History of Elevators
The first electric elevator was built by the German inventor Wener Von Siemens in 1880.
In 1889, the first commercially successful electric elevator was installed.
In 1887, an electric elevator with automatic doors that would close
off the elevator shaft was patented. This invention made elevators
safer.
Many changes in elevator design and installation was made by the great advances in electronic systems during World War II.
Space elevators use the same concept of classic elevator. They will
be used to transport people to space station. This concept theoretically
can considerably reduce the cost for putting a person into space.
Today, modern commercial buildings commonly have multiple elevators
with a unified control system. In addition, all modern elevators have
special override controls (to make elevators go directly to a specific
floor without intermediate stops).
Since the dawn of time, humans sought the way for more efficient
vertical transportation of freight and passengers to different levels.
These devices for transport goods up and down represent first elevators.
Elevator history begins several hundred years before Christ. The earliest elevators were called hoists. They were powered by human and animal power, or sometimes water-driven mechanisms. They were in use as early as the 3rd century BC.
Modern elevators were developed during the 1800s. These crude
elevators slowly evolved from steam driven to hydraulic power. The first
hydraulic elevators were designed using water pressure as the source of
power.
They were used for conveying materials in factories, warehouses and
mines. Hydraulic elevators were often used in European factories.
In 1852, Elisha Graves Otis introduced the first safety contrivance for elevators.
Otis established a company for manufacturing elevators and went on to
dominate the elevator industry. Today the Otis Elevator Factory is the
world's largest manufacturer of vertical transport systems.
Revolution in elevator technology began with the invention of hydraulic and electricity.
Motor technology and control methods evolved rapidly and electricity
quickly became the accepted source of power. The safety and speed of
these elevators were significantly enhanced.
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