Below is 1 such lift, located at the new wing of IOI mall Puchong.
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As you can see, it only serve only 4 floors and does not serve the basement below it. I can see it is a small capacity machine roomless lift since it appears there isn't any machine room at the top. This kind of lift is called a machine roomless lift, whereby all the motors and equipment are located in the shaft. This kind of lift is good for a short building as it does not need a huge room right at the top, but not advisable for tall buildings 12 storeys or more since if anything goes wrong, the poor repair guy have to be suspended up to 60-70 meters at the top of the shaft to get to the motor.
The close-up of the lift car.The counter-weight is at the side of the car. Some lifts have it behind the car, but in this case the counterweight will block the good view out of the lift. It is also why some lift have very long widths or depths to cater for the placement of the counterweight. The car operating panel for this lift is only located on 1 side of the lift car. Ok for a small lift, but if it is a big lift for a office building, it is better to have it on both sides.
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To the visitors to this shopping mall, they will not notice all the finer details that went into the placement and installation of this lift. Even during the design stage, we as the mechanical engineer must coordinate with the architect and civil engineer on the placement of the lift so that is does not affect items like headroom, beams, columns, car park etc. It becomes important as we take a look at the lift pit from Basement 1, the floor below.
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As you can see, the lift pit is something like a very big concrete box suspended from the ceiling. Lift pits vary in depth depending on the speed of the lift car. Some like in this case maybe 2m deep or less, while high speed lifts may have lift pits up to 4m deep to house the large buffer (something like a spring) to absorb the impact of the lift should the lift free-fall (very very unlikely, since it has a safety governor). But it can be a big issue when you have very little headroom to place the lift pit. As you can see, it is eating up 2 car park lots that might otherwise be available. But this is something like a compromise when you do the lift pit placement; you cannot have it in the driveway, you can't let the lift shaft run all the way down to lowest basement otherwise you would lose 4 car parks.
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To the consultants and architects doing IOI mall, great work for coordinating this lift pit into a location where it will at most, eat only 2 car parks and not obstruct the driveway.
I'm just a frequent shopper to IOI mall, so this is my first time to the new wing since it was opened.
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