Why do people choose the same side of the sidewalk?
A sidewalk works best when strangers agree without speaking.
People choose the same side of the sidewalk because walking in public is a coordination problem. Every passerby creates a small question: who moves, who keeps direction, and when?
Sidewalks usually have no painted lanes, yet pedestrians create informal lanes through repetition. One person moves right or left, the next person reads that movement, and soon a local rhythm appears. This rhythm reduces eye contact, hesitation, and the awkward dance of two people stepping into each other's path.
The hidden mechanism is collision avoidance through social copying. People do not need to discuss the rule because the crowd demonstrates it in real time. The more people follow the same pattern, the safer and easier the pattern feels.
This creates a feedback loop. A silent habit becomes a local rule, the rule reduces friction, and reduced friction makes the habit stronger. People think sidewalks are empty paths. Often, they are negotiations that have become so smooth no one notices them.
