University installs 'texting lanes' for distracted walkers - Action News
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University installs 'texting lanes' for distracted walkers

More and more attention is being paid to the act of "texting while walking" lately as reports of injuries, embarrassments and even deaths related to mobile distraction rise.

Injuries and deaths linked to mobile distraction prompt adoption of separate stairway lane

The largest university in Utah is addressing the problem of distracted walking on campus by giving smartphone-toting students their own "texting lane." (Utah Valley University)

A university in Utah is giving its students who walk and use their cellphonesat the same time their own "lane" on stairways in a new student centre.

As reports of injuries,embarrassmentanddeaths relatedto pedestrian smartphone userise, so too does the amount of attention being paid to "distractedwalking."

Lawmakersand publicsafetyorganizations across the globe have been working for yearsto raise awareness about how dangerous it can be tousea mobile devicewhile traveling on foot. Some U.S. cities have even started ticketing "careless pedestrians"for looking at their phones while crossing the street.

And yet, despite all of the rules, risks and snide comments from strangers thatcomewith this behaviour, it still persists particularly among younger people.

Utah Valley Universityappearsto understand this well,which is why it'snot discouraging smartphone use among its30,000 students.

Instead, the school is attempting to eliminate hallway gridlock by giving texters a lane of their own.

"Hate getting stuck behind slow people on the stairs? My school just put these in everywhere on campus," wrote the UVU student who uploaded this photo to Imgur last month. (http://imgur.com/seTKzhp)

Timereports that a large staircase withdesignated lanes for walking, running and textingwas officially unveiled at theuniversity's new student centre in Orem, Utah, on June 7.

While no official school policy has been rolled out to enforcethe usage of these stairs,UVU'screative director MattBambrough hopes it gets students laughing, talking, and thinking about the issue.

"You have 18-24-year-olds walking down the hall withsmartphones, you're almost bound to run into someone somewhere; it's something we're dealing with in this day and age," he said in a press release, explaining that the school'sintention was "to engage our students, to catch their attention and to let them know we are aware of who they are and where they're coming from."

UVU appears to be the first academic institution to create a dedicated walking space forsmartphone users, but the creation"texting lanes" in other parts of the world have been making headlines since at least 2012.

Last summer, National Geographic installed temporary"phone lanes" for D.C. pedestrians while filming a TV segmentaboutbehavioural science, and in September, the Chinese city of Chongqing followed suit with an almost-identical stunt aimed at raising safety awareness.

Earlier this week, a Belgian mobile phone repair company painted "text walking lanes" onto several streets around Antwerp.

While many outlets originally reported that the citywas interested in making thetextinglanes permanent, AntwerpMayorJohan VermanttoldQuartz that this would not be happening.

"To be frank: we are not at all interested in expanding these lanes," he said via email, noting that the company had violated several laws in an attempt "to get publicity with this stunt."

It's certainly fair to say that the issue of distracting walking is an attention grabber.

Thousands of tweets aboutUVU'stexting lane staircase have been sent since a photo of it was posted to Reddit last month, many of them praising the project as innovative and calling upon their own schools or cities for something similar.

Detractors, on the other hand, point to the staircase as a product of our technologically-obsessed and "self-absorbed" society.

Regardless of how anyone feels about it, UVU's texting lane most definitely has people talking which was Bambrough's main goal.

"Most people don't obey the posted lanes," he said in the UVU release. "But [preventing collisions]isn't the reason we did it we did it to engage the students. It's meant to be there for people to look at and enjoy."