Paternoster Lifts: Dangerous, Obsolete and Quite Fun (including over the top!)

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  • Опубликовано: 7 июн 2015
  • tomscott.com - / tomscott - There aren't many paternoster lifts left in the world: they're inaccessible, tough to maintain and a bit more dangerous than a regular lift. But some of them still exist: so if you're ever nearby, do stop by the University of Sheffield's Arts Tower and have a ride up and down. Just don't go over the top.
    Thanks to Chris Dymond, who was my camera operator for this trip to Sheffield!

Комментарии • 2,3 тыс.

  • @smokeydapot
    @smokeydapot 4 года назад +2674

    The sign should've said: "You didnt listen, did you?"

    • @dingdong2103
      @dingdong2103 3 года назад +107

      The sign said 'further travel not dangerous'

    • @peterhebden1557
      @peterhebden1557 3 года назад +45

      @@dingdong2103 there was one after saying keep clear stand back

    • @classicrobloxfindings4261
      @classicrobloxfindings4261 2 года назад +1

      oh nice 666 likes

    • @NovajaPravda
      @NovajaPravda 2 года назад +12

      I am gonna write that, nothing actually happened if you stay

    • @KlaxontheImpailr
      @KlaxontheImpailr 2 года назад +63

      “There are no Easter eggs here, go away!”

  • @stumbling
    @stumbling 8 лет назад +12122

    Perfect place to put a hidden floor. I was half expecting to see a room full of mythical creatures playing poker or something.

    • @flower-ld5id
      @flower-ld5id 8 лет назад +38

      😂

    • @iAmTheSquidThing
      @iAmTheSquidThing 8 лет назад +405

      You can only see them if you're worthy.

    • @margaretmadole
      @margaretmadole 8 лет назад +166

      I want to write that story now. Badly. Someone at least needs to put it in the next James Bond.

    • @iAmTheSquidThing
      @iAmTheSquidThing 8 лет назад +48

      Margaret Madole It would still make more sense than Spectre.

    • @BlamBlamuwu
      @BlamBlamuwu 8 лет назад +222

      for the real hidden floor you have to ride on top of the lift.

  • @henryhunter9643
    @henryhunter9643 3 года назад +4059

    This is one of those things that could work brilliantly if you assume everyone is:
    A: able bodied
    B: not an idiot

    • @lamarepository248
      @lamarepository248 3 года назад +338

      C: not pushing around a cart

    • @classicambo9781
      @classicambo9781 3 года назад +194

      Not trying to load a stretchered patient into it.

    • @Godfish22
      @Godfish22 3 года назад +174

      Or walking a dog on a lead which is afraid to get on. Nearly hung the poor beastie.

    • @spankyjeffro5320
      @spankyjeffro5320 3 года назад +323

      That's a major modern design flaw. ALWAYS assume that everyone using it is an idiot, then design accordingly. :P

    • @chrish.942
      @chrish.942 2 года назад +69

      @@spankyjeffro5320 Maybe that was the point of a lot of potentially dangerous, but only if misused, designs. Discouraging idiotic behaviour and possibly some eugenics on the side.

  • @wibblywobblyidiotvision
    @wibblywobblyidiotvision 3 года назад +1909

    We had one of those in one of my old workplaces. Used to take the apprentices up to the top floor, "forget" to get out, and then do a handstand whilst screaming loudly as it went over the top. Hilarious to see their faces as you came back round upside down, but yes, dangerous. Also, that was back in the days when I could still do a handstand.

    • @SR.LS.
      @SR.LS. 2 года назад +145

      Bro a menace

    • @runner0075
      @runner0075 2 года назад +55

      Mad, but to do at least once in the life.

    • @o0xTHEcoPlayerx0o
      @o0xTHEcoPlayerx0o Год назад +132

      @chu Harry which is why he did a handstand and pretended it did.................

    • @DH-xw6jp
      @DH-xw6jp Год назад +45

      @chu Harry congratulations, you found the joke.

    • @ajs41
      @ajs41 Год назад +2

      Was anyone ever injured?

  • @hughlingard
    @hughlingard 8 лет назад +4571

    I just imagine a grizzled old janitor nonchalantly sweeping up severed limbs every day of his job.

    • @OHYS
      @OHYS 4 года назад +57

      25 likes after 3 years? This comment is underrated.

    • @ClarinoI
      @ClarinoI 4 года назад +137

      @@OHYS Because that's fairly normal in Sheffield, and nothing really to do with the lift in the Arts Tower.

    • @jasper24601
      @jasper24601 4 года назад +8

      ClarinoI hahaha

    • @artemkras
      @artemkras 4 года назад +6

      None other than Scruffy Scruffington

    • @germanvisitor2
      @germanvisitor2 4 года назад +38

      @@OHYS
      Don't worry. The algorithm decided this video is ripe and the likes are coming in.

  • @xxliveloveholly
    @xxliveloveholly 9 лет назад +3828

    As a student at the University of Sheffield, I can tell you that the paternoster is not as terrifying as it might look on camera. I use it instead of the stairs when I'm in the Arts Tower - bit of fun in between lectures. A lot of students do refuse to use it though, more because they're scared of it than anything else. Travelling over the top or round the bottom is not inherently dangerous - university just prefers you not to do it. Many people have, I accidentally went round the bottom on my first go!
    The One Show on the BBC tested Sheffield's paternoster against the ordinary lifts in the building a few years back, and it moves students a lot faster. Particularly those needing to get to the basement floor for a coffee before quickly returning to their lecture. Great to see a bit of Sheffield though, Tom! (:

    • @solarsatan9000
      @solarsatan9000 5 лет назад +140

      Could one ride it all day without getting off without looking suspicious?

    • @ianroberts6531
      @ianroberts6531 5 лет назад +175

      In computing terms the paternoster is lower bandwidth (fewer people per car) than the regular lifts but that is offset by the lower latency (shorter wait for the car to arrive), meaning higher throughput overall. Years ago they used to run the standard lifts with an attendant at peak times and they would only stop at certain floor numbers - you were expected to get the express lift to the nearest available stop to your destination floor and then the paternoster just a couple of floors up or down from there.

    • @bacul165
      @bacul165 4 года назад +47

      It's like a roundabout...

    • @AAAyyyGGG
      @AAAyyyGGG 4 года назад +65

      The reason for not riding over the top or bottom might be something about load (weight) on the mechanism at that point - obviously the lift car has a certain weight but that's known and designed into the system. Passenger weight is more unpredictable... Does anyone know the real reason?

    • @petravorlickova3727
      @petravorlickova3727 4 года назад +1

      @@AAAyyyGGG pičovina je tojedno vole

  • @roryokane5907
    @roryokane5907 2 года назад +813

    There was one at a hospital I went to as a medical student. It was great - no need to wait for the main lifts. Of course, everyone rode it all the way around at least once, despite the “get off now or you’ll die” warning. There was a “don’t worry, just stay at the back of the cab and you’ll be fine” sign as you want over the top.

    • @karinmurphy592
      @karinmurphy592 2 года назад +96

      Had one at my hospital when I was a student nurse in the 80s. I mis-stepped and landed flat on my face with my legs sprawling outside and terrified I'd have my legs sheared off. Never again! Still have the occasional nightmare of going 'over the top'

    • @AnthonyFlack
      @AnthonyFlack 2 года назад +81

      I'm thinking their main concern is the extra weight causing the transfer mechanism to wear out faster, and I guess if it ever was going to break down it would be right when an unusually heavy car goes around. Potentially leaving you stuck in the top bit.

    • @weirjwerijrweurhuewhr588
      @weirjwerijrweurhuewhr588 Год назад +24

      @@karinmurphy592 Going over the top is not dangerous. The one I've used specifically had a sign mentioning it was safe.

    • @gladtobeangry
      @gladtobeangry Год назад +52

      Hospitals seem like the right place for this. It keeps out those pesky paraplegics cluttering up your lifts, and for those who inevitably will injure themselves, it's a very short trip to A&E.

  • @ShuRugal
    @ShuRugal 4 года назад +415

    I have literally had nightmares involving elevators that worked like this. I had no idea they were real.

    • @numtee2608
      @numtee2608 Год назад +7

      same

    • @johsy
      @johsy Год назад

      You probably died in one of those in your past life

    • @sapientia_et_virtus
      @sapientia_et_virtus Год назад +24

      Same here! My entire life I've been having nightmares about these things and have only just discovered that they exist(ed).

    • @mustbetheSUN
      @mustbetheSUN Год назад +6

      Oh god I'm glad I'm not the only one

    • @istankimjong-unbutcantstan3398
      @istankimjong-unbutcantstan3398 Год назад

      Not the "fault" of the machine!

  • @Riotlight
    @Riotlight 9 лет назад +4790

    This may be a bit stupid, but i was imagining that at the top the whole thing got turned upside down and you would end up getting tipped over after what tom said, then when i saw the sign an was really confused. Thank god the video clip cleared things up!

    • @TomScottGo
      @TomScottGo  9 лет назад +1729

      Riotlight There's an old legend about introducing new students to it by letting them watch you go "over the top" -- disappearing standing upright, and reappearing standing on your hands!

    • @mrnice4434
      @mrnice4434 9 лет назад +50

      Riotlight I thought the same :)

    • @jeremyj.5687
      @jeremyj.5687 9 лет назад +392

      Riotlight In the city I used to live in, Hattingen, there is a paternoster installed in the city hall that actually *does* turn the "baskets" upside down!
      But it has a mechanical weight detector that stops it if there is anything in the basket before it does that last leg above the last exit.

    • @anjwiz
      @anjwiz 9 лет назад +481

      The board at 1:13 says "Further travel NOT dangerous." That seems to indicate it's perfectly safe to stay in the lift when it changes direction at the top.

    • @MinecraftEpicPlayer
      @MinecraftEpicPlayer 9 лет назад +213

      anjalixz Probably because it is safe
      but it causes them trouble

  • @jbkjbk1999
    @jbkjbk1999 9 лет назад +3615

    Theres one of these in the danish parliment. Theyre apparently very useful for escaping journalists.

    • @fish3977
      @fish3977 7 лет назад +157

      We Finns have one too! or at least we had, I dunno if it is being replaced during renevation.

    • @typograf62
      @typograf62 7 лет назад +133

      I wonder if the Danish Parliament paternoster is still marked "I Fart" (meaning "running").

    • @vondahe
      @vondahe 4 года назад +37

      typograf62 It translates to “in motion” and no. Those old buttons were only used on ordinary lifts as anyone can see the paternoster’s continuous movement, thus leaving such status lamps superfluous.

    • @kaasmeester5903
      @kaasmeester5903 4 года назад +67

      Quite useful to have in parliament. When the revolution comes, this thing can be used as an "assembly line" style guillotine...

    • @andersbuchjeppesen5493
      @andersbuchjeppesen5493 4 года назад +25

      I’m Danish and can confirm that “i fart” means “in motion”, although the direct translation is “in speed” I believe it’s meant to be interprétated as “in motion”

  • @YEETMAN-dt9mb
    @YEETMAN-dt9mb 3 года назад +904

    “Last floor to alight. Further travel not dangerous” that just encourages people to go up.

    • @BioYuGi
      @BioYuGi 3 года назад +324

      It's probably something to do with not wanting people hurriedly trying to get out when it's unsafe to do so. They'd rather someone go over the top than lose a limb

    • @Whywouldyounot
      @Whywouldyounot 2 года назад +75

      Because you can safely ride through the top and bottom in a paternoster. The fear of unbalancing the system shouldn't be a thing.
      Just tried that the other day in Hamburg. We still have a few of them running

    • @Alex-nx5wi
      @Alex-nx5wi 2 года назад +38

      @@Whywouldyounot You are right! My dads Workplace had one. An old wooden kreeky one. And when I was a Kid, I was super afraid of going over the top because I thought it would turn upside down.. After I figured out it doesn't I had to proof my bravery and could go up and down and around all day. Never caused an issue! ^^

    • @strawtoro
      @strawtoro Год назад +2

      @@Whywouldyounot I was in Hamburg today and went to an office building in Neuer Wall just to ride on a paternoster :)

    • @tracypetrie3033
      @tracypetrie3033 Год назад +1

      I wondered about that also

  • @unknown-ql1fk
    @unknown-ql1fk 4 года назад +424

    I love it, putting personal irresponsibility back into daily activities.

    • @Vekikev1
      @Vekikev1 3 года назад +2

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @feargalb7913
    @feargalb7913 8 лет назад +1074

    This lift is bloody brilliant. On a school trip to Sheffield University, our English teacher encouraged us all to under-ride the Paternoster (while she distracted the staff member escorting us round the Uni). It was as much fun as a lift can possibly be. Which, surprisingly, is quite a lot.

    • @HarryWizard
      @HarryWizard 8 лет назад +68

      what was it like going under? I am yet to see any videos of going under, only over

    • @feargalb7913
      @feargalb7913 8 лет назад +116

      Zephane It was very much like going over, just the other way around really. I think there was a little mechanics showing but other than that was just dark.

    • @AkbarNurPribadi
      @AkbarNurPribadi 4 года назад +28

      What a lovely teacher

    • @nendwr
      @nendwr 4 года назад +39

      Underriding can be useful, if you have no shame about queue-jumping.

    • @jessicaweinshenker1659
      @jessicaweinshenker1659 3 года назад

      FergieTheSeagull hahaha, what an awesome.

  • @jamesgrimwood1285
    @jamesgrimwood1285 8 лет назад +802

    Daub some red hand print smears along the top of the shaft as it goes around, just to freak out people who decide to ride it in a loop ;-)

    • @werwolf1257
      @werwolf1257 6 лет назад +17

      James Grimwood I will do it if I can

    • @xorbe2
      @xorbe2 5 лет назад +17

      Easy there, Satan!

    • @jspafford
      @jspafford 4 года назад +9

      James Grimwood and put a large garbage disposal at the bottom.

    • @La_sagne
      @La_sagne 3 года назад

      i did ride it as a loop alot as a kid

  • @spicyginger6876
    @spicyginger6876 4 года назад +381

    I like how there's graffiti on the walls past the point of no return so obviously some rebellious teens took this for a joy ride

    • @Cjnw
      @Cjnw 3 года назад +3

      I saw the MEWT contribution

    • @eamurdock
      @eamurdock 4 месяца назад

      I'm gonna guess that 95% of university of Sheffield students take the ride over the top. I can't think why one wouldn't.

  • @xImperfectRomance
    @xImperfectRomance 3 года назад +115

    Ten years ago I briefly worked in a hotel in Amsterdam (the former Scheepvaarthuis) that had a paternoster lift! It wasn't in use anymore since they get significantly more dangerous when you throw drunk/high tourists with suitcases in the mix, but they were still fully operational. They were turned on upon request or for special occasions, but every time we did guests would complain about the noise. Older people who had formerly worked in the building always came in to see them, and often expressed disappointment about not being able to ride them one last time.

  • @chelfyn
    @chelfyn 9 лет назад +141

    over 35 years ago, when I was about 9 or 10, our school allowed us to go into Newcastle University to learn basic on print-based teletype terminals running into a HP 2000 Mainframe. The department at the time had a paternoster, and these computer classes were after hours, so there was always a massive temptation to try going over the top. 9-year old me, however, was a wuss and chickened out, despite the imagined promise of gateways into future worlds or at the very least, the sight of some cool machinery. Thank you so much for satisfying a 35 year old curiosity!

    • @petercumpson6867
      @petercumpson6867 3 года назад +6

      I went to exactly the same computer course! Many years later I became a professor at Newcastle, but they had replaced it with a normal lift 😐

    • @istankimjong-unbutcantstan3398
      @istankimjong-unbutcantstan3398 Год назад

      @@petercumpson6867 Dang those pussycats!

    •  26 дней назад

      Chicken! Of course you can go around the top - and bottom is even scarier as it gets dark

  • @notdaveschannel9843
    @notdaveschannel9843 8 лет назад +3373

    I assume it's called a Paternoster because you have to say a prayer before you get on the bloody thing.

    • @Makron5
      @Makron5 7 лет назад +328

      It's called that because it mimics prayer beads, but it might as well be for that reason.

    • @kantoros
      @kantoros 7 лет назад +111

      i think its more of a:
      pater-noster
      patro = floor/storey
      nosit = move/lift(up)
      so lifting-storey

    • @Remogeus
      @Remogeus 7 лет назад +122

      Actually, it is because the design of the paternoster reminds of a rosary beads used as an aid for reciting... well, the Pater Noster prayer - but I know the name reminds of that in Czech because they are still used in some places here (we have one in one of faculties here - in Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Brno University of Technology)

    • @mememaster147
      @mememaster147 7 лет назад +45

      I'm more convinced by the 'pater noster, qui est in caelis' explanation myself.

    • @totalrandomness4543
      @totalrandomness4543 6 лет назад +19

      Jindrich Petr Kantor
      Pater-father
      Noster- our

  • @Beobout6
    @Beobout6 3 года назад +132

    The “escalator” of “elevators”.

  • @petrsebik
    @petrsebik 5 лет назад +324

    We have about 50 working paternosters in Czech Republic. Come and see them!:)

    • @erinmcgrathejm4985
      @erinmcgrathejm4985 4 года назад +19

      I have! Prague City Hall (yes, I was respectful). I also saw another near Wenceslas Square, but you needed a code to get in the glass doors (a needed precaution against overuse, I’m sure!)

    • @stepanpavlica4841
      @stepanpavlica4841 3 года назад +5

      @@erinmcgrathejm4985 or the one in Zlín's 21 building, where the office lift exists

    • @deusexaethera
      @deusexaethera 3 года назад +4

      No. I refuse to ever embark on something with such an obviously flawed design.

    • @varbalvarbal
      @varbalvarbal 3 года назад +2

      Quite a few in Hungary, too.

    • @soaringvulture
      @soaringvulture 3 года назад +2

      Is that because you're famous for defenestration?

  • @Skyhawk1998
    @Skyhawk1998 7 лет назад +362

    With some improvements and some safety features, I can see these things actually being really good. It never stops and it doesn't have to go back and forth to whatever floors the riders are requesting. Of course, you'd need a couple of conventional elevators for handicapped folks or people who otherwise might have an issue getting on and off, but it's really nothing more than a vertical escalator. Maybe optical sensors plus some digital logic and there would be no "guillotine" risk.

    • @vojtasTS29
      @vojtasTS29 2 года назад +28

      Which is exactly what all of them have.

    • @brrrrrr
      @brrrrrr 2 года назад

      Don't forget about idiots

    • @DanielSultana
      @DanielSultana 2 года назад +12

      I wouldn't use optical sensors, I'd use pressure sensors, so not to get false positives

    • @charredUtensil
      @charredUtensil 2 года назад +27

      @@DanielSultana That thing's gonna be loaded with inertia though - by the time it detects pressure, it's far too late.

    • @juliamonem133
      @juliamonem133 Год назад +3

      Maybe a pause and go mechanism for rolling cargo?

  • @samramdebest
    @samramdebest 9 лет назад +2065

    1:08 It says it isn't dangerous to go over the top

    • @TomScottGo
      @TomScottGo  9 лет назад +1000

      samramdebest Yep. I never said it was! But I really didn't want to get trapped up in the top, there. [Edit to make clear: "dangerous" refers to the open shaft you can fall into and the exposed floors that can trap parts of you!]

    • @seanboyd2898
      @seanboyd2898 9 лет назад +63

      ***** I gather that it wasn't successful?

    • @jonnypanteloni
      @jonnypanteloni 9 лет назад +243

      samramdebest the contradictory implications of the laminated sign at 0:58 and 1:07 are silly!

    • @MrSamliffe
      @MrSamliffe 9 лет назад +39

      ***** This is in Sheffield, not London.

    • @zeddash
      @zeddash 9 лет назад +377

      ***** It's not dangerous to the person but it can damage the lift - they don't contradict each other.

  • @aadiseh1597
    @aadiseh1597 3 года назад +26

    That wave is probably the cutest thing I’ve seen this week

  • @sspotter1978
    @sspotter1978 3 года назад +71

    My father lived in Germany in the 60s while in the USAF and told me about these. I never really could grasp the concept until now. Thanks for this footage and for going "over the top". Much obliged.

  • @HeyLaserLips
    @HeyLaserLips 8 лет назад +1719

    Well, SOMEONE has been to the top that shouldn't have been, judging by the graffiti scrawled on the wall. xD

    • @andyowens5494
      @andyowens5494 5 лет назад +154

      Rabid Raccoon Yep, quite a few of us used to; as long as you are balanced and dont move about, its fine. (1987 BSc Physics).

    • @shawnpitman876
      @shawnpitman876 4 года назад +62

      @Programming Noob Probably because they unbalanced the whole thing and got it shut down.

    • @junienet
      @junienet 4 года назад +7

      @@shawnpitman876 how is that possible?

    • @mickys8065
      @mickys8065 4 года назад +48

      @@junienet rule of archemides, if the weight going down is equal to the weight going up there is very little energy needed to move them, now on the main chain on the lift the weight of people going on and off would be evenly distributed but over the top I imagine the lift would move much more freely and either get caught or just prove too much for the motors to safely handle

    • @timfischer
      @timfischer 3 года назад +28

      Nah... It can't be balance on the chain... it would have to be designed so that suddenly 2 people on every floor but the top decided to get in and go up, while at the same time nobody was going on. Incredibly unbalanced, but within the realm of possibilities for the system.
      More likely there's a fractional chance that if a car going over the top got really unbalanced, it could hit the side of the shaft going down. On the normal shafts they could have runners/guides to prevent tilting but moving laterally over the top that's harder to do. I'm sure it's perfectly safe to go over the top (or under the bottom) while standing in the middle.

  • @Stealthwilde
    @Stealthwilde 8 лет назад +205

    I live quite close to Sheffield, and I've been in that lift. It's kinda thrilling. You know, for a lift.

    • @LeoKeidran
      @LeoKeidran 8 лет назад +82

      Would you say it was... Uplifting...?

    • @Stealthwilde
      @Stealthwilde 8 лет назад +7

      TheGamesters
      Wa wa waaaaaaa

    • @wamgoc3637
      @wamgoc3637 6 лет назад

      Stealthwilde r

  • @julianegner5997
    @julianegner5997 Год назад +47

    When I was at University of Leipzig (Germany), there was a Paternoster. There it was not forbidden to go over the top or under the lowest floor. And it is not dangerous, as you can see in this video.

    • @Skylancer727
      @Skylancer727 Год назад +5

      Well it's warned about as some paternosters are actually just belts with a platform and flip at the top.

  • @Gahanun
    @Gahanun 5 лет назад +73

    I can name at least three different places in Prague that have these, two being publically accessible. Growing up around them, they never struck me as something unusual.

  • @ej_tech
    @ej_tech 9 лет назад +493

    I looked up and Hitachi is currently developing a more high-tech one. They call it the "Circulating Multi-Car Elevator System"
    It's on RUclips too

    • @kronasoosanork
      @kronasoosanork 9 лет назад +6

      MixEcoSystem I think i've seen that, isn't that the lift that also goes across floors as well as between them?

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L 9 лет назад +8

      MixEcoSystem i thought of that when i saw this, though the hitachi system doesn't seem to have the constant kind-of-unstoppable motion of this, and passing places etc for the self propelled lifts. the more i watched this video the more i thought the only real similarity was the fact it operates in a circuit, idk.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L 9 лет назад +7

      MixEcoSystem this one certainly looks a lot more "we'll be seeing them in 5 years" than the one i (and i think ben too) was thinking of, which is a bit more "maybe in 20 years", imo. the parallel steel ropes looks a better idea right now than MULTI's self propelled lifts, though the MULTI one still allows for lateral motion and taller shafts, so would be nice to see eventually.

    • @waterlubber
      @waterlubber 8 лет назад +11

      +ben dover The Wonkavator!!

    • @TassieLorenzo
      @TassieLorenzo 3 года назад +1

      @@kronasoosanork But that's a Wonkavator! :)

  • @Larry
    @Larry 9 лет назад +870

    There's one at Northwick Park Hospital, But I've always been to scared to go on it.
    That and I never knew until recently what happens when you get to the top floor.

    • @NaoPb
      @NaoPb 9 лет назад +13

      ***** And so we meet again Mr. Bundy...
      I kinda feel like a stalker, but I guess we just have similar interests.

    • @Larry
      @Larry 9 лет назад +25

      *****
      Indeedy, maybe we both just have good tastes in videos :D

    • @Nicolai0Nerland
      @Nicolai0Nerland 9 лет назад +4

      ***** It always brightens my day to see your presence of videos I like. c:

    • @Larry
      @Larry 9 лет назад +8

      Nico Icon
      aww, bless you :D

    • @asronome
      @asronome 9 лет назад +3

      Hi Larry! I'm here too...

  • @johnmichaelcule8423
    @johnmichaelcule8423 3 года назад +61

    I remember being caught in one as a child perhaps about five years old. It was at a department store in Bristol (I think) and I got seperated from my parents and went round and up and down without jamming anything: presumably I was too light. Eventually I was freed by my parents and I was in a right old state. It is astounding to me that any of them are still in use.

  • @PromiseSoul648
    @PromiseSoul648 4 года назад +37

    That brought back awful memory of watching my brother leaving me in the elevator alone while my hands were holding a heavy box. I don't remember how many floors I passed while I was standing there thinking I will live the rest of my life stuck in metal box carrying another box.

  • @drops2cents260
    @drops2cents260 7 лет назад +540

    I'd say that camera ride was a little over the top. ;-)

  • @Yaddlezap
    @Yaddlezap 8 лет назад +1027

    This looks really frightening. I would constantly be afraid that I would trip and fall onto the entry and then get snapped in half by the wall as it went up or down.

    • @DoubleBob
      @DoubleBob 8 лет назад +117

      +yonoid818 Those ropes will stop the elevator as soon as you come into contact.

    • @randomisoty422
      @randomisoty422 8 лет назад +135

      +FernestHall well, in theory anyway

    • @DoubleBob
      @DoubleBob 8 лет назад +156

      Kyle McNicoll
      ...and in practice. Do you think the people, who invented and improved it (over decades) were total idiots?

    • @Naitasm
      @Naitasm 8 лет назад +149

      +yonoid818 Well, there's no risk of that, but if you're nervous then don't ever ride these things. MILDLY GRAPHIC INJURY WARNING: I rode this exact lift a couple of years ago (going down), was too slow getting on and really hurt my leg when it got caught on the rapidly-ascending floor. My brain couldn't handle trying to raise my foot to drag it onto the lift and it not doing anything because the floor beneath it is also rising. I ended up panicking and trying to hop on by pushing off of my foot that was still on solid ground - and lemme tell ya. Putting all your weight on the bony protrusion on your instep when your leg's bent at about 60 degrees, before landing a good foot lower down than your brain expects and therefore staggering directly onto that leg, is NOT PLEASANT.
      2/10, would only recommend if you're not a clumsy tit like myself.

    • @xponen
      @xponen 8 лет назад +41

      +LiberatorXIII , yes, I saw videos of people stuck (died) in regular lift exactly like that. You couldn't get into the lift if one of your foot is on an ascending surface. There's case where the brake on the lift fail, so when you step into the lift it trigger the brake, then the counter-weight pull the lift up and squish half of the person.

  • @zralokvemigraci
    @zralokvemigraci 4 года назад +30

    Haha, we have several of them in Prague. Once me and my friend went round and I was also a bit scared. Some young people here are fascinated by those elevators because there are urban legends how it goes around - that it turns upside down, compresses at the top and the bottom etc. It's quite fun to be honest. I had to try and see for myself!

  • @davidgillies620
    @davidgillies620 3 года назад +10

    I still have the occasional flashback to the paternoster in the University of Sussex which was the most terrifying thing I had seen up to that point in my life. This was 1979, and it still ranks in the top five.

  • @JimFortune
    @JimFortune 9 лет назад +71

    I like that this is titled "Things You Might Not Know" instead of the more common RUclips type of title "X Things you didn't know about _____" the X and the _____ being variable. Tom doesn't seem to assume that everyone but he is ignorant.

  • @salerio61
    @salerio61 8 лет назад +634

    We had them at Salford University when I was there. One thing we use to do was to go to the top floor and someone would go in and come out doing a head stand. Then we'd push a poor fresher into the lift and watch their face as panic set in as they went higher and higher

    • @Semiicolin5
      @Semiicolin5 8 лет назад +21

      +Martin O'Donnell I might have to try this!

    • @tomkenning5482
      @tomkenning5482 4 года назад +4

      That'd be bloody useful for the new adelphi now, the lifts there are absolutely useless

    • @jgt2598
      @jgt2598 4 года назад +33

      Huh, I guess it's a good thing nobody panicked enough to try to jump out. You'd probably have found the accidental homicide charges for throwing someone into moving machinery less amusing.
      Also please never work at a factory.

    • @barrylongden7
      @barrylongden7 4 года назад +5

      I went to Salford University in the 80's and went back a few years later (after failing spectacularly) and the whole building had vanished. I had considered jumping off the top floor at one point when things went awray

    • @salerio61
      @salerio61 4 года назад +2

      @@barrylongden7 The maths tower has gone?

  • @jaromir_kovar
    @jaromir_kovar 2 года назад +18

    There's one in the building of the main post office in Brno, CZ. As a kid I was fascinated by it and with my classmates we would scare ourselves by imagining what happens beyond the top and bottom floors (the cabin folding close, flipping over, spikes, ...). When we were a bit older we would ride through the transition areas as a dare. In the one I know, there is a massive metal wheel on top which turns the whole thing. It is covered in old bubblegums. Once, my friend and I got stuck there. The whole thing stopped and we were trapped until found by the post office workers. I haven't gone through the top or bottom since :o)

  • @tripsd8388
    @tripsd8388 4 года назад +28

    I was an international student there 2 years ago and I was too scared to use that thing. It did help reduce the morning student traffic which was unreal.

  • @Oo_Tigger_oO
    @Oo_Tigger_oO 9 лет назад +51

    Hey Tom,
    University Of Essex, Colchester, have a Paternoster in their Library which if memory serves is 6 floors, so not quite as big as the one in Sheffield. It was still in operation when I graduated in 2005, and I believe it is still going strong - UoE RUclipsrs feel free to correct me...
    It has always been a bit of a 'Right of Passage' for new students (freshers) to be told the perils and dangers of going 'over the top' and 'through the basement' before being dared, or challenged, to 'endure' a full cycle all the way round - in reality you just see the huge chain pulling the cars around and, so long as you keep protrusions clear, there is no danger whatsoever despite the multitude of horrifying warning signs!
    (My favourite was to tell them that it 'flips over' at the top and bottom, so you have to be ready to rotate and get back on your feet - seeing them brace for the sudden change, then come around smilingly perturbed was delightfully satisfying!)
    So yeah, thanks for enlightning the world to the existence of the Paternoster Lift, and keep up the good work. :-)
    Best Regards,
    Tigger

    • @tylerburney8576
      @tylerburney8576 7 лет назад +5

      You should've went in to demonstrate that it flips over, then when it was at the top do a handstand

    • @TheJeleb
      @TheJeleb 7 лет назад +8

      John McCulloch I can confirm it is still there and still operating, though I don't remember anyone trying to terrify me or other freshers, quite the opposite actually :)

    • @BigFella672
      @BigFella672 5 лет назад +4

      Graduated from Essex last year and it’s still going strong

  • @mastax1234
    @mastax1234 7 лет назад +876

    am i the only one that thought when the elevator was going over the top that it flipped upside-down?

    • @ncfly
      @ncfly 6 лет назад +21

      no

    • @slinkytreekreeper
      @slinkytreekreeper 6 лет назад +31

      That's what I was told when a friend took me on it just before it went to the top part. To his dismay I didn't buy his grabbing the walls and bracing while trying to explain it would turn upside down.I wasn't aware they stopped people going over the top though, I think this is still ignored to this day.

    • @Don69730
      @Don69730 6 лет назад +9

      No, why would it do that.

    • @solarsatan9000
      @solarsatan9000 5 лет назад +7

      Well it would discourage people from pissing the it

    • @haydensanford1987
      @haydensanford1987 4 года назад +4

      Do you think the same way of a ferris wheel? Same principle.

  • @ClarinoI
    @ClarinoI 5 лет назад +36

    I've ridden in that, it's a lot of fun and I wish they were more common. They're perfectly safe if you're able bodied and you don't prat about.

    • @ClarinoI
      @ClarinoI 3 года назад

      @@fiftyskoopaklub2982 That's up to you, there's always conventional lifts, or the stairs. You don't have to be that precise though, it's not moving hugely quickly.

    • @Orwic1
      @Orwic1 3 года назад +2

      @@fiftyskoopaklub2982 when I used the lift in 1970s, there was a claim by a few conspiracy theorists that the lift chambers folded flat when they went over, or that they turned upside down. Maybe disappointingly, they don’t!

  • @v1x4z
    @v1x4z 3 года назад +1

    In Czechia, there's about 70 páternoster lifts in total, however only a handful are working and available to the public. I've been to multiple and can say that you might eventually get used to it. The oldest one is in Prague in the building of Czech Radio, it was made in 1920 and installed in 1929 with 18 cabins, reconstructed between 2007-2008. The tallest one (58.5 m) is in Baťa's Skyscraper (AKA Building No. 21) in Zlín with 30 cabins. It takes 195 seconds to get from the 15th to the ground floor, its velocity is 0.3 m/s. It was installed in 1938 and reconstructed between 2018-2019. Apparently the package and letter delivery system was also using the same technology with an automatic tilt mechanism. The second tallest (56.8 m, 35 cabins) is in the Liberec region municipality building in Liberec, installed in 1971. It was reconstructed last year, but 2 months ago, some workers demolished two cabins and the engine room when a ladder they were transporting got stuck (severe safety violation, there are modern lifts in the building), so it's in non-working condition unfortunately. It is not known when it will be running again.

  • @Ved000000
    @Ved000000 7 лет назад +349

    I could kill the better part of a day with this thing and a portal gun.

    • @mibdev
      @mibdev 7 лет назад +3

      How? push people into the top?
      The carts are on fixed rails, so good luck teleporting them.

    • @neilisbored2177
      @neilisbored2177 5 лет назад +12

      @@mibdev Not to mention that if something a portal is on is moving, the portal instantly disappears.

    • @novakane8722
      @novakane8722 4 года назад +19

      @@neilisbored2177 unless ypur cutting pipes with a laser in portal 2

    • @macaroon_nuggets8008
      @macaroon_nuggets8008 4 года назад +9

      @@neilisbored2177 relative to each portal, If both portals are moving at the same speed the wouldn't be moving relative to each other, so they shouldnt disappear.

    • @coolguy284_2
      @coolguy284_2 4 года назад +9

      @@macaroon_nuggets8008 Time to get technical. In the game code, if any portal is moving (since this is a game there is a concept of absolute motion, and the walls REALLY are stationary), then both portals fizzle and disappear. However, if the rule allow_moving_portals or something like that is set to true, than portals can be moving without fizzle. However, physics near a moving portal is strange: objects cannot pass through, and if you try to go through, as soon as you touch the portal you instantly teleport fully across to the other side.

  • @mt_xing
    @mt_xing 9 лет назад +181

    This would scare the s*** out of me. I'd be perpetually terrified of falling. Or getting trapped between the wall and the lift. Or forgetting to get out and going over the top.

    • @MikeyJAllTheWay
      @MikeyJAllTheWay 9 лет назад +14

      Mt_Xing forgetting to get out and going over the top would be an all too real concern that would no doubt paralyse me with fear.

    • @AntiGravityC9
      @AntiGravityC9 9 лет назад +42

      You'd be in for some over the top over the top action.

    • @ijsjah
      @ijsjah 9 лет назад +24

      Mt_Xing Its not dangerous to go over the top. If you got scared or stressed its better to say in the bucket going over the top instead of rushing out and hurt yourself that way.
      Im not saying its /dangerous/ to rush out of the paternoster, please dont curl up inside, never to get off again.

    • @ShroudedWolf51
      @ShroudedWolf51 4 года назад +4

      Unless you are looking for a way to get yourself purposely injured, all those fears are completely unfounded.

    • @jimtaylor294
      @jimtaylor294 4 года назад +2

      @@ShroudedWolf51 Unfortunately Irrational Fears are generally involentry, not easily overcome if at all, and get stronger the longer one is in such a situation.

  • @Zooobly
    @Zooobly 3 года назад +5

    The building where I did an internship at 16 had a paternoster and you were allowed to go over the top, it was honestly so cool

  • @valeriepiskackova4054
    @valeriepiskackova4054 4 года назад +105

    Uhm... I live in Prague... These are in every old building... Going to the doctor in the center? Yep. Visiting your lawyer? Yep. Going to a pub on the top of a building? Yep.

    • @c.ocadizg.4127
      @c.ocadizg.4127 3 года назад +23

      Leaving drunk from a pub and using this kind of elevators doesn’t seem the best combination...

    • @DeterminedHaphazard
      @DeterminedHaphazard 3 года назад +2

      @@c.ocadizg.4127 The same thought crossed my mind.

    • @alisar505
      @alisar505 2 года назад

      There are some in Brno too! There’s one in the main post office.

    • @yosserhughes139
      @yosserhughes139 2 года назад +1

      That’s because the the Czech republic is the antiquated backwoods of Europe.

    • @packratty
      @packratty 2 года назад

      Can't believe this wasn't on the UseIt guide - will have to go back!

  • @douro20
    @douro20 7 лет назад +48

    Hitachi wants to make a modern paternoster lift with enhanced safety.

  • @king5327
    @king5327 8 лет назад +24

    I remember thinking of something like this elevator when I was young. I didn't think it actually existed, much less had a name.

  • @billswifejo
    @billswifejo 3 года назад +2

    I went to Birmingham Poly in the 1980s and took the Paternoster up to the top of B block whenever it was working! I loved it. As a small child I was trapped in a lift and became frightened of them, but because the Paternoster was open I didn’t get scared, even when it stopped and you had to be helped out. It helped me get over my fear of lifts. So glad to hear thar Sheffield Uni still has one.

  • @jameslaidler4259
    @jameslaidler4259 8 лет назад +386

    Exciting AND very dangerous? Someone get BigClive in there right quick!

    • @ChrisCooper312
      @ChrisCooper312 7 лет назад +32

      It's not pink though, so can't be that exciting or dangerous.

    • @buddyclem7328
      @buddyclem7328 6 лет назад +18

      For Clive it would have to be a dodgy Chinese "pre-exploded" paternoster.

    • @ShroudedWolf51
      @ShroudedWolf51 4 года назад +1

      Exciting, yes. Dangerous...no. Not unless you are looking for a way to injure yourself on purpose.

    • @derekeastman7771
      @derekeastman7771 4 года назад

      ShroudedWolf51 that exposed chain at the top is an accident waiting to happen

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin 3 года назад

      It's old, so it must be dangerous - logic of western europeans and americans. :-D

  • @GKMcWhite
    @GKMcWhite 9 лет назад +16

    I like you for writing "you might not know" instead of "you don't know".

  • @Dukenukem
    @Dukenukem 5 лет назад +12

    well, there are several in CZ left and operational :D now I feel even more special

  • @sultanofsick
    @sultanofsick Год назад +7

    That style of elevator honestly never occurred to me, and frankly it's genius. I really don't see why they can't co-exist with "normal" elevators. Could make a world of difference in large and highly populated buildings where waiting for an elevator is a significant time sink. Like many large downtown office buildings.

    • @Skylancer727
      @Skylancer727 Год назад

      Because in a disaster you still need stairs so now you're talking stairs for emergencies, a basic elevator for taking heavy gear to your higher floors, and this for foot traffic. It's just too much wasted space in a building as none of these can cover all necessities and this is the one most expendable.

    • @istankimjong-unbutcantstan3398
      @istankimjong-unbutcantstan3398 Год назад

      @@Skylancer727 I don't think he said anything about not having stairs or "a basic elevator". I think fewer "normal elevators" may be needed as people who had only a brief case would used these would be constantly moving. I think the maximum a building should be for this should be about 10 floors otherwise just have regular elevators.

  • @TheMrflatlands
    @TheMrflatlands 9 лет назад +711

    Going over the top didn't seem to be that dangerous at all.

    • @TomScottGo
      @TomScottGo  9 лет назад +435

      Walter Tromp Nope, it isn't - and the sign sayd so! But if the lift unbalances slightly, safety mechanisms can cut in and the whole thing can shut down. (That happened, unprompted as far as I could tell, about five minutes after I finished filming.) You won't get hurt, but you might be waiting up there a while!

    • @TheMrflatlands
      @TheMrflatlands 9 лет назад +114

      ***** Ah, I see. For some reason, I thought that by over the top, you meant that the thing would turn on it's head then it went back down; now that would be something! (probably because in Dutch,, ''over de kop'' means capsizing, which sounds similar to ''over the top'''). Thanks for the video!

    • @aednil
      @aednil 9 лет назад +7

      Walter Tromp my thought exactly!

    • @emmey8865
      @emmey8865 9 лет назад +12

      Walter Tromp kop sounds kinda similar to how we pronounce "kopf" here. (german for head.)
      New meaning found? .-.

    • @Fiyaaaahh
      @Fiyaaaahh 9 лет назад +25

      ***** Can we start a kickstarter for a modern version which does not have this problem? I hate waiting for elevators so much and this looks awesome.

  • @GEdgemaster
    @GEdgemaster 9 лет назад +62

    Can we have a counterpart video of going under?

  • @ashleystrachan8318
    @ashleystrachan8318 3 года назад +7

    there used to be one at Leicester Poly (uni) in a building that has since gone called the James Went building. Really amazing to go in and even more amazing how quickly you got used to it. I do indeed have the pleasure of riding over the top and indeed the bottom. What i found was lots of graffiti from students who had "dared" to be naughty and risk the whole thing closing. Which, considering there were no lifts as an alternative could spark of riots with students having to go up and down stairs. And no i didnt add my signature to the very exclusive club. Well, maybe once :)

  • @valgalloway6914
    @valgalloway6914 4 года назад +5

    The office building where I worked (built in the mid 1960s) had a postal distribution system based on the paternoster principal. When I heard that name I thought it meant it worked if you prayed hard enough! :-)

  • @error.418
    @error.418 9 лет назад +24

    Anyone notice the "Trapped!!" and other various graffiti around 1:28 when it went over the top? ;)

  • @justpressstart
    @justpressstart 6 лет назад +8

    This brings back memories of uni to me. I know everyone is talking about going over the top, but the real challenge is how many can you fit into a single carriage. It takes timing, teamwork, commitment and for the last person in, some very quick decision making. We managed four but didn't dare do more.

  • @dlakodlak
    @dlakodlak 3 года назад +6

    Czech Technical University in Prague has 2 of these. And from what I can see in the video, they also have some extra safety features.

  • @Dana-koc
    @Dana-koc 5 лет назад +10

    We have one of these in my city. One day I decided to give it a try. Oh boy was that a mistake. Turns out that I'm not afraid to hop on but I'm terrified of getting of. I gotta admit that I went over the top because I didn't realize that I missed the last floor. Whoops.

  • @xyxyxy2066
    @xyxyxy2066 8 лет назад +204

    Why the hell did I get a wheelchair add before this? Is it really that dangerous?

    • @ShroudedWolf51
      @ShroudedWolf51 4 года назад +1

      The video has no control over whay advertisements it does or doesn't get.

    • @Engineer9736
      @Engineer9736 4 года назад +10

      ShroudedWolf51 It works the other way around. The advertiser gets to know what you are watching.

    • @Silverdev2482
      @Silverdev2482 4 года назад

      *ad

    • @deusexaethera
      @deusexaethera 3 года назад +2

      Now imagine trying to get in that thing while riding in a wheelchair.

  • @edmanrapperu
    @edmanrapperu 7 лет назад +12

    This is an amalgamation of all of my worst fears.

  • @Peter-nj5mv
    @Peter-nj5mv 3 года назад +15

    We have a small version in the house, it actually also travels horizontally and it only fits about a microwave oven. Our staff uses it to distribute snacks and drinks across our home.

  • @chrisball3778
    @chrisball3778 3 года назад +4

    Its interesting that most of the UK Paternosters seem to have been installed in Universities. I've ridden one at Leicester University, which I believe was decommissioned a few years ago. Absolutely fascinating things- I'd never even heard of them until I realised I was expected to ride in one. You never entirely get used to that tiny moment of tension when you jump on and off.

    • @FallingofftheGrid
      @FallingofftheGrid Год назад

      Alas I never went on the one at Leicester when I was a student there, but I remember seeing it and hearing about it! Alas, it’s long since gone.

  • @GFSTaylor
    @GFSTaylor 7 лет назад +3

    It was fun telling freshers stories about the paternoster. We once had someone virtually convinced it was hydroelectric powered by a stream that ran deep under the building.

    • @DH-xw6jp
      @DH-xw6jp Год назад

      I mean... Having one of these direct driven from an ever spinning water wheel like an old grain mill would be really cool.

  • @MyAvitech
    @MyAvitech 9 лет назад +54

    That thing looks like it would take body parts in an accident.
    But at least it will bring them back though. ;P

  • @peterlipond2643
    @peterlipond2643 4 года назад +4

    I've been in one, it didn't say anything about not going to it's "turn point''. But as I've crossed it, there was a sign telling that it's safe, an there's no problem with that. It was quite a fun to be in such a thing

  • @EscapeFromCustody
    @EscapeFromCustody 2 года назад +1

    Managed to have a go on this at Sheffield University's open day last weekend, and was reminded of your video! Thanks for inspiring me to (eventually!) also visit these amazing places

  • @bobuppendown7277
    @bobuppendown7277 6 лет назад +4

    Thanks for uploading this Tom, it took me back to one I used to use at Heathrow Airport in the 1990's. I'm going to show it to my teenage sons, I don't think they'll be able to believe it, hehe.

    • @lickwish1969
      @lickwish1969 4 года назад

      Used to be one in St. Thomas's hospital Westminster as well. Wonder if it's still running?

  • @effyleven
    @effyleven 8 лет назад +25

    Aha! So the cars are NOT inverted as they go over the top -- under the bottom. Again, I learn something new!

  • @sorlieu3562
    @sorlieu3562 4 года назад +12

    This thing appeared in one of my dreams a couple months back ( i somehow remember it) even though i had no idea these elevators existed.

  • @modularcarpet
    @modularcarpet 3 года назад +7

    There's one at Essex University and I went round the top and bottom several times. It felt illicit to slightly daring to my 18 year old self...
    I did manage to do it accidentally a few times while busy chatting 🙂.
    They are great fun and so quick and easy if you want to go up or down a floor quickly.

  • @srpilha
    @srpilha 9 лет назад +3

    wow, I rode one of those like 30 years ago in Switzerland - and I went "over the top" too!
    Hadn't seen or heard of one since then. Thanks for the vid!

  • @SkidRowRockstar
    @SkidRowRockstar 9 лет назад +8

    They have at least two of these in Copenhagen, Denmark :-D One in Cristiansborg (the Danish parliament building) and one in the KVUC building at Vognmagergade. I've taken a dozen trips with the latter while I studied there. Including the entire way around.

    • @mibdev
      @mibdev 7 лет назад +1

      Funny how many fellow Danes there are here.
      There's also one in a hospital somewhere, I've ridden that one.

  • @RedDeadRanger
    @RedDeadRanger 3 года назад +5

    This actually gives me severe anxiety, I wouldn't step on that if I was paid to.

  • @tracypetrie3033
    @tracypetrie3033 Год назад +5

    Just when I thought normal elevators were the scariest thing in my life....

  • @SuperJimmyChanga
    @SuperJimmyChanga 9 лет назад +8

    Thank you Tom! I didnt know these existed!

  • @oisint.5953
    @oisint.5953 9 лет назад +3

    This is effing terrifying for me. Like, getting crushed in an elevator is one of the scariest ways of dying, and I'm clumsy enough to die in one of these.

  • @nordicberserk
    @nordicberserk 5 лет назад +1

    Two of the machines that I use at work operate on the paternoster principle. The other 8 use a more modern central lift frame that pulls shelves off of, well shelves basicaly, then bring them down to an area where I can pick the items the order I'm working on needs, then puts that shelf back, and then zooms up/down to pull the next shelf off the racks either side of the frame. Rinse and repeate for each order/item.

  • @aprilbentley6843
    @aprilbentley6843 4 года назад +7

    I’m from Sheffield and went on a school trip to this University when I was younger. Me and 4 friends all went over the top of this exact lift, and then all the way down and round the bottom, in the same lift carriage, and nothing bad happened 👀 no secret floor, no off-balancing, no upside-down lift carriage, no damage to the lift... makes me wonder why so many people think it’s so dangerous or damaging? Maybe it might get damaged if absolutely everyone did it, but I’m sure it’s completely okay for the odd few people to do it 😅

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin 3 года назад +1

      People like to believe to myths and nonsenses. Also parents like to scary kids. :-D

  • @rubidium8196
    @rubidium8196 5 лет назад +3

    The library at the University of Essex also has one. It's under refurb currently although finding parts for it has been difficult I've heard.

    • @thomhollyer4102
      @thomhollyer4102 2 года назад

      It's up and running again now with some new features!

  • @HeroesOfTimes
    @HeroesOfTimes 8 лет назад +45

    There's one in the Umea University Hospital in Sweden as well

    • @AppoloniaK
      @AppoloniaK 8 лет назад +16

      I spent a full afternoon in that one once, when I had to stay with mum at work. This was in the seventies, so a pater noster was a totally acceptable babysitter. Glory days :-)

    • @asj3419
      @asj3419 6 лет назад +5

      here is a å to fix your comment with.

    • @MrCuddlyable3
      @MrCuddlyable3 3 года назад +1

      @HeroesOfTime There is the Umeå University in Umeå in north-east Sweden. Swedes are still searching for a "Umea", perhaps you dreamed it Mr. Hero.

    • @spkmafia
      @spkmafia 3 года назад

      @@MrCuddlyable3 Chill out dude.

  • @musicplateau1
    @musicplateau1 3 года назад +1

    I remember the one at BNFL in Birchwood, Warrington. It went round at unbelievable speed, you had to be quick jumping on/ off.

  • @cursedcliff7562
    @cursedcliff7562 3 года назад +5

    God damn i saw this video and afterwards had a nightmare about a giant one that just lets you fall off, like im not already terrified of elevators

  • @eetzi
    @eetzi 8 лет назад +9

    The parliament house in Helsinki has one of these! It's pretty fancy.

  • @adamallen8922
    @adamallen8922 9 лет назад +14

    Should have done this in Leicester. They expect you to go over and just leave a sign saying no screaming when you do stay on ^^

    • @adamallen8922
      @adamallen8922 9 лет назад +1

      In fact come see Britain's first post modern building looks like a ship I'm told ^^

    • @hamzahsajjad7952
      @hamzahsajjad7952 4 года назад

      I'm 4 years too late, but
      Where's the one in Leicester? DMU or UOL?

    • @joshuabrookes6075
      @joshuabrookes6075 4 года назад +2

      @@hamzahsajjad7952 UOL, sadly it was removed about 2 years ago because it broke and no one could fix it IIRC, really sad but I'm glad I got to ride it before it shut down

    • @monicasmalley3336
      @monicasmalley3336 4 года назад

      @@hamzahsajjad7952 Both unis had one, but I think they've both gone now

    • @catherinewilson3880
      @catherinewilson3880 3 года назад +1

      Rode over the top of the paternoster at Leicester poly in about 1974. It was a bit of an anticlimax tbh.

  • @danielthundersteel7146
    @danielthundersteel7146 4 года назад +1

    one of the most german things I ever heard was introducing a drivers license for a particular paternoster. I think it was at the university of frankfurt am main, but I'm not sure. they had an accident where someone broke his leg in the paternoster and after that, the university administration decided to introduce a paternoster drivers license. it basically was just a security introduction and after that you got a piece of paper, but still.

  • @gumboot50
    @gumboot50 3 года назад +1

    Back in the 1970's I was at Leicester University and there was one in the Attenborough Building. As I recall, people did sponsored Paternoster rides during Rag Week - they would sit in a car going round and round for hours at a time, all for charity. Crazy but less hazardous than the more popular 3-legged pub crawl, which I know from personal experience to be the cause of many injuries!

  • @pwilkinson18
    @pwilkinson18 4 года назад +5

    we had one at Aston University in the 70's (am I giving my age away?) We could get six or seven people at a time in one car, but it had a weight sensor so if too many people climbed on it would grind to a halt.
    I still have dreams that I am on it, and it is traveling too fast and I cannot get off - 50 years later!
    BTW, I have seen a much simpler version in vertical food processing facilities such as flour mills, where you have only a foothold and handhold to hand on to. NO WAY you will go over the top on one of those!

    • @brrrrrr
      @brrrrrr 2 года назад

      You can go to university at any age so technically you arent

  • @lolpope
    @lolpope 8 лет назад +76

    I expected to see "the cake is a lie "

    • @leehttucec-9985
      @leehttucec-9985 3 года назад +1

      The paternoster elevator is very aperture-esque: a little outdated, dangerous compared to its alternatives, yet brings in volunteers because it seems fun :)
      Really looks like something cave johnson would invest in

    • @blackaperturemesaresearchl3934
      @blackaperturemesaresearchl3934 3 года назад

      “Cave Johnson here. This is an elevator. Shaft, cables and pulleys. Good enough for science. Not aperture science. Gentleman, I give you aperture brand paternoster lifts, The elevators of tomorrow.”

  • @rykmat2542
    @rykmat2542 2 года назад +1

    In Prague are 28 paternosters still in daily operation and many of them are accessible by the public. In other Czech cities are too. Mostly under Heritage preservation.

  • @MLampner
    @MLampner 2 года назад +1

    I just stumbled on this and remember fondly the Paternoster in the Science Building at Leicester University where I got my MBA. I actually didn't know of it during the years I attended but learned of it on visit to campus after graduation and rode it several times on visits back. Unfortunately it was retired something like a year ago. - I have been enjoying your videos but had held off on subscribing till now, but this has pushed me to do so.

  • @tabby73
    @tabby73 3 года назад +6

    When I was a child my mom worked in an office building that had a paternoster. Was quite fun and of course we kids went up and down many times while waiting for my mom. Aaah good times! 😎

  • @hi-i-am-atan
    @hi-i-am-atan 8 лет назад +132

    This is terrifying.

  • @bigbalticbox
    @bigbalticbox 4 года назад +1

    The University of Essex also has one. Tons of freshers sneak onto it and go over the top or bottom.
    It did break down a while ago and since they need specialists to repair it, it was out of service for about 3 months or something

  • @Beateau
    @Beateau 4 года назад +1

    I rode one of these in Austria. I think in an university dorm. I tour guide even included the rumor about the turned over if you go over the top. As a bunch of Middle Schoolers (Jr. High), we were terrified of the thing and only rode it when we absolutely had to.

  • @shorttimer874
    @shorttimer874 Год назад +3

    I have a memory of the same kind of things in parking garages, but they were just belts with a combination step / hand grab for use by the attendants.