I sure hope so, I’ve worked as a machine installer and electrician and by far the worst parts has been all the drilling in concrete, I once drilled over 1200 18mm 250mm deep holes in a concrete floor in preparation for a factory being built, and even though I had professional equipment it was the worst month of my life so I’d hate being one of the guys drilling the holes in elevator shafts 😢
This is insane!!! And she's got 4 more sisters!!!! Question: Is this the typical Traction Elevator using pulleys and counterweight, or is it a different type? I'm so glad I subscribed to the channel
Yes and It would be good to see this type of robot in other areas like installing anchors for stadium setting or hanging electrical conduit. Maybe also hauling concrete up to the current floor pour.....
Great article! Does this method also help to reduce errors in the initial construction of the elevator shafts (i.e. plumbness, placement of lift rails, etc.)? Or might that come later? In any case, it IS a game changer!
This is a prime example of a task that robots are perfect for. Repetitive tasks that require a high degree of precision. This also removes workers from environments that pose risks of health and safety issue while completing task in a more efficient and speedy manner.
But when you have a scarcity of jobs in itself… that makes the job market be even smaller & competitive. Technology will eventually cause more people to be either extremely poor or extremely rich. No middle class.
This is the kind of robot in construction I can get behind without any real objection. It saves time and cuts out health risks to in a tricky working space. Also, couldn't help notice that lady was called Caroline Rieper, like Carolina Reaper. That's a cool name :D
@@zntei2374 Yes, that's the solution to the problem. unfortunately, only the problem is being done at the moment, and nobody is working toward enacting the solution - nor will they until it's far too late for a lot of people.
@@andrewthomson Taking into account today's mental state of woke people your question is not precise enough. Do you mean if I'm genetically Swiss? Or administratively? Or by birth?? Or if I just identify as a Swiss citizen although I'm in fact a delusional tree on the Cook Islands?
You gotta love the Viennese dialect. It's pretty cool for a German guy like me. They have this attitude in their dialect which always gives me reason to smile as it sounds like they express that they don't care who you are or what you represent when they talk.
Ok I‘m swiss but when I hear viennese people I‘m always asking myself if they are gay or just viennese. I don‘t mean it as an insult…it really sounds a bit too…gay.
@@Slithermotion I find their dialect funny, plus they have many funny words that we don't understand in Germany but once someone explains them they get even funnier.
I think the sustainable building is a building that can last through centuries. Instead of using sustainable materials or designs that will be obsolete 20-50 years later.
We're building like that nowadays because we need flexible constructions to keep up with the changing demand of cities (people living in it, and companies). You can't build a church for 500 years anymore and set it up somewhere. Even the stuff built long ago isn't actually used. It is just there because people like to look at those things most of the times. Or there is some museum in there. But people have to actually live in buildings. If you see an old building that is actually used there was lot of work done to keep it up to modern standards.
It depends on the carbon and environmental impact. The building could last longer but have enormous carbon and environmental impact, while a 30 year building needs to be replaced but has less impact.
@robertmusil1107 a large portion of the buildings in Britain are over 150 years old, there's plenty way older aswell. Most are still used today as homes, shops or offices. Yes they had to have services fitted, but that's a lot more sustainable than knocking them down and rebuilding them with a modern building which the original building would outlast. Replacing a building every 30 years would never be sustainable, it wouldn't even last a person's lifetime. You also wouldn't be able to get a mortgage for it as it would depreciate in value faster than you could pay off the mortgage. It's carbon footprint would always be higher than traditional bricks and mortar over time, as you would have to rebuild it 5-10 times for every one time that you build a brick house, if not many more times.
@@kaneworsnop1007 There's a bit of survivorship bias here. There's plenty of 100+ year old buildings in the US as well - plenty of houses in New England that date back to the 1800s - but 90% of all buildings were made with poor quality materials and shoddy labor practices and didn't survive more than a single generation, if that. We only remember the ones that haven't fallen down. The cost to maintain the old colonial homes in New England as well is insane in terms of things like heat loss due to old windows and 70 year old diesel boilers and radiator heating, etc. It would be cheaper for people to tear them down and build a new home, but they can't even if they wanted to because it's illegal to tear down a historic building. My parents house is from the 1880s, and the cost to run their natural gas boiler for the radiators and hot water is easily 10x what the natural gas costs me for my heat in my house built in the 1970s.
Most of the buildings and houses in my area turned 100 in the last 20 years, and it shows. The basements of some of the buildings here are a maze of rotting wood and crumbling concrete. A brick facade fell off a building and into the street last week, no injuries luckily. There's new development in the area, but it's way cheaper and easier to lobby the local government to dismantle our parks and green space than it is to tear down or repair the old buildings. Of course, nobody that actually lives and works within city limits can afford these luxury condos that stand where our parks used to. And landlords love using it as an excuse to raise rent
...and the "group think" that gives rise nowadays to the disheartening rise of the 'my bat my ball, not playing' mentality. Worse still, in this instance it quite possibly made my initial "better‽" reply swiftly disappear. Fair comment, I thought and if it were just another glitch in the system and had no human hand in the erasure, j'apologise monsieur! Let's see how long this over-long venting of my spleen remains up. Too wordy, too many words; j'apologise!
4:09 But which ones? Could be Bashful ~ because you can't really be one of such a few skyscrapers and call yourself Bashful. Also Sneezy is not the best. Think of all the extra reinforcing rods you'd need to put in to accommodate the sudden movement in a sneezing skyscraper!
@@primordial_platypus rude. Did you know that hardly an average US family could still afford the costs to go to Disneyland? If so i guess Disney looses money with their park(s). How long before they let people go? From that perspectiv, it isn't that far fetched that they may look around for new revenue streams. Then again they may just carry those costs with the money they make from films and what not, as loosing that prestige maybe even worse for them.
@@kinngrimmTake it easy, it was a joke. The people there said it was like Snow White and the seven(five) dwarves. If you call the main building Snow White it makes sense to name the 5 smaller buildings after the dwarves. As far as Disney is concerned I doubt they would have a case against the buildings as long as they don’t “formally” call them Snow White.
The thing about rotohammers is that 1: hilti makes really good ones at a good price, and 2: ALL rotohammers break. I mean, the drill bits last about 100 holes before they are done... sure the hammers last longer, but being able to buy a cheap off the shelf available worldwide replacement of something goes wring with that part - is just good engineering.
In the company where I worked a technician who did maintenance work on one of our elevators on a Friday afternoon. On Monday we received a call from the technician's employer if the technician had shown up on Friday. Yes, he did. He did not show up for work on Monday morning and nobody knew where he was. Turned out that he was still in our company on the top of an elevator squeezed to death. :-( I thought there would be enough space between the cabin and the roof but apparently there isn't.
Thanks Fred and Schindler’s Lifts. It’s great to see Ella improving safety and efficiency in installing the Snow White tower’s lifts. Limited only by the access to power, Ella can prepare the shafts for the teams of technicians that fit the equipment to transport people safely to any floor of the skyscraper when it’s finished.
All the robots are females. Ella and her robotic mates "whistle while they work" on the Snow White Tower. Two Disney references! Wow! When the structure is complete, it is a fairy tale!
This channel is great but sometimes I wonder what goes through Fred’s brain when he sees an ikea wardrobe? Does he think ‘this is the most incredible wardrobe construction in a century’
It uses hydraulic compression arms that roll up hoistway, keeping tension against the walls at all times. I’m sure there’s a safety line for when the system fails.
There are websites specifically used to gain information. They are called search engines. They've only been around for decades, so you might not be aware. Hope this helps.
I'm a bit concerned with how when the drill bit is withdrawn from the hole that it drops significantly, so much that it no longer lines up. I would think when a robot drill goes in then out, it is still lined up with the hole and can just go straight back in again. @1:52
SDS Plus or SDS Max drill bits for rotary hammers has a fair amount of play, that drop is perfect normal and acceptable. @5:30 you can see the mounting brackets have lots of slots to align the rails.
I'd like to see more elevator tech covered. Given all the solutions to traditional elevator capacity (double decker, sky lobbies, etc.) I'd like to see if anyone is doing the "turbo lift" approach where elevators ride on tracks instead of cables and can divert around each other so they can share shafts.
As an elevator constructor, and now an elevator inspector, I can tell you there is a reason why you don't see that method in the U.S. For one thing, we don't often use concrete anchors in the hoistways anymore. We weld the brackets that carry the rails for the elevator, way more secure than a wedge bolt in concrete. And the weld plates are imbedded in the concrete as the building is being built. There are also Unistrut tracks that can be embedded in the concrete, where you just insert a bolt into the track and tighten the bolt. It takes a 4 year apprenticeship to become a elevator constructor, and I seriously doubt robots are going to replace a guy with that kind of experience anytime soon. Besides knowing what I know, I wouldn't trust some elevator built by a machine, in turn built by a guy somewhere in a place I know nothing of.
Las Vegas needs a lot of these. We always have some building going up! I can see a time when there are two RISE machines per elevator shaft x 10 shafts speeding up construction in the Las Vegas Valley!
Nothing is currently rising out here that I'm aware of. New baseball stadium soonish but that wont be very tall, ya know? But ive been here almost 30 years and have seen this city expand and grow like crazy.
Interesting. Men are doing 30 floors in 30 weeks. Then they stated it could shave off a full 2 weeks. That is only a 6% increase. I am not questioning that it is safer, more reliable, and better at the job. I am just surprised it is only 6% faster.
You have to look at it this way: It's already 6% faster. Despite being new tech. Also, I had like a few months ago a bunch of people doing the new elevators in my building. Since then we have a problem like every week because seemingly they did a bad job. So, in the end you'll also save time and costs in the maintainment phase and not just the construction phase that you have to consider.
I'm thinking maybe they have to wait for the robot to finish before letting humans in to fit the rails etc. Perhaps before they were able to have both the drillers and installers at the same time? Just a guess. Would be interested to know the actual answer.
Unlike 3D extrusion forming houses, this automaton application makes sense. Its a repetitive task that needs to be done accurately in a (geometrically) well conformed environment featuring significant exposures for human workers. Be sure not to keep her waiting - you loaded enough bolts right?
It would be even cooler if it didn't have to climb and it would put the rails above it, install it and climb it like an elevator instead of going on the raw concrete
Robots are not afraid of heights or falling.... I too am not afraid of falling from extreme heights... only the extreme stopping when I hit the ground...
i mostly just hope this frees up workers to let them work on other constructions, overall speeding up total construction time over a wider and larger area
Construction Robots are the future! Imagine space construction in zero gravity or moon gravity. Megaspaceships and O'neil cylinders would be made possible.
funnily enough we have two Schindler elevators in my 16story apartement building in germany and onbe of them is currently out of order. apperantly Schindler (or the commissioned repair company) can't get fitting replacement parts anymore as the building is from the 70s. so we're just hoping that the other one doesnt break as well now.
Do you think we'll see this on more construction sites in the future?
I sure hope so, I’ve worked as a machine installer and electrician and by far the worst parts has been all the drilling in concrete, I once drilled over 1200 18mm 250mm deep holes in a concrete floor in preparation for a factory being built, and even though I had professional equipment it was the worst month of my life so I’d hate being one of the guys drilling the holes in elevator shafts 😢
This is insane!!!
And she's got 4 more sisters!!!!
Question: Is this the typical Traction Elevator using pulleys and counterweight, or is it a different type?
I'm so glad I subscribed to the channel
Yes and It would be good to see this type of robot in other areas like installing anchors for stadium setting or hanging electrical conduit. Maybe also hauling concrete up to the current floor pour.....
Great article!
Does this method also help to reduce errors in the initial construction of the elevator shafts (i.e. plumbness, placement of lift rails, etc.)? Or might that come later? In any case, it IS a game changer!
In terms of safety and risk mitigation within the sphere of occupational safety, this really is a game changer.
This is a prime example of a task that robots are perfect for. Repetitive tasks that require a high degree of precision. This also removes workers from environments that pose risks of health and safety issue while completing task in a more efficient and speedy manner.
And yet the workers that usually do this are probably all complaining about "Muh jerb!" heh
But when you have a scarcity of jobs in itself… that makes the job market be even smaller & competitive. Technology will eventually cause more people to be either extremely poor or extremely rich. No middle class.
@@zqpcydbfoqbdiehdj Welcome to capitalism! Heh
@@3nertia Yeah? taking someone's job away is still terrible
@zqpcydbfoqbdiehdj there is no scarcity of jobs, quite the opposite.
Ah yes, Schindler's Lift.
Seen it.... It was.... Uplifting......
Schindler's Rise is the sequel.
@@TobyMole That's what she said...
B1M in elevator era
that is true because whenever if i see skyscraper, what's one thing viable to keep people moving around?
He likes Schindlers Lifts
Underrated Comment
This is the kind of robot in construction I can get behind without any real objection. It saves time and cuts out health risks to in a tricky working space.
Also, couldn't help notice that lady was called Caroline Rieper, like Carolina Reaper. That's a cool name :D
Cuts out health risks to workers*
precision elevator shaft work seems best use of robot. I wonder if this could be adapted to installing exterior panels.
Also cuts out income for a number of workers.
@@pileofstuff Most jobs in the world will be soon automated anyway. UBI for those workers.
@@zntei2374 Yes, that's the solution to the problem.
unfortunately, only the problem is being done at the moment, and nobody is working toward enacting the solution - nor will they until it's far too late for a lot of people.
Schindler is a Swiss company that has been around since 1874. Happy 150th birthday!
Yes but do they have a list?
@@supernova7069 Yes, they do. They have a list of standart answers to stupid questions. 😁
@@svenlima are you swiss?
@@andrewthomson Taking into account today's mental state of woke people your question is not precise enough. Do you mean if I'm genetically Swiss? Or administratively? Or by birth?? Or if I just identify as a Swiss citizen although I'm in fact a delusional tree on the Cook Islands?
@@svenlima that answers it lol
My local elevator mechanics union ain't gonna like this lol
Only B1M Fred could make the words "...maximizing floor area on site..." sound like a stirring part of the romance of the mighty skyscraper.
You gotta love the Viennese dialect. It's pretty cool for a German guy like me. They have this attitude in their dialect which always gives me reason to smile as it sounds like they express that they don't care who you are or what you represent when they talk.
Ok I‘m swiss but when I hear viennese people I‘m always asking myself if they are gay or just viennese.
I don‘t mean it as an insult…it really sounds a bit too…gay.
@@Slithermotion I find their dialect funny, plus they have many funny words that we don't understand in Germany but once someone explains them they get even funnier.
@@Slithermotion As a viennese i could say the same about swiss too. :D also not being rude but ... grüzzi, ja blas mir doch id Schueh. like wtf?
@@depppata“Oh läck du mir“ is also a classic
Love the droneshots & close ups on the robot @The B1M ! Looking forward to more building site stuff 🎉
agree would love to see more like that
I think the sustainable building is a building that can last through centuries. Instead of using sustainable materials or designs that will be obsolete 20-50 years later.
We're building like that nowadays because we need flexible constructions to keep up with the changing demand of cities (people living in it, and companies). You can't build a church for 500 years anymore and set it up somewhere. Even the stuff built long ago isn't actually used. It is just there because people like to look at those things most of the times. Or there is some museum in there. But people have to actually live in buildings. If you see an old building that is actually used there was lot of work done to keep it up to modern standards.
It depends on the carbon and environmental impact. The building could last longer but have enormous carbon and environmental impact, while a 30 year building needs to be replaced but has less impact.
@robertmusil1107 a large portion of the buildings in Britain are over 150 years old, there's plenty way older aswell. Most are still used today as homes, shops or offices. Yes they had to have services fitted, but that's a lot more sustainable than knocking them down and rebuilding them with a modern building which the original building would outlast.
Replacing a building every 30 years would never be sustainable, it wouldn't even last a person's lifetime. You also wouldn't be able to get a mortgage for it as it would depreciate in value faster than you could pay off the mortgage.
It's carbon footprint would always be higher than traditional bricks and mortar over time, as you would have to rebuild it 5-10 times for every one time that you build a brick house, if not many more times.
@@kaneworsnop1007 There's a bit of survivorship bias here. There's plenty of 100+ year old buildings in the US as well - plenty of houses in New England that date back to the 1800s - but 90% of all buildings were made with poor quality materials and shoddy labor practices and didn't survive more than a single generation, if that. We only remember the ones that haven't fallen down. The cost to maintain the old colonial homes in New England as well is insane in terms of things like heat loss due to old windows and 70 year old diesel boilers and radiator heating, etc. It would be cheaper for people to tear them down and build a new home, but they can't even if they wanted to because it's illegal to tear down a historic building. My parents house is from the 1880s, and the cost to run their natural gas boiler for the radiators and hot water is easily 10x what the natural gas costs me for my heat in my house built in the 1970s.
Most of the buildings and houses in my area turned 100 in the last 20 years, and it shows. The basements of some of the buildings here are a maze of rotting wood and crumbling concrete. A brick facade fell off a building and into the street last week, no injuries luckily. There's new development in the area, but it's way cheaper and easier to lobby the local government to dismantle our parks and green space than it is to tear down or repair the old buildings. Of course, nobody that actually lives and works within city limits can afford these luxury condos that stand where our parks used to. And landlords love using it as an excuse to raise rent
Robots in a Lift Shaft - the long-awaited sequel to Snakes on a Plane.
I think I saw an animated movie about that one time
Schindler's List is very different to Schindler's lift !
I can hear the CEO retiring saying, "I could have made one more lift"
@@Nero-l4q lol
human workmanship has progressed to a very robotic stage. making robots do those works is just a matter of fact taking shape
Same with music industry, AI now better, faster, cheaper
@@CawKeebetter‽
which is the real reason im excited for AI getting a leap forward. It's the gateway to full automation and spaceyard
@@Vysair and bland homogenisation
...and the "group think" that gives rise nowadays to the disheartening rise of the
'my bat my ball, not playing' mentality. Worse still, in this instance it quite possibly made my initial "better‽" reply swiftly disappear.
Fair comment, I thought and if it were just another glitch in the system and had no human hand in the erasure, j'apologise monsieur!
Let's see how long this over-long venting of my spleen remains up.
Too wordy, too many words; j'apologise!
Can't wait for future archeologists digging throughout europe to find the "missing two" dwarves, joke's on them!
4:09 But which ones?
Could be Bashful ~ because you can't really be one of such a few skyscrapers and call yourself Bashful.
Also Sneezy is not the best. Think of all the extra reinforcing rods you'd need to put in to accommodate the sudden movement in a sneezing skyscraper!
Meanwhile at Disney: "so you think we can get licensing fees?"
I'm sure they'll be filing the lawsuit by this afternoon.
Doubt it, as Snow White is a fairytale from 1800's, far older than Disney.
Where do you live? Dopey.
@@primordial_platypus rude.
Did you know that hardly an average US family could still afford the costs to go to Disneyland? If so i guess Disney looses money with their park(s). How long before they let people go?
From that perspectiv, it isn't that far fetched that they may look around for new revenue streams. Then again they may just carry those costs with the money they make from films and what not, as loosing that prestige maybe even worse for them.
@@kinngrimmTake it easy, it was a joke. The people there said it was like Snow White and the seven(five) dwarves. If you call the main building Snow White it makes sense to name the 5 smaller buildings after the dwarves.
As far as Disney is concerned I doubt they would have a case against the buildings as long as they don’t “formally” call them Snow White.
'RISE' is so obviously a backronym ;-)
love that its a high tech robot but still got a standard drill strapped to it. instead of integrating the motor into the arm
The thing about rotohammers is that 1: hilti makes really good ones at a good price, and 2: ALL rotohammers break. I mean, the drill bits last about 100 holes before they are done... sure the hammers last longer, but being able to buy a cheap off the shelf available worldwide replacement of something goes wring with that part - is just good engineering.
You can spend thousands of dollars designing a tool or spend hundreds of dollars to buy a tool someone else already spent thousands designing.
@@dcurry7287
cheaper to replace too instead of proprietary.
B1M consistently creates top-notch content! Great job
You know, that robot must have the location of every hole in a list.
In the company where I worked a technician who did maintenance work on one of our elevators on a Friday afternoon. On Monday we received a call from the technician's employer if the technician had shown up on Friday. Yes, he did. He did not show up for work on Monday morning and nobody knew where he was.
Turned out that he was still in our company on the top of an elevator squeezed to death. :-(
I thought there would be enough space between the cabin and the roof but apparently there isn't.
Thanks Fred and Schindler’s Lifts. It’s great to see Ella improving safety and efficiency in installing the Snow White tower’s lifts.
Limited only by the access to power, Ella can prepare the shafts for the teams of technicians that fit the equipment to transport people safely to any floor of the skyscraper when it’s finished.
Grats on getting onto Schindler's lift.
00:10 "Around the world..." ...this has to be a new record, Fred!
I heard Schindler has a list of elevators.
That camera feedback would have been impressive in 1965
If they developed that camera feedback in Ancient Egypt they would have burned the inventor because of how useless it is.
All the robots are females. Ella and her robotic mates "whistle while they work" on the Snow White Tower. Two Disney references! Wow! When the structure is complete, it is a fairy tale!
This video has 10 minutes exactly. Perfection. Reminded me the old days of RUclips.
Under my umber ELLA ELLA ELLA EEEH EEEH EEEH
Under my umber ELLA ELLA ELLA EEEH EEEH EEEH
🎵
This channel is great but sometimes I wonder what goes through Fred’s brain when he sees an ikea wardrobe? Does he think ‘this is the most incredible wardrobe construction in a century’
Once seen, this robot totally makes sense. An elevator shaft is a quite simple/monolithic structure.
Very cool, been in Vienna 2 months ago, amazing city!
Same. Was there at the end of July. We could see this building from the tram we took to get to our hotel.
How does the robot climb the lift shaft? What stops if from falling?
Yes, I also wonder
Time to exercise your imagination
Friction.
It uses hydraulic compression arms that roll up hoistway, keeping tension against the walls at all times. I’m sure there’s a safety line for when the system fails.
There are websites specifically used to gain information. They are called search engines. They've only been around for decades, so you might not be aware. Hope this helps.
I’m a retired electrician with an interest in technology. Thanks for keeping me informed
I'm a bit concerned with how when the drill bit is withdrawn from the hole that it drops significantly, so much that it no longer lines up. I would think when a robot drill goes in then out, it is still lined up with the hole and can just go straight back in again. @1:52
Caught that too
SDS Plus or SDS Max drill bits for rotary hammers has a fair amount of play, that drop is perfect normal and acceptable. @5:30 you can see the mounting brackets have lots of slots to align the rails.
Fred shafted us with this video…
I'd like to see more elevator tech covered. Given all the solutions to traditional elevator capacity (double decker, sky lobbies, etc.) I'd like to see if anyone is doing the "turbo lift" approach where elevators ride on tracks instead of cables and can divert around each other so they can share shafts.
As an elevator constructor, and now an elevator inspector, I can tell you there is a reason why you don't see that method in the U.S. For one thing, we don't often use concrete anchors in the hoistways anymore. We weld the brackets that carry the rails for the elevator, way more secure than a wedge bolt in concrete. And the weld plates are imbedded in the concrete as the building is being built. There are also Unistrut tracks that can be embedded in the concrete, where you just insert a bolt into the track and tighten the bolt. It takes a 4 year apprenticeship to become a elevator constructor, and I seriously doubt robots are going to replace a guy with that kind of experience anytime soon. Besides knowing what I know, I wouldn't trust some elevator built by a machine, in turn built by a guy somewhere in a place I know nothing of.
That's a great story for a skyscraper's name.
I truly love your channel. Keep doing the best work.
Shindler's Lifts, an excellent movie.
“You need a concrete shaft running up your building” got me quivering 😩
Robots of the world unite , you have nothing to lose really except your nuts and bolts .
I've got my name down for an apartment in Grumpy.
Las Vegas needs a lot of these. We always have some building going up! I can see a time when there are two RISE machines per elevator shaft x 10 shafts speeding up construction in the Las Vegas Valley!
Nothing is currently rising out here that I'm aware of. New baseball stadium soonish but that wont be very tall, ya know? But ive been here almost 30 years and have seen this city expand and grow like crazy.
Schindler is definitely on construction companies lists
The thing that all skyscrapers have in common: Hubris.
Love to see that this video is 4K!
Talking about Warsaw, you should make a video about that city, its rapidly growing and its an amazing city
Interesting. Men are doing 30 floors in 30 weeks. Then they stated it could shave off a full 2 weeks. That is only a 6% increase. I am not questioning that it is safer, more reliable, and better at the job. I am just surprised it is only 6% faster.
You have to look at it this way: It's already 6% faster. Despite being new tech.
Also, I had like a few months ago a bunch of people doing the new elevators in my building. Since then we have a problem like every week because seemingly they did a bad job. So, in the end you'll also save time and costs in the maintainment phase and not just the construction phase that you have to consider.
The robot, currently does one small aspect. Have it fit the rails too... then 'we'll be talking...
I'm thinking maybe they have to wait for the robot to finish before letting humans in to fit the rails etc. Perhaps before they were able to have both the drillers and installers at the same time? Just a guess. Would be interested to know the actual answer.
6% faster and less prone to error. Less prone to error is a very big deal.
Because it was never about productivity.
Unlike 3D extrusion forming houses, this automaton application makes sense. Its a repetitive task that needs to be done accurately in a (geometrically) well conformed environment featuring significant exposures for human workers.
Be sure not to keep her waiting - you loaded enough bolts right?
Very cool but a bit unfortunate that Switzerland has almost no skyscrapers yet so many elevator companies like Schindler. 😂
That's why they're a worldwide company
It would be even cooler if it didn't have to climb and it would put the rails above it, install it and climb it like an elevator instead of going on the raw concrete
They’re called ‘Lifts’ bro ;-)
Not in the USA...remember that there are more RUclips viewers NOT in the UK...dgp/uk
4:26 Nice use of elevator music.
Obviously robots will have a profound impact on construction that we are only seeing the beginnings of.
Schindler’s lifts, funny
I nearly wet myself when I first saw a Schindlers Lift. 😂
This is the kind of stuff I would love to work with.
I would say this is not replacing work. It's one very specific task that requires precision accuracy, from a job with dozens of other tasks to do.
Good killer app for robots! Good job Schindler. May we have smooth rides in precision-installed elevators!
Love everything you all do. I look forward to every new video and podcast. Can't wait until you all get prince Alberts!
Always love when a Channel as great as The B1M talks (and teaches me new things) about the lovely City i live in! Great Video!:)
Dystopian cityscapes.
Skynet will change it all, not if but "when" it starts functioning! 🤖🤖🤖
I heard that ideally, most building heights should be around 3-7 floors high. To keep them in human scale
Should have called the video "Shindlers Lift"
Brilliant use of robotics in construction. Frankly, I'm surprised there aren't a dozen of them in use.
What an amazing time we live in.
They need a vacuum for the drilling, you don’t need all that concrete dust
As someone whoes drilled a lot of wholes into concrete, any help we can get is very welcome haha
It also doesn't get mad when someone urinates down the shaft.
So this is how the Blame Manga starts?
Fred standing outside on top of the tower. No fear of heights here.
Jeez, the elevator union is already tough to get into.
Remember never call them on the weekend to fix your elevator. They'll double charge your 😂
The installers still get to work. 👌
Easy to lose level when drilling in walls, robots won't get sore trying to keep level. I like it 👌
First zee elevator shafts !! Tomorrow zee Vorld !!!
Robots are not afraid of heights or falling.... I too am not afraid of falling from extreme heights... only the extreme stopping when I hit the ground...
This would dovetail with adaptive project management as you ship the robots around to the sites and reallocate labor. . .
There is something ironic hearing the word Schindler and Austria in the same paragraph
Look it’s B1M in an elevator…going up.
Anything above eight floors is a skyscraper by definition, so Snow White is a skyscraper
i mostly just hope this frees up workers to let them work on other constructions, overall speeding up total construction time over a wider and larger area
Heh... Schindler's Lift... I bet nobody ever thought of that one before.
well we have brick laying robots, 3D printing building tech, cement plaster robots, painter robots, etc, UBI everyone ?
Construction Robots are the future! Imagine space construction in zero gravity or moon gravity. Megaspaceships and O'neil cylinders would be made possible.
Thank you for all the videos! Great elevator information. Fascinating!
After watching this video, I found a new ambition. I want to have the job being the robot minion's boss.
It's all about company interests.
If Schindler makes elevators, are they Schindler's lifts?
That axis creep @1:54 is destroying my faith in robotics :P
Nice. Im sure that Schindler will receive many requests for bids based on this video 👍
Thats kinda a cool name though. At least the origin
Schindler's Lift!
funnily enough we have two Schindler elevators in my 16story apartement building in germany and onbe of them is currently out of order. apperantly Schindler (or the commissioned repair company) can't get fitting replacement parts anymore as the building is from the 70s. so we're just hoping that the other one doesnt break as well now.
RISE of the Robots! Bring that future on NOW, ASAP! We'll need it for a generation of young people who don't wanna work or LEARN.
Explanation starts at 4:00.
Must use key words and phrases like “sustainable” and “less impact on environment” with every sales pitch these days.
Another great video. Love the way the team always makes infrastructure seem cool to others.