The human powered student tower building has 22 floors and no passenger elevators.
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The lower five floors are communal spaces. Individual student flats start at the sixth floor and go all the way up to the highest level, only interrupted by two more communal floors in between.
The students use the stairs to travel to and from the kitchen floors, the shower and laundry floors, and the communal energy production floors. They also have to walk up or down whenever they want to leave the building.
In many tower buildings, the stairs get rarely any use. In the human powered student tower, they are teeming with life.
How Fast are Stairs?
A student that lives on the highest floor — where the cheapest rooms are — would need to climb 75 metres, which is comparable to walking the stairs of the Montagne de Buere — a 347 step staircase in the city of Liège, Belgium.
Climbing the Van Unnik student building at an easy pace, one step at a time, requires roughly 30 seconds per floor. If this speed can be sustained until the top floor, climbing 22 floors would take 11 minutes. Compared to cycling or walking, climbing stairs is a heavy exercise.
Running instead of walking up the stairs could greatly increase travel speed. The best athletes in the yearly Empire State Building Run climb 86 floors in 10 to 12 minutes. At such speeds, it would take only 3 minutes to climb the entire human powered student building — faster than an elevator, which usually stops along the way. Going down the stairs would go even faster when jumping and swinging around corners.
Unfortunately, running up or down the staircase of the human powered student building is often dangerous, because it can be busy and there can be obstacles present. We advise all students to go up or down the stairs at an easy pace.
The gravity lights in the staircase are charged by the students that walk by or hang around.


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