Singapore has world's fastest walkers  

May 3, 2007 - 11:20AM

Pedestrians in Singapore have been crowned the world's fastest movers in a 
study of cities across the world.
The study showed pedestrians were upping their pace at an alarming rate as they 
scurried from place to place, determined to cram as much as possible into each 
day.

Scientists say it is symptomatic of a modern life driven by email, text 
messages and a need to be available 24 hours a day.

The most dramatic increases were found in Asia among the fast-growing "tiger" 
economies.

Pedestrians in Singapore were the fastest, walking 30 per cent faster than they 
did in the early 1990s, and in China, the pace of life in Guangzhou has 
increased by more than 20 per cent.

Copenhagen and Madrid were the fastest European cities, beating Paris and 
London. And despite its reputation as "the city that never sleeps", New York 
ranked only eighth in the pace race, behind Dublin and Berlin.

A professor of psychology at the University of Hertfordshire, Richard Wiseman, 
who helped conduct the research, used a 1994 study of pedestrians' speed as a 
comparison and found that on average city dwellers now moved 10 per cent faster.

"The pace of life in our major cities is now much quicker than before," he 
said. "This increase in speed will affect more people than ever, because for 
the first time in history the majority of the world's population are now living 
in urban centres."

Professor Wiseman is worried by the rising need for speed.

"We just have this feeling that we should be producing and active all of the 
time," he said. "That is fuelled by the email, text, mobile phone culture."

"But there has to be an upper limit, because if this trend continues, we will 
arriving places before we have set off."

The study was carried out with the help of the British Council, which promotes 
British cultural links with countries around the world.

Researchers in each city found a busy street with a wide, flat pavement, free 
from obstacles and sufficiently uncrowded to allow people to walk at their 
maximum speed. They then timed how long it took 35 people to walk 60 feet (18 
metres).

They only monitored adults on their own, and ignored anyone on a mobile phone 
conversation or struggling with shopping bags.

The times, in seconds, recorded in 32 cities across the world are listed below:

1) Singapore (Singapore): 10.55

2) Copenhagen (Denmark): 10.82

3) Madrid (Spain): 10.89

4) Guangzhou (China): 10.94

5) Dublin (Ireland): 11.03

6) Curitiba (Brazil): 11.13

7) Berlin (Germany): 11.16

8) New York (USA): 12.00

9) Utrecht (Netherlands): 12.04

10) Vienna (Austria): 12.06

11) Warsaw (Poland): 12.07

12) London (United Kingdom): 12.17

13) Zagreb (Croatia): 12.20

14) Prague (Czech Republic): 12.35

15) Wellington (New Zealand): 12.62

16) Paris (France): 12.65

17) Stockholm (Sweden): 12.75

18) Ljubljana (Slovenia): 12.76

19) Tokyo (Japan): 12.83

20) Ottawa (Canada): 13.72

21) Harare (Zimbabwe): 13.92

22) Sofia (Bulgaria): 13.96

23) Taipei (Taiwan): 14.00

24) Cairo (Egypt): 14.18

26) Bucharest (Romania): 14.36

27) Dubai (United Arab Emirates): 14.64

28) Damascus (Syria): 14.94

29) Amman (Jordan): 15.95

30) Bern (Switzerland): 17.37

31) Manama (Bahrain): 17.69

32) Blantyre (Malawi): 31.60

Reuters

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