Material Hoist — The Complete Guide to Types, Specifications, Capacity & Choosing the Right Unit for Your Site
On any active construction site above three storeys, moving heavy materials — concrete, steel, bricks, roofing sheets, scaffolding, and MEP equipment — between floor levels manually is not just slow, it is dangerous and expensive. Workers carrying heavy loads up stairs suffer more injuries, fatigue faster, and complete less productive work. A material hoist eliminates this problem entirely, moving tonnes of materials vertically in minutes rather than hours, slashing labour costs and accelerating your build programme.
Jaypee® has manufactured material hoists for over 42 years, supplying construction projects across India and in more than 50 countries worldwide. This complete guide covers everything you need to know — what a material hoist is, how it works, the different types available, full technical specifications of our JMH range, safety requirements, installation, maintenance, and how to select the right unit for your project. To go directly to our product range, view our full material hoist range here.
What Is a Material Hoist? Definition, Purpose & How It Works
A material hoist — also called a goods hoist, builders hoist, or construction goods lift — is a temporary mechanical lifting system installed on the exterior of a building or structure during the construction phase. Its sole purpose is to transport heavy construction materials, equipment, and goods vertically between ground level and working floor levels. It is fundamentally different from a passenger hoist in one critical respect: a material hoist is certified for goods only and must never carry people.
Like passenger hoists, modern material hoists use the rack and pinion drive system as the primary lifting mechanism. Here is how the system operates:
- The mast — a modular steel tower assembled from bolted sections — is erected vertically alongside the building and anchored to the structure at regular intervals. It provides the guide rail for the platform’s vertical travel.
- The rack — a precision-machined toothed steel rail fixed to the mast — meshes with the pinion gears on the drive unit.
- The motor and gearbox assembly drives the pinion gears, which rotate against the fixed rack and propel the platform upward or downward in a controlled, smooth motion.
- The platform or cage — an open or enclosed steel deck — carries the materials and is guided by rollers running along the mast. The platform size is designed for construction material dimensions: pallets, steel bundles, scaffold boards, concrete kibbles.
- Safety devices including limit switches, overload protection, and mechanical brakes ensure safe operation throughout the travel range.
The rack and pinion system is preferred over wire-rope hoists because it offers more precise speed control, better reliability in dusty construction environments, and superior safety characteristics. For a full comparison of the two hoist types and how to decide which you need, read our guide on passenger hoist vs material hoist — key differences.
Types of Material Hoist — Which Configuration Is Right for Your Project?
Material hoists come in several configurations to suit different project scales, material types, and site layouts. Choosing the right type ensures maximum productivity without over-specifying and paying for capacity you do not need.
1. Single platform material hoist
The most common configuration — a single open platform running on a single mast. Suitable for most mid-rise construction projects up to 150 metres where one cycle per load is sufficient to meet material demand. Easy to install, low groundspace requirement, and cost-effective for projects up to 12 months duration.
2. Enclosed cage material hoist
An enclosed cage (rather than an open platform) is used where materials need protection from weather during transit — particularly important on coastal sites or in monsoon conditions — or where the site perimeter does not permit open-platform use at low heights due to ground-level access constraints. Jaypee® offers both open platform and enclosed cage configurations across our JMH range.
3. High-capacity heavy-duty material hoist
For projects requiring the movement of very heavy single loads — structural steel sections, heavy MEP plant, large concrete formwork panels — a heavy-duty material hoist with a rated payload of 2,000 kg+ and an oversized platform is required. Our JMH 200 and specialist heavy-duty variants are engineered for these applications.
4. Material hoist alongside passenger hoist (combined site solution)
On large construction projects, the most productive configuration is running a dedicated material hoist and a passenger hoist in parallel on the same or adjacent masts. This separates people and goods traffic entirely, maximises throughput on both streams, and is the configuration used on most major high-rise construction sites worldwide. Jaypee® supplies combined passenger and material hoist packages with coordinated installation for maximum efficiency.
5. Rack and pinion material-only hoist
Our material-only rack and pinion hoist is a lighter-duty variant designed specifically for projects where only goods transportation is required and a full passenger-rated system is not needed. Lower initial investment, faster installation, and suitable for building heights up to 100 metres.
Jaypee® Material Hoist Specifications — JMH Range
The Jaypee® material hoist JMH range is manufactured to ISO 9001:2015 quality standards and carries CE marking for international use. Every unit is factory load-tested before dispatch.
| Model | Payload | Platform Size | Speed | Max Height | Drive Power |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| JMH 100 | 1,000 kg (1 ton) | 2.5 m × 1.4 m | 25–40 m/min | 150 m | 2 × 7.5 kW |
| JMH 200 | 2,000 kg (2 ton) | 3.2 m × 1.5 m | 33–46 m/min | 200 m | 2 × 11 kW |
| JMH 200H | 2,000 kg | 3.2 m × 1.5 m | 46–63 m/min | 300 m | 2 × 15 kW |
| JMH 300 | 3,000 kg | 4.0 m × 1.6 m | 40–60 m/min | 300 m | 2 × 18.5 kW |
| JMH 500 | 5,000 kg | 4.5 m × 1.8 m | 40–63 m/min | 450 m | 3 × 22 kW |
All JMH models are available with optional accessories including loading ramps, remote controls, extended platforms, weather enclosures, and advanced drive frequency inverters for smooth speed control. Contact our technical sales team for a model recommendation specific to your project requirements.
What Materials Can a Material Hoist Transport?
A material hoist is designed to handle virtually any construction material that fits within the platform dimensions and does not exceed the rated payload. Common materials transported include:
Structural and civil materials
- Ready-mix concrete in kibble buckets (typically 250–500 litre capacity)
- Steel reinforcement bars, mesh, and structural steel sections
- Precast concrete panels and stair flights (within platform capacity)
- Formwork panels, props, and falsework components
- Concrete blocks, bricks, and masonry units on pallets
Finishing and fit-out materials
- Plasterboard sheets and ceiling grid components
- Floor screed and levelling compound in bags
- Roofing tiles, membrane rolls, and insulation panels
- Ceramic and porcelain tiles on pallets
- Timber and engineered wood products
MEP and specialist equipment
- Electrical cable drums and containment systems
- HVAC ductwork, fan coil units, and air handling equipment
- Plumbing pipe sections and sanitary ware
- Lift machine room equipment and escalator components
- Window and curtain wall glazing units
If your material is unusually heavy, long, or awkwardly shaped, contact our technical team before specifying. We can advise on platform extensions, load spreading, and rigging arrangements to handle non-standard loads safely.
Material Hoist Safety: Standards, Requirements & What to Verify
Because a material hoist operates in an active construction environment — often above occupied areas of the site — safety standards are stringent. Every material hoist must meet the following minimum requirements:
International safety standards for material hoists
| Standard | Region | What It Covers |
|---|---|---|
| EN 12159:2012 | Europe / International | Builders hoists with guided cages for persons and materials |
| EN 12158-1 | Europe | Construction hoists for goods — part 1: hoists with accessible platforms |
| ANSI A10.4 | USA | Personnel hoists and employee elevators during construction |
| BS 7212:2016 | UK | Code of practice for safe use of construction hoists |
| ISO 9001:2015 | International | Quality management system for manufacturing |
Mandatory safety devices on every material hoist
- Upper and lower travel limit switches: Cut power to the drive when the platform reaches the extremes of its permitted travel range — preventing over-travel and mast damage.
- Overload protection: Prevents departure when load exceeds rated capacity — protects the structure, mast, and drive system from stress damage.
- Slack rope / mast departure detection: Detects if the platform loses contact with the mast or if the rack-pinion engagement fails and triggers an automatic stop.
- Landing gates and interlocks at every level: Each landing level must have a gate that prevents access to the hoist shaft when the platform is not present at that level.
- Emergency stop at base and remote: Allows immediate power cut from ground level or via remote control in an emergency.
- Anti-collision device (for adjacent hoists): On sites with multiple hoists on adjacent masts, anti-collision systems prevent simultaneous occupation of the same height zone.
For a complete breakdown of what inspectors check and the legal requirements in India and internationally, read our full guide on construction hoist safety standards for site managers.
Material Hoist Installation: Site Preparation Guide
Installing a material hoist requires careful site preparation to ensure structural integrity, safe operation, and regulatory compliance. Here is what is involved:
Ground bearing and foundation
The mast base frame must be placed on a foundation with adequate bearing capacity to support the combined weight of the mast, platform, and maximum rated load under dynamic conditions. For the JMH 200, the minimum foundation size is typically 2.2 m × 2.2 m × 0.4 m reinforced concrete. A ground investigation report may be required for soft ground conditions. Full foundation design drawings are provided by Jaypee® for every project.
Mast clearance and site layout
The mast must be positioned to allow clear access for material loading at ground level and safe unloading at each working floor. A minimum clear working area of 3.5 m × 3.5 m is required at the base of the mast for loading operations. The platform loading edge should align with the building floor slab edge within a maximum 300 mm gap at each landing level.
Structural anchoring
The mast must be tied to the building structure at maximum 6–9 metre intervals using approved tie brackets and anchor bolts. The tie design must be verified by a structural engineer for the specific building structure type and wind loading zone. Jaypee® provides standard tie bracket designs and can arrange engineer sign-off for non-standard structural conditions.
Electrical requirements
All Jaypee® JMH material hoists require a dedicated three-phase 415V / 50Hz power supply at the hoist base. The supply must be rated to the full connected load of the drive motors, protected by an RCD and motor circuit breakers, and terminated in a lockable isolator at the base of the mast. Cable routing must be protected from site vehicle damage and weather.
Step-by-step installation timeline
| Stage | Activity | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Site survey and foundation design | 1–2 days |
| 2 | Foundation pour and cure | 4–6 days |
| 3 | Base frame and first 3 mast sections | Half day |
| 4 | Full mast erection to working height | 1 day per 50 m |
| 5 | Platform installation and drive connection | 1 day |
| 6 | Electrical connections and controls setup | Half day |
| 7 | Load testing at 100% and 125% SWL | Half day |
| 8 | Operator briefing and site handover | 2 hours |
Our installation teams operate across India from our offices in Kolkata, Delhi, and Mumbai. For international projects, we coordinate installation through our certified service partner network. Download our full step-by-step material hoist installation guide for complete site preparation requirements.
How to Calculate the Right Material Hoist Capacity for Your Project
Undersizing your material hoist creates bottlenecks that cost far more in lost productivity than the saving from specifying a smaller unit. Use this method to calculate the minimum hoist capacity and throughput required:
Step 1: Identify your peak material demand
Calculate the maximum daily weight of materials that must be moved to upper floors. For example: a 20-storey residential building with concrete pours every two weeks, daily brickwork of 5 tonnes, and ongoing MEP materials of 2 tonnes per day has a peak demand of approximately 7–8 tonnes per working day.
Step 2: Calculate required cycle throughput
Divide your daily material tonnage by the payload per trip and the number of available working hours. For a JMH 200 (2,000 kg payload) at a building height of 80 m (cycle time approximately 6 minutes), you can complete roughly 10 cycles per hour — a throughput of 20 tonnes per hour at full utilisation. Even at 60% utilisation, this comfortably handles the example project above.
Step 3: Check platform size against your largest single load
The platform dimensions must accommodate your largest single load — for example, a full pallet of bricks (1.2 m × 1.0 m) or a standard formwork panel (2.4 m × 1.2 m). Check platform dimensions against your most common load types before specifying. Our team can help you match platform size to your material schedule. Contact us for a free capacity calculation.
Step 4: Add buffer capacity
Always specify at least 20% more capacity than your calculated peak demand. Construction projects inevitably have acceleration phases — concrete pours, steelwork packages, fit-out drives — where material demand spikes above the average. An undersized hoist becomes the critical path bottleneck exactly when you can least afford it.
Material Hoist Maintenance Schedule — Keeping Your Hoist Compliant
A material hoist operating in a construction environment is exposed to concrete dust, steel filings, weather, and continuous heavy loading. A robust maintenance programme is essential to prevent breakdowns, maintain safety, and comply with statutory inspection requirements.
| Frequency | Who | Key Activities |
|---|---|---|
| Daily (pre-use) | Operator | Visual check of mast, platform, limit switches, landing gates, and controls. Test emergency stop. Check for unusual noise during first cycle. |
| Weekly | Supervisor / operator | Rack and pinion lubrication, check mast joint bolts, inspect anchor ties, clean drive unit air vents, test overload sensor function. |
| Monthly | Competent engineer | Full mechanical inspection — pinion wear check, brake adjustment, motor inspection, electrical connection check, mast section bolt torque check. |
| Quarterly | Jaypee® service engineer | Load test at 125% SWL, brake performance test, full electrical safety check, anti-collision device test, inspection report and service certificate issued. |
| Annual | Certified inspector | Full statutory examination — structural assessment of mast, fatigue check on tie brackets, motor and gearbox condition assessment, compliance certification renewal. |
Jaypee® offers planned maintenance contracts for all material hoists we supply, covering monthly, quarterly, and annual inspections with a fixed cost per inspection. This ensures you stay compliant, avoids unexpected repair costs, and keeps your programme on track. For our full maintenance checklist, visit our material hoist maintenance guide or contact our service team.
Material Hoist vs Goods Lift vs Freight Elevator — What Is the Difference?
Construction buyers are often confused by terminology. Here is a clear breakdown:
| Term | Where Used | Key Distinction |
|---|---|---|
| Material hoist | India, Middle East, International | Temporary construction equipment, rack and pinion, exterior mounted, goods only |
| Goods hoist | UK, Australia | Same as material hoist — terminology difference only |
| Builders hoist | UK, Australia | Can refer to either passenger or goods — check certification type |
| Freight elevator | USA | Usually refers to a permanent elevator in a completed building, not a temporary construction unit |
| Construction hoist | International (general) | Umbrella term covering both passenger and material hoists used during construction |
When specifying or purchasing, always check the certification — EN 12158 (goods only) or EN 12159 (persons and goods) — not just the product name. Jaypee® can supply both types and provide full certification documentation for any market. View our full certified material hoist range here.
Frequently Asked Questions About Material Hoists
1.Can a material hoist carry people?
No — never. A material hoist is certified for goods only and must never carry persons. It does not have the overspeed governor, anti-fall safety devices, or structural ratings required for personnel transportation. Using a material hoist to carry workers is illegal under all major safety standards and extremely dangerous. If you need to carry both workers and materials, you need a passenger hoist.
Jaypee®’s material hoist range — the JMH series — is the result of over four decades of engineering experience, real-world project feedback, and continuous product development.
From a single-platform JMH 100 on a mid-rise residential project to a JMH 500 on a 300-metre infrastructure build, we have the right solution for your site. Explore our material hoist range, read our comparison guide on passenger hoist vs material hoist, or speak to our technical team today for a free site assessment and no-obligation quote.