Subscribe Now to Our Free Email Newsletter

Thomas Frey - Senior Futurist at the DaVinci Institute
January 18th, 2006 at 9:14 pm

Tokyo Installs World’s First ‘Maglev’ Elevator

The world’s first elevators controlled by magnetic levitation will debut as early as 2008, a Tokyo-based company said Tuesday.

Toshiba Elevator and Building Systems Corp. will employ so-called maglev technology — capable of suspending objects in mid-air through the combination of magnetic attraction and repulsion — to control the lifts, it said in a statement.

The maglev elevators will be quieter and more comfortable and will travel 300 meters (984 feet) per minute — not as fast as the company’s conventional lifts that can move up to 1,010 meters (3,314 feet) a minute, Toshiba said.

Maglev technology has already been used to develop high-speed trains. The only passenger-carrying maglev train in the world links Pudong International Airport in Shanghai, China, to the city center at speeds of 430 kilometers (267 miles) per hour.

A maglev shuttle in Birmingham, U.K. was abandoned in 1995 after 11 years in operation because of technical glitches.

More here.

You must be logged in to post a comment.