How to choose the right elevator for your building type
Not every elevator suits every building. From a private duplex to a 30-storey commercial tower, the lift you choose will shape your building's safety profile, energy bill, and long-term maintenance costs.
Why the right choice matters
Elevators are long-term infrastructure — the average service life of a well-maintained system is 25 to 30 years. Choosing the wrong type from the outset means years of operational frustration, sky-high maintenance costs, and potential safety liability. Getting it right starts with understanding your building's traffic profile, load requirements, and available machine room space.
Residential buildings: Home lifts and low-rise passenger elevators
For private homes and low-rise residential buildings of up to five floors, a compact hydraulic or machine-room-less (MRL) traction elevator is typically the most cost-effective solution. These systems operate quietly, require minimal shaft space, handle loads of 320 kg to 630 kg comfortably, and are available in scenic glass configurations for aesthetic impact.
For luxury duplexes and villas, home lift platforms with telescopic or scissor-lift mechanisms offer a premium look without major structural work.
Commercial buildings: Traction and gearless systems
Office towers, shopping malls, and hotels demand high-capacity, high-speed systems. Gearless traction elevators — powered by permanent-magnet motors — are the gold standard for buildings above six floors. They deliver speeds of 1.0 m/s to 6.0 m/s, capacities from 630 kg to 2,000 kg, regenerative drives, and smart group-control dispatching that reduces average waiting times by up to 40%.
Optimum Elevators Tip: For mixed-use buildings, consider a zoned elevator strategy with separate low-rise and high-rise banks. This dramatically reduces lobby congestion and improves tenant satisfaction.
Healthcare: Hospital and bed elevators
Hospitals have some of the most demanding elevator requirements. Bed elevators must accommodate wheeled stretchers and ICU beds, requiring wider cars (often 1,100 mm × 2,100 mm or larger) and extra-wide doors. Smooth, jerk-free operation is a clinical requirement, not just a comfort feature.
Industrial and warehousing: Freight elevators and dumbwaiters
Where heavy goods, pallets, or vehicles need to be moved between floors, freight elevators rated from 2,000 kg to 10,000 kg are the appropriate solution. For smaller loads, a dumbwaiter rated at 50 kg to 300 kg is cost-efficient and space-saving.
Key questions to ask before specifying
- How many floors does the building have?
- What is the peak-hour traffic volume?
- Is a machine room available, or do you need a machine-room-less solution?
- What is the available shaft size?
- What is your power supply capacity and reliability?
- Do you need battery backup or solar-assisted operation?
At Optimum Elevators, our consultation team carries out a full building assessment before recommending any system. Contact us to schedule a free site visit.