List of aerial lift manufacturers
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
This is a list of the current and former aerial lift manufacturers.
Current
- Anzen Sakudo – Japan
- BMF Bartholet – Switzerland
- BMHRI – China
- Borer – Switzerland
- SunKid
- Doppelmayr Garaventa Group – Austria and Switzerland, merging of Doppelmayr and Garaventa in 2002
- CWA Constructions – Switzerland, acquired by Doppelmayr in 2001, company only manufactures cabins
- DCC Doppelmayr Cable Car – Austria
- Doppelmayr USA – North America, originally CTEC, merged with Garaventa in 1992 to form Garaventa CTEC, became Doppelmayr CTEC in 2002, and Doppelmayr USA in 2011
- Full list of subsidiaries
- Gimar Montaz Mautino – France, merging of Gimar and Montaz Mautino
- Habegger – Switzerland, company now only manufactures cables
- Him Cableways - India
- Hongji – China
- Leitner Group – Italy
- Agudio – Italy
- Leitner-Poma – North America
- Skytrac – North America, acquired by Leitner-Poma in 2016[1]
- Poma – France, acquired in 2000
- Sigma Composite – France, company only manufactures cabins
- LST Ropeway Systems – Germany, acquired by MND Group (France) in 2012
- M&M Ropeways – India
- Nippon Cable – Japan, licensee of Doppelmayr
- Tokyo Cableway – Japan
- SkyTrans Mfg. – North America
- Steurer – Austria / Switzerland
- STM Sistem Teleferik – Turkey
Former
- American Steel and Wire
- Australasian Ropeway – Australian based chairlift maker in the 1960s and 1970s
- De Pretis
- Giovanola
- GMD Mueller
- Hamilton – New Zealand lift maker; the Hamilton Model B was the standard nutcracker tow across NZ and Australia in the 1950s and 1960s
- Lift Engineering
- McCallum - made about two dozen T-bars and chairlifts in the 1960s and 1970s; based in Melbourne, Australia
- Murray-Latta
- Pohlig-Heckel-Bleichert
- Pullman-Berry
- Huntsinger Skilifts
- Riblet – closed in 2003
- Ski Lift International – sold to Riblet in 1973
- Roebling
- Stemag
- Streiff
- Swoboda
- Wito
- Wopfner – Austria
- Yac – a French company that built platter lifts
Sold to Doppelmayr Garaventa Group
- Agamatic – Italy, sold to Doppelmayr; some lifts in Italy are still produced under this name
- Partek – sold to Doppelmayr CTEC in 2005
- Borvig – closed in 1993, rights sold to Partek
- Städeli – sold to Doppelmayr in the early 1990s
- Thiokol – ropeway division closed in 1977, sold to CTEC in 1978
- Von Roll – ropeway division sold to Doppelmayr in 1996
- Hall Ski-Lift – merged with Von Roll in 1982
References
- ↑ "Leitner-Poma & Skytrac - 2 Companies Become 1 Mission". Skytrac. Retrieved 24 July 2016.
External links
- chairlift.org list of brands
- Skilifts.org list of manufacturers
- Manufacturers that built in Colorado
- Doppelmayr Garaventa international website
- Doppelmayr North American affiliate
- Poma international website
- Leitner-Poma of America
- Skytrac
- Steurer
- Gimar Montaz Mautino
- Nippon Cable
- Tokyo Cableway, Inc.
- Ansaku
- HIM Cableways
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.