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by stegosaurus 3811 days ago
This seems to rely on assuming that the average time taken is the metric to optimize.

Imagine that you have 100 passengers, 25 of which aren't concerned with time taken, 50 of which are indifferent, and 25 of which are concerned with time taken.

With a 'walking lane', it seems to me that everyone is satisfied.

Without a walking lane, average speed improves, but those that would prefer to walk are slowed down.

I can't speak for others but I personally find the system excellent. If I'm in a rush, I can run up the stairs. If I'm not, I can chill.

I would generally be in favour of asking everyone to walk (as the below poster mentions), but that can't be expected of everyone - the disabled, elderly, children, those with suitcases, and likely other groups can't do that.

1 comments

One could argue that this does help everyone when it's particularly busy because it reduces the glut of people waiting to get on the bottom of the escalator, which can slow you down even if you want to walk up.

I suppose from TFL's point of view, the average time take is exactly what they want to optimise too because it everyone through the system quickest.

Personally, I really like walking and I guess I'd be a bit frustrated at not being able to even if it was for the good of the whole. Or even for me personally (time-wise)