Again, with no elevator.

I can’t imagine no elevator and walking up with groceries.

  • @gerryflap@feddit.nl
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    59 months ago

    I still do, though I only live 2 floors from ground level. It’s not really an issue with groceries since the store is one street away, so I go like 3 times a week.

  • ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠
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    89 months ago

    Yeah, I liked it. I carried the groceries two or three blocks from the store already, what’s a couple flights of stairs?

  • @ccunning@lemmy.world
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    29 months ago

    I owned a 3rd floor walk-up condo for about 20 years. The two flights of stairs were no problem outside of moving day which only happened twice in twenty years.

  • Ð Greıt Þu̇mpkin
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    89 months ago

    It’s ok, I think more about the apartment itself than the stairwell up to it but it’s an ok enough stairwell.

  • @7uWqKj@lemmy.world
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    -29 months ago

    Second floor now, third floor earlier, so what? I’m up the stairs before the elevator would even have arrived. Are you, like, 80?

    • @Pirtatogna@lemmy.world
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      29 months ago

      Being 80 wouldn’t explain it. My 80+ aunt with severe arthritis (as in having had multiple surgeries on her feet and hands) managed two stairs up and down several times a day with no complaints. She considered it good excercise and saw it as one thing that keept her on her feet.

  • @Catoblepas@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    209 months ago

    I lived on the 3rd floor in my first apartment, no elevator. We had no car either so we dealt with it by getting groceries more often. The grocery store was only a few blocks away, so it wasn’t terrible. We could have made it easier with a bike or a folding cart, but we were young and stupid so we just carried it.

    I also took the subway to work which added at least another 2-4 sets of stairs I walked up every weekday. Getting to my front door honestly felt like only half of my commute home. It absolutely sucked, but my calves were incredible.

  • @MicrowavedTea@infosec.pub
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    69 months ago

    I’d say anything up to a third floor is ok, you just get used to it. I’m only on the first but my walk to the supermarket does include a ~2 floor staircase and don’t think that much of it anymore. It still feels awkward when you get something big delivered and wonder if they’ll bring it up the stairs though.

  • Corroded
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    69 months ago

    It was a struggle to move but other than that it didn’t really effect me. I walk about a mile for groceries so the added stairs weren’t a huge problem.

    Another issue was the layout of the building. It wasn’t just a tall column with an elevator. It had multiple staircases so it was a struggle for visitors and delivery people to find apartments.

    • Otherbarry
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      19 months ago

      Oof, yeah I’ve seen buildings like that. In NYC in the Lower East Side inside some of the older buildings you walk up one flight of stairs then walk the hallway across the length of the building to the other flight of stairs. That sort of setup feels so much worse vs just toughing it out up a column of stairs.

  • Max-P
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    259 months ago

    Third floor ain’t that bad as long as you don’t exceed your carrying capacity. Going up 3 floors by stairs isn’t much compared to the ~10 minutes of walking back from the store. Really not that bad with a bag each hand.

    It starts getting much with places with > 4 floors but that’s pretty rare without an elevator. You waste more time waiting for the elevator than actually going up anyway when you’re on floor < 3.

    • Max-P
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      189 months ago

      When you live in a city generally the pattern changes. You don’t take the car and go do your biweekly costco trip and come back with 20 bags of groceries. You get like 1-4 at a time, and go more often.

      A lot of the time just going out anywhere, you can fit a quick grocery stop on your way home so you come back with maybe 5 items. It’s perfectly reasonable to leave work, grab a quick steak at the butcher, some veggies at the store, and you get home with fresh food to cook. Or even go back out because you forgot an item.

      City life is just a whole lifestyle. It gets you in shape, and you just don’t think that much about having an elevator to go to the second floor.

  • @Praxinoscope@lemm.ee
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    339 months ago

    Honestly, doing laundry in the basement when I lived on the 3rd floor was the most annoying part of having no elevator.

  • @merari42@lemmy.world
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    79 months ago

    I had an apartment in the 5th floor without an elevator. I liked it at the time and it had some advantages (great view of the city, cheap rent) but was horrendously impractical if you needed to carry anything big up. Even simple things like taking out the trash were really annoying.

  • Onno (VK6FLAB)
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    79 months ago

    I’ve never lived in a building with an elevator. I’ve lived in multistorey apartments, townhouses and live in one now.

    Stairs are part of life.

    I’ve never had an issue with groceries and stairs.

    Heavy furniture and stairs on the other hand are a reminder that you need friends in your life, if only to have them help you move :)

  • @1984@lemmy.today
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    9 months ago

    I’ve done that when I was younger… It’s great exercise. Also had to walk to shop and carry bags home, since I had no car.

    It’s actually dangerous how out of shape people let themselves become.

  • @whaleross@lemmy.world
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    49 months ago

    I grew up on the third floor without an elevator. Thinking of it, I’ve lived mostly without elevator most of my life. Some places on the first floor but mostly 2-3 floor. A year on a top floor penthouse apartment without elevator on the top of a hill. Last place was fourth floor with an elevator. Now I’m back to stairs only. It feels perfectly natural for me.

  • athos77
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    49 months ago

    It wasn’t a big issue until I screwed up my ankle really bad. A couple years later I messed up my back and moved out.