New ISO standard focuses on escalator safety

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by Shane Henson — October 21, 2011—The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) has released a new standard to help ensure that elevators in buildings around the world are secure and safe for everyone who uses them.

ISO technical report ISO/TS 25740-1:2011, Safety requirements for escalators and moving walks—Part 1: Global essential safety requirements (GESR), specifies safety requirements for escalators and moving walks, the components and functions, and provides methods for minimizing safety risks that might arise in the course of the operation and use of, or work on, escalators and moving walks.

The standard was developed by ISO technical committee ISO/TC 178, Lifts, escalators and moving walks. According to the committee, the objective of this technical specification is to define a common global level of safety for all people using, or associated with, escalators and moving walks and provide a uniform process for assessing their safety. The requirements will help:

  • Developers of safety or safety-related standards for escalators and moving walks;
  • Designers of escalators and moving walks, manufacturers and installers, and maintenance and service organizations;
  • Independent third-party conformity assessment bodies;
  • Inspection and testing bodies and similar organizations.

Developed as a product safety standard, the technical specification will further help users and non-users to be protected from the effects of falling, shearing, crushing or abrasion, or other injuries. The objectives of the safety requirements are to:

  • Introduce a universal approach to identifying and mitigating potential safety risks on new designs of components for escalators and moving walks that use new technologies, materials or concepts that are not adequately addressed in existing standards;
  • Stimulate harmonization of existing safety standards for escalators and moving walks.