In article <
ir5gla55jetuevo4d...@4ax.com>,
"David H.--REMOVE \"STOPSPAM\" to reply" <
davidhhh...@bellatlantic.net> said:
> Or at least slide down!
>
> In Cambridge, MA, outside of Harvard, there is a subway station
> called Porter Sq that has one of the world's longest escalators.
I used to live in Davis Square, so although I used the Davis stop
most of the time I still got on or off at Porter now and then, so
I'm familiar with the station. I even once, long ago, timed the
super-long escalator and then measured one of the staircase steps
and counted them all, and used all that to figure out the
escalator's vertical speed. I of course have no memory at all today
of what number I came up with.
> They have an art installation of sculptures of gloves all along
> the metal between the two handrails, presumably to prevent people
> from sliding down. (I'm not sure if they're actual gloves covered
> with metal, or just sculptures of them.)
I _think_ they're real bronzed items, from the T's collection of
lost-and-found-and-never-claimed stuff, but like you I'm not sure.
> Still, some people do try to slide down the rubber handrail on the
> escalator. I did it once nearly 30 years ago and literally burned
> a hole in my nice dress pants from the friction!
Hey if you're going to do something like that, you should definitely
wear your best pants for it.
-- wds