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* Steve Page, 1997 to 2002
* Steve Page, 1997 to 2002
* Ari Bousbib, 2002 to 2008
* Ari Bousbib, 2002 to 2008
* Didier Michaud-Daniel, 2008 to 2012
*[[Didier Michaud-Daniel]], 2008 to 2012
* Pedro Sainz de Baranda, 2012 to 2014<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.utc.com/News/News-Center/Pages/United-Technologies-Corp-Names-New-President-at-Otis-Elevator-Co.aspx|title=United Technologies Corp. Names New President at Otis Elevator Co.|publisher=}}</ref>
* Pedro Sainz de Baranda, 2012 to 2014<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.utc.com/News/News-Center/Pages/United-Technologies-Corp-Names-New-President-at-Otis-Elevator-Co.aspx|title=United Technologies Corp. Names New President at Otis Elevator Co.|publisher=}}</ref>
* Philippe Delpech, 2015 to 2017
* Philippe Delpech, 2015 to 2017

Revision as of 07:28, 3 September 2019

Otis Elevator Company
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryVertical transport systems
Founded1853; 171 years ago (1853)
(acquired in 1976)
HeadquartersFarmington, Connecticut, U.S.
ProductsElevators and escalators
RevenueIncrease US$12.341 billion (2017)[1]
Decrease US$2.021 billion (2017)[1]
1,253,000,000 United States dollar (2022) Edit this on Wikidata
Number of employees
68,078 (2017)[1]
ParentUnited Technologies
Websitewww.otis.com
An Otis escalator

The Otis Elevator Company is an American company (owned by United Technologies) that develops, manufactures and markets elevators, escalators, moving walkways, and related equipment. Based in Farmington, Connecticut, Otis is the world's largest manufacturer of vertical transportation systems, principally focusing on elevators, moving walkways, and escalators.[2] The company pioneered the development of the "safety elevator", invented by Otis in 1852, which used a special mechanism to lock the elevator car in place should the hoisting ropes fail.

Otis has installed elevators in some of the world's most famous structures, including the Eiffel Tower, Empire State Building, the original World Trade Center, The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror, Petronas Twin Towers, Burj Khalifa, CN Tower, the Winchester Mystery House, the Hotel del Coronado, the Demarest Building (first electric elevator), the Singing Tower at Bok Tower Gardens, and the Skylon Tower.

History

Otis elevator in Glasgow, Scotland, imported from the U.S. in 1856 for Gardner's Warehouse, the oldest cast-iron fronted building in the British Isles.

In 1852 Elisha Otis invented the safety elevator, which automatically comes to a halt if the hoisting rope breaks. After a demonstration at the 1854 New York World's Fair the elevator industry established credibility.[3]

The Otis Elevator Company was founded in Yonkers, New York in 1853 by Elisha Otis. When Elisha died in 1861, his sons Charles and Norton formed a partnership and continued the business. During the American Civil War, their elevators were in high demand due to the shipment of war materials. Businesses throughout the United States purchased them. In 1864, with the partnership of J.M. Alvord, the company became known as Otis Brothers & Co. [4]

In 1925, the world's first fully automatic elevator, Collective Control, was introduced.

It was acquired by United Technologies in 1976 and is a wholly owned subsidiary. Otis has more than 64,000 employees, with 2014 revenue of US$13.0 billion. The company headquarters are located in Farmington, Connecticut.

Otis has also dabbled in horizontal automated people-mover "shuttle" systems, such as the Otis Hovair. In 1996, Otis formed a joint venture called "Poma-Otis Transportation Systems" with the French company Pomagalski to promote these products. That partnership has since ended.

Otis Elevator Company purchased Evans Lifts in the UK when Evans Lifts Ltd went bankrupt in 1997 during its merge with Express Lift Company with the name ExpressEvans. It was the oldest and largest manufacturer of lift equipment in the UK, and was based in Leicester, England. Otis' Customer Care Centre is still based in the old Evans Lifts building in Leicester. The building has since been extended by Otis.

There are some installations of Evans Lifts in use today. Few lifts made by Otis are branded as Evans. Notably, an original Evans Lift is still in the Silver Arcade in Leicester. It formerly transported people to the upper floors. The upper floors are no longer occupied: the lift is no longer used.

United Technologies will be divesting Otis Elevator into an independent company, announced on November 26, 2018.[5]

Presidents

Elisha Graves Otis

Controversy

Accidents

  • On July 24, 2009, a group of 8 people were trapped for 8 hours in an Otis elevator in Toronto. A repair man who tried to fix the elevator fell 10 floors to his death.[14]
  • On December 14, 2010, an Otis escalator installed in the International Trade station of Shenzhen Metro Line 1 retrograded without notice, triggering a stampede that injured 25 passengers.[15]
  • On July 5, 2011, an Otis 513MPE escalator installed at port A of Beijing Subway Line 4 Zoo Station changed direction without notice, causing 30 people to fall. One boy was killed and 27 people injured, prompting China to halt the use of the escalator model. A Beijing official called the 513MPE escalator "defects in design, manufacturing and maintenance," and Otis had "unavoidable responsibility for the accident."[16] Shenzhen Metro authorities confirmed that the cause of the accident was also similar to the Shenzhen accident on December 14.[15]
  • In March 2017 eighteen people suffered injuries at a Hong Kong's Langham Place shopping mall when an escalator maintained by Otis reversed direction from up to down.[17][18]
  • On July 9, 2018 a one year old Otis escalator at Stockholm City Station changed direction from up to a rapid descent, in what local officials called a "free fall"[19], causing minor injuries. Inspection of the gear boxes of several Otis escalators revealed unexpected rust and heavy wear. This led to the newly-built train stations Stockholm City Station and Stockholm Odenplan being temporarily closed for security reasons, on July 13, 2018 until the problems have been understood and resolved.[20][21] The temporary outage has been extended to the third quarter of 2019.

In February 2007, European Union regulators fined Otis Elevator €225 million ($295.8 million) for being part of a price-fixing cartel in the Belgian, Dutch, Luxembourg, and German markets. Competitors ThyssenKrupp, Schindler Group, KONE, and Mitsubishi Elevator Europe were also fined for participating in the same cartel.[22]

Biggest contracts

In October 2013, Otis won its biggest ever contract; it will supply 670 elevators and escalators to the Hyderabad Metro.[23] Its second biggest contract was in 2012, to supply 349 elevators for the Hangzhou metro.[23]

Locations

Headquarters in Farmington, Connecticut

In 1867, Otis opened a factory in Yonkers, New York, the city where the company was founded.[24] The Yonkers factory closed in 1983.[25][26] The former plant was later purchased by Kawasaki for use as a rail car assembly plant.[27]

Otis opened a factory in Bloomington, Indiana in 1965.[28] Beginning in 2011, Otis cut its manufacturing operations in Nogales and supply-chain operations in Tucson, Arizona as part of a consolidation of manufacturing operations in Florence, South Carolina,[29] where Otis purchased a former Maytag facility on 92 acres.[30] As part of the consolidation, Otis shut down its Bloomington facility in 2012.[31] The Florence facility is nearly 500,000 square feet in size; it opened with about 360 employees and grew to about 700 employees as of 2017.[30]

Otis had a large factory in Harrison, New Jersey.

In 1999, Otis acquired CemcoLift, Inc, located in Hatfield, Pennsylvania. The operation was later closed in October 2012, with the remaining business being sold to Minnesota Elevator Inc.

Otis has a test tower facility in Bristol, Connecticut and a Service Center in Bloomfield, Connecticut that serve its businesses in North and South America. Other test towers and service centers are located throughout the world.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "United Technologies Annual Report 2017" (PDF). UTC. Retrieved 23 May 2018.
  2. ^ "Otis Fact Sheet 2011-2" (PDF). otisworldwide.com.
  3. ^ "Elisha Graves Otis". Invent Now. Retrieved December 18, 2007.
  4. ^ Allison, Charles Elmer (1896). This History of Yonkers. New York: Wilbur B. Ketcham. p. 348.
  5. ^ https://www.utc.com/en/news/news-center/2018/11/26/united-technologies-announces-intention-to-separate-into-three-independent-compan
  6. ^ Allison, Charles Elmer (1896). The History of Yonkers. New York: Wilbur B. Ketcham. p. 348.
  7. ^ Allison, Charles M. (1896). The History of Yonkers. New York: Wilbur B. Ketcham. p. 348.
  8. ^ "Pay Raised". Time magazine. December 13, 1926. Retrieved 2009-08-18. The Board of Arbitration met the end of October. On it sat For the railroads: ... For the public: William Delavan Baldwin, chairman, Otis Elevator Co., and Edgar Erastus Clark, onetime (1906-21) I. C. C. commissioner ...
  9. ^ "Otis Elevator Re-elects Board. At the meeting of the Otis Elevator Company yesterday the directors were re-elected". New York Times. April 28, 1925. W. D. Baldwin, Chairman of the board, ...
  10. ^ "President Elected For Otis Elevator". New York Times. October 26, 1964. Retrieved 2009-08-18. Fayette S. Dunn The Otis Elevator Company over the weekend the election of Fayette S. Dunn as president and director, succeeding the late Percy L. Douglas. ...
  11. ^ "Fayette Dunn, 76, Dies. Otis Elevator's Ex-Head". New York Times. December 12, 1979. Retrieved 2009-08-18. Fayette S. Dunn, former president and chairman of the board of the Otis Elevator Company, died yesterday in Dorset, Vt., where he had lived since his ...
  12. ^ "United Technologies Corp. Names New President at Otis Elevator Co".
  13. ^ "United Technologies Appoints Judy Marks as President of Otis".
  14. ^ "Worker Dies & Passengers Trapped For Hours After Elevator Accident At TD Towers". CityNews. Archived from the original on 16 December 2014.
  15. ^ a b "China subway stampede leaves 25 injured". china.org.cn.
  16. ^ "China Halts Use of Otis Escalator Model After Deadly Accident". Bloomberg News. July 8, 2011.
  17. ^ CNN, Karina Tsui and Elizabeth Joseph,. "2 mechanics arrested after escalator malfunction". {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  18. ^ "At least 18 hurt in mall escalator accident". 27 March 2017.
  19. ^ "Presskonferen om rulltrapporna på pendeltågsstationerna".
  20. ^ "Svt nyheter July 13, 2018".
  21. ^ SvD, Matilda Bjerlöw and Sophia Sinclair,. "2 Stationer i Stockholm stängs – rulltrappa skenade".{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  22. ^ Brand, Constant (February 21, 2007). "Europeans slap $1.3 billion price-fixing fine on 5 elevator makers, including Otis". USA Today.
  23. ^ a b Reporter, B. S. (2013-10-23). "Hyd metro contract is largest for Otis". Business Standard India. Retrieved 2015-04-29.
  24. ^ Dan Robbins, Founded In Yonkers, Otis Elevators Took American Industry To New Heights, Westchester Magazine (September 2014).
  25. ^ James Feron, Otis Elevator to Leave Birthplace, New York Times (December 1, 1982).
  26. ^ Workers at the Otis Elevator Plant, United Press International (June 16, 1983).
  27. ^ Thomas J. Lueck, In Yonkers, Kawasaki Offers Hope, New York Times (April 17, 1987).
  28. ^ https://www.nhregister.com/news/article/Otis-Elevator-to-close-plant-in-Indiana-11690266.php Otis Elevator to close plant in Indiana], Associated Press (December 7, 2003).
  29. ^ Otis Elevator Co. to curtail Nogales operations, Inside Tucson Business (October 22, 2011).
  30. ^ a b Joshua Lloyd, Otis Elevator outgrowing its Florence facility; expansion coming, officials say, The Morning News (July 10, 2017).
  31. ^ Ernest Rollins, Closures manufacturer looking to expand to former Otis Elevator site, The Herald-Times (September 23, 2017).