Protective elevator systems

4708222
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Inventors

Bills, Randall C.
Bumgardner, Teddy E.
Monroe, Lusbert L.
Zimmermann, Jeffery D.

Application #

854591

Filed

Apr-22-1986

Published

Nov-24-1987

Current US Class

052/239
160/135
160/351
187/401

International Classes

B66B 009/00

Field of Search

187/1 160/351 160/352 160/135 135/109 135/111 135/116 52/239 52/238.1 52/70 52/71 52/65 105/463.1

Assignee

Beltway Construction, Inc. (Dallas, TX)

Examiners

Rolla; Joseph J.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Richards, Harris, Medlock & Andrews

US Patent References

4161850   Room divider
4194313   Articulated panel d...

Referenced by:

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Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
A collapsible portable protective wall system for use in protecting the interior surfaces of elevators. The system comprises an articulated backwall and articulated sidewalls hingedly connected to the ends of the backwall. The backwall comprises a central base panel and at least two hingedly connected wing panels. Each sidewall has at least two wall panels hingedly connected to each other. The outer surfaces of the protective system is provided with a padding material such as carpeting or the like to avoid abrasion of the interior elevator surfaces. The system may be inserted into an elevator interior in the folded compact position in which the padded surfaces are exposed. It can then be unfolded to conform generally with the elevator walls so that the padded outer surfaces of the wall panels are exposed to the interior elevator surfaces, thus minimizing the possibility of damage during installation.
 
Claims
We claim:

1. In a protective wall system for use in elevators, the combination comprising:

(a) an articulated backwall comprising structurally rigid panels including a central base panel and at least two wing wall panels hingedly connected to said base panel, the width of said base panel being substantially less then the width of said wing panels;

(b) first and second articulated sidewalls hingedly connected to the opposed ends of said backwall;

(c) the articulated backwall and the sidewalls of the protective wall system laying in a proximate contiguous relationship with adjacent interior surfaces of an elevator structure;

(d) each of said sidewalls having structurally rigid panels including at least two wall panels hingedly connected to one another, the rearward wall panels in closest proximity to said backwall, when in the open position, folding inwardly toward each other and against the front surface of said backwall; and



Description
TECHNICAL FIELD

This invention relates to systems for the protection of the interior surfaces of elevator cabs and more particularly to protective wall systems which can be readily inserted into and removed from elevator interiors.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Elevator shafts occupy a substantial portion of the space available in multi-level buildings. Many multi-level buildings, particularly midrise office buildings and apartment buildings, do not have elevators exclusively for the transportation of freight, furniture, construction materials and the like to upper levels within the building. Absent such dedicated elevators, elevators normally used for passenger service are temporarily converted for the purpose of hauling freight, furniture, etc.

In many cases, such passenger elevators have expensive and sometimes delicate interior wall finishes and also floor coverings which are subject to damage when transporting freight. In this case it is a conventional practice to provide temporary protective materials. Probably the most common method of protecting elevator interiors involves the use of removable fabric pads or mats. These pads typically are hung on wall hooks that are permanently installed around the interior of the elevator cab. These pads, however, are relatively thin to avoid bulk which would prove unwieldy and thus provide only limited protection against impact. They soil easily and are subject to tearing so that the interior elevator surface may still be subject to abrasion, scratching and the like. The parameter hooks required for installation of the pads are unsightly and thus many elevators are not provided with such hooks making the use of pads even more unreliable. Elevators pads, of course, do not provide any protection for the floor of the elevator.
 
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