Moving sidewalks in airports

Walk.

No. It sounds like they’ve got a design problem with their platform layout. Maybe escalators are rare in California, and that contributes to the problem.

London is a major tourist destination with escalators to service the commuters using the underground railway, and I’ve never heard that they turned off the escalators at peak times. Nor in any other place, but London is one of the busiest, and has tourists.

Same here. Like getting a free ride at Disneyland.

That would be a bit bizarre. I’m quite familiar with using public transit so I know to get out of the way getting off the escalator and then find my train when I’m a tourist. That sounds like tourists who aren’t used to public transit and BART or MUNI is a novelty to them. Chicago summers are infamous for odd tourist behavior on the CTA as people that have never been on public transit in their lives try to use it for the first time.

I either walk or stick to the right just like I do on an escalator

Moving Sidewalks was the name of Billy Gibbon’s first band, by the way. They toured with Jimi Hendrix for a while.

That is one design; there are several more, including the (old?) one in Paris where you stand on metal rollers and grab the handrail to accelerate- so the fast-moving section is not in direct contact with the normal-speed sections at the entrance and exit, and the one in Toronto which consists of metal panels like an escalator that slide relative to each other, but in no case does a gap open up and form a pit :eek:

Sometimes I use it an excuse to take off my backpack and rest, but then I always keep to the right. Other times I walk on them.

I always walk on them. It’s great fun.

When I was an airline employee I would fly standby on the staff concession. Often would get a boarding pass only 20 minutes before the flight (pre 9/11 so much less security). I would run down those suckers. It was like having seven league boots!

I agree with the posters that said “stand on the right” “walk on the left”. Seems the most logical etiquette.

The moving sidewalk was introduced for the 1893 Chicago Colombian Exposition.

A two-lane version with one faster than the other was introduced for the 1900 Exposition Universelle in Paris.

I keep telling people that science fiction writers invented nothing. All that stuff was around decades before they got their grubby little paws on it.

As for airports, I always use the movers because I have problems with my legs and feet and I can’t comfortably walk the distances required.

Why do you avoid them? Are they blocked on both sides at the places you use them? Because I sometimes see people walking on the non-travelator bit even at Heathrow, and I don’t get that. When I could walk well I used the travelator because it was quicker, so why not, and it made me feel like I was living in the future. The neighbouring walkways are there for when the travelator isn’t working, because they’re tiled and easier to drag a suitcase along or push someone along in a wheelchair.

Some airports have not only signs stating this instruction, but a recorded voice repeating it, and still there are morons standing on the left, or even worse, standing in the middle with a big piece of luggage blocking the entire thing.

I always have so much time at airports there is no point running along the damn things. I rarely use them as I want some exercise after a long flight.

Is it “stand on the left and walk on the right” in England?

Absolutely not, at least on London Underground escalators. I’ve only flow in and out of Heathrow and Manchester, I don’t remember if they had moving sidewalks or not.

Oops. We have conflicting answers! Compare Posts #13 and #29.

Personally I tend not to use them unless I’m in a rush, in which case I walk fast on them.

If I have time to spare, I prefer to stay off them, for the simple reason that most travel I do means I’m going to be seated for 10 hours at least. I love the chance to move around and get my blood flowing.

Never seen that at BART - shutting off escalators because people are sheep.

Usually, if the escalator is off, it’s because it’s broken, which is sadly not uncommon.