If you own or manage a building in New Hampshire, there are new elevator inspection rules you need to know, especially when it comes to returning suspended or modernized elevators to service. Here’s a quick breakdown of what’s changing and how it could affect your operations.
Attention, building owners and managers in New Hampshire! As of March 2024, the state has officially adopted the latest update to the ASME A17.1-2022 elevator safety code and now requires all new elevator installations AND elevator modernizations to be in compliance.
Attention building owners! In 2022, due to a potential safety concern, the State of Massachusetts changed part of their interpretation of the elevator fire service code, and in order for your elevator to be in compliance — and therefore operational — you may need to have it updated and retested.
June 30, 2021, (Wellesley, MA) – Stanley Elevator Company, Inc., which has served the New England area for almost 70 years, is now expanding its services into Worcester County, Massachusetts.
Did you know that the amount of bacteria on a commercial elevator button is nearly 40x higher than on a public toilet seat? We may only be inside an elevator cab for a few seconds at a time, but it only takes one press of a call button to spread illness-causing pathogens and germs.
We are prepared and ready to help. As the situation with coronavirus (COVID-19) continues to develop, our entire team is ready and standing by to support you. You rely on us every day for your elevator needs, and we’re going to continue to provide important services you count on.