Elevator operator

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Elevator girls in Japan
In the Smith Tower in Seattle , 2008

As elevator operator , elevator operator , elevator operator or Elevator Girl refers to a service provider, whose main task is for the guests of large department stores or hotels the elevator to use and to assist them in addition advice. This can include welcoming texts or the announcement of the floor and the product groups in department stores. In addition, they pay attention to compliance with the safety regulations, so that, for example, the permissible maximum weight or the maximum number of people are not exceeded.

history

In most industrialized countries the elevator operators have disappeared after the invention of the button operation, since the elevator passengers could now choose the floor themselves and the car doors were automatically closed or opened. Therefore, elevator operators can only be found in Europe today where monitoring of elevator traffic is necessary for safety reasons, especially in heavily frequented elevators, e.g. B. on well-known landmarks, such as the Eiffel Tower or the Berlin TV tower .

In Japanese department stores ( depāto ), however, the elevator girls ( Japanese エ レ ベ ー タ ー ガ ー ル , erebētā gāru ) can still be found today. Most of them are young women in neat uniforms who do this work as a part-time job ( ア ル バ イ ト , arubaito ). The first elevator girls in Japan - at that time still called shōkōki girl ( 昇降機 ガ ー ル ) - were introduced in Depāto Matsuzaka-ya in 1929 . The Japanese are so used to the elevator girls that in some unmanned elevators there is a sign asking customers to operate the buttons themselves.

If an elevator is part of local public transport , the elevator operator is sometimes also responsible for selling tickets . Examples of this are the Bern Mattelift , the Hammetschwand lift on Lake Lucerne and some public lifts ( Ascensori ) in Genoa , Italy .

Novel and film

The lift boy is a typical figure that is often found in novels and films, for example in

See also

In aviation language , liftboy jokingly describes a pilot who drops parachutists at the desired location with his machine .

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. 松 坂 屋 「ひ と ・ こ と ・ も の」 語 り 昭和 . Matsuzaka-ya, accessed May 15, 2009 (Japanese).