The Only Way Is Up Think of a
modem city and the first image that come to mind is the skyline. It is full of
great buildings, pointing like fingers to heaven. It is true that some cities
don’t permit buildings to go above a certain height. But these are cities
concerned with the past. The first thing any city does when it wants to tell the
world that it has arrived is to build skyscrapers. When people
gather together in cities, they create a demand for land, Since cities are
places where money is made, that demand can be met. And the best way to make
money out of city land is to put as many people as possible in a space that
covers the smallest amount of ground. That means building upwards.
The technology existed to do this as early as the 19th
century. But the height of buildings was limited by one important factor. They
had to be small enough for people on the top floors to climb stairs. People
could not be expected to climb a mountain at the end of their journey to work,
or home. Elisha Otis, a US inventor, was the man who brought US
the lift-or elevator, as he preferred to call it. However, most of the
technology is very old. Lifts work using the same pulley system the Egyptians
used to create the Pyramids. What Otis did was attach the system to a steam
engine and develop the elevator brake, which stops the lift falling if the cords
that hold it up are broken. It was this that did the most to gain public
confidence in the new invention. In fact, he spent a number of years exhibiting
lifts at fairgrounds, giving people the chance to try them out before selling
the idea to architects and builders. A lift would not be a very
good theme park attraction now. Going in a lift is such an everyday thing that
it would just be boring. Yet psychologists and others who study human behavior
find lifts fascinating. The reason is simple. Scientists have always studied
animals in zoos. The nearest they can get to that with humans is in observing
them in lifts. "It breaks all the usual conventions about the
bubble of personal space we carry around with us-and you just can’t choose to
move away", says workplace psychologist, Gary Fitzgibbon. Being trapped in this
setting can create different types of tensions, he says. Some people are scared
of them. Others use them as an opportunity to get close to the boss. Some stand
close to the door. Others hide in the corners. Most people try and shrink into
the background. But some behave in a way that makes others notice them. There
are a few people who just stand in a corner taking notes. Don’t
worry about them. They are probably from a university. Psychologists find the lift a good place where they can study human
behaviour because ______.
A. here humans behave the way animals do
B. people in a lift are all scared
C. here some people take notes
D. in a lift the bubble of personal space breaks