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excaliburlast Sunday at 10:27 PM7 repliesview on HN

> It’s fair to say that few of us now marvel at moving walkways, those standard infrastructural elements of such utilitarian spaces as airport terminals, subway stations, and big-box stores.

You've gotta be referring to escalators here. Never seen a moving walkway in a big-box store, or a subway station for that matter.


Replies

nlehuenlast Sunday at 10:47 PM

There are at least some in the Paris subway, including one that went at 12 km/h but was decommissioned in 2011:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moving_walkway#Trottoir_roulan...

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kergonathlast Sunday at 11:32 PM

> You've gotta be referring to escalators here. Never seen a moving walkway in a big-box store

I have seen some occasionally in stores, in or around Paris. They usually are on an incline to allow trolleys to be taken up or down a level. Or similarly outside malls to get trolleys to the upper level of a car park. That’s in places where you have to stack car parks instead of just having them sprawl all over the place, of course.

> or a subway station for that matter.

There are a few of them in Paris métro stations. Some of them in the London Underground, as well.

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emmelaichyesterday at 12:13 AM

There's one in Sydney, from a carpark to near the city centre, of 207m.

Quoting wikipedia:

> The walkway has been the longest continuous moving walkway in the world since its construction in 1961.

cguesslast Sunday at 11:53 PM

Not in the US, but in Europe it's more common. Shopping malls in Eastern Europe they're not uncommon.

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michaelterryioyesterday at 1:42 AM

Notwithstanding the people responding, yes, it is extremely uncommon in "big box stores".

userbinatorlast Sunday at 10:35 PM

I've seen them in airports.

throawayonthelast Sunday at 11:03 PM

i've seen them in a few metro systems, there's definitely one for transfers in barcelona somewhere