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Funiculars
Inclined Elevators
Funiculars (hill-climbers)
no doubt came into being before vertical lifts as a method of moving passengers.
Obviously, it was much easier to transport a group of people along the
side of an existing hill than construct a multistory building. However,
the transport of materials came first. Early graphics depict sledges on
rollers, then carts with rude wheels, moving building materials and goods.
With castles and fortresses finding a natural location on hilltops, it
was logical that a form of inclined device was developed to move stone
and timber to the construction site. Secure a block with tackle to the
cart and the task became easier for human muscle. Add a counterweight
and smooth off a track, and a funicular was present -- in practice, if not
in name. The laying of wooden, then iron rails on the leveled surface
made the job still easier. Records indicate that a water-balance was an
early assist -- a tank under the car or the counterweight. Emptying and
filling the tank -- as the case might dictate -- would raise the car to
the upper level, needed -- either a spring at the top, or a simple water
pump at the bottom. In later years, when the times and small payment allowed
leisure, the steam-driven funiculars became focal points, taking passengers
to high places for a panoramic view. Why not counterweight one car with
another? With this technique, the addition of a few more rails allowed
a by-pass at mid-point while doubling the carrying capacity. In later
years, the aerial ropeway replaced the funicular in many instances. Another
Gallery will indicate how passenger ropeways were able to traverse ravines
that would have halted funicular construction. When technology advanced
to where exciting views could be obtained from an entertainment tower
or the top floor of a skyscraper, the funicular gave way to the vertical
high-speed elevator. The funiculars had a fine fallback position -- taking
skiers to the mountaintop in comfort. The funiculars were also able to
rebound in mini form, serving hillside homes. When land for living quarters
became scarce, builders looked to the slopes for home sites. Small hill-climbers, with an average capacity of four persons, allowed access.
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