Choosing between stairs and escalators in China: The impact of location, height and pedestrian volume

Objective: This research examines whether Beijing residents are more or less likely than Montréal residents to avoid stair climbing, by replicating a study in Montréal, Canada that measured the impacts of distance between stairs and escalator, height between floors and pedestrian volume on stair cli...

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Main Authors: John Zacharias, Boshen Tang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2015-01-01
Series:Preventive Medicine Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335515000753
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spelling doaj-e7007005ee764a46b870891ae1fdd2612020-11-25T01:29:03ZengElsevierPreventive Medicine Reports2211-33552015-01-012C52953210.1016/j.pmedr.2015.06.005Choosing between stairs and escalators in China: The impact of location, height and pedestrian volumeJohn ZachariasBoshen TangObjective: This research examines whether Beijing residents are more or less likely than Montréal residents to avoid stair climbing, by replicating a study in Montréal, Canada that measured the impacts of distance between stairs and escalator, height between floors and pedestrian volume on stair climbing rate. Method: 15 stairways, 14 up-escalators and 13 down-escalators were selected in 13 publicly accessible settings in Beijing. Distance between the bottom or top of nearest stair and escalator combinations varied from 2.1 m to 114.1 m with height between floors varying from 3.3 m to 21.7 m. Simultaneous counts were conducted on stair and escalator pairs, for a total of 37,081 counted individuals. Results: In the ascent model, pedestrian volume accounted for 16.3% of variance in stair climbing, 16.4% when height was added and 45.1% when distance was added. In the descent model, 40.9% of variance was explained by pedestrian volume, 41.5% when height was added and 45.5% when distance was added. Conclusion: Separating stairs and escalator is effective in increasing stair climbing in Beijing, accounting for 29% of the variance in stair climbing, compared with 43% in Montreal. As in the Montreal case, distance has less effect on stair use rate when descending. Overall, 25.4% of Beijingers opted for stairs when ascending compared with 20.3% of Montrealers, and for descending 32.8% and 31.1% respectively.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335515000753Physical activityStair climbingEnvironmental factorsVoluntary activityChinaComparative study
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John Zacharias
Boshen Tang
spellingShingle John Zacharias
Boshen Tang
Choosing between stairs and escalators in China: The impact of location, height and pedestrian volume
Preventive Medicine Reports
Physical activity
Stair climbing
Environmental factors
Voluntary activity
China
Comparative study
author_facet John Zacharias
Boshen Tang
author_sort John Zacharias
title Choosing between stairs and escalators in China: The impact of location, height and pedestrian volume
title_short Choosing between stairs and escalators in China: The impact of location, height and pedestrian volume
title_full Choosing between stairs and escalators in China: The impact of location, height and pedestrian volume
title_fullStr Choosing between stairs and escalators in China: The impact of location, height and pedestrian volume
title_full_unstemmed Choosing between stairs and escalators in China: The impact of location, height and pedestrian volume
title_sort choosing between stairs and escalators in china: the impact of location, height and pedestrian volume
publisher Elsevier
series Preventive Medicine Reports
issn 2211-3355
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Objective: This research examines whether Beijing residents are more or less likely than Montréal residents to avoid stair climbing, by replicating a study in Montréal, Canada that measured the impacts of distance between stairs and escalator, height between floors and pedestrian volume on stair climbing rate. Method: 15 stairways, 14 up-escalators and 13 down-escalators were selected in 13 publicly accessible settings in Beijing. Distance between the bottom or top of nearest stair and escalator combinations varied from 2.1 m to 114.1 m with height between floors varying from 3.3 m to 21.7 m. Simultaneous counts were conducted on stair and escalator pairs, for a total of 37,081 counted individuals. Results: In the ascent model, pedestrian volume accounted for 16.3% of variance in stair climbing, 16.4% when height was added and 45.1% when distance was added. In the descent model, 40.9% of variance was explained by pedestrian volume, 41.5% when height was added and 45.5% when distance was added. Conclusion: Separating stairs and escalator is effective in increasing stair climbing in Beijing, accounting for 29% of the variance in stair climbing, compared with 43% in Montreal. As in the Montreal case, distance has less effect on stair use rate when descending. Overall, 25.4% of Beijingers opted for stairs when ascending compared with 20.3% of Montrealers, and for descending 32.8% and 31.1% respectively.
topic Physical activity
Stair climbing
Environmental factors
Voluntary activity
China
Comparative study
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335515000753
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AT boshentang choosingbetweenstairsandescalatorsinchinatheimpactoflocationheightandpedestrianvolume
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