Santa Justa Lift

Santa Justa Elevator/Lift (Elevador de Santa Justa)
Carmo Elevator/Lift
Lift (Elevador)
An image of the Santa Justa Lift in the evening
Official name: Elevador do Carmo
Country  Portugal
Region Lisboa
Subregion Greater Lisbon
District Lisbon
Municipality Lisbon
Location Sacramento
 - elevation 13 m (43 ft)
 - coordinates PT 38°42′43.64″N 9°8′21.92″W / 38.7121222°N 9.1394222°W / 38.7121222; -9.1394222Coordinates: PT 38°42′43.64″N 9°8′21.92″W / 38.7121222°N 9.1394222°W / 38.7121222; -9.1394222
Height 45 m (148 ft)
Engineer Raoul Mesnier du Ponsard
Style Neo-Gothic
Materials Iron, Wood, Glass, Cement
Origin c. 1874
 - Initiated 2 June 1900
 - Completion c. 1902
Owner Portuguese Republic
For public Public
Visitation Closed (Mondays and on 1 January, Easter Sunday, 1 May and 25 December)
Easiest access Rua de Santa Justa
Management Instituto Gestão do Patrimonio Arquitectónico e Arqueológico
Operator Carris
Summer 7:00 a.m. - 11:00 p.m.
Winter 7:00 a.m. - 10:00 p.m.
Status National Monument
Listing Decree No.5/2002; DR 42, 19 February 2002
Location of the elevator within the municipality of Lisbon
Wikimedia Commons: Elevador de Santa Justa
Website: http://www.carris.pt/pt/ascensores-e-elevador/

The Santa Justa Lift (Portuguese: Elevador de Santa Justa, pronounced: [elɨvɐˈdoɾ dɨ ˈsɐ̃tɐ ˈʒuʃtɐ]), also called Carmo Lift (Portuguese: Elevador do Carmo, [elɨvɐˈdoɾ du ˈkaɾmu]), is an elevator, or lift, in the civil parish of Santa Justa, in the historical city of Lisbon, Portugal. Situated at the end of Rua de Santa Justa, it connects the lower streets of the Baixa with the higher Largo do Carmo (Carmo Square).

Since its construction, the Lift has become a tourist attraction for Lisbon as, among the urban lifts in the city, Santa Justa is the only remaining vertical (conventional) one. Others, including Elevador da Glória and Elevador da Bica, are actually funicular railways, and the other lift constructed around the same time, the Elevator of São Julião, has since been demolished.

History

A photograph of the Santa Justa Lift, as it appeared prior to a 1907 conversion to Electric power.
The Santa Justa Lift, as seen from the Praça D.Pedro IV
The location of the Santa Justa Lift, within the buildings of the Baixa Pombalina in Sacramento

The hills of Lisbon have always presented a problem for travel between the lower streets of the main Baixa and the higher Largo do Carmo (Carmo Square).,[1] In order to facilitate the movement between the two, the civil and military engineer Roberto Arménio presented a project to the Lisbon municipal council in 1874.[2] A similar project was suggested in 1876, that included rail-lines that would be pulled by animals up an inclined plane.

In May 1882 founder and representative of the Companhia dos Ascensores Mecânicos de Lisboa, Raoul Mesnier du Ponsard,[2] petitioned the city council for permission to explore alternative plans for constructing an inclined transport moved by mechanical means. On 1 June 1882, Mesnier, a Porto-born engineer of French parentage, was granted a licence to proceed.

In 1896 Mesnier petitioned for the concession of this project, in order to establish the Escadinhas de Santa Justa, a request that was contested by Henry Lusseau. At the same time, the Serviços de Obras da Câmara (Municipal Public Services) supported Mesnier's petition, and the concession to authorize the construction and exploration of the Raoul Mesnier du Ponsard Elevator was approved.[3][2] It took two years to receive a provisional license to construct the structure. In 1899, the Empresa do Elevador do Carmo (Company of the Elevator of Carmo) was founded (constituted by principal partners Raoul Mesnier du Ponsard, medical surgeon João Silvestre de Almeida and the Marquess of Praia e Monforte, António Borges de Medeiros Dias da Câmara e Sousa) in order to secure the permanent concession of the elevator project for a period of 99 years.[2][4]

In 1900, the formal contract was signed between the Municipal Council of Lisbon and the Empresa do Elevador do Carmo (extinct in 1939), on which the working group was obligated to present a project for an elevator in a period of six months;[3] planning on the construction had already begun with the Lisbon branch of the metal constructors Cardoso D'Argent & Cia. (founded in 1897), on Rua Da Junqueira.[2] The founder, Manuel Cardoso, had already been placed in charge of the offices of firm Empresa Industrial Portuguesa and was responsible for the workers in the Elevador de Santa Justa project. By the middle of the year, the land that would be the main site was already in movement, establishing the footings and equipment house (2 June of the same year).[2][4]

On 31 August 1901, King Carlos inaugurated the metal bridge and awning,[4] in a ceremony that included members of the royal family, the members of the elevator company, Raoul Mesnier du Ponsard, and various members of the nobility and journalists.[2] Its initial operation was delayed: the operating car was only inaugurated in 1902[3] in the presence of the managing director of the concessionary company, Dr. Silvestre de Almeida, accompanied by journalists and other invited guests, in a ceremony presided over by the Secretary-General of the Civil Government.[2]

The operating concession was given to the company Lisbon Electric Tramway Ltd. in 1905.[2] Originally powered by steam, the lift was converted to electrical operation in 1907,[3][4][5] and the respective concessionary company bought the Elevator in 1913, from the Empresa do Elevador do Carmo.[2]

Republic

In 1943, the Lisbon Electric Tramway Ltd. solicited the city council to authorize the transfer of the elevator to the Companhia da Carris. The process was approved, with the condition that its operation should be integrated into the transport network, with the Companhia da Carris as the principal.[2]

By 1973, a contract was signed between the municipal council of Lisbon, the Companhia da Carris and the Lisbon Electric Tramway Ltd., transferring the Elevator definitively into the city's historical tram network.[2]

In July 2002, the Santa Justa Elevator celebrated its first centenary; along with the three remaining cable railways of Lavra, Glória and Bica, they were all classified as National Monuments in same year.[1][2][4]

After remodelling and renovation, the elevator walkway was reopened on February 2006 for the general public and tourists.[2]

Architecture

The Santa Justa Lift, as seen from Rua de Santa Justa
The terrace and walkway of the Lift, with the upper level kiosk
Santa Justa Lift engines

The lift is included on the historical guides of Lisbon, within the down-town Pombaline Baixa area between several older historical buildings in the quarter. It is situated in the Escadinhas de Santa Justa which connects the Baixa to the Rua do Carmo.[2] The Escadinhas are actually part of the north-eastern urban wall of the Baixa and west of the Rua de Santa de Justa. The elevator gives access to many of the important zones of the city.[2] To the north, towards the Rossio (Praça D. Pedro IV and Avenida da Liberdade); to the south, the (Terreiro do Paço) Praça do Comércio and the river zone; while in the upper zone, there is access to the Largo do Carmo, the Trindade, Church of São Roque and the Bairro Alto quarter. In addition, the panormaic views allow glimpses of the Castle of São Jorge, the Tagus River, the lower part of the Baixa, the National Theatre D. Maria II, while the upper entrance permits a view of the ruins of the Monastery of Nossa Senhora do Vencimento do Monte do Carmo.[2]

The elevator is a vertical structure, developed along the Rua de Santa Justa, consisting of a metal tower, observation platform, walkway and base. Its base includes four vertical columns, each composed of two pillars.[2] The largest part of the structure runs parallel to the Rua de Santa Justa. With a height of 45 metres, covering seven stories, the tower includes two elevator cabins, decorated in wood, mirrors and windows, and with an initial capacity for 24 passengers in each (updated to 29 people later).[3] The structure includes a dozen transverse beams, forming a double lattice, supported at the top by foundations at the Escadinhas de Santa Justa. On the sides of the elevator, the walkway is articulated by means of bearings, as well as on the pillars, which is articulated at the base.[2]

On the top floor is a kiosk and lookout, with panoramic views of the city, while connections to the floors below are made (in addition to the elevator) by two spiral staircases, with different patterns on each storey.[3][2] The main machinery was installed at the base of the Elevator, while at the exit to the Largo do Carmo there is a veranda to allow circulation.[2] The corridor that passes above the structure, was transformed into a terrace, and exits to Largo do Carmo through an iron gate. The space destined the electrical equipment was located under the Escadinhas, in a space set aside for this purpose, under a vaulted ceiling.[2]

The lift is decorated in a Neo-Gothic style in iron. Since iron was a new building material at the time of its construction, it is symbolic of the technical and memorial construction from this period, representing the culture of the 1900s, when the structure and elevators were considered a major innovation and portent of a modern age.[2]

See also

References

Notes
  1. 1 2 Caminhos de Mobilidade: Os Elevadores de Lisboa (PDF) (in Portuguese) (3), Lisbon, Portugal: Câmara Municipal de Lisboa, April 2011, p. 1
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 Fernandes, Rosa (2003). SIPA, ed. "Elevador do Carmo/Elevador de Santa Justa" (in Portuguese). Lisbon, Portugal: SIPA – Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Oliveira, Catarina (May 2011). IGESPAR, ed. "Séc. XVI" (in Portuguese). Lisbon, Portugal: IGESPAR-Instituto de Gestão do Património Arquitectónico e Arqueológico. Retrieved 12 August 2011.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Carris, ed. (10 July 2009), Press Release: 107º. Aniversário do Elevador de Santa Justa (PDF) (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: Carris
  5. Caminhos de Mobilidade: Os Elevadores de Lisboa (PDF) (in Portuguese) (3), Lisbon, Portugal: Câmara Municipal de Lisboa, April 2011, p. 6
Sources
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