The Elevator that Never Stopped

paternoster

 

I recently had the opportunity to ride a historic relic. 

 

Invented in the 1860s, the Paternoster elevator was a marvel of continuous motion — a chain of open compartments looping endlessly up and down, with no doors and no waiting. You simply stepped in as it ascended or descended. Its name came from the Latin prayer “Pater Noster” (“Our Father”), because the compartments moved like beads on a rosary.

 

The Paternoster was once a symbol of bold European engineering, a model of operational efficiency and continuous flowToday, only a few hundred still operate in Europe, mostly in Germany.

 

Getting to ride one is not only a thrilling moment of time travel.  It is also a point of inspiration, a reminder of the importance of continuous motion and innovation.  In our environment of unrelenting uncertainty and change, standing still is not an option. 

 

#Innovation#Technology#DigitalTransformation#Future#Management

Contact

Your email address will never be shared.

Receive exclusive content, including highlights of creative advice from some of the world’s leading visionaries, by registering your email address.

FacebookTwitterGoogle +LinkedinRSS Feed