Or his partner, Robert A. Heinlein.
Seriously, if there are stairs going down to the basement, chances are you’ll find yourself on the second floor.
Or his partner, Robert A. Heinlein.
Seriously, if there are stairs going down to the basement, chances are you’ll find yourself on the second floor.
Soooooo? What’s the deal OP?
Thought experiment
Bad dream
Real life mystery
Did ya take the brown acid at Woodstock?
You have an audience good sir.
Batpole.
Here is a real house with a 3x3.5 meter platform that can move from the first floor (living room) to the second (kitchen) to the third (office). Here is a YouTube video about the house.
What was Kim Hunter thinking?
I picture Les Moore from Funky Winkerbean being made to climb the rope in gym class and freezing when he reaches the top.
Wow! That is so Matt Helm/Derek Flint–I want one! However, the first thing I will probably do is fall into the pit while the lift is on the top floor.
I don’t know, but the OP is making me think of that episode of **I Dream of Jeanie ** where the Nelsons & the Bellowses went to a conference, but their hotel was overbooked so Jeanie simply blinked a 13th floor onto the hotel. Tony didn’t realize what she did until it was too late, and they had to spend the rest of the episode keeping the Bellowses and the hotel staff from finding out the truth.
^ alphaboi, post #16; it’s a must-see (not the post, the cartoon).
NOT THE WED ONE! DON’T EVER PUSH THE WED ONE!
“Design For Leaving” (1943) full cartoon on DailyMotion
Stairs, schmairs, c’mere.
I don’t think I’ve missed an entrance, but I’m certain I wouldn’t miss one big enough for a car.
It’s a normal block of shops in an English town centre. The buildings have three floors, generally a shop on the ground floor and ither flats or back-room activities in the upper floors. One side is a travel agent, the other is a clothes shop. Offices and storage areas upstairs in those premises.
There is a local shopping centre which, if you go upstairs, has access to caves. But that is many miles away, this building is just on a flat street.
There was only one package, it was addressed to, all-caps, “UPSTAIRS FLAT, 1ST AND 2ND FLOOR”.
There is a basement, but the only access is in the ground floor, and the hatch is always covered and hence it can’t be opened from underground. It is, however, lavishly equipped with leaking pipes, sometimes-functional lighting and many cobwebs.
The ceiling is covered in those tiles with which commercial buildings normally cover their ceilings. That means I can’t see what’s above them, but it also means you couldn’t really get a ladder through them, then get yourself through them, then return them to a state that doesn’t give away your activities.
There are stairs going down, but they don’t lead upstairs. Also, they only lead part of the way down. You have to lift up the floor then jump about five feet onto the top step, then go down.
Real life mystery. Probably some innocent explanation.
I’m told the place used to be a pub called The Cavalier, and there are certain oddities to the place. The ceiling, for example, comes low enough for very tall people to have to duck as they walk up the shop. Then gets much higher. The floor also slopes noticably upwards. The entire premises are very long and narrow. There is also a certain spot in the cellar where there is a metal apparatus attached to the wall which others have speculated would be appropriate for someone to sit in and have the metal clamp around their neck as some sort of deviant sex game.
Based on your additional details, I suspect there is an opening into the adjacent shop, which does have a stairs going up. If not that, I believe that some of these blocks have common attics, so perhaps someone is accessing the second story that way.
Link to Google Earth Street View, please?
Have you asked them if either has had a wall knocked out on their second floor to access the neighbor’s?
I guess I have to append this.
The shopping center with the caves. Isn’t that in Birmingham? I seem to remember seeing signs for it.