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Angel Reyes
Angel Reyes

Buy Piano Stairs



These inspirational and innovative installations are interactive such that notes of a song or a melody is played with each step. They are also known as social stairs. They can be applied to any stairs. The stairs are transformed into a giant piano keyboard in a noninvasive way. Several piano staircases have been installed in shopping malls, metro stations, and science museums in different cities.




buy piano stairs



The piano stairs play notes of a melody or piano tones when people walk on them. These artworks stimulate people to take the stairs instead of the elevator or escalator. Musical stairs change people's behaviour for the better (healthier) by making it fun to do. Thus, physical activity is encouraged when taking stairs is fun. A study has shown commuters choose to take the piano stairs 66% more than to take the escalator. They can be also used to create public spaces to engage people.


The Piano Staircase is a project by The Fun Theory (which is an initiative of Volkswagen) from 2009. The objective of the project was initially to see if they could get people to choose the stairs over the escalator by making taking the stairs more fun to do.


This project transforms a plain staircase into a piano. These piano staircases are designed to make taking the stairs more fun and to encourage the people to walk up (or down) the stairs instead of taking the elevator or escalator. According to me the Piano Staircase project is part of the gamification issue.


Walking up and down the stairs is a lot healthier as opposed to taking an escalator because it keeps you moving.The reason I like this project so much is because it is something I personally care about. Lately I have been trying to get my stamina up again and I have been trying to live a healthier lifestyle. I feel like it is hard to actually accomplish these things without putting a lot of effort in it, but small things like taking the stairs can already make a difference.


The artistic qualities are a little less obvious or present in this project. The stairs look more fun when they are decorated as a piano, but it is not necessarily focused on the creation of something from the imagination or focused on the aesthetics of the project. Personally, I absolutely love the way these stairs look as opposed to the average station (metro or train), it gives the stations a much friendlier appearance.


Plug the Arduino into the Raspberry Pi via the USB cable. Then, plug your speakers into the Raspberry Pi's audio jack.Download the github repo onto your Raspberry Pi and run python ohboymusic.py! -stairsImage from raspberypi.org


Hi. I'm new to raspberry pi. I don't know where I'm supposed to put the piano keys. All you tell me is to put the code. Where do I put the .wav files. I'm obviously new to pi bc everyone else gets it and I don't. :(


The video of people skipping the escalator in favor of composing music on the piano stairs of Odenplan subway station in Stockholm, Sweden, has been viewed more than 2.5 million times on YouTube. (Watch it above in the embedded player.)


Volkswagen chose a staircase at the Odenplan subway station in Stockholm, Sweden. The staircase was right next to an escalator. First, they tallied how many random subway commuters took the stairs versus the escalator on a typical day. Then, they made each step of the staircase produce a different sound when it was stepped on, like a piano. They found that 66% more commuters than normal opted to take the stairs when they were piano stairs.


Overnight, a team transformed the stairs leading out of the Odenplan subway in Stockholm, Sweden, into a giant functioning piano keyboard - much like the piano made famous in the Tom Hanks movie Big. Applying pressure on each step played a musical note.


While the internal mechanisms of pianos keep getting makeovers, as hammers and strings make way for circuit boards and electronic components, one thing, however, has remained largely the same. The keyboard has seen few changes over the centuries.


A Turkish company has made it its business to dress the stairs in buildings as piano keys. Known aptly as The Piano Stairs, the company travels around the world to install the ubiquitous black-and-white keys onto public stairs.


These are not pure, decorative pieces, however. The keys do work like real piano keys and with each step that commuters take, a note is produced. Sensors embedded under the layer of keys send electrical signals to a computer, which analyses them and produces a corresponding sound that is broadcast from hidden speakers.


The Armada Shopping Mall in Ankara, Turkey, was an early beneficiary. Shoppers warmed up to them quickly and gladly made music as they made their way up and down the stairs. Since then, the vendor has expanded out of Turkey and performed similar installations in Russia and Guatemala.


Though the Micheltorena Stairs have probably made far more appearances on instagram (likely because they are more visible to those driving down Sunset Blvd.) we think the Murray Stairs are a bit more cool. So cool in fact that in an earlier post, our friend Zeus Lee learns to play the piano on them in this YouTube video.


If he did the stairs without permission then it's vandalism, regardless. It impugns your intent and sends the wrong message when you just do these things without asking. That's the real injury to society; your criminal charge, fines, and any kicks in the shins are minor problems compared to giving a bad name to other artists who might otherwise have been perceived in a more positive light. Good intentions are good, but the road to hell, and all that.


That having been said, I think the piano stairs are pretty cool. I think they did a good job. The paint work was well-done, and is definitely more interesting and really stands out, whereas before the stairs were just greyish and nondescript. Particularly now that it's winter an the leaves are all down, the piano design makes a good contrast with and adds definition to otherwise drab part of town. That kind of thing makes people feel better about being there and living in that area, which is good for everyone because they take better care of it. And, art inspires art; one things leads to others and over time it can infuse and transform a space.


Volkswagen decided that persuasive technology could convince people to begin to use the stairs again. The concept was for each stair in the subway staircase to produce various sounds when pressure was applied to their surfaces, as a piano would if it was being played. The randomized controlled experiment took place at the Odenplan subway station in Stockholm, Sweden, next to an escalator. A group of randomized unsuspected subway commuters were tallied as they were given the choice to take plain steps or an escalator. In the second trail, another group of randomized commuters were give the same option, but with musical stairs. This left people with the choice to either participate in the giant musical steps or to use the escalator.


This was an extremely interesting post because I had never heard of the Fun Theory. It is a very interesting concept, one that could have many positive impacts in this world. I can definitely see how people would be more interested in taking a piano staircase than a regular one. However, I am curious as to whether they looked to see if it was consistently successful. After using the piano staircase several times, would the novelty wear off? People may get tired of the noise or lose their interest and revert back to taking the escalator. This was a very creative post, and it was also very relatable to the daily debate whether to take the elevator or the stairs.


Besides sea lions, Pier 39 in San Francisco also has a flight of musical stairs done up to look like a giant piano. The steps are painted to look like keys and there are speakers set up along one side to play musical notes. Each step plays a different note as you walk up or down the staircase. The interactive exhibit was done by Remo Saraceni, who also created the floor piano that appears in Tom Hanks's movie, Big! The musical staircase is located in Building O on Pier 39 allowing you to musically move from the first to second floor. If you turn left at the top, you will enter Magowan's Infinite Mirror Maze!


The Music Box is a Laurel and Hardy short film comedy released in 1932. It was directed by James Parrott, produced by Hal Roach and distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The film, which depicts the pair attempting to move a piano up a long flight of steps, won the first Academy Award for Best Live Action Short (Comedy) in 1932.[1][2] In 1997, it was selected for preservation in the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[3][4][5]


The duo soon learn from a postman (Charlie Hall) that the home is at the top of a very long stairway. Their attempts to carry the piano up the stairs result in it rolling and crashing into the street below several times, twice with Ollie in tow. During their first attempt, they encounter a nursemaid (Lilyan Irene) pushing a baby carriage down the steps; in trying to let her pass, they knock the piano back down the stairs. After the lady laughs at them, Stan kicks her in her backside, causing her to punch him back and hit Ollie over the head with a milk bottle. Stan and Ollie then heft the piano back up the stairs. In a double entendre line, the angry woman tells a policeman (Sam Lufkin) on the corner that she was "kicked right in the middle of my daily duties". The cop then confronts the hapless duo, kicking Ollie twice and hitting Stan with his nightstick after the latter suggests the officer is "bounding over his steps" (i.e. "overstepping his bounds"). Meanwhile, the piano has rolled down the steps again.


The two doggedly persist in carrying the piano up the stairs for a third time. Halfway up, they encounter the short-tempered and pompous Professor Theodore von Schwartzenhoffen (Billy Gilbert), M.D., A.D., D.D.S., F.L.D., F-F-F-und-F. He impatiently tells them to take the piano out of his way; he should like to pass. Ollie very reasonably and sensibly suggests he walk around, which sets off the Professor in a fit of Teutonic rage. He screams at Stan and Ollie to get the piano out of his way, and Stan knocks the Professor's top hat down the stairs and into the street, where it is crushed by a passing vehicle. The outraged professor leaves, loudly threatening to have the two arrested. 041b061a72


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