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Design specifications and the bidding process lasted more than a year in what Malkin called a "hotly competitive process." Only three elevator manufacturers
-- Schindler, ThyssenKrupp and Otis -- could credibly compete, he said. Otis came up with a novel and innovative staffing system, Malkin said. The project is a homecoming for Otis, which designed and installed the Empire State Building's original elevators during the Depression. It will hire a full-time branch manager to run the project that is set to begin in November and be finished in March 2014. It will involve as many as 60 workers on two shifts a day, six days a week. The number of tenants has declined to fewer than 200 from 561 since 2006 as tenants rent entire floors or multiple floors and the building's management seeks larger and higher quality tenants, Malkin said. The renovations, including the new elevators, are part of the plan. The new elevators promise to route passengers better and reduce their wait times, Otis said. Michaud-Daniel said it's probably the first time ever in a building this size that elevator equipment will be as good or better than those newly installed. "I've been working in the industry 30 years, and for me, coming from France, it was a dream getting the Empire State Building back," he said. "We're extremely proud of it."
[Associated
Press;
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