trouble: tiny empty square with "Ticky box?", flashing to a checkmark with "Tickybox!" (Ticky!)
trouble ([personal profile] trouble) wrote2010-06-10 14:47

Poll of Passive Aggressive Complaining

So, a coffee shop moved in to my beloved tea shop. I miss my tea shop, deeply, but I also like having a place to drink hot drinks that's air conditioned and has tables and stuff, and thus, here I am.

And I got used to being around people who though "Accessibility matters!". I'm really missing that especially right now.

Noting that I've already asked people to stop putting the table out front so it blocks the only way for a wheelchair to get into this building (both this store and the one next door) twice, and both times people have said "Oh, yeah, that's important" and then not moved it until I've said "Look, my husband will be here soon, and he'd like to get in your shop, kk?", I ask this question:


Poll #3406 Wheelchair Accessibility: Is it optional?
Open to: All, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 60


How many times will I need to ask the coffee shop to stop putting a table in front of the accessible entrance?

View Answers

3
1 (1.7%)

4
1 (1.7%)

5
2 (3.3%)

6-10
1 (1.7%)

11-15
7 (11.7%)

You will stop going before they stop doing that
48 (80.0%)



*sigh*
willow: Raspberry on black background. Text: Original Unfiltered Willow (Willow:Unfiltered)

[personal profile] willow 2010-06-11 19:14 (UTC)(link)
Considering the tea-shop was all about accessibility and comfort for customers - that- might actually be the difference. Many places (especially franchises, though you've said it's not one) actually design their interiors to be subtly unfriendly to customers.

A single individual with a laptop doing work; will drink lots of coffee for oral satisfaction & because 'they're working'. A pair or more of people have each other for company, which might encourage lots of lounging, but not lots of purchasing. They might even buy one item and share it between them.

So they design the place to LOOK just inviting enough, but not be comfortable for long term sitting or conversation so people naturally decide to move on somewhere else.