Speed: 1.00 m/s Formerly known as the East Coast Line, this line has merged with the Thomson Line to be known as the Thomson East-Coast Line, and is now designated as the 4th (and 5th stage). Due to the differences between the 1st to 3rd stages, and the 4th to 5th stages, these received different lift manufacturers, the former being Otis Elevator Company while the latter being Kone. Marine Parade has an underground commercial linkway, which is where exits 4 to 6 are located. In the near future (as of filming), it will become a community space associated with the rebuilt Marine Parade Community Club, and may even have a direct linkway to its basement. This possibly means that one can walk half of the Marine Parade HDB estate without ever needing to cross any road, from Parkway Parade at the eastern end, to the community club at the western end. Therefore, there is a single 'one-off' cargo lift installation under the T371A; while retaining its large buttons and the 'Show You Care' announcement, it features a more 'rugged' interior compared to passenger units (including those installed in the bicycle parks).
This playlist is for lifts which are: - The only unit found in a development - Are unclassified (i.e. there are other lift types in a development but has not been documented yet).
Triton Centre is the most recognisable building in Skyscraper Simulator, which is an elevator/lift simulation game. As several new features came up, one of the more important ones is the destination dispatch system, which now allows users to indicate their destination from outside the lift. Though the logic may be rudimentary, it is a fair simulation to real-life destination dispatch systems. As a result, most lifts in this building have been retrofitted into this system, which comes in two types: keypad (Miconic 10 style), or floor buttons (DOAS style). The configuration depends on the number of floors served, with most passenger lifts receiving floor buttons, and service lifts receiving keypads.