Cutting-Edge Elevator Technology

Elevating architecture with destination dispatch controls
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Sponsored by Schindler Elevator Corporation
C.C. Sullivan

Learning Objectives:

  1. Discuss the context for developments in elevator technology, with particular emphasis on controls.
  2. Describe new destination-based dispatching technology, and how it is installed and implemented in both new construction and modernization projects.
  3. List the energy-efficiency implications and other operation and efficiency benefits of destination-dispatch elevator controls and similar optimization techniques.
  4. Explain how destination dispatch benefits specific building typologies, citing case studies.

Credits:

HSW
1 AIA LU/HSW
IACET
0.1 IACET CEU*
As an IACET Accredited Provider, BNP Media offers IACET CEUs for its learning events that comply with the ANSI/IACET Continuing Education and Training Standard.
This test is no longer available for credit

Over the last decade, new techniques in controlling elevators have radically changed thinking about how building mobility is organized and operated. For architects, these advances are essential knowledge for designing and renovating any buildings that rely on elevators for moving their occupants and visitors. The most important advancement in recent years is destination control. About 20 years ago, destination control systems were commercialized based on this approach. Not only did the controls reduce wait times and traveling times by up to 30 percent, but they also allowed for new techniques in core layouts, elevator stacking, and overall building designs.

From the 1940s to today, elevator call systems have operated on a single, uniform principle, the up-and-down hall push-button. These systems are known today as conventional technology. Used to guide elevators and tell them which floor to visit next, this approach is familiar to anyone who regularly rides an elevator. The essential logic is:

  • A car will continue traveling in the current direction as long as there are remaining requests in that direction.
  • If there are no requests in that direction, the car should wait and idle.
  • The car should change direction if there are requests in the opposite direction.

Decidedly simple, yes—but elevator operations could be optimized for even greater efficiency. In the 1980s, microprocessor technology introduced programs with more complex commands. These include heuristics—experience-based problem solving—which attempts to approximate reasonable if not optimal solutions to handling requests. These more recent algorithms are typically applied to elevator banks through a lift-group control system (LGCS), using microprocessor logic to send off the most appropriate car among the group to answer a given request.

Yet older conventional technology systems can be outdated and inefficient. These systems represent unnecessary costs and losses to both building owners and tenants. Simple and heuristic algorithms often waste time, energy, money, and space in a large number of typologies and applications. For architects and their clients, there are big implications for adopting cutting-edge controls instead—creating “smart elevators” that benefit everyone.

Elevator layouts traditionally are dictated by efficiency of core area and ADA rules, but destination-based systems remove this design constraint, allowing more freedom in planning a lobby layout.

Photo courtesy of Schindler Elevator Corporation

 

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Originally published in Architectural Record
Originally published in June 2013

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