A look at the last remaining paternoster lifts

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  • Опубліковано 29 сер 2017
  • (25 Aug 2017) LEAD IN
    The paternoster elevator, which works on a circuit and never stops moving, is rarely seen these days.
    But despite some concerns over safety, a handful still operate in Central and Eastern Europe.
    STORY-LINE:
    Paternoster elevators are a holdover of times when safety regulations were a little more lax, but the unusual elevators are still in use.
    The name Paternoster, Latin for Lords Prayer, comes not from a last ditch effort to nervously atone before jumping on one. It actually gets its name because each car runs on chains on a belt system in a loop, a little like rosary beads on a rosary.
    Passengers are supposed to exit before the paternoster passes the top or bottom floor. If they don't nothing serious happens, but they must wait to make the turn in the circuit before heading back up or down in the opposite direction. Some people make the turn just for fun to see what happens.
    The inventors of the paternoster saw it as a way to deliver more people up and down floors without as a long of a wait.
    The disadvantage is they could be very dangerous if they don't have an emergency shut off triggered by an obstruction. This one in Prague's Lucerna Palace, a downtown Art Deco shopping passage, has an emergency shut off.
    There are dozens of decades old paternosters still in use in the Czech Republic, where they are mainly used by staff in government buildings. A few are open to the public to ride.
    There are also as many 200 of them still in use in the Germany. But they are slowly being replaced, since new ones are no longer allowed to be installed in buildings.
    And a few remain in the UK where the invention of the paternoster, dating to the 19th century, has its origins.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 67

  • @edwardcalvert
    @edwardcalvert 5 років тому +9

    Excellent video. This was everything about the Paternoster elevator I wanted to see. Thank you.

  • @crazyleyland5106
    @crazyleyland5106 2 роки тому +4

    In Britain, the paternoster lift was derived from the "belt man lifts" found in mines and factories; a series of little platforms on an endless chain that workers would hang onto to go up or down. Cars were less dangerous than platforms, although paternosters could kill, and safety sensors reduced the risk. Only 3 left in Britain by 2022.

  • @ANDREWLEONARDSMITH
    @ANDREWLEONARDSMITH 6 років тому +14

    This is really a vertical escalator & indeed it was from the paternoster that the escalator as we know it evolved & it was the invention of the escalator that sounded the death knell for the paternoster.

  • @johno9507
    @johno9507 5 років тому +2

    Beautifully simple!

  • @NewRepublicMapper
    @NewRepublicMapper 3 роки тому +3

    For those People Who wonder Why is it Named As Paternoster Lift
    Because It Derives from the Biblical Prayer “Our Father” and the mechanism of the Elevator is Derrived from the Prayer Beads

  • @bobjones8378
    @bobjones8378 Місяць тому

    35 years in the elevator trade that's a dangerous crushing contraption

  • @fredashay
    @fredashay 3 роки тому +5

    This looks like a good way to lose a head or a limb if you trip and fall at the wrong moment.

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin 3 роки тому +1

      Nonsense, our ancestors were not stupid nor crazy, it has sensors in floor and ceiling. When you let your arm outside, it stops immediately. You can see how it works in this video. ua-cam.com/video/-Y1ME8n5tCU/v-deo.html

    • @MiloslavBrada
      @MiloslavBrada Рік тому

      Of course not 😅

  • @brentaudi9354
    @brentaudi9354 5 років тому +10

    I bet they have a hard time finding insurance....and when they do it is an enormous fee.

  • @Speeddemon3
    @Speeddemon3 4 роки тому +6

    That is very cool! Never seen a Paternoster machine room, very simple. What the heck makes that constant annoying clacking?

    • @Musikverkaeufer
      @Musikverkaeufer 4 роки тому +10

      That is caused by the chains that every cabin is hanging on; when the chains are grabbed by the wheels in the turning stations it makes that noise. You will hear it in every paternoster, without an exception.

  • @Pidalin
    @Pidalin 3 роки тому

    I like that GET OUT!!! table there, it's so simple and clear. :-)

    • @maximiliankaysen1425
      @maximiliankaysen1425 3 роки тому

      @Romeo Marley definitely, been using flixzone} for since november myself =)

  • @itsjustameme
    @itsjustameme 3 роки тому

    They have one in the danish parlament also I believe

  • @avi4767
    @avi4767 6 років тому +35

    Why are people so scared of this thing, there cool.

    • @fnulnu6300
      @fnulnu6300 6 років тому +2

      Why do u think Idiot?

    • @avi4767
      @avi4767 6 років тому +1

      Fnu Lnu
      Whats why i asked

    • @paulanderson79
      @paulanderson79 5 років тому +7

      *they're

    • @vince6473
      @vince6473 4 роки тому +2

      because they are dangerous and often don't have much safety measures. it's easy to lose an arm or a leg or get crushed and die if you trip over for example.

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin 3 роки тому +1

      Because they are stupid and think our ancestors were stupid. Most of modern people even don't know how old technology is car or train so they are scared in elevator from 1925 because they don't know they already had sensors and safety devices in that time and it's completely safe.

  • @666Necropsy
    @666Necropsy Рік тому

    What code allows this, wow

  • @markmatthews7401
    @markmatthews7401 Рік тому

    BNFL Risley Warrington and Natwest Bank 55 king st Manchester had these.

  • @HDXFH
    @HDXFH 5 років тому +8

    MEZ, czech motor

  • @bct_planespotter5598
    @bct_planespotter5598 5 років тому +4

    Should of went all the way down and around the curve

    • @paulanderson79
      @paulanderson79 5 років тому +3

      *have gone, not of went.

    • @paulanderson79
      @paulanderson79 5 років тому +1

      @@semura5141 No

    • @belethblake
      @belethblake 5 років тому +2

      @@semura5141 LOL You won't. Just simply ride around a wheel and going up again. I hope you're just joking.

  • @herbielicious6744
    @herbielicious6744 2 роки тому

    What happens if you don’t get off at the top?

    • @Diogo2cool
      @Diogo2cool Рік тому

      Nothing happens, it’s just that the parnoster might stop

    • @freeculture
      @freeculture Рік тому

      @@Diogo2cool It doesn't stop, you simply do the loop and start going down. I rode this one, there is an inverted horse statue? hanging from the roof outside, Prague has so many weird statues lol.

    • @Diogo2cool
      @Diogo2cool Рік тому

      @@freeculture but I thought the warning thing that said to go to the stop would go + not to start a augruemt or anything I said might cuz the poster also said might

  • @jlt_lp6879
    @jlt_lp6879 5 років тому

    Where is this Paternoster ?

    • @Musikverkaeufer
      @Musikverkaeufer 5 років тому +4

      It´s stated in the text above: Lucerna Palace in Prague, very close to Wenceslas Square. The entrance door is closed, so you have to wait until somebody leaves the building to get in, or simply ring a bell and hope that the door will be opened then.
      Another one is in the New Town Hall, that door is always open.

    • @DanielYusim
      @DanielYusim 4 роки тому +2

      @@Musikverkaeufer ​ I rode it yesterday. during my last day in Prague You just have to buy a 100 Czech Koruna ticket to the rooftop bar named "Strecha Lucerna" (which includes a free cup of hot wine) and then they let you in. You can take the Paternoster up to the top level . (or ride it all around like I did) Very cool, and very calm experience. It can be quite difficult to find it, though. I had to ask shop-owners in Passage Lucerna/Passage Rococo for directions to it.

    • @Musikverkaeufer
      @Musikverkaeufer 4 роки тому +4

      @@DanielYusim That´s true, if you don´t know of its existence you only will find it by coincidence or if someone tells you. You can see it when you pass by the mentioned always closed door, but of course you must take a look in the right moment.

    • @DanielYusim
      @DanielYusim 4 роки тому +1

      @@Musikverkaeufer Yeah, it was really an interesting experience for me trying to find it. I found a google map of potential sites, not even knowing the names of the places and guesstimated the few closest ones to my hotel. I image searched pictures of Paternosters and asked a shop-owner about it and he pointed me to a place I had just passed, not even knowing it where a girl was selling tickets to the rooftop bar and the elevator was right behind her. It happened to be the first one on the list I'd made which was lucky because it was my last day in Prague and I had plenty of time left over.
      I think I'd found the same one once before while looking for a bookstore located somewhere in Passage Lucerna but the glass door was locked.
      Also, the one in the Town Hall is likely inaccessible during the weekends because the town hall seems to be closed on weekends. (according to Google when I was there)

    • @stepank765
      @stepank765 4 роки тому +1

      There is one more paternoster in Uzhgorod 🇺🇦 Ukraine. Which is still in working state

  • @kleszczoros4885
    @kleszczoros4885 3 роки тому

    There is one in Poland too

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin 3 роки тому

      Only one? We have many of them in Czechia.

    • @kleszczoros4885
      @kleszczoros4885 3 роки тому

      @@Pidalin well I know of one there might be more

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin 3 роки тому

      @@kleszczoros4885 We have dozens of them, but only few of them are public and you can use them. I googled it and we have 68 of paternoster lifts, but I don't know if all are operable.

    • @bonitobonita9263
      @bonitobonita9263 2 роки тому

      @@Pidalin 68!? Really? UK’s last one has been removed and was so sad. I would definitely want to go for the lifts

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin 2 роки тому

      @@bonitobonita9263 You can find many of them even in Germany, Austria and Poland, I heard that even in Switzerland they have some of them, but here in Czechia, we have really many of them in good condition, we really keep things which are related to our first republic era, it's important for us.

  • @konstanaritonang5489
    @konstanaritonang5489 5 років тому

    Dangerr

  • @sharonashfield5761
    @sharonashfield5761 2 роки тому