30 Times People Ignored The Designated Paths In The Name Of Convenience (New Pics)
You're running late to the bus stop. You check your clock every few strides — there's still hope to make it. But after you turn a corner, you see that the sidewalk you've been sprinting takes a ridiculous curve instead of going straight to the street where you need to go. So what do you do? Cut the line through the grass.
You've just taken a 'desire path,' described by Robert Macfarlane as "paths & tracks made over time by the wishes & feet of walkers, especially those ... that run contrary to design or planning"; he calls them "free-will ways."
Robert Moor offers other terms, such as 'cow paths,' 'pirate paths,' 'social trails,' 'kemonomichi (beast trails),' 'chemins de l'âne (donkey paths)', and 'Olifantenpad (elephant trails).'
JM Barrie described them as 'Paths that have Made Themselves.'
Whichever word you decide to use, there's a whole subreddit dedicated to these shortcuts, and it perfectly illustrates that urban developers aren't always on top of their game. Or that people are just lazy. Or maybe it's both!
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Next Level Desire Path
Desire Path Created By A Squirrel We Feed Peanuts To Every Morning
Desirepath Regocnition In The Netherlands
Understandable Desire Path
Never Heard Of This Before, But Figured I Had The Perfect One
Been Here 30 Years, I Don't Think The Gate Has Ever Been Used
Well Worn Wal-Mart Path. Deepest I've Ever Seen
We Won !
They're Both Kind Of Appealing
Desire Steps?
Miami U (Ohio) With The Awareness!!
Update: Tree Is Budding + Secondary Path
Desire Stairs
Beautiful Exemplar
"Please, Take This Circuitous Route Following The Perimeter" Signed, The Architects
Ultimate Acceptance
Three Years Ago, I Posted About A Desire Path On My Campus. We Are Successful!
Hey, I go to this school! That's awesome, I didn't know that was a desire path 🤣
It's not anymore, they were working on making it a real path
Load More Replies...Frosty Scotland
Desire Path To Avoid A Branch Hanging Over Another Larger Desire Path
The Fast Track To Fastrac
It's Not Very Long But It's Got Character
My Daughter Found The Shortest Way Home
This His Is In Fact A Walkway, Thanks Though Lil’ Sign
Useful Desire Path
Long, Foggy, More Direct Desire Path At Ucsc
My University Gave Into Our Desire Path- In A Way That Created Another, Smaller Desire Path
One Side Preferred
A Low-Tech Approach To Defeating A Desire Path
Desirepath? Gimme That Desirestreet!
Absolute Behemoth Desired Path Next To The College In My Home Town
Same here. So very human and no celebrities.
Load More Replies...Ive never heard the term “desire paths”. We always called them “cow paths.” Learn something new everyday!
In German, the very unromantic term translates to "trampled path".
Load More Replies...Fun Fact: Michigan State University didn’t put in sidewalks when new buildings were built. Instead, they waited for students to create their own paths. yg8gz0knvv...7a39ec.jpg
At IBM, they used to let people create the desire paths, then they paved them. Saved a lot of hassle for everyone.
While in college, the school erected a new building on the main quad. Went from 4 buildings to 5. Understandably, the construction wrecked the grass as stuff was left on it during the build and people walked around it. They finished in the spring. Come summer, they took up all the sidewalks and resodded the whole 1.5 acres. People built new desire paths on the new lawn. Christmas break, they laid down new brick sidewalks on all the paths.
Considering the fact that most of our modern roads and highways started out as animal migration paths, then became indigenous peoples’ footpaths, then cart paths to market, then carriage roads, and eventually major roads and highways. Not all of them started that way, but quite a lot of the older roads and highways did.
The existence of desire paths, at least in many cases, are great examples of why people REALLY need to start using human factors scientists/psychologists when they design the layouts of things. How humans will use something is basically their field of study and could greatly help to avoid this stuff and make a lot of things more efficient. I'm not a human factors scientist, I'm a biologist/epidemiologist, but I've worked with and know personally some human factors scientists, and it actually helped me with considering my own things, just having their input.
To conclude, the journey is nowhere near as desirable as the destination.
Many years ago my grandmother and I used to go for walks in a public park along a river. We (and a lot of other people) noticed that one part of the path was in danger of falling into the river. Many people created a desire path avoiding the threatened part. Eventually the desire path became part of the official path - because the short stretch that was too close to the river eventually fell in. I know that making your own path in a public park is a no-no, but I'm sure we can make an exception in this case.
It just occurred to me that I very rarely don't follow the "legitimate" path, don't know why. It's just automatic for me: this is the path, that's what I'm gonna use. It takes me longer? Well, there must be a reason why they laid it like that. 🤷♀️That says a lot about my personality, I guess
Anyone else uncomfortable with the term "desirepath"? I've always called them goat tracks.
Same here. So very human and no celebrities.
Load More Replies...Ive never heard the term “desire paths”. We always called them “cow paths.” Learn something new everyday!
In German, the very unromantic term translates to "trampled path".
Load More Replies...Fun Fact: Michigan State University didn’t put in sidewalks when new buildings were built. Instead, they waited for students to create their own paths. yg8gz0knvv...7a39ec.jpg
At IBM, they used to let people create the desire paths, then they paved them. Saved a lot of hassle for everyone.
While in college, the school erected a new building on the main quad. Went from 4 buildings to 5. Understandably, the construction wrecked the grass as stuff was left on it during the build and people walked around it. They finished in the spring. Come summer, they took up all the sidewalks and resodded the whole 1.5 acres. People built new desire paths on the new lawn. Christmas break, they laid down new brick sidewalks on all the paths.
Considering the fact that most of our modern roads and highways started out as animal migration paths, then became indigenous peoples’ footpaths, then cart paths to market, then carriage roads, and eventually major roads and highways. Not all of them started that way, but quite a lot of the older roads and highways did.
The existence of desire paths, at least in many cases, are great examples of why people REALLY need to start using human factors scientists/psychologists when they design the layouts of things. How humans will use something is basically their field of study and could greatly help to avoid this stuff and make a lot of things more efficient. I'm not a human factors scientist, I'm a biologist/epidemiologist, but I've worked with and know personally some human factors scientists, and it actually helped me with considering my own things, just having their input.
To conclude, the journey is nowhere near as desirable as the destination.
Many years ago my grandmother and I used to go for walks in a public park along a river. We (and a lot of other people) noticed that one part of the path was in danger of falling into the river. Many people created a desire path avoiding the threatened part. Eventually the desire path became part of the official path - because the short stretch that was too close to the river eventually fell in. I know that making your own path in a public park is a no-no, but I'm sure we can make an exception in this case.
It just occurred to me that I very rarely don't follow the "legitimate" path, don't know why. It's just automatic for me: this is the path, that's what I'm gonna use. It takes me longer? Well, there must be a reason why they laid it like that. 🤷♀️That says a lot about my personality, I guess
Anyone else uncomfortable with the term "desirepath"? I've always called them goat tracks.