Bumping into people on the street in the UK

2/12/2015 4:57:37 AM

This got me when I first went to the US. I’m from NZ, and like the UK we drive on the left. I noticed after America that our escalators also tend to be on the left (ie if there are two escalators/travelators to/from a floor, the one you’ll use tends to be on the left). In the US, I noticed a lot more on the right.

Initially in the US, I bumped into lots of people, doing ‘the dance’ like you say, and eventually got used to switching and it improved.

Then I returned home, and boom, opposite problem 🙁

When I went to the UK, I read Wikipedia and noticed they claimed Londoners would always stand to the right on escalators. I thought this a joke until I got there and found the social norm and semi-offical rule is certainly to do that.

In Australia, you stand on the left on escalators. Go figure.

In Japan, I was told Osaka differs from other cities for this rule.

So yes, there is a difference and sometimes it’s an official ‘rule’ (ie the signs in London’s underground saying ‘stand on the right’), while as Gilles says, sometimes it’s a societal thing, we self-organise based on other normalities – perhaps subconciously around doing the same as when we drive.

2/11/2015 9:31:59 PM

I’m French and I’ve lived in England for a while.

In my experience, in France (and elsewhere on the continent) people instinctively pass on the right. When there’s a corridor with people walking in both directions, on the continent, a flow naturally establishes itself with people sticking to their right most of the time. People usually overtake on the left. On escalators in the London underground, you stand on the right and overtake on the left; if there are escalators in both directions, the one on the right is the one going in your direction. I believe all of this applies to the US as well (another country that drives on the right).

In the UK, the situation isn’t symmetric. Passing on the left is dominant but by no means universal. Large crowds do tend to organize themselves with a left lane going forward, but this a lot less systematic than the right-side throng in France. I think Londoners may be more prone to passing on the right than inhabitants of other parts of the country (suggesting a natural tendency to keep left partly curbed by the Underground?), but I don’t really have enough data. In the London underground, there are corridors where people are requested to keep right and corridors where people are requested to keep left. On escalators in the London underground, if there are escalators in both directions, the one on the left is the one going in your direction (symmetric to the continent), however you always stand on the right and overtake on the left (like on the continent).

Other people confirm my observations:

I don’t remember where and can’t find a reference, but I’ve read that people tend to convey their intentions in a crowd (“I’m going to pass you on the left/right”, “I’m going to turn right”) through head and eye movements and other minute details of posture that are subconscious and not transcultural. This explains why tourists in a strange country tend to bump into people more than locals even if the locals don’t know the place (so it isn’t just a matter of knowing where you’re going).

Credit:stackoverflow.com

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Hello,My name is Aparna Patel,I’m a Travel Blogger and Photographer who travel the world full-time with my hubby.I like to share my travel experience.

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