Amusing Signs
Nothing too exciting happening in Shanghai, so I went diving into my picture collection and found some amusing ones to share with you. All of these were taken in Linyi, China.
Usually, when you need to escape a building, there are multiple exits – at least two sets of stairs. This was not the case of the building that we lived in Linyi. There were two sets of stairs, but only one would go all the way to the bottom floor. On the third floor, where we lived, the middle stairs continued down to the restaurant below us only in the case of an emergency. Unlike some of the emergency doors you would see in America, this one could not be opened by simply pushing it, thus causing an alarm to sound. In the event of an emergency, we would have had to find the person who had the key to open the door, had a handy pair of bolt cutters, been willing to chuck something very heavy at the door or pray that our parachutes were ready for action because the window would have been our only remaining option. Thankfully, there were no emergencies in the ten months we lived there.
Hrm. How does one fight against time, and publicly nonetheless? And why do you have to strive for efficiency(not spelled correctly on the sign) privately? Isn’t it easier to make things better when you work with like-minded people? Hrm. I don’t think I get this sign. I found it in the F building of Linyi University, which is the Foreign Language Building.
Well, I suppose it makes sense right? An elevator is very much like a floating stair. Out of curiosity, I Googled the term airstair, and found out that the term is real, but it isn’t quite an elevator. Wikipedia tells me that an airstair is “a passenger staircase that is built in to an airliner — often, though not always, on the inside of a clamshell-style door. The stairs can be raised or lowered while the aircraft is on the ground, allowing passengers and ground personnel to board or depart the aircraft without the need for a mobile staircase or a jetway.” You learn something everyday.
Now there’s a job for you in China; proof reader for the sign manufacturers.
April 14, 2011 @ 5:29 PM