Ed Caesar on Nick Paumgarten's "Up and Then Down"
Briefly

Ed Caesar on Nick Paumgarten's "Up and Then Down"
"The shortest magazine pitch of Nick Paumgarten's life actually took place in an elevator, which the writer was sharing with an elevator-phobic editor, and consisted of a single word: "Elevators!" The article that followed, in April, 2008, is titled "Up and Then Down." It is the story of a man named Nicholas White-who was trapped in an elevator in the McGraw-Hill Building, in midtown Manhattan, for forty-one hours-and also a study of "elevatoring," a delicious word for the discipline of designing vertical transportation."
"Paumgarten's story is a parade not only of fascinating facts-there are, or were, fifty-eight thousand elevators in New York City; the super-fast elevators in the Taipei 101 Tower are pressurized to prevent ear damage; all door-close buttons in elevators built after the early nineteen-nineties are designed not to work-but also of indelible similes. In speeded-up CCTV footage of White stuck in the elevator car, he looks "like a bug in a box.""
Nicholas White was trapped in a Midtown Manhattan elevator for forty-one hours, and the incident anchors an examination of vertical-transportation design and culture. The account layers engineering details — roughly fifty-eight thousand elevators in New York City, pressurized super-fast lifts in Taipei 101 to prevent ear damage, and nonfunctional door-close buttons in elevators built after the early nineteen-nineties — with observations of human behavior and memorable similes. Passengers' instinctive spatial arrangements inside elevator cars are likened to the dots on a die, and CCTV imagery portrays the trapped man as "like a bug in a box," blending technical facts with unexpected poetic language.
Read at The New Yorker
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