EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND COUNCIL DIRECTIVE
95/16/EC
of 29 June 1995
on the approximation of the laws of the
Member States relating to lifts
THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL OF
THE EUROPEAN UNION,
Having regard to the Treaty establishing the
European Community, and in particular Article
100a thereof,
Having regard to the proposal from the
Commission (1),
Having regard to the Opinion of the Economic
and Social Committee (2),
Acting in accordance with the procedure laid
down in Article 189b of the Treaty (3) in the
light of the joint text approved by the
Conciliation Committee on 17 May 1995,
Whereas Member States are responsible within
their territory for the health and safety of
people;
Whereas paragraphs 65 and 68 of the White
Paper on the completion of the internal market,
approved by the European Council in June 1985,
provide for a new approach to the approximation
of laws;
Whereas Council Directive 84/529/EEC of 17
September 1984 on the approximation of the laws
of the Member States relating to electrically,
hydraulically or oil-electrically operated lifts
(4) does not ensure freedom of movement for all
types of lift; whereas disparities between the
binding provisions of the various national
systems for types of lift not covered by
Directive 84/529/EEC constitute barriers to
trade within the Community; whereas the national
rules on lifts should therefore be harmonized;
Whereas Council Directive 84/528/EEC of 17
September 1984 on the approximation of the laws
of the Member States relating to common
provisions for lifting and mechanical handling
appliances (5) serves as a framework Directive
for two specific Directives, namely Directive
84/529/EEC and Council Directive 86/663/EEC of
22 December 1986 on the approximation of the
laws of the Member States relating to
self-propelled industrial trucks (6), repealed
by Council Directive 91/368/EEC of 20 June 1991
amending Directive 89/392/EEC on the
approximation of the laws of the Member States
relating to machinery (7);
Whereas on 8 June 1995 the Commission adopted
recommendation No 95/216/EC (8) to the Member
States concerning improvement of safety of
existing lifts;
Whereas the essential requirements of this
Directive will guarantee the intended level of
safety only if appropriate conformity assessment
procedures, chosen from among the provisions of
Council Decision 93/465/EEC of 22 July 1993
concerning the modules for the various phases of
the conformity assessment procedures and the
rules for the affixing and use of the CE
conformity marking, which are intended to be
used in the technical harmonization directives
(9), ensure compliance therewith;
Whereas the CE marking must be visibly
affixed to lifts or to certain safety components
of lifts which meet the essential health and
safety requirements of this Directive to enable
them to be placed on the market;
Whereas this Directive defines only general
essential health and safety requirements;
whereas, in order to help manufacturers prove
conformity with these essential requirements, it
is desirable to have standards harmonized at
European level concerning the prevention of
risks arising from the design and installation
of lifts, and also in order to enable conformity
with the essential requirements to be verified;
whereas such standards are drawn up at European
level by private-law bodies and must retain
their non-binding status; whereas, for this
purpose, the European Committee for
Standardization (CEN) and the European Committee
for Electrotechnical Standardization (Cenelec)
are recognized as the competent bodies for
adopting harmonized standards in accordance with
the general guidelines for cooperation between
the Commission and CEN and Cenelec signed on 13
November 1984; whereas a harmonized standard
within the meaning of this Directive is a
technical specification adopted by CEN and/or
Cenelec on the basis of a mandate from the
Commission in accordance with Council Directive
83/189/EEC of 28 March 1983 laying down a
procedure for the provision of information in
the field of technical standards and regulations
(1) and pursuant to the abovementioned general
guidelines;
Whereas provision should be made for
transitional arrangements to enable installers
to place on the market lifts manufactured before
the date of implementation of this Directive;
Whereas this Directive is designed to cover
all risks caused by lifts and run by their users
and by the occupants of the construction;
whereas this Directive should therefore be
regarded as a Directive within the meaning of
Article 2 (3) of Council Directive 89/106/EEC of
21 December 1988 on the approximation of laws,
regulations and administrative provisions of the
Member States relating to construction products
(2);
Whereas an agreement on a modus vivendi
between the European Parliament, the Council and
the Commission concerning the implementing
measures for acts adopted in accordance with the
procedure laid down in Article 189b of the EC
Treaty was reached on 20 December 1994,
HAVE ADOPTED THIS DIRECTIVE:
CHAPTER I
Scope, placing on the market and free
movement
Article 1
1. This Directive shall apply to lifts
permanently serving buildings and constructions.
It shall also apply to the safety components for
use in such lifts listed in Annex IV.
2. For the purposes of this Directive, 'lift'
shall mean an appliance serving specific levels,
having a car moving along guides which are rigid
and inclined at an angle of more than 15 degrees
to the horizontal and intended for the transport
of:
- persons,
- persons and goods,
- goods alone if the car is accessible, that
is to say, a person may enter it without
difficulty, and fitted with controls situated
inside the car or within reach of a person
inside.
Lifts moving along a fixed course even where
they do not move along guides which are rigid
shall fall within the scope of this Directive
(for example, scissor lifts).
3. The Directive shall not apply to:
- cableways, including funicular railways,
for the public or private transportation of
persons,
- lifts specially designed and constructed
for military or police purposes,
- mine winding gear,
- theatre elevators,
- lifts fitted in means of transport,
- lifts connected to machinery and intended
exclusively for access to the workplace,
- rack and pinion trains,
- construction-site hoists intended for
lifting persons or persons and goods.
4. For the purposes of this Directive:
- the 'installer of a lift' shall mean the
natural or legal person who takes responsibility
for the design, manufacture, installation and
placing on the market of the lift and who
affixes the CE marking and draws up the EC
declaration of conformity,
- 'placing on the market of the lift' shall
occur when the installer first makes the lift
available to the user,
- 'safety component' shall mean a component
as listed in Annex IV,
- the 'manufacturer of the safety components'
shall mean the natural or legal person who takes
responsibility for the design and manufacture of
the safety components and who affixes the CE
marking and draws up the EC declaration of
conformity,
- a 'model lift' shall mean a representative
lift whose technical dossier shows the way in
which the essential safety requirements will be
met for lifts which conform to the model lift
defined by objective parameters and which uses
identical safety components.
All permitted variations between the model
lift and the lifts forming part of the lifts
derived from the model lift must be clearly
specified (with maximum and minimum values) in
the technical dossier.
By calculation and/or on the basis of design
plans it is permitted to demonstrate the
similarity of a range of equipment to satisfy
the essential safety requirements.
5. Where, for lifts, the risks referred to in
this Directive are wholly or partly covered by
specific Directives, this Directive shall not
apply or shall cease to apply in the case of
such lifts and such risks as from application of
those specific Directives.
Article 2
1. Member States shall take all appropriate
measures to ensure that:
- lifts covered by this Directive may be
placed on the market and put into service only
if they are not liable to endanger the health or
safety of persons or, where appropriate, the
safety of property, when properly installed and
maintained and used for their intended purpose.
- safety components covered by this Directive
may be placed on the market and put into service
only if the lifts in which they are to be
installed are not liable to endanger the health
or safety of persons or, where appropriate, the
safety of property when properly installed and
maintained and used for their intended purpose.
2. Member States shall take all appropriate
measures to ensure that the person responsible
for work on the building or construction and the
installer of the lift, on the one hand, keep
each other informed of the facts necessary for,
and, on the other hand, take the appropriate
steps to ensure, the proper operation and safe
use of the lift.
3. Member States shall take all necessary
measures to ensure that shafts intended for
lifts do not contain any piping or wiring or
fittings other than that necessary for the
operation and safety of the lift.
4. Without prejudice to paragraphs 1, 2 and
3, the provisions of this Directive shall not
affect Member States' entitlement to lay down in
conformity with the Treaty such requirements as
they may deem necessary to ensure that persons
are protected when the lifts in question are put
into service or used, provided that this does
not mean that the lifts are modified in a way
not specified in the Directive.
5. At trade fairs, exhibitions or
demonstrations in particular, Member States
shall not prevent the showing of lifts or safety
components which do not conform to the Community
provisions in force, provided that a visible
sign clearly indicates that such lifts or safety
components are not in conformity and are not for
sale until they have been brought into
conformity by the installer of the lift, the
manufacturer of the safety components or the
latter's authorized representative established
in the Community. During demonstrations,
adequate safety measures shall be taken to
ensure the protection of persons.
Article 3
Lifts covered by this Directive must satisfy
the essential health and safety requirements set
out in Annex I.
The safety components covered by this
Directive must satisfy the essential health and
safety requirements set out in Annex I or enable
the lifts in which they are installed to satisfy
the said essential requirements.
Article 4
1. Member States may not prohibit, restrict
or impede the placing on the market or putting
into service on their territory of lifts and/or
safety components which comply with this
Directive.
2. Member States may not prohibit, restrict
or impede the placing on the market of
components which, on the basis of a declaration
by the manufacturer or his authorized
representative established in the Community, are
intended to be incorporated into a lift covered
by this Directive.
Article 5
1. Member States shall regard lifts and
safety components bearing the CE marking and
accompanied by the EC declaration of conformity
referred to in Annex II as conforming to all the
provisions of this Directive, including the
conformity assessment procedures laid down in
Chapter II.
In the absence of harmonized standards,
Member States shall take any steps they deem
necessary to bring to the attention of the
parties concerned the existing national
technical standards and specifications which are
regarded as important or relevant to the proper
implementation of the essential health and
safety requirements in Annex I.
2. Where a national standard transposing a
harmonized standard, the reference for which has
been published in the Official Journal of the
European Communities, covers one or more of the
essential health and safety requirements:
- lifts constructed in accordance with that
standard shall be presumed to comply with the
relevant essential requirements.
or
- safety components constructed in accordance
with that standard shall be presumed suitable to
enable a lift on which they are correctly
installed to comply with the relevant essential
requirements.
Member States shall publish the references of
national standards transposing harmonized
standards.
3. Member States shall ensure that
appropriate measures are taken to enable both
sides of industry to have an influence at
national level on the process of preparing and
monitoring the harmonized standards.
Article 6
1. Where a Member State or the Commission
considers that the harmonized standards referred
to in Article 5 (2) do not entirely satisfy the
essential requirements referred to in Article 3,
the Commission or the Member State concerned
shall bring the matter before the Committee set
up under Directive 83/189/EEC, giving the
reasons therefor. The Committee shall deliver an
opinion without delay.
Upon receipt of the Committee's opinion, the
Commission shall inform the Member States
whether or not it is necessary to withdraw those
standards from the published information
referred to in Article 5 (2).
2. The Commission may adopt any appropriate
measure with a view to ensuring the practical
application in a uniform manner of this
Directive in accordance with the procedure laid
down in paragraph 3.
3. The Commission shall be assisted by a
Standing Committee composed of the
representatives of the Member States and chaired
by the representative of the Commission.
The Standing Committee shall draw up its own
rules of procedure.
The representative of the Commission shall
submit to the Standing Committee a draft of the
measures to be taken. The Committee shall
deliver its opinion on the draft, within a time
limit which the chairman may lay down according
to the urgency of the matter, if necessary by
taking a vote.
The opinion shall be recorded in the minutes,
in addition, each Member State shall have the
right to ask to have its position recorded in
the minutes.
The Commission shall take the utmost account
of the opinion delivered by the Standing
Committee. It shall inform that Committee of the
manner in which its opinion has been taken into
account.
4. The Standing Committee may, furthermore,
examine any question concerning the application
of this Directive and raised by its chairman
either at the latter's initiative or at the
request of a Member State.
Article 7
1. Where a Member State ascertains that a
lift or a safety component bearing the CE
marking and used in accordance with its intended
purpose is liable to endanger the safety of
persons and, where appropriate, of property, it
shall take all appropriate measures to withdraw
it from the market, to prohibit it from being
placed on the market or put into service or to
restrict its free movement.
The Member State shall immediately inform the
Commission of any such measure, indicating the
reasons for its decision and in particular
whether non-conformity is due to:
(a) failure to satisfy the essential
requirements referred to in Article 3;
(b) incorrect application of the standards
referred to in Article 5 (2);
(c) shortcomings in the standards referred to
in Article 5 (2) themselves.
2. The Commission shall enter into
consultation with the parties concerned as soon
as possible. Where, after such consultation, the
Commission finds that:
- the measures are justified, it shall
immediately so inform the Member State which
took the initiative and the other Member States;
where the decision referred to in paragraph 1 is
based on shortcomings in the standards, the
Commission shall, after consulting the parties
concerned, bring the matter before the Committee
referred to in Article 6 (1), if the Member
State which has taken the decision intends to
maintain it, and shall initiate the procedure
referred to in Article 6 (1),
- the measures are unjustified, it shall
immediately so inform the Member State which
took the initiative and the installer of the
lift, the manufacturer of the safety components
or the latter's authorized representative
established in the Community.
3. Where a lift or safety component which
does not comply bears the CE marking, the
competent Member State shall take appropriate
action against whomsoever affixed the marking
and shall so inform the Commission and the other
Member States.
4. The Commission shall ensure that the
Member States are kept informed of the progress
and outcome of the procedure.
CHAPTER II
Conformity assessment procedure
Article 8
1. Before placing safety components listed in
Annex IV on the market, the manufacturer of a
safety component or his authorized
representative established in the Community
must:
(a) (i) either submit the model of the safety
component for EC type-examination in accordance
with Annex V and for production checks by a
notified body in accordance with Annex XI;
(ii) or submit the model of the safety
component for EC type-examination in accordance
with Annex V and operate a quality assurance
system in accordance with Annex VIII for
checking production;
(iii) or operate a full quality assurance
system in accordance with Annex IX;
(b) affix the CE marking on each safety
component and draw up a declaration of
conformity containing the information listed in
Annex II, taking account of the specifications
given in the Annex used (Annex VIII, IX or XI as
the case may be);
(c) keep a copy of the declaration of
conformity for 10 years from the date on which
the safety component was last manufactured.
2. Before being placed on the market, a lift
must have undergone one of the following
procedures:
(i) either, if it was designed in accordance
with a lift having undergone an EC
type-examination as referred to in Annex V, it
shall be constructed, installed and tested by
implementing:
- the final inspection referred to in Annex
VI, or
- the quality assurance system referred to in
Annex XII, or
- the quality assurance system referred to in
Annex XIV.
The procedures for the design and
construction stages, on the one hand, and the
installation and testing stages, on the other,
may be carried out on the same lift;
(ii) or, if it was designed in accordance
with a model lift having undergone an EC
type-examination as referred to in Annex V, it
shall be constructed, installed and tested by
implementing:
- the final inspection referred to in Annex
VI, or
- the quality assurance system referred to in
Annex XII, or
- the quality assurance system referred to in
Annex XIV;
(iii) or, if it was designed in accordance
with a lift for which a quality assurance system
pursuant to Annex XIII was implemented,
supplemented by an examination of the design if
the latter is not wholly in accordance with the
harmonized standards, it shall be installed and
constructed and tested by implementing, in
addition:
- the final inspection referred to in Annex
VI, or
- the quality assurance system in accordance
with Annex XII, or
- the quality assurance system in accordance
with Annex XIV;
(iv) or, having undergone the unit
verification procedure, referred to in Annex X,
by a notified body;
(v) or, having been subject to the quality
assurance system in accordance with Annex XIII,
supplemented by an examination of the design if
the latter is not wholly in accordance with the
harmonized standards.
In the cases referred to in (i), (ii) and
(iii) above, the person responsible for the
design must supply to the person responsible for
the construction, installation and testing all
necessary documents and information for the
latter to be able to operate in absolute
security.
3. In all the cases referred to in paragraph
2:
- the installer shall affix the CE marking on
the lift and draw up a declaration of conformity
containing the information listed in Annex II,
taking account of the specifications given in
the Annex used (Annex VI, X, XII, XIII or XIV,
as the case may be),
- the installer must keep a copy of the
declaration of conformity for 10 years from the
date on which the lift was placed on the market,
- the Commission, the Member States and the
other notified bodies may, on request, obtain
from the installer a copy of the declaration of
conformity and reports of the tests involved in
the final inspection.
4. (a) Where the lifts or safety components
are subject to other Directives concerning other
aspects and which also provide for the affixing
of the CE marking, the latter shall indicate
that the lift or safety component is also
presumed to conform to the provisions of those
other Directives.
(b) However, where one or more of these
Directives allows the manufacturer, during a
transitional period, to choose which
arrangements to apply, the CE marking shall
indicate conformity only to the Directives
applied by the installer of the lift or the
manufacturer of the safety components. In this
case, particulars of the Directives applied, as
published in the Official Journal of the
European Communities, must be given in the
documents, notices or instructions required by
the Directives and accompanying the lift or
safety component.
5. Where neither the installer of the lift
nor the manufacturer of the safety component nor
his authorized representative established in the
Community has complied with the obligations of
the preceding paragraphs, those obligations
shall devolve upon whomsoever places the lift or
the safety component on the market in the
Community. The same obligations shall apply to
whomsoever manufactures the lift or safety
component for his own use.
Article 9
1. Member States shall notify the Commission
and the other Member States of the bodies which
they have appointed to carry out the procedures
referred to in Article 8, together with the
specific tasks and examination procedures which
these bodies have been appointed to carry out
and the identification numbers assigned to them
beforehand by the Commission.
The Commission shall publish for information
in the Official Journal of the European
Communities a list of the notified bodies and
their identification numbers and the tasks for
which they have been notified. The Commission
shall ensure that this list is kept up to date.
2. Member States shall apply the criteria
laid down in Annex VII in assessing the notified
bodies. Bodies meeting the assessment criteria
laid down in the relevant harmonized standards
shall be presumed to fulfil the criteria laid
down in Annex VII.
3. A Member State which has notified a body
must withdraw its notification if it finds that
the body no longer meets the criteria laid down
in Annex VII. It shall immediately inform the
Commission and the other Member States
accordingly.
CHAPTER III
CE marking
Article 10
1. The CE marking shall consist of the
initials CE. Annex III sets out the model to be
used.
2. The CE marking shall be affixed to every
lift car distinctly and visibly in accordance
with Section 5 of Annex I and shall be affixed
on each of the safety components listed in Annex
IV or, where that is not possible, on a label
inseparably attached to the safety component.
3. The affixing on the lifts or safety
components of markings which are likely to
mislead third parties as to the meaning and form
of the CE marking shall be prohibited. Any other
marking may be affixed to the lifts or safety
components, provided that the visibility and
legibility of the CE marking are not thereby
reduced.
4. Without prejudice to Article 7:
(a) where a Member State establishes that the
CE marking has been affixed irregularly, the
installer of the lift, the manufacturer of the
safety component or the authorized
representative of the latter established within
the Community shall be obliged to make the
product conform as regards the provisions
concerning the CE marking and to end the
infringement under the conditions imposed by the
Member State;
(b) should non-conformity persist, the Member
State must take all appropriate measures to
restrict or prohibit the placing on the market
of the safety component in question or to ensure
that it is withdrawn from the market and
prohibit the lift from being used and inform the
other Member States in accordance with the
procedures laid down in Article 7 (4).
CHAPTER IV
Final provisions
Article 11
Any decision taken pursuant to this Directive
which restricts:
- the placing on the market and/or putting
into service and/or use of a lift,
- the placing on the market and/or putting
into service of a safety component,
shall state the exact grounds on which it is
based. Such a decision shall be notified as soon
as possible to the party concerned, who shall at
the same time be informed of the legal remedies
available to him under the laws in force in the
Member State concerned and of the time limits to
which such remedies are subject.
Article 12
The Commission shall take the necessary steps
to have information on all the relevant
decisions relating to the implementation of this
Directive made available.
Article 13
Directive 84/528/EEC and Directive 84/529/EEC
are hereby repealed with effect from 1 July
1999.
Article 14
With regard to the aspects concerning the
installation of the lift, this Directive is a
Directive within the meaning of Article 2 (3) of
Directive 89/106/EEC.
Article 15
1. Member States shall adopt and publish the
laws, regulations and administrative provisions
necessary to comply with this Directive by 1
January 1997. They shall forthwith inform the
Commission thereof.
When Member States adopt these measures, they
shall contain a reference to this Directive or
shall be accompanied by such reference on the
occasion of their official publication. The
methods of making such reference shall be laid
down by Member States.
Member States shall apply these measures with
effect from 1 July 1997.
2. Until 30 June 1999 Member States shall
allow:
- the placing on the market and putting into
service of lifts,
- the placing on the market and putting into
service of safety components,
which conform to the provisions in force in
their territories on the date of adoption of
this Directive.
3. Member States shall communicate to the
Commission the texts of the provisions of
national law which they adopt in the field
covered by this Directive.
Article 16
No later than 30 June 2002, the Commission
shall, in consultation with the Committee
referred to in Article 6 (3) and on the basis of
reports provided by the Member States,
re-examine the functioning of the procedures
laid down in this Directive and, if necessary,
submit any proposals for appropriate amendments.
Article 17
This Directive is addressed to the Member
States.
Done at Brussels, 29 June 1995.
For the European Parliament
The President
K. HAENSCH
For the Council
The President
M. BARNIER
(1) OJ No C 62, 11. 3. 1992, p. 4 and OJ No C
180, 2. 7. 1993, p. 11.
(2) OJ No C 287, 4. 11. 1992, p. 2.
(3) Opinion of the European Parliament of 29
October 1992 (OJ No C 305, 23. 11. 1992, p.
114), Council common position of 16 June 1994
(OJ No C 232, 20. 8. 1994, p. 1) and Decision of
the European Parliament of 28 September 1994 (OJ
No C 305, 31. 10. 1994, p. 48).
(4) OJ No L 300, 19. 11. 1984, p. 86.
Directive as last amended by Directive
90/486/EEC (OJ No L 270, 2. 10. 1990, p. 21).
(5) OJ No L 300, 19. 11. 1984, p. 72.
Directive as last amended by Directive
88/665/EEC (OJ No L 382, 31. 12. 1988, p. 42).
(6) OJ No L 384, 31. 12. 1986, p. 12.
(7) OJ No L 198, 22. 7. 1991, p. 16.
(8) OJ No L 134, 20. 6. 1995, p. 37.
(9) OJ No L 220, 30. 8. 1993, p. 23.
(1) OJ No L 109, 26. 4. 1983, p. 8. Directive
as last amended by European Parliament and
Council Directive 94/10/EC (OJ No L 100, 19. 4.
1994, p. 30).
(2) OJ No L 40, 11. 2. 1989, p. 12.
ANNEX I
ESSENTIAL HEALTH AND SAFETY REQUIREMENTS
RELATING TO THE DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION OF LIFTS
AND SAFETY COMPONENTS
PRELIMINARY REMARKS
1. Obligations under essential health and
safety requirements apply only where the lift or
safety component is subject to the hazard in
question when used as intended by the installer
of the lift or the manufacturer of the safety
components.
2. The essential health and safety
requirements contained in the Directive are
imperatives. However, given the present state of
the art, the objectives which they lay down may
not be attainable. In such cases, and to the
greatest extent possible, the lift or safety
components must be designed and built in such a
way as to approximate to those objectives.
3. The safety-component manufacturer and the
installer of the lift are under an obligation to
assess the hazards in order to identify all
those which apply to their products; they must
then design and construct them taking account of
the assessment.
4. In accordance with Article 14, the
essential requirements laid down in Directive
89/106/EEC, not included in this Directive,
apply to lifts.
1. GENERAL
1.1. Application of Directive 89/392/EEC, as
amended by Directives 91/368/EEC, 93/44/EEC and
93/68/EEC.
Where the relevant hazard exists and is not
dealt with in this Annex, the essential health
and safety requirements of Annex I to Directive
89/392/EEC apply. The essential requirement of
Section 1.1.2 of Annex I to Directive 89/392/EEC
must apply in any event.
1.2. Car
The car must be designed and constructed to
offer the space and strength corresponding to
the maximum number of persons and the rated load
of the lift set by the installer.
In the case of lifts intended for the
transport of persons, and where its dimensions
permit, the car must be designed and constructed
in such a way that its structural features do
not obstruct or impede access and use by
disabled persons and so as to allow any
appropriate adjustments intended to facilitate
its use by them.
1.3. Means of suspension and means of support
The means of suspension and/or support of the
car, its attachments and any terminal parts
thereof must be selected and designed so as to
ensure an adequate level of overall safety and
to minimize the risk of the car falling, taking
into account the conditions of use, the
materials used and the conditions of
manufacture.
Where ropes or chains are used to suspend the
car, there must be at least two independent
cables or chains, each with its own anchorage
system. Such ropes and chains must have no joins
or splices except where necessary for fixing or
forming a loop.
1.4. Control of loading (including overspeed)
1.4.1. Lifts must be so designed, constructed
and installed as to prevent normal starting if
the rated load is exceeded.
1.4.2. Lifts must be equipped with an
overspeed governor.
These requirements do not apply to lifts in
which the design of the drive system prevents
overspeed.
1.4.3. Fast lifts must be equipped with a
speed-monitoring and speed-limiting device.
1.4.4. Lifts driven by friction pulleys must
be designed so as to ensure stability of the
traction cables on the pulley.
1.5. Machinery
1.5.1. All passenger lifts must have their
own individual lift machinery. This requirement
does not apply to lifts in which the
counterweights are replaced by a second car.
1.5.2. The installer of the lift must ensure
that the lift machinery and the associated
devices of a lift are not accessible except for
maintenance and in emergencies.
1.6. Controls
1.6.1. The controls of lifts intended for use
by unaccompanied disabled persons must be
designed and located accordingly.
1.6.2. The function of the controls must be
clearly indicated.
1.6.3. The call circuits of a group of lifts
may be shared or interconnected.
1.6.4. Electrical equipment must be so
installed and connected that:
- there can be no possible confusion with
circuits which do not have any direct connection
with the lift,
- the power supply can be switched while on
load,
- movements of the lift are dependent on
electrical safety devices in a separate
electrical safety circuit,
- a fault in the electrical installation does
not give rise to a dangerous situation.
2. HAZARDS TO PERSONS OUTSIDE THE CAR
2.1. The lift must be designed and
constructed to ensure that the space in which
the car travels is inaccessible except for
maintenance or in emergencies. Before a person
enters that space, normal use of the lift must
be made impossible.
2.2. The lift must be designed and
constructed to prevent the risk of crushing when
the car is in one of its extreme positions.
The objective will be achieved by means of
free space or refuge beyond the extreme
positions.
However, in specific cases, in affording
Member States the possibility of giving prior
approval, particularly in existing buildings,
where this solution is impossible to fulfil,
other appropriate means may be provided to avoid
this risk.
2.3. The landings at the entrance and exit of
the car must be equipped with landing doors of
adequate mechanical resistance for the
conditions of use envisaged.
An interlocking device must prevent during
normal operation:
- starting movement of the car, whether or
not deliberately activated, unless all landing
doors are shut and locked,
- the opening of a landing door when the car
is still moving and outside a prescribed landing
zone.
However, all landing movements with the doors
open shall be allowed in specified zones on
condition that the levelling speed is
controlled.
3. HAZARDS TO PERSONS IN THE CAR
3.1. Lift cars must be completely enclosed by
full-length walls, fitted floors and ceilings
included, with the exception of ventilation
apertures, and with full-length doors. These
doors must be so designed and installed that the
car cannot move, except for the landing
movements referred to in the third subparagraph
of Section 2.3, unless the doors are closed, and
comes to a halt if the doors are opened.
The doors of the car must remain closed and
interlocked if the lift stops between two levels
where there is a risk of a fall between the car
and the shaft or if there is no shaft.
3.2. In the event of a power cut or failure
of components the lift must have devices to
prevent free fall or uncontrolled upward
movements of the car.
The device preventing the free fall of the
car must be independent of the means of
suspension of the car.
This device must be able to stop the car at
its rated load and at the maximum speed
anticipated by the installer of the lift. Any
stop occasioned by this device must not cause
deceleration harmful to the occupants whatever
the load conditions.
3.3. Buffers must be installed between the
bottom of the shaft and the floor of the car.
In this case, the free space referred to in
Section 2.2 must be measured with the buffers
totally compressed.
This requirement does not apply to lifts in
which the car cannot enter the free space
referred to in Section 2.2 by reason of the
design of the drive system.
3.4. Lifts must be so designed and
constructed as to make it impossible for them to
be set in motion if the device provided for in
Section 3.2 is not in an operational position.
4. OTHER HAZARDS
4.1. The landing doors and car doors or the
two doors together, where motorized, must be
fitted with a device to prevent the risk of
crushing when they are moving.
4.2. Landing doors, where they have to
contribute to the protection of the building
against fire, including those with glass parts,
must be suitably resistant to fire in terms of
their integrity and their properties with regard
to insulation (containment of flames) and the
transmission of heat (thermal radiation).
4.3. Counterweights must be so installed as
to avoid any risk of colliding with or falling
on to the car.
4.4. Lifts must be equipped with means
enabling people trapped in the car to be
released and evacuated.
4.5. Cars must be fitted with two-way means
of communication allowing permanent contact with
a rescue service.
4.6. Lifts must be so designed and
constructed that, in the event of the
temperature in the lift machine exceeding the
maximum set by the installer of the lift, they
can complete movements in progress but refuse
new commands.
4.7. Cars must be designed and constructed to
ensure sufficient ventilation for passengers,
even in the event of a prolonged stoppage.
4.8. The car should be adequately lit
whenever in use or whenever a door is opened;
there must also be emergency lighting.
4.9. The means of communication referred to
in Section 4.5 and the emergency lighting
referred to in Section 4.8 must be designed and
constructed so as to function even without the
normal power supply. Their period of operation
should be long enough to allow normal operation
of the rescue procedure.
4.10. The control circuits of lifts which may
be used in the event of fire must be designed
and manufactured so that lifts may be prevented
from stopping at certain levels and allow for
priority control of the lift by rescue teams.
5. MARKING
5.1. In addition to the minimum particulars
required for any machine pursuant to Section
1.7.3 of Annex I to Directive 89/392/EEC, each
car must bear an easily visible plate clearly
showing the rated load in kilograms and the
maximum number of passengers which may be
carried.
5.2. If the lift is designed to allow people
trapped in the car to escape without outside
help, the relevant instructions must be clear
and visible in the car.
6. INSTRUCTIONS FOR USE
6.1. The safety components referred to in
Annex IV must be accompanied by an instruction
manual drawn up in an official language of the
Member State of the lift installer or another
Community language acceptable to him, so that:
- assembly,
- connection,
- adjustment, and
- maintenance,
can be carried out effectively and without
danger.
6.2. Each lift must be accompanied by
documentation drawn up in the official
language(s) of the Community, which may be
determined in accordance with the Treaty by the
Member State in which the lift is installed. The
documentation shall contain at least:
- an instruction manual containing the plans
and diagrams necessary for normal use and
relating to maintenance, inspection, repair,
periodic checks and the rescue operations
referred to in Section 4.4,
- a logbook in which repairs and, where
appropriate, periodic checks can be noted.
ANNEX II
A. Content of the EC declaration of
conformity for safety components (1)
The EC declaration of conformity must contain
the following information:
- name and address of the manufacturer of the
safety components (2),
- where appropriate, name and address of his
authorized representative established in the
Community (2),
- description of the safety component,
details of type or series and serial number (if
any),
- safety function of the safety component, if
not obvious from the description,
- year of manufacture of the safety
component,
- all relevant provisions with which the
safety component complies,
- where appropriate, reference to harmonized
standards used,
- where appropriate, name, address and
identification number of the notified body which
carried out the EC type-examination in
accordance with Article 8 (1) (a) (i) and (ii),
- where appropriate, reference to the EC
type-examination certificate issued by that
notified body,
- where appropriate, name, address and
identification number of the notified body which
carried out the production checks in accordance
with Article 8 (1) (a) (ii),
- where appropriate, name, address and
identification number of the notified body which
checked the system of quality assurance
implemented by the manufacturer in accordance
with Article 8 (1) (a) (iii),
- identification of the signatory empowered
to act on behalf of the manufacturer of the
safety components or his authorized
representative established in the Community.
B. Content of the EC declaration of
conformity for installed lifts (3)
The EC declaration of conformity must contain
the following information:
- name and address of the installer of the
lift (4),
- description of the lift, details of the
type or series, serial number and address where
the lift is fitted,
- year of installation of the lift,
- all relevant provisions to which the lift
conforms,
- where appropriate, reference to harmonized
standards used,
- where appropriate, name, address and
identification number of the notified body which
carried out the EC type-examination of the model
of the lift in accordance with Article 8 (2),
(i) and (ii),
- where appropriate, reference of the EC
type-examination certificate,
- where appropriate, name, address and
identification number of the notified body which
carried out the verification of the lift in
accordance with Article 8 (2) (iv),
- where appropriate, name, address and
identification number of the notified body which
carried out the final inspection of the lift in
accordance with the first indent of Article 8
(2), (i), (ii) and (iii),
- where appropriate, name, address, and
identification number of the notified body which
inspected the quality assurance system
implemented by the installer in accordance with
the second and third indents of Article (8) (2)
(i), (ii), (iii) and (v),
- identification of the signatory having been
empowered to act on behalf of the lift
installer.
(1) The declaration must be drafted in the
same language as the instruction manual referred
to in Annex I, Section 6.1, and be either
typewritten or printed.
(2) Business name, full address; in the case
of an authorized representative, also indicate
the business name and address of the
manufacturer of the safety components.
(3) This declaration must be drafted in the
same language as the instruction manual referred
to in Annex I, Section 6.2, and be either
typewritten or printed.
(4) Business name and full address.
ANNEX III
CE CONFORMITY MARKING
The CE conformity marking shall consist of
the initials 'CE' taking the following form:
>REFERENCE TO A FILM>
If the CE marking is reduced or enlarged the
proportions given in the above drawing must be
respected.
The various components of the CE marking must
have substantially the same vertical dimension,
which may not be less than 5 mm. This minimum
dimension may be waived for small-scale safety
components.
The CE marking shall be followed by the
identification number of the notified body that
deals with
- the procedures referred to in Article 8 (1)
(a) (ii) or (iii),
- the procedures referred to in Article 8
(2).
ANNEX IV
LIST OF SAFETY COMPONENTS REFERRED TO IN
ARTICLE 1 (1) AND ARTICLE 8 (1)
1. Devices for locking landing doors.
2. Devices to prevent falls referred to in
Section 3.2 of Annex I to prevent the car from
falling or unchecked upward movements.
3. Overspeed limitation devices.
4. (a) Energy-accumulating shock absorbers:
- either non-linear,
- or with damping of the return movement.
(b) Energy-dissipating shock absorbers.
5. Safety devices fitted to jacks of
hydraulic power circuits where these are used as
devices to prevent falls.
6. Electric safety devices in the form of
safety switches containing electronic
components.
ANNEX V
EC TYPE-EXAMINATION (module B)
A. EC type-examination of safety components
1. EC type-examination is the procedure
whereby a notified body ascertains and certifies
that a representative specimen of a safety
component will permit the lift to which it is
correctly fitted to satisfy the relevant
requirements of the Directive.
2. The application for EC type-examination
must be lodged by the manufacturer of the safety
component, or his authorized representative
established in the Community, with a notified
body of his choice.
The application must include:
- the name and address of the manufacturer of
the safety component and of his authorized
representative, if the application is made by
the latter, and the place of manufacture of the
safety components,
- a written declaration that the same
application has not been lodged with any other
notified body,
- a technical dossier,
- a representative specimen of the safety
component or details of the place where it can
be examined. The notified body may make reasoned
requests for further specimens.
3. The technical dossier must allow an
assessment of the conformity and adequacy of the
safety component to enable a lift to which it is
correctly fitted to conform with the provisions
of the Directive.
In so far as is necessary for the purpose of
assessing conformity, the technical dossier
should include the following:
- a general description of the safety
component, including its area of use (in
particular possible limits on speed, load and
power) and conditions (in particular explosive
environments and exposure to the elements),
- design and manufacturing drawings or
diagrams,
- essential requirement(s) taken into
consideration and the means adopted to satisfy
it (them) (e.g. a harmonized standard),
- results of any tests or calculations
performed or subcontracted by the manufacturer,
- a copy of the assembly instructions for the
safety components,
- steps taken at the manufacturing stage to
ensure that series-produced safety components
conform to the safety component examined.
4. The notified body must:
- examine the technical dossier to assess how
far it can meet the desired aims,
- examine the safety component to check its
adequacy in terms of the technical dossier,
- perform or have performed the appropriate
checks and tests necessary to check whether the
solutions adopted by the manufacturer of the
safety component meet the requirements of the
Directive allowing the safety component to carry
out its function when correctly fitted on a
lift.
5. If the representative specimen of the
safety component complies with the provisions of
the Directive applicable to it, the notified
body must issue an EC type-examination
certificate to the applicant. The certificate
must contain the name and address of the
manufacturer of the safety component, the
conclusions of the check, any conditions of
validity of the certificate and the particulars
necessary to identify the approved type.
The Commission, the Member States and the
other notified bodies may obtain a copy of the
certificate and, on a reasoned request, a copy
of the technical dossier and reports of
examinations, calculations and tests carried
out. If the notified body refuses to issue an EC
type-examination certificate to the
manufacturer, it must state the detailed grounds
for refusal. Provision must be made for an
appeal procedure.
6. The manufacturer of the safety component
or his authorized representative established in
the Community must inform the notified body of
any alterations, even of a minor nature, which
he has made or plans to make to the approved
safety component, including new extensions or
variants not specified in the original technical
dossier (see the first indent of Section 3). The
notified body must examine the alterations and
inform the applicant whether the EC
type-examination certificate remains valid (1).
7. Each notified body must communicate to the
Member States the relevant information
concerning:
- EC type-examination certificates issued,
- EC type-examination certificates withdrawn.
Each notified body must also communicate to
the other notified bodies the relevant
information concerning the EC type-examination
certificates it has withdrawn.
8. EC type-examination certificates and the
dossiers and correspondence relating to EC
type-examination procedures must be drawn up in
an official language of the Member State where
the notified body is established or in a
language acceptable to it.
9. The manufacturer of the safety component
or his authorized representative must keep with
the technical documentation copies of EC
type-examination certificates and their
additions for a period of 10 years after the
last safety component has been manufactured.
Where neither the manufacturer of a safety
component nor his authorized representative is
established in the Community, the obligation to
keep the technical documentation available falls
to the person who places the safety component on
the Community market.
B. EC type-examination of lifts
1. EC type-examination is the procedure
whereby a notified body ascertains and certifies
that a model lift, or that a lift for which
there is no provision for an extension or
variant, satisfies the requirements of the
Directive.
2. The application for EC type-examination
must be lodged by the installer of the lift with
a notified body of his choice.
The application must include:
- the name and address of the installer of
the lift,
- a written declaration that the same
application has not been lodged with any other
notified body,
- a technical dossier,
- details of the place where the model lift
can be examined. The model lift submitted for
examination must include the terminal parts and
be capable of serving at least three levels
(top, middle and bottom).
3. The technical dossier must allow an
assessment of the conformity of the lift with
the provisions of the Directive and an
understanding of the design and operation of the
lift.
In so far as is necessary for the purpose of
assessing conformity, the technical dossier
should include the following:
- a general description of the representative
model of the lift. The technical dossier should
indicate clearly all possible extensions to the
representative model of the lift under
examination (see Article 1 (4)),
- design and manufacturing drawings or
diagrams,
- essential requirements taken into
consideration and the means adopted to satisfy
them (e.g. a harmonized standard),
- a copy of the EC declarations of conformity
of the safety components used in the manufacture
of the lift,
- results of any tests or calculations
performed or subcontracted by the manufacturer,
- a copy of the lift instruction manual,
- steps taken at the installation stage to
ensure that the series-produced lift conforms to
the provisions of the Directive.
4. The notified body must:
- examine the technical dossier to assess how
far it can meet the desired aims,
- examine the representative model of the
lift to check that it has been manufactured in
accordance with the technical dossier,
- perform or have performed the appropriate
checks and tests necessary to check that the
solutions adopted by the installer of the lift
meet the requirements of the Directive and allow
the lift to comply with them.
5. If the model lift complies with the
provisions of the Directive applicable to it,
the notified body must issue an EC
type-examination certificate to the applicant.
The certificate must contain the name and
address of the lift installer, the conclusions
of the check, any conditions of validity of the
certificate and the particulars necessary to
identify the approved type.
The Commission, the Member States and the
other notified bodies may obtain a copy of the
certificate and, on a reasoned request, a copy
of the technical dossier and reports of
examinations, calculations and tests carried
out.
If the notified body refuses to issue an EC
type-examination certificate to the
manufacturer, it must state the detailed grounds
for refusal. Provision must be made for an
appeal procedure.
6. The installer of the lift must inform the
notified body of any alterations, even of a
minor nature, which he has made or plans to make
to the approved lift, including new extensions
or variants not specified in the original
technical dossier (see the first indent of
Section 3). The notified body must examine the
alterations and inform the applicant whether the
EC type-examination certificate remains valid
(1).
7. Each notified body must communicate to the
Member States the relevant information
concerning:
- EC type-examination certificates issued,
- EC type-examination certificates withdrawn.
Each notified body must also communicate to
the other notified bodies the relevant
information concerning the EC type-examination
certificates it has withdrawn.
8. EC type-examination certificates and the
dossiers and correspondence relating to EC
type-examination procedures must be drawn up in
one of the official languages of the Member
State where the notified body is established or
in a language acceptable to it.
9. The installer of the lift must keep with
the technical documentation copies of EC
type-examination certificates and their
additions for a period of at least 10 years
after the last lift has been manufactured in
conformity with the representative model of the
lift.
(1) If the notified body deems it necessary,
it may either issue an addition to the original
EC type-examination certificate or ask for a
fresh application to be submitted.
(1) If the notified body deems it necessary,
it may either issue an addition to the original
EC type-examination certificate or ask for a
fresh application to be submitted.
ANNEX VI
FINAL INSPECTION
1. Final inspection is the procedure whereby
the installer of the lift who fulfils the
obligations of Section 2 ensures and declares
that the lift which is being placed on the
market satisfies the requirements of the
Directive. The installer of the lift shall affix
the CE marking in the car of each lift and draw
up an EC declaration of conformity.
2. The installer of the lift shall take all
steps necessary to ensure that the lift being
placed on the market conforms with the model
lift described in the EC type-examination
certificate and the essential health and safety
requirements applicable to it.
3. The installer of the lift shall keep a
copy of the EC declaration of conformity and the
final inspection certificate referred to in
Section 6 for 10 years from the date when the
lift was placed on the market.
4. A notified body chosen by the installer of
the lift shall carry out or have carried out the
final inspection of the lift about to be placed
on the market. The appropriate tests and checks
defined by the applicable standard(s) referred
to in Article 5, or equivalent tests, must be
carried out in order to ensure conformity of the
lift with the relevant requirements of the
Directive.
These checks and tests shall cover in
particular:
(a) examination of the documentation to check
that the lift conforms with the representative
model of the lift approved in accordance with
Annex V.B;
(b) - operation of the lift both empty and at
maximum load to ensure correct installation and
operation of the safety devices (end stops,
locking devices, etc.),
- operation of the lift at both maximum load
and empty to ensure the correct functioning of
the safety devices in the event of loss of
power,
- static test with a load equal to 1,25 times
the nominal load.
The nominal load shall be that referred to in
Annex I, Section 5.
After these tests, the notified body shall
check that no distortion or deterioration which
could impair the use of the lift has occurred.
5. The notified body must receive the
following documents:
- the plan of the complete lift,
- the plans and diagrams necessary for final
inspection, in particular control circuit
diagrams,
- a copy of the instruction manual referred
to in Annex I, Section 6.2.
The notified body may not require detailed
plans or precise information not necessary for
verifying the conformity of the lift about to be
placed on the market with the model lift
described in the EC type-examination
declaration.
6. If the lift satisfies the provisions of
the Directive, the notified body shall affix or
have affixed its identification number adjacent
to the CE marking in accordance with Annex III
and shall draw up a final inspection certificate
which mentions the checks and tests carried out.
The notified body shall fill in the
corresponding pages in the logbook referred to
in Annex I, Section 6.2.
If the notified body refuses to issue the
final inspection certificate, it must state the
detailed reasons for refusal and recommend means
whereby acceptance may be obtained. Where the
installer of the lift again applies for final
inspection, he must apply to the same notified
body.
7. The final inspection certificate, dossiers
and correspondence relating to the acceptance
procedures shall be drawn up in one of the
official languages of the Member State where the
notified body is established or in a language
acceptable to it.
ANNEX VII
MINIMUM CRITERIA TO BE TAKEN INTO ACCOUNT BY
MEMBER STATES FOR THE NOTIFICATION OF BODIES
1. The body, its director and the staff
responsible for carrying out verification
operations may not be the designer, builder,
supplier or manufacturer of safety components or
installer of the lifts which they inspect, nor
the authorized representative of any of these
parties. Similarly, the body, its director and
the staff responsible for supervising the
quality assurance systems referred to in Article
8 of the Directive may not be the designer,
builder, supplier or manufacturer of safety
components or installer of the lifts which they
inspect, nor the authorized representative of
any of these parties. They may not become
involved either directly or as authorized
representatives in the design, construction,
marketing or maintenance of the safety
components or in the installation of lifts. This
does not preclude the possibility of exchanges
of technical information between the
manufacturer of the safety components or the
installer of the lift and the body.
2. The body and its staff must carry out the
inspection or supervision operations with the
highest degree of professional integrity and
technical competence and must be free from all
pressures and inducements, particularly
financial, which might influence their judgment
or the results of the inspection, especially
from persons or groups of persons with an
interest in the result of inspection or
supervision.
3. The body must have at its disposal the
necessary staff and possess the necessary
facilities to enable it to perform properly the
technical and administrative tasks connected
with inspection or supervision; it must also
have access to the equipment required for
special verification.
4. The staff responsible for inspection must
have:
- sound technical and professional training,
- satisfactory knowledge of the requirements
for the tests they carry out and adequate
experience of such tests,
- the ability to draw up the certificates,
records and reports required to authenticate the
performance of the tests.
5. The impartiality of the inspection staff
must be guaranteed. Their remuneration must not
depend on the number of tests carried out or on
the results of such tests.
6. The body must take out liability insurance
unless its liability is assumed by the State in
accordance with national law, or the Member
State itself is directly responsible for the
tests.
7. The staff of the body must observe
professional secrecy with regard to all
information gained in carrying out its tasks
(except vis-à-vis the competent administrative
authorities of the State in which its activities
are carried out) under this Directive or any
provision of national law giving effect to it.
ANNEX VIII
PRODUCT QUALITY ASSURANCE (module E)
1. Product quality assurance is the procedure
whereby the manufacturer of the safety component
who satisfies Section 2 ensures and declares
that the safety components are in conformity
with the type as described in the EC
type-examination certificate and satisfy the
requirements of the Directive that apply to them
and ensures and declares that the safety
component will enable a lift to which it is
correctly fitted to satisfy the provisions of
the Directive.
The manufacturer of the safety component or
his authorized representative established in the
Community must affix the CE marking to each
safety component and draw up an EC declaration
of conformity. The CE marking must be
accompanied by the identification number of the
notified body responsible for surveillance as
specified in Section 4.
2. The manufacturer must apply an approved
quality assurance system for final inspection of
the safety component and testing as specified in
Section 3, and must be subject to surveillance
as specified in Section 4.
3. Quality assurance system
3.1. The manufacturer of the safety component
must lodge an application for assessment of his
quality assurance system for the safety
components concerned with a notified body of his
choice.
The application must include:
- all relevant information for the safety
components envisaged,
- the documentation on the quality assurance
system,
- the technical documentation of the approved
safety components and a copy of the EC
type-examination certificates.
3.2. Under the quality assurance system, each
safety component must be examined and
appropriate tests as set out in the relevant
standards referred to in Article 5 or equivalent
tests must be carried out in order to ensure its
conformity to the relevant requirements of the
Directive.
All the elements, requirements and provisions
adopted by the manufacturer of the safety
components must be documented in a systematic
and orderly manner in the form of written
measures, procedures and instructions. This
quality assurance system documentation must
ensure a common understanding of the quality
programmes, plans, manuals and records.
It must contain in particular an adequate
description of:
(a) the quality objectives;
(b) the organizational structure,
responsibilities and powers of the management
with regard to safety component quality;
(c) the examinations and tests that will be
carried out after manufacture;
(d) the means to verify the effective
operation of the quality assurance system;
(e) quality records, such as inspection
reports and test data, calibration data, reports
on the qualifications of the personnel
concerned, etc.
3.3. The notified body must assess the
quality assurance system to determine whether it
satisfies the requirements referred to in
Section 3.2. It must presume conformity with
these requirements in respect of quality
assurance systems that implement the relevant
harmonized standard (1).
The auditing team must have at least one
member with experience of assessment in the lift
technology concerned. The assessment procedure
must include a visit to the premises of the
safety component manufacturer.
The decision must be notified to the
manufacturer of the safety components. The
notification must contain the conclusions of the
examination and the reasoned assessment
decision.
3.4. The manufacturer of the safety
components must undertake to discharge the
obligations arising from the quality assurance
system as approved and to ensure that it is
maintained in an appropriate and efficient
manner.
The manufacturer of the safety components or
his authorized representative established in the
Community must keep the notified body which has
approved the quality assurance system informed
of any intended updating of the quality
assurance system.
The notified body must assess the
modifications proposed and decide whether the
modified quality assurance system still
satisfies the requirements referred to in
Section 3.2 or whether a reassessment is
required.
It must notify its decision to the
manufacturer. The notification must contain the
conclusions of the examination and the reasoned
assessment decision.
4. Surveillance under the responsibility of
the notified body
4.1. The purpose of surveillance is to make
sure that the manufacturer of the safety
component duly fulfils the obligations arising
out of the approved quality assurance system.
4.2. The manufacturer must allow the notified
body access for inspection purposes to the
inspection, testing and storage locations and
provide it with all necessary information, in
particular:
- the quality assurance system documentation,
- the technical documentation,
- the quality records, such as inspection
reports and test data, calibration data, reports
on the qualifications of the personnel
concerned, etc.
4.3. The notified body must periodically
carry out audits to ensure that the manufacturer
of the safety components maintains and applies
the quality assurance system and must provide an
audit report to the manufacturer of the safety
components.
4.4. Additionally, the notified body may pay
unexpected visits to the manufacturer of the
safety component.
At the time of such visits, the notified body
may carry out tests or have them carried out in
order to check the proper functioning of the
quality assurance system where necessary; it
must provide the manufacturer of the safety
components with a visit report and, if a test
has been carried out, with a test report.
5. The manufacturer must, for a period ending
10 years after the last safety component has
been manufactured, keep at the disposal of the
national authorities:
- the documentation referred to in the third
indent of the second paragraph of Section 3.1,
- the updating referred to in the second
paragraph of Section 3.4,
- the decisions and reports from the notified
body which are referred to in the final
paragraph of Section 3.4 and in Sections 4.3 and
4.4.
6. Each notified body must forward to the
other notified bodies the relevant information
concerning the quality assurance system
approvals issued and withdrawn.
(1) This harmonized standard will be EN
29003, supplemented where necessary to take
account of the specific features of safety
components.
ANNEX IX
FULL QUALITY ASSURANCE (module H)
1. Full quality assurance is the procedure
whereby the manufacturer of the safety component
who satisfies the obligations of Section 2
ensures and declares that the safety components
satisfy the requirements of the Directive that
apply to them and that the safety component will
enable a lift to which it is correctly fitted to
satisfy the requirements of the Directive.
The manufacturer or his authorized
representative established in the Community must
affix the CE marking to each safety component
and draw up an EC declaration of conformity. The
CE marking must be accompanied by the
identification number of the notified body
responsible for the surveillance as specified in
Section 4.
2. The manufacturer must operate an approved
quality assurance system for design, manufacture
and final inspection of the safety components
and testing as specified in Section 3 and must
be subject to surveillance as specified in
Section 4.
3. Quality assurance system
3.1. The manufacturer must lodge an
application for assessment of his quality
assurance system with a notified body. The
application must include:
- all relevant information on safety
components,
- the documentation on the quality assurance
system.
3.2. The quality assurance system must ensure
compliance of the safety components with the
requirements of the Directive that apply to them
and enable lifts to which they have been
correctly fitted to satisfy those requirements.
All the elements, requirements and provisions
adopted by the manufacturer must be documented
in a systematic and orderly manner in the form
of written measures, procedures and
instructions. This quality assurance system
documentation must ensure a common understanding
of the quality policies and procedures such as
quality programmes, plans, manuals and records.
It must contain in particular an adequate
description of:
- the quality objectives and the
organizational structure, responsibilities and
powers of the management with regard to the
design and quality of the safety components,
- the technical design specifications,
including standards, that will be applied and,
where the standards referred to in Article 5
will not be applied in full, the means that will
be used to ensure that the essential
requirements of the Directive that apply to the
safety components will be met,
- the design control and design verification
techniques, processes and systematic actions
that will be used when designing the safety
components,
- the corresponding manufacturing, quality
control and quality assurance techniques,
processes and systematic actions that will be
used,
- the examinations and tests that will be
carried out before, during and after
manufacture, and the frequency with which they
will be carried out,
- the quality records, such as inspection
reports and test data, calibration data, reports
on the qualifications of the personnel
concerned, etc.,
- the means of monitoring the achievement of
the required design and product quality and the
effective operation of the quality assurance
system.
3.3. The notified body must assess the
quality assurance system to determine whether it
satisfies the requirements referred to in
Section 3.2. It must presume compliance with
these requirements in respect of quality
assurance systems that implement the relevant
harmonized standard (1).
The auditing team must have at least one
member with experience of assessment in the lift
technology concerned. The assessment procedure
must include a visit to the manufacturer's
premises.
The decision must be notified to the
manufacturer of the safety components. The
notification must contain the conclusions of the
examination and the reasoned assessment
decision.
3.4. The manufacturer of the safety
components must undertake to discharge the
obligations arising from the quality assurance
system as approved and to ensure that it is
maintained in an appropriate and efficient
manner.
The manufacturer or his authorized
representative established in the Community must
keep the notified body which has approved the
quality assurance system informed of any
intended updating of the quality assurance
system.
The notified body must assess the
modifications proposed and decide whether the
modified quality assurance system will still
satisfy the requirements referred to in Section
3.2 or whether a reassessment is required.
It must notify its decision to the
manufacturer. The notification must contain the
conclusions of the examination and the reasoned
assessment decision.
4. Surveillance under the responsibility of
the notified body
4.1. The purpose of surveillance is to make
sure that the manufacturer of the safety
components duly fulfils the obligations arising
out of the approved quality assurance system.
4.2. The manufacturer of the safety
components must allow the notified body access
for inspection purposes to the design,
manufacture, inspection and testing, and storage
locations, and must provide it with all
necessary information, in particular:
- the quality assurance system documentation,
- the quality records provided for in the
design part of the quality system, such as
results of analyses, calculations, tests, etc.,
- the quality records provided for in the
manufacturing part of the quality assurance
system, such as inspection reports and test
data, calibration data, reports on the
qualifications of the personnel concerned, etc.
4.3. The notified body must periodically
carry out audits to make sure that the
manufacturer of the safety components maintains
and applies the quality assurance system and
must provide an audit report to the manufacturer
of the safety components.
4.4. Additionally, the notified body may pay
unexpected visits to the manufacturer of the
safety components. At the time of such visits,
the notified body may carry out tests or have
them carried out in order to check the proper
functioning of the quality assurance system
where necessary; it must provide the
manufacturer of the safety components with a
visit report and, if a test has been carried
out, with a test report.
5. The manufacturer of the safety components
or his authorized representative must, for a
period of 10 years after the last safety
component has been manufactured, keep at the
disposal of the national authorities:
- the documentation referred to in the second
indent of the second paragraph of Section 3.1,
- the updating referred to in the second
paragraph of Section 3.4,
- the decisions and reports from the notified
body which are referred to in the final
paragraph of Section 3.4 and in Sections 4.3 and
4.4.
Where neither the manufacturer of the safety
components nor his authorized representative is
established in the Community, the obligation to
keep the technical documentation available falls
to the person who places the safety component on
the Community market.
6. Each notified body must forward to the
other notified bodies the relevant information
concerning the quality assurance system
approvals issued and withdrawn.
7. The dossiers and correspondence relating
to the full quality assurance procedures must be
drawn up in one of the official languages of the
Member State where the notified body is
established or in a language acceptable to it.
(1) This harmonized standard will be EN
29001, supplemented where necessary to take
account of the specific features of safety
components.
ANNEX X
UNIT VERIFICATION (module G)
1. Unit verification is the procedure whereby
the installer of a lift ensures and declares
that a lift which is being placed on the market
and which has obtained the certificate of
conformity referred to in Section 4 complies
with the requirements of the Directive. The
installer of the lift must affix the CE marking
in the car of the lift and draw up an EC
declaration of conformity.
2. The lift installer shall apply to a
notified body of his choice for unit
verification.
The application shall contain:
- the name and address of the installer of
the lift and the location where the lift is
installed,
- a written declaration to the effect that a
similar application has not been lodged with
another notified body,
- a technical dossier.
3. The purpose of the technical dossier is to
enable the conformity of the lift with the
requirements of the Directive to be assessed and
the design, installation and operation of the
lift to be understood.
So far as relevant for conformity assessment,
the technical dossier shall contain the
following:
- a general description of the lift,
- design and manufacturing drawings and
diagrams,
- the essential requirements in question and
the solution adopted to meet them (e.g.
harmonized standard),
- the results of any tests or calculations
carried out or subcontracted by the installer of
the lift,
- a copy of the instructions for use of the
lift,
- a copy of the EC type-examination
certificates of the safety components used.
4. The notified body must examine the
technical dossier and the lift and carry out the
appropriate tests as set out in the relevant
standard(s) referred to in Article 5 of the
Directive, or equivalent tests, to ensure its
conformity with the relevant requirements of
this Directive.
If the lift meets the requirements of this
Directive, the notified body shall affix, or
cause to be affixed, its identification number
adjacent to the CE marking in accordance with
Annex III and shall draw up a certificate of
conformity relating to the tests carried out.
The notified body shall fill in the
corresponding pages of the logbook referred to
in Section 6.2 of Annex I.
If the notified body refuses to issue the
certificate of conformity, it must state in
detail its reasons for refusing and indicate how
conformity can be achieved. When the installer
of the lift reapplies for verification he must
apply to the same notified body.
5. The certificate of conformity and the
dossiers and correspondence relating to unit
verification procedures must be drawn up in an
official language of the Member State where the
notified body is established or in a language
acceptable to it.
6. The installer of the lift shall keep with
the technical dossier a copy of the certificate
of conformity for a period of 10 years from the
date on which the lift is placed on the market.
ANNEX XI
CONFORMITY TO TYPE WITH RANDOM CHECKING
(module C)
1. Conformity to type is the procedure
whereby the manufacturer of the safety
components or his authorized representative
established in the Community ensures and
declares that the safety components are in
conformity with the type as described in the EC
type certificate and satisfy the requirements of
the Directive that apply to them and enable any
lift to which they are correctly fitted to
satisfy the essential health and safety
requirements of the Directive.
The manufacturer of the safety components, or
his authorized representative established in the
Community, must affix the CE marking to each
safety component and draw up an EC declaration
of conformity.
2. The manufacturer of the safety components
must take all measures necessary to ensure that
the manufacturing process assures conformity of
the manufactured safety components with the type
as described in the EC type-examination
certificate and with the requirements of the
Directive that apply to them.
3. The manufacturer of the safety components
or his authorized representative must keep a
copy of the EC declaration of conformity for a
period of 10 years after the last safety
component has been manufactured.
Where neither the manufacturer of the safety
components nor his authorized representative is
established in the Community, the obligation to
keep the technical documentation available falls
to the person who places the safety components
on the Community market.
4. A notified body chosen by the manufacturer
must carry out or have carried out checks on
safety components at random intervals. An
adequate sample of the finished safety
components, taken on site by the notified body,
must be examined and appropriate tests as set
out in the relevant standard(s) referred to in
Article 5, or equivalent tests, must be carried
out to check the conformity of production to the
relevant requirements of the Directive. In those
cases where one or more of the safety components
checked do not conform, the notified body must
take appropriate measures.
The points to be taken into account when
checking the safety components will be defined
by joint agreement between all the notified
bodies responsible for this procedure, taking
into consideration the essential characteristics
of the safety components referred to in Annex
IV.
On the responsibility of the notified body,
the manufacturer must affix that body's
identification number during the manufacturing
process.
5. The dossiers and correspondence relating
to the random checking procedures referred to in
Section 4 must be drawn up in one of the
official languages of the Member State where the
notified body is established or in a language
acceptable to it.
ANNEX XII
PRODUCT QUALITY ASSURANCE FOR LIFTS (module
E)
1. Product quality assurance is the procedure
whereby the installer of a lift who satisfies
Section 2 ensures and declares that the lifts
installed are in conformity with the type as
described in the EC type-examination certificate
and satisfy the requirements of the Directive
that apply to them.
The installer of a lift must affix the CE
marking to each lift and draw up an EC
declaration of conformity. The CE marking must
be accompanied by the identification number of
the notified body responsible for surveillance
as specified in Section 4.
2. The installer of a lift must apply an
approved quality assurance system for final
inspection of the lift and testing as specified
in Section 3, and must be subject to
surveillance as specified in Section 4.
3. Quality assurance system
3.1. The installer of a lift must lodge an
application for assessment of his quality
assurance system for the lifts concerned with a
notified body of his choice.
The application must include:
- all relevant information for the lifts
envisaged,
- the documentation on the quality assurance
system,
- the technical documentation on the approved
lifts and a copy of the EC type-examination
certificates.
3.2. Under the quality assurance system, each
lift must be examined and appropriate tests as
set out in the relevant standards referred to in
Article 5 or equivalent tests must be carried
out in order to ensure its conformity to the
relevant requirements of the Directive.
All the elements, requirements and provisions
adopted by the installer of a lift must be
documented in a systematic and orderly manner in
the form of written measures, procedures and
instructions. This quality assurance system
documentation must ensure a common understanding
of the quality programmes, plans, manuals and
quality records.
It must contain in particular an adequate
description of:
(a) the quality objectives,
(b) the organizational structure,
responsibilities and powers of the management
with regard to lift quality,
(c) the examinations and tests that will be
carried out before placing on the market,
including at the very least the tests laid down
in Annex VI, 4 (b),
(d) the means to verify the effective
operation of the quality assurance system,
(e) quality records, such as inspection
reports and test data, calibration data, reports
on the qualifications of the personnel
concerned, etc.
3.3. The notified body must assess the
quality assurance system to determine whether it
satisfies the requirements referred to in
Section 3.2. It must presume conformity with
these requirements in respect of quality
assurance systems that implement the relevant
harmonized standard (1).
The auditing team must have at least one
member with experience of assessment in the lift
technology concerned. The assessment procedure
must include a visit to the premises of the lift
installer and a visit to the installation site.
The decision must be notified to the lift
installer. The notification must contain the
conclusions of the examination and the reasoned
assessment decision.
3.4. The installer of a lift must undertake
to discharge the obligations arising from the
quality assurance system as approved and to
ensure that it is maintained in an appropriate
and efficient manner.
The installer of a lift must keep the
notified body which has approved the quality
assurance system informed of any intended
updating of the quality assurance system.
The notified body must assess the
modifications proposed and decide whether the
modified quality assurance system still
satisfies the requirements referred to in
Section 3.2 or whether a reassessment is
required.
It must notify its decision to the lift
installer. The notification must contain the
conclusions of the examination and the reasoned
assessment decision.
4. Surveillance under the responsibility of
the notified body
4.1. The purpose of surveillance is to make
sure that the installer of a lift duly fulfils
the obligations arising out of the approved
quality assurance system.
4.2. The installer of a lift must allow the
notified body access for inspection purposes to
the inspection and testing locations and provide
it with all necessary information, in
particular:
- the quality assurance system documentation,
- the technical documentation,
- the quality records, such as inspection
reports and test data, calibration data, reports
on the qualifications of the personnel
concerned, etc.
4.3. The notified body must periodically
carry out audits to ensure that the installer of
a lift maintains and applies the quality
assurance system and must provide an audit
report to the lift installer.
4.4. Additionally, the notified body may pay
unexpected visits to the lift installation
sites.
At the time of such visits, the notified body
may carry out tests or have them carried out in
order to check the proper functioning of the
quality assurance system where necessary and of
the lift; it must provide the lift installer
with a visit report and, if a test has been
carried out, with a test report.
5. The installer of a lift must, for a period
of 10 years after the last lift has been
manufactured, keep at the disposal of the
national authorities:
- the documentation referred to in the third
indent of the second paragraph of Section 3.1,
- the updating referred to in the second
paragraph of Section 3.4,
- the decisions and reports from the notified
body which are referred to in the final
paragraph of Section 3.4 and in Sections 4.3 and
4.4.
6. Each notified body must forward to the
other notified bodies the relevant information
concerning the quality assurance system
approvals issued and withdrawn.
(1) This harmonized standard will be EN
29003, supplemented where necessary to take
account of the specific features of the lifts.
ANNEX XIII
FULL QUALITY ASSURANCE FOR LIFTS (module H)
1. Full quality assurance is the procedure
whereby the installer of a lift who satisfies
the obligations of Section 2 ensures and
declares that lifts satisfy the requirements of
the Directive that apply to them.
The installer of a lift must affix the CE
marking on each lift and draw up an EC
declaration of conformity. The CE marking must
be accompanied by the identification number of
the notified body responsible for the
surveillance as specified in Section 4.
2. The installer of a lift must operate an
approved quality assurance system for design,
manufacture, assembly, installation and final
inspection of the lifts and testing as specified
in Section 3 and must be subject to surveillance
as specified in Section 4.
3. Quality assurance system
3.1. The installer of a lift must lodge an
application for assessment of his quality
assurance system with a notified body.
The application must include:
- all relevant information on the lifts, in
particular information which makes for an
understanding of the relationship between the
design and operation of the lift and enables
conformity with the requirements of the
Directive to be assessed,
- the documentation on the quality assurance
system.
3.2. The quality assurance system must ensure
conformity of the lifts with the requirements of
the Directive that apply to them.
All the elements, requirements and provisions
adopted by the lift installer must be documented
in a systematic and orderly manner in the form
of written measures, procedures and
instructions. This quality assurance system
documentation must ensure a common understanding
of the procedures such as programmes, plans,
manuals and quality records.
It must contain in particular an adequate
description of:
- the quality objectives and the
organizational structure, responsibilities and
powers of the management with regard to the
design and quality of the lifts,
- the technical design specifications,
including standards that will be applied and,
where the standards referred to in Article 5 of
the Directive will not be applied in full, the
means that will be used to ensure that the
requirements of the Directive that apply to the
lifts will be met,
- the design control and design verification
techniques, processes and systematic actions
that will be used when designing the lifts,
- the examinations and tests that will be
carried out on acceptance of the supplies of
materials, components and sub-assemblies,
- the corresponding assembly, installation
and quality control techniques, processes and
systematic actions that will be used,
- the examinations and tests that will be
carried out before (inspection of installation
conditions: shaft, housing of machinery, etc.),
during and after installation (including at the
very least the tests laid down in Annex VI,
Section 4 (b)),
- the quality records, such as inspection
reports and test data, calibration data, reports
on the qualifications of the personnel
concerned, etc.,
- the means of monitoring the achievement of
the required design and installation quality and
the effective operation of the quality assurance
system.
3.3. Design inspection
When the design is not entirely in accordance
with harmonized standards, the notified body
must ascertain whether the design conforms to
the provisions of the Directive and, if it does,
issue an 'EC design examination certificate' to
the installer, stating the limits of the
certificate's validity and giving the details
required for identification of the approved
design.
3.4. Assessment of the quality assurance
system
The notified body must assess the quality
assurance system to determine whether it
satisfies the requirements referred to in
Section 3.2. It must presume compliance with
these requirements in respect of quality
assurance systems that implement the relevant
harmonized standard (1).
The auditing team must have at least one
member with experience of assessment in the lift
technology concerned. The assessment procedure
must include a visit to the lift installer's
premises and a visit to an installation site.
The decision must be notified to the lift
installer. The notification must contain the
conclusions of the examination and the reasoned
assessment decision.
3.5. The lift installer must undertake to
discharge the obligations arising from the
quality assurance system as approved and to
ensure that it is maintained in an appropriate
and efficient manner.
The lift installer must keep the notified
body that has approved the quality assurance
system informed of any intended updating of the
quality assurance system.
The notified body must assess the
modifications proposed and decide whether the
modified quality assurance system will still
satisfy the requirements referred to in Section
3.2 or whether a reassessment is required.
It must notify its decision to the lift
installer. The notification must contain the
conclusions of the examination and the reasoned
assessment decision.
4. Surveillance under the responsibility of
the notified body
4.1. The purpose of surveillance is to make
sure that the installer of a lift duly fulfils
the obligations arising out of the approved
quality assurance system.
4.2. The lift installer must allow the
notified body access for inspection purposes to
the design, manufacture, assembly, installation,
inspection and testing and storage locations,
and must provide it with all necessary
information, in particular:
- the quality assurance system documentation,
- the quality records provided for in the
design part of the quality assurance system,
such as results of analyses, calculations,
tests, etc.,
- the quality records provided for in the
part of the quality assurance system concerning
acceptance of supplies and installation, such as
inspection reports and test data, calibration
data, reports on the qualifications of the
personnel concerned, etc.
4.3. The notified body must periodically
carry out audits to make sure that the installer
of a lift maintains and applies the quality
assurance system and must provide the installer
with an audit report.
4.4. Additionally, the notified body may pay
unexpected visits to the premises of a lift
installer or to the assembly site of a lift. At
the time of such visits, the notified body may
carry out tests or have them carried out in
order to check the proper functioning of the
quality assurance system where necessary; it
must provide the lift installer with a visit
report and, if a test has been carried out, with
a test report.
5. The installer of a lift must, for a period
of 10 years after the lift has been placed on
the market, keep at the disposal of the national
authorities:
- the documentation referred to in the second
indent of the second paragraph of Section 3.1,
- the updating referred to in the second
paragraph of Section 3.5,
- the decisions and reports from the notified
body which are referred to in the final
paragraph of Section 3.5 and in Sections 4.3 and
4.4.
Where the installer is not established in the
Community, this obligation falls to the notified
body.
6. Each notified body shall forward to the
other notified bodies the relevant information
concerning the quality assurance systems issued
and withdrawn.
7. The dossiers and correspondence relating
to the full quality assurance procedures must be
drawn up in one of the official languages of the
Member State where the notified body is
established or in a language acceptable to it.
(1) This harmonized standard will be EN
29001, supplemented where necessary to take
account of the specific features of the lifts.
ANNEX XIV
PRODUCTION QUALITY ASSURANCE (module D)
1. Production quality assurance is the
procedure whereby the installer of a lift who
satisfies the obligations of Section 2 ensures
and declares that the lifts satisfy the
requirements of the Directive that apply to
them. The installer of the lift must affix the
CE marking to each lift and draw up a written
declaration of conformity. The CE marking must
be accompanied by the identification symbol of
the notified body responsible for surveillance
as specified in Section 4.
2. The installer of the lift must operate an
approved quality assurance system for
production, installation, final lift inspection
and testing as specified in Section 3 and is
subject to surveillance as specified in Section
4.
3. Quality assurance system
3.1. The installer must lodge an application
for assessment of his quality assurance system
with a notified body of his choice.
The application must include:
- all relevant information for the lifts,
- the documentation concerning the quality
assurance system,
- the technical documentation of the approved
type and a copy of the EC type-examination
certificate.
3.2. The quality assurance system must ensure
compliance of the lifts with the requirements of
the Directive that apply to them.
All the elements, requirements and provisions
adopted by the installer of a lift shall be
documented in a systematic and orderly manner in
the form of written policies, procedures and
instructions. The quality assurance system
documentation must permit a consistent
interpretation of the quality programmes, plans,
manuals and records.
It must contain in particular an adequate
description of:
- the quality objectives and the
organizational structure, responsibilities and
powers of the management with regard to the
quality of the lifts,
- the manufacturing, quality control and
quality assurance techniques, processes and
systematic actions that will be used,
- the examinations and tests that will be
carried out before, during and after
installation (1),
- the quality records, such as inspection
reports and test data, calibration data,
qualification reports of the personnel
concerned, etc.,
- the means to monitor the achievement of the
required lift quality and the effective
operation of the quality assurance system.
3.3. The notified body must assess the
quality assurance system to determine whether it
satisfies the requirements referred to in
Section 3.2. It presumes conformity with these
requirements in respect of quality assurance
systems that implement the relevant harmonized
standard (2).
The auditing team must have at least one
member with experience of assessment in the lift
technology concerned. The assessment procedure
must include an inspection visit to the
installer's premises.
The decision must be notified to the
installer. The notification must contain the
conclusions of the examination and the reasoned
assessment decision.
3.4. The installer must undertake to
discharge the obligations arising from the
quality assurance system as approved and to
ensure that it is maintained in an appropriate
and efficient manner.
The installer shall keep the notified body
that has approved the quality assurance system
informed of any intended updating of the quality
assurance system.
The notified body must assess the
modifications proposed and decide whether the
modified quality assurance system will still
satisfy the requirements referred to in Section
3.2 or whether a re-assessment is required.
It must notify its decision to the installer.
The notification must contain the conclusions of
the examination and the reasoned assessment
decision.
4. Surveillance under the responsibility of
the notified body
4.1. The purpose of surveillance is to make
sure that the installer duly fulfils the
obligations arising out of the approved quality
assurance system.
4.2. The installer must allow the notified
body access for inspection purposes to the
manufacture, inspection, assembly, installation,
testing and storage locations and must provide
it with all necessary information, in
particular:
- the quality assurance system documentation,
- the quality records, such as inspection
reports and test data, calibration data, reports
on the qualifications of the personnel
concerned, etc.
4.3. The notified body must periodically
carry out audits to make sure that the installer
maintains and applies the quality assurance
system and must provide an audit report to the
installer.
4.4. Additionally the notified body may pay
unexpected visits to the installer. During such
visits the notified body may carry out, or cause
to be carried out, tests to verify that the
quality assurance system is functioning
correctly, if necessary. The notified body must
provide the installer with a visit report and,
if a test has taken place, with a test report.
5. The installer must, for a period of 10
years after the last lift has been manufactured,
keep at the disposal of the national
authorities:
- the documentation referred to in the second
indent of Section 3.1,
- the updating referred to in the second
paragraph of Section 3.4,
- the decisions and reports from the notified
body which are referred to in the final
paragraph of Section 3.4, Sections 4.3 and 4.4.
6. Each notified body must give the other
notified bodies the relevant information
concerning the quality assurance system
approvals issued and withdrawn.
7. Documentation and correspondence relating
to the production quality assurance procedures
shall be drawn up in an official language of the
Member State in which the notified body is
established or in a language acceptable to it.
(1) These tests include at least the tests
provided for in Annex VI, Section 4 (b).
(2) This harmonized standard will be EN
29002, supplemented where necessary to take
account of the specific nature of the lifts.
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