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File talk:World Trade Center Building Design with Floor and Elevator Arrangment.svg Metadata This file contains additional information, probably added from the digital camera or scanner used to create or digitize it.
The John Hancock Center's sky lobby on the 44th floor serves only the residential portion of the building that occupies 48 floors (floors 45–92). Three express elevators run from the residential lobby on the ground floor to the 44th floor, with all three of the elevators stopping at one of the parking garage levels. [5]
The original can be viewed here: World Trade Center Building Design with Floor and Elevator Arrangment.svg: . Modifications made by MacRudi. Licensing.
Once the elevator has left the floor, depending on where the alarm was set off, the elevator will go to the fire-recall floor. However, if the alarm was activated on the fire-recall floor, the elevator will have an alternate floor to recall to. When the elevator is recalled, it proceeds to the recall floor and stops with its doors open.
Mechanical systems drawing is a type of technical drawing that shows information about heating, ventilating, air conditioning and transportation (elevators and escalators) around a building. [1] It is a tool that helps analyze complex systems.
A typical floor layout and elevator arrangement of the World Trade Center's Twin Towers. Another major limiting factor in the buildings' designs was elevators. As the building got taller, more elevators were needed to service the building, which required more elevator banks that in turn took up space. [76]
Mechanical attic (fourth floor) in Moore Hall at UCLA. A mechanical floor, mechanical penthouse, mechanical layer or mechanical level is a story of a high-rise building that is dedicated to mechanical and electronics equipment. "Mechanical" is the most commonly used term, but words such as utility, technical, service, and plant are also used.
Structural diagram of a en:space elevator. The earth is shown in a "top-down" perspective looking at the north pole, with the space elevator in equatorial orbit.