[画像:Space elevator illustration by artist Pat Rawling.]
by Chris Woodford . Last updated: February 8, 2025.
Hit the top button on the elevator and prepare yourself for a long ride: in just a few days you'll be waving back from space! Elevators that can zoom up beyond Earth have certainly captured people's imagination in the decade or so since space scientists first proposed them—and it's no wonder. But in their time ordinary office elevators probably seemed almost as radical. It wasn't just brilliant building materials such as steel and concrete that allowed modern skyscrapers to soar to the clouds: it was the invention, in 1861, of the safe, reliable elevator by a man named Elisha Graves Otis of Yonkers, New York. Otis literally changed the face of the Earth by developing a machine he humbly called an "improvement in hoisting apparatus," which allowed cities to expand vertically as well as horizontally. That's why his invention can rightly be described as one of the most important machines of all time. Let's take a closer look at elevators and find out how they work!
Photo: How far will the top button take you? All the way to space? NASA is already working on an elevator that could carry materials from the surface of Earth up to geostationary Earth orbit, 35,786km (22,241 miles) up. Illustration by artist Pat Rawling courtesy of NASA Marshall Space Flight Center (NASA-MSFC).
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[画像:Labeled artwork showing the main parts of an elevator. Taken from an Otis brochure dated 1900.]
Artwork: With the exception of electronic control systems, the basic mechanism of traction elevators (ones that are pulled up and down by cables) hasn't changed all that much in over a century. This diagram comes from a historic Otis brochure dated around 1900 courtesy of the Internet Archive.
The annoying thing about elevators (if you're trying to understand them) is that their working parts are usually covered up. From the viewpoint of someone traveling from the lobby to the 18th floor, an elevator is simply a metal box with doors that close on one floor and then open again on another. For those of us who are more curious, the key parts of an elevator are:
[画像:A modern steel and glass elevator.]
Photo: Every so often, you might stumble across an elevator that shows off its secrets. If you wait for the cars to move out of the way, you can often see some of the workings and figure out which bits do what. Photo courtesy of Carol M. Highsmith's America Project in the Carol M. Highsmith Archive, Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division.
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Scientifically, elevators are all about energy. To get from the ground to the 18th floor walking up stairs you have to move the weight of your body against the downward-pulling force of gravity. The energy you expend in the process is (mostly) converted into potential energy, so climbing stairs gives an increase in your potential energy (going up) or a decrease in your potential energy (going down). This is an example of the law of conservation of energy in action. You really do have more potential energy at the top of a building than at the bottom, even if it doesn't feel any different.
To a scientist, an elevator is simply a device that increases or decreases a person's potential energy without them needing to supply that energy themselves: the elevator gives you potential energy when you're going up and it takes potential energy from you when you're coming down. In theory, that sounds easy enough: the elevator won't need to use much energy at all because it will always be getting back as much (when it goes down) as it gives out (when it goes up). Unfortunately, it's not quite that simple. If all the elevator had were a simple hoist with a cage passing over a pulley, it would use considerable amounts of energy lifting people up but it would have no way of getting that energy back: the energy would simply be lost to friction in the cables and brakes (disappearing into the air as waste heat) when the people came back down.
[画像:Elevator shaft showing a car supported by multiple cables.]
Photo: Elevators don't just hang from a single cable: there are several strong cables supporting the car in case one breaks. If the worst does happen, you'll find there's often an emergency intercom telephone you can use inside an elevator car to call for assistance.
If an elevator has to lift an elephant (weighing let's say 2500 kg) a distance of maybe 20m into the air, it has to supply the elephant with 500,000 joules of extra potential energy. If it does the lift in 10 seconds, it has to work at a rate of 50,000 joules per second or 50,000 watts, which is about 20 times as much power as a typical electric toaster uses.
Most elevators don't carry elephants; they carry people. Suppose we have six average American males weighing about 80kg (180lb) each, which makes roughly 500kg. Then our elevator would need only about a fifth of the power or more like 10,000 watts—and that turns out to be a decent estimate, because (from what I can glean from a quick online search) the power consumption of real elevators is generally in the 5–15kW range, depending on the load. [2]
Suppose the elevator is indeed carrying elephants, all day long (10 hours or 10 × 60 = 600 minutes or 10 × 60 × 60 = 36,000 seconds), and lifting for half that time (18,000 seconds). It would need a grand total of 18,000 × 50,000 = 900 million joules (900 megajoules) of energy, which is the same as 250 kilowatt hours in more familiar terms.
In fact, the elevator wouldn't be 100 percent efficient: all the energy it took from the electricity supply wouldn't be completely converted into potential energy in rising elephants. Some would be lost to friction, sound, heat, air resistance (drag), and other losses in the mechanism. So the real energy consumption would be somewhat greater.
That sounds like a huge amount of energy—and it is. But much of it can be saved by using a counterweight.
[画像:Counterweight on wheels and tracks inside an elevator shaft.]
Photo: The counterweight rides up and down on wheels that follow guide tracks on the side of the elevator shaft. The elevator car is at the top of this shaft (out of sight) so the counterweight is at the bottom. When the car moves down the shaft, the counterweight moves up—and vice versa. Each car has its own counterweight so the cars can operate independently of one another. On this picture, you can also see the doors on each floor that open and close only when the elevator car is aligned with them.
In practice, elevators work in a slightly different way from simple hoists. The elevator car is balanced by a heavy counterweight that weighs roughly the same amount as the car when it's loaded half-full (in other words, the weight of the car itself plus 40–50 percent of the total weight it can carry). [3] When the elevator goes up, the counterweight goes down—and vice-versa, which helps us in four ways:
In a different design, known as a duplex counterweightless elevator, two cars are connected to opposite ends of the same cable and effectively balance each other, doing away with the need for a counterweight.
Everyone who's ever traveled in an elevator has had the same thought: what if the cable holding this thing suddenly snaps? Rest assured, there's nothing to worry about. If the cable snaps, a variety of safety systems prevent an elevator car from crashing to the floor. This was the great innovation that Elisha Graves Otis made back in the 1860s. His elevators weren't simply supported by ropes: they also had a ratchet system as a backup. Each car ran between two vertical guide rails with sturdy metal teeth embedded all the way up them. At the top of each car, there was a spring-loaded mechanism with hooks attached. If the cable broke, the hooks sprung outward and jammed into the metal teeth in the guide rails, locking the car safely in position.
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Artwork: The Otis elevator. Thanks to the wonders of the Internet, it's really easy to look at original patent documents and find out exactly what inventors were thinking. Here, courtesy of the US Patent and Trademark Office, is one of the drawings Elisha Graves Otis submitted with his "Hoisting Apparatus" patent dated January 15, 1861. I've colored it in a little bit so it's easier to understand.
Greatly simplified, here's how it works:
[画像:Wheels guiding an elevator car.]
Photo: A modern elevator has much in common with the original Otis design. Here you can see the little wheels at the edges of an elevator car that help it move smoothly up and down its guide bars.
According to Otis, the key part of the invention was: "having the pawls and the teeth of the racks hook formed, essentially as shown, so that the weight of the platform will, in case of the breaking of the rope, cause the pawls and teeth to lock together and prevent the contingency of a separation of the same."
If you'd like a more detailed explanation, take a look at the original Otis patent, US Patent #31,128: Improvement in Hoisting Apparatus. It explains more fully how the winch and pulleys work with the counterweight.
No. He invented the safety elevator: he noted how ordinary elevators could fail and came up with a better design that made them safer. The Otis elevator dates from the middle of the 19th century, but ordinary elevators date back much further—as far as Greek and Roman times. We can trace them back to more general kinds of lifting equipment such as cranes, windlasses, and capstans; ancient water-raising devices such as the shaduf (sometimes spelled shadoof), based on a kind of swinging see-saw design, may well have inspired the use of counterweights in early elevators and hoists. [4]
Safety wasn't the only attractive feature of the Otis elevator. One of his (somewhat clunky) marketing lines was "by the power of ascension of the unassisted human leg": thanks to Otis, people and buildings could swiftly and safely go places they'd never been before—high into the air. [5]
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Most elevators have an entirely separate speed-regulating system called a governor, which is a heavy flywheel with massive mechanical arms built inside it. Normally the arms are held inside the flywheel by hefty springs, but if the lift moves too fast, they fly outward, pushing a lever mechanism that trips one or more braking systems. First, they might cut power to the lift motor. If that fails and the lift continues to accelerate, the arms will fly out even further and trip a second mechanism, applying the brakes. Some governors are entirely mechanical; others are electromagnetic; still others use a mixture of mechanical and electronic components.
Artwork: How a governor works. The lift motor (1) drives gears (2) that turn the sheave (3)—a grooved wheel that guides the main cable. The cable supports both the counterweight (4) and lift car (5). A separate governor cable (6) is attached to the lift car and the governor mechanism on the right. The governor consists of a flywheel with centrifugal arms inside it (7). If the lift moves too quickly, the arms fly outward, tripping a safety mechanism that applies brakes to the governor cable (8) and slows it down. Because the governor cable is now moving slower than the main cable and the car itself, it activates another mechanism that causes friction brakes to shoot out from the elevator car onto its outer guide rails, bringing it smoothly and safely to a halt (in a similar way to the original Otis safety mechanism).
[画像:An Otis mechanical elevator governor from the 1960s from US Patent 3,327,811.]
Artwork: An example of a fully mechanical governor mechanism designed by Otis engineers in the 1960s. You can see the flywheel (gray) with its centrifugal arms inside (light blue) and the springs that hold them in (yellow). When the wheel turns too fast, the arms fly outward, tripping a braking device that applies a pair of spring-loaded arms (darker blue) to the governor rope (brown). From US Patent 3,327,811: Governor by Joseph Mastroberte, Otis Elevator Company, patented June 27, 1967. Artwork courtesy of US Patent and Trademark Office (with colors added to make it easier to understand).
[画像:An Otis elevator hoist, motor, and centrifugal governor.]
Photo: Older elevators sometimes used centrifugal governors, with two heavy little metal balls that moved up and out as they spun around, locking the car if they moved too fast and too far. This is the hoist motor and hoist (left) and centrifugal governor (right) on an old Otis elevator at the Grand Coulee Dam. Photograph by Jet Lowe, Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, HAEL WASH,13-GRACO,1A--32.
[画像:An Otis elevator hoist, motor, and centrifugal governor.]
Artwork: Here's a detail of an early Otis centrifugal governor from one of the company's promotional brochures, dated 1893. This is similar to the governor you can see in the photo above, but in much enlarged view. You can see the two metal balls that spin around, connected to the central wheel by a bevel gear. They rise upward if the car moves too fast, pulling on a brake lever that slows the car down safely. Source: Hydraulic, electric, steam and belt elevators by Otis Brothers. Peerless Press, 1893, courtesy of the Internet Archive.
Modern elevators have multiple safety systems. Like the cables on a suspension bridge, the cable in an elevator is made from many metal strands of wire rope twisted together so a small failure of one part of the cable isn't, initially at least, going to cause any problems. Most elevators also have multiple, separate cables supporting each car, so the complete failure of one cable leaves others functioning in its place. Even if all the cables break, this system will still hold the car in place.
In November 2018, it was widely reported in over-sensational media accounts that an elevator car at 875 North Michigan Avenue in Chicago (the skyscraper formerly known as the John Hancock Cente) had "plunged" down 84 floors after a cable failure. In fact, as a detailed safety inspector's report later made clear, only one of seven hoist ropes had broken and the other six intact cables had allowed a slow, controlled descent from the 20th floor to the 11th floor, where passengers were eventually rescued. The elevator's safety systems worked exactly as designed and it was "never out of control or unsafe."
[画像:Elevator car at 875 North Michigan Avenue in Chicago, the John Hancock Centre.]
Photo: One of the elevators at 875 North Michigan Avenue in Chicago. Multiple safety systems ensure you return to the ground even when a cable fails. Photo courtesy of Carol M. Highsmith's America Project in the Carol M. Highsmith Archive, Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division.
Finally, if you've ever looked at a transparent glass elevator, you'll have noticed a giant hydraulic or gas spring buffer at the bottom to cushion against an impact if the safety brake should somehow fail. Thanks to Elisha Graves Otis, and the many talented engineers who've followed in his footsteps, you're much safer inside an elevator than you are in a car.
Elevators that work with cables and wheels are sometimes called traction elevators, because they involve a motor pulling on the car and counterweight. Not all elevators work this way, however. In small buildings, it's quite common to find hydraulic elevators that raise and lower a single car using a hydraulic ram (a fluid-filled piston similar to the ones that operate construction machines like bulldozers and cranes).
Hydraulic elevators are mechanically simpler and therefore cheaper to install, but since they typically don't use counterweights, they consume more power raising and lowering the car. They're inherently safe and offer a super-smooth ride, but they do move slowly. Unlike traction elevators, they're only used in relatively low buildings, partly because of their speed but also because of the energy you'd needed to lift the car through greater heights.
Sometimes the hydraulic ram is installed directly underneath the car and pushes it up and down (a design known as direct-acting). Alternatively, if there isn't room to do that, the ram can be mounted to the side of the lift shaft, operating the car using a system of ropes and sheaves (in a design known as indirect-acting). More complex elevators, like the one shown here, use multiple hydraulic cylinders and counterweights.
[画像:Hydraulic elevator with two linked rams and a counterweight.]
Artwork: A hydraulic elevator with an energy-saving counterweight. In this design, the passenger car (1) is supported by a direct-acting hydraulic ram (2), connected through a hydraulic pump (3) operated by a motor (4) connected to a second hydraulic ram (5) that operates a counterweight (6). As the elevator car falls, the pump transfers hydraulic fluid from one ram (2) to the other (5), so avoiding the need for a fluid reservoir. My drawing is based on a design by Otis described in US Patent 5,975,246: Hydraulically balanced elevator by Renzo Toschi, Otis Elevator Company, patented November 2, 1999.
[画像:Illustration of Otis direct-acting hydraulic freight elevator from 1893.]
Artwork: An early Otis direct-acting hydraulic freight elevator from one of the company's promotional brochures, dated September 1893. In this design, the moving hydraulic ram lifts the load; in indirect designs, the ram moves the load through a system of intermediate pulleys. Source: Hydraulic, electric, steam and belt elevators by Otis Brothers. Peerless Press, 1893, courtesy of the Internet Archive.
[画像:A small direct-acting hydraulic elevator in a shopping mall.]
Photo: Here's a typical direct-acting hydraulic elevator in a small shopping mall. I've colored the hydraulic ram red so you can spot it more easily. Note the guide rails on the sides and the complete lack of a motor, winding gear, or other safety cables on top.
Chris Woodford is the author and editor of dozens of science and technology books for adults and children, including DK's worldwide bestselling Cool Stuff series and Atoms Under the Floorboards, which won the American Institute of Physics Science Writing award in 2016. You can hire him to write books, articles, scripts, corporate copy, and more via his website chriswoodford.com.
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Woodford, Chris. (2009/2025) Elevators. Retrieved from https://www.explainthatstuff.com/how-elevators-work.html. [Accessed (Insert date here)]
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