the steps every time I come and go?
Easily defeated by taking elevator up to the 4th floor and then down to the 2nd.
