Course Content
GATE Architecture & Planning (AR) — Preparation Course

LESSON 6.4 — Electrical Systems and Vertical Transportation


§A — Electrical Distribution: Generation to Consumer

§A.1 The Supply Chain

India’s electricity supply follows a stepwise voltage transformation chain. Understanding each link matters for building services design — specifically to determine at what voltage a building receives supply, and whether an on-site transformer is required.

Power Station (Generation)
        ↓
~25 kV (generated)
        ↓
Step-up transformer → 132 / 220 / 400 kV (HT national grid)
        ↓   Long-distance transmission (minimise I²R losses at HV)
Regional/State Grid
        ↓
Step-down at grid substation → 33 kV / 11 kV (primary distribution)
        ↓
Local substation (urban)
        ↓
Step-down → 400 V three-phase / 230 V single-phase
        ↓   (per IS 12360:1988 — Voltage Bands for Electrical Installations)
Consumer Premises (small to medium buildings)

Why high voltage for transmission? Power loss in cables is proportional to I²R. Transmitting at very high voltage (high V → low I for the same power) dramatically reduces transmission losses over long distances.

Large buildings — on-site transformer:
Buildings with total connected loads exceeding approximately 100 kW, or buildings in certain occupancy categories (large hospitals, shopping centres, institutional campuses, industrial facilities), receive supply at 11 kV directly from the local substation. They must install their own on-site step-down transformer to convert 11 kV → 400/230 V for internal distribution.

Building Scale Supply Voltage On-site Transformer
Small residential / shop 230 V single-phase Not required
Medium residential / commercial 400 V three-phase Not required
Large commercial / institutional / industrial 11 kV HT supply Required — 11 kV → 400 V on-site

§A.2 Internal Distribution in Multi-Storey Buildings

Rising main (busbar trunking): In buildings with multiple floors, a vertical copper busbar assembly enclosed in insulated trunking distributes power from the main LV switchboard (typically in a ground-floor substation room) to each floor via tap-off units.

Critical safety requirement: Fire barriers must be installed at each floor level within the busbar chamber to prevent fire and smoke propagation vertically through the busbar duct — a mandatory NBC 2016 requirement for life safety.

Cable identification — Indian wiring convention (IS 732:1989 / NBC 2016):

Conductor Colour
Phase (live) Red
Protective earth Green
Neutral Black

Cable burial depths (IS 732:1989):

Location Minimum Depth
Below roads and carriageways 750 mm
Below open (non-trafficked) ground 450 mm

§A.3 Transformers — Key Principles

A transformer transfers electrical energy between two circuits through electromagnetic induction. The laminated silicon-steel core links the primary and secondary windings magnetically while physically isolating them.

Why laminated core? A solid steel core would allow large eddy currents to circulate, generating heat and wasting energy. Lamination (thin insulated sheets) breaks these current paths, reducing eddy current losses.

Voltage transformation law: V₁/V₂ = N₁/N₂ (turns ratio)

Step-down on-site: 11,000 V → 400 V requires a turns ratio of 27.5:1.


§A.4 Earthing and Circuit Protection

TT earthing system: Standard residential and commercial earthing in India; a copper earth rod driven into the ground provides the earth reference electrode for the installation.

Residual Current Device (RCD):
– Monitors the current balance between live and neutral conductors.
– If the difference (leakage current) exceeds 30 mA, trips the circuit within 30 milliseconds.
– Rationale: 30 mA / 30 ms is the threshold below which the risk of cardiac fibrillation is acceptably low for brief exposures (per IEC 61008).
– Location: Consumer unit (distribution board); mandatory for socket circuits in wet locations.

Electrical line clearances from buildings (NBC 2016 / Indian Electricity Rules):

Line Type Voltage Vertical Clearance Horizontal Clearance
LV / MV Up to 650 V 2.50 m 1.20 m
HV Up to 11 kV 3.70 m 1.20 m
HV Above 11 kV to 33 kV 3.70 m 2.00 m
EHV Above 33 kV +0.3 m per 33 kV +0.3 m per 33 kV

§B — DG Backup (Awareness Level)

§B.1 When DG Sets Are Required

A Diesel Generator (DG) set provides backup power when the mains supply fails. NBC 2016 Part 4 and Part 8 require emergency/standby power for specific systems and building types.

Mandatory DG backup triggers (awareness):

System / Building Type DG Backup Requirement
Firefighting lift Mandatory — dual supply (mains + generator); cannot operate without power during fires
Wet riser booster pumps Mandatory — standby pump on independent electrical supply or diesel engine
Fire alarm and detection system Secondary power supply (battery or capacitor); generator supplements for long-duration events
Emergency lighting (escape routes) Standby power for minimum 3 hours (NBC Part 4)
Hospitals / ICU / operating theatres Standby generator; typically ≤ 15-second switchover (IS 14665 / NBC Part 8)
High-rise buildings > 45 m Emergency power for lifts, pumps, and fire systems

DG sizing rule of thumb: Generator capacity ≥ total essential loads (fire pumps + firefighting lift + emergency lighting + critical HVAC) with 20–25% standby margin.

Location requirements: DG rooms must be at ground level or accessible basement; adequate ventilation for combustion air and exhaust; acoustic enclosure recommended (NBC Part 8).


§C — Lighting: Lux Levels and the Lumen Method

§C.1 Photometric Terminology

Term Symbol Unit Definition
Luminous Intensity I Candela (cd) Luminous flux emitted per unit solid angle
Luminous Flux Φ Lumen (lm) Total light power emitted by a source per second
Illuminance E Lux (lm/m²) Luminous flux incident on a surface per unit area
Luminance L cd/m² Apparent brightness of a surface in a given direction
CCT Kelvin (K) Colour appearance: warm < 3,300 K; neutral 3,300–5,300 K; cool > 5,300 K
CRI 0–100 Colour rendering accuracy vs. reference light source

§C.2 Recommended Illuminance by Space Type (IS 3646 / NBC 2016)

Space Type Recommended Illuminance (lux) Notes
Corridors and stairways 100–150 Circulation; safety minimum
Toilet / washroom 100–200 Personal hygiene tasks
Residential living room 150–300 General domestic activity
Classroom 300 IS 3646 recommended; min DF 2%
Drawing / draughting office 500 Fine visual task
General office (open plan) 300–500 Computer work; reading
Hospital ward (general) 100–200 Patient comfort; lower at night
Hospital examination / operating table 1,000–10,000 Surgical precision
Retail / merchandising display 500–1,000 Visual appeal; product differentiation
Library reading room 300–500 Sustained reading
Sports hall (general) 300 Training level
Sports hall (competition with TV) 1,000–2,000 TV broadcast requirement
Factory (coarse assembly) 150–200 General industrial
Factory (fine assembly / inspection) 500–1,000 Precision work
Emergency lighting (escape routes) 1 lux minimum at floor level NBC Part 4; maintained during mains failure

Exam anchor: Classroom = 300 lux; Drawing office = 500 lux; these are the two most commonly tested values. Emergency lighting at escape routes = 1 lux minimum.


§C.3 The Lumen Method (Utilisation Factor Method)

The standard formula for calculating the number of luminaires needed to achieve a target maintained illuminance on the working plane:

$$boxed{N = frac{E times A}{F times U times M}}$$

Where:
N = number of lamps (luminaires)
E = required illuminance (lux)
A = area of working plane (m²)
F = luminous flux per lamp (lumens) — from manufacturer’s data
U = utilisation factor — fraction of lamp flux reaching the working plane; depends on room geometry (Room Index) and surface reflectances (0.3–0.7 typical)
M = maintenance factor — accounts for lamp depreciation and dirt accumulation (typically 0.7–0.9)

Lambert’s Cosine Law — for oblique incidence:

$$E = frac{I times costheta}{d^2}$$

Where I = luminous intensity (cd), θ = angle from the normal to the surface, d = distance (m). A surface at 60° from the beam receives cos 60° = 0.5 of the normal illuminance.

Worked example: A classroom 10 m × 8 m requires 300 lux maintained illuminance. Each luminaire produces 3,200 lumens. U = 0.60, M = 0.80.

N = (300 × 80) / (3,200 × 0.60 × 0.80) = 24,000 / 1,536 = 15.6 → 16 luminaires


§C.4 Lamp Technology Comparison (Awareness)

Lamp Type Typical Efficacy (lm/W) Colour Rendering Life (hours) Best Use
Incandescent / GLS 8–15 Excellent (CRI ~100) 1,000 Largely phased out (Energy Conservation Act)
Halogen 15–25 Excellent 2,000–4,000 Display, accent (high heat output)
Fluorescent (T8, T5) 60–90 Good (CRI 80–90) 10,000–20,000 Offices, classrooms
Compact Fluorescent (CFL) 40–70 Good 8,000–12,000 Residential replacement for GLS
Metal Halide (HID) 80–120 Good–excellent 6,000–20,000 High-bay industrial, sports halls
LED 80–200 Good–excellent (CRI 80–95+) 25,000–50,000 All applications; dominant modern standard

LED efficacy is 10–20× incandescent at equivalent output. This is a frequent GATE comparison question.


§D — Lifts: Types, Speed, and Selection

§D.1 Lift Planning Principles

Central location: Lift cores should be centrally positioned to minimise horizontal walking distance from all parts of the floor plate.

Grouping: 4–6 lifts in a common lobby; grouped lifts share a single call button system, reducing waiting time through coordinated dispatch.

Express lifts: In buildings exceeding approximately 15 storeys, express lifts bypass lower floors and serve upper zones directly, reducing round-trip time and improving service capacity for taller buildings.

5-minute handling capacity target: The standard design criterion for offices is to transport 15–25% of building population within a 5-minute peak period (IS 14665).


§D.2 Lift Types — Comparative Table

Type Drive System Mechanism Speed Range Max Travel Applications Key Limitation
Electric traction (geared) AC motor + gearbox Steel ropes over sheave; counterweight balances car 0.5–2.5 m/s Medium-rise (~60 m) Residential, small commercial, 5–15 storeys Gearbox limits top speed; machine room required above shaft
Electric traction (gearless) AC motor (direct drive) Ropes over gearless sheave; counterweight 2.5–10 m/s High-rise (no practical limit) High-rise commercial, hotels, premium residential Higher cost; machine room required (or MRL variant)
Machine Room-Less (MRL) Compact gearless motor in shaft or above door Motor and drive electronics in compact unit within shaft 0.5–2.5 m/s Mid-rise Modern residential, commercial; where machine room is not possible Slightly higher maintenance access complexity
Hydraulic Hydraulic pump + oil cylinder (ram) Oil pressure lifts ram directly or via ropes 0.1–1.0 m/s ~21 m maximum travel Low-rise (3–5 storeys); hospitals; goods lifts; car lifts Slow; limited height; oil leakage risk; energy-inefficient (no counterweight); not suitable for high-rise

§D.3 Speed Classification by Building Height

Building Type / Height Typical Car Speed (m/s)
Goods lifts (electric or hydraulic) 0.2–1.0
Passenger, ≤ 4 floors 0.3–0.8
4–6 floors 0.8–1.2
6–9 floors 1.2–1.5
9–15 floors 1.5–2.5
High-rise 15–30 floors 2.5–5.0
Super high-rise > 30 floors (express) 5–10 m/s

§D.4 Lift Shaft and Machine Room

Pit: The shaft extends below the lowest served floor to form a buffer pit (absorbs overtravel). Pit must be watertight with drainage.

Smoke vent: Minimum 0.1 m² at the top of the shaft (passive smoke exhaust).

Shaft fire resistance: Minimum 1-hour fire resistance for shaft walls (prevents fire spread between floors via the shaft void).

Machine room (conventional traction):
– Directly above the shaft (minimises rope length)
– Temperature: 10–40°C (air conditioning if required in hot climates)
– Vibration-isolated machinery mountings
– Steel lifting beam for maintenance


§D.5 Lift Selection Decision Logic

Is travel height > 21 m?
    YES → Electric traction (geared or gearless depending on speed needed)
    NO  → Is the building low-rise (3–5 storeys)?
              YES → Hydraulic lift acceptable (slow, smooth, no machine room above)
              NO  → Electric traction (geared, MRL)

Is top speed > 2.5 m/s required?
    YES → Gearless traction (no gearbox speed limit)
    NO  → Geared traction or MRL

Is machine room space unavailable?
    YES → MRL (Machine Room-Less) traction

§E — Firefighting Lift (NBC 2016 Part 4)

§E.1 Trigger and Specifications

A firefighting lift is a dedicated lift reserved for exclusive use by the fire service during an emergency. It is not an escape route for occupants — it is a tool for firefighters to transport personnel and equipment to upper floors.

Height trigger: Buildings with floors more than 18 m above fire service vehicle access level — or basements exceeding 10 m below access level — must provide a firefighting lift (NBC 2016 Part 4 / IS 14665).

Full specifications:

Parameter Requirement
Height trigger Floor > 18 m above access level (or basement > 10 m below)
Duty load Minimum 630 kg
Internal car dimensions Min 1.1 m wide × 1.4 m deep × 2.0 m high
Door dimensions Min 0.8 m wide × 2.0 m high
Top floor access time Maximum 60 seconds from ground floor
Emergency escape hatch Required in car roof
Communication Two-way intercommunication system
Power supply Dual: mains + emergency generator — must remain operational during mains failure
Lobby Dedicated firefighting lift lobby; 2-hour fire-rated enclosure
Control Fire service switch at ground/access level; overrides normal call system

Critical distinction: The firefighting lift height trigger is 18 m (NBC Part 4). The refuge area trigger is 24 m. The wet riser trigger is 60 m. These three thresholds are different and are frequently confused in MCQs.


§E.2 Firefighting Lift vs. Passenger Lift — Key Differences

Feature Passenger Lift Firefighting Lift
User during fire Must not be used Exclusive fire service use
Power backup Desirable Mandatory (dual supply)
Car dimensions Standard (varies) Minimum 1.1 × 1.4 × 2.0 m
Escape hatch Not required Required in car roof
Lobby fire rating Standard 2-hour fire-rated enclosure
Height trigger No specific fire trigger > 18 m floor level

§F — Escalators and Travellators

§F.1 Escalator Design Parameters

An escalator is a continuously moving inclined step conveyor. It provides one-directional flow — a separate escalator or lift must handle the opposite direction.

Standard specifications (IS 10450:1983):

Parameter Value
Step widths 600 mm, 800 mm, or 1,000 mm
Operating speeds 0.5 m/s or 0.65 m/s (max recommended for public safety)
Standard inclination angle 30° or 35° from horizontal (35° most common in practice)
Maximum tread width 1,020–1,050 mm
Step pitch (L) 0.4 m (standard)
Handrail speed Must match step speed

Capacity formula (IS 10450):

$$boxed{N = frac{3600 times P times V times costheta}{L}}$$

Where:
N = persons per hour
P = persons per step position (600/800 mm → 1 person; 1,000 mm → 2 persons)
V = speed (m/s)
θ = inclination angle from horizontal
L = step pitch (m) — typically 0.4 m

Worked example: 1,000 mm wide escalator (P = 2), V = 0.5 m/s, θ = 30°:

N = (3600 × 2 × 0.5 × cos 30°) / 0.4 = (3600 × 2 × 0.5 × 0.866) / 0.4 = 3,119 / 0.4 = 7,794 persons/hour

Worked example: Same escalator at θ = 35°:

N = (3600 × 2 × 0.5 × cos 35°) / 0.4 = (3600 × 2 × 0.5 × 0.819) / 0.4 = 2,949 / 0.4 = 7,373 persons/hour

Steeper angle → lower capacity (cos 35° < cos 30°), despite identical speed and step width.


§F.2 Escalator Arrangements

Arrangement Description Space Use
Single bank One escalator per direction per level; sequential Maximum plan length
Criss-cross (scissors) Upward and downward escalators alternate direction at each floor; compact plan Minimum floor area
Parallel Up and down escalators side by side; bidirectional adjacent Wider plan; intuitive for users

§F.3 Travellators (Moving Walkways)

  • Purpose: Horizontal or gently inclined conveyance for pedestrians over medium distances.
  • Typical travel distance: Up to 300 m (airports, railway stations, exhibition centres, large retail).
  • Standard widths: 840–910 mm.
  • Operating speeds: 0.6–1.3 m/s (higher speeds make boarding difficult; standard is ~0.75 m/s).
  • Maximum incline: Up to 12° recommended; 18° possible but not advisable for wheeled transport (prams, trolleys, wheelchairs) due to tipping risk.
  • Combined pedestrian speed: Walking at 1.5 m/s on a 0.75 m/s travellator ≈ 2.25 m/s effective speed.

§G — Universal Access: Lift and Escalator Requirements

§G.1 Accessible Lift Specifications (NBC 2016 / IS 14665)

Parameter Minimum Requirement
Car internal width 1.1 m
Car internal depth 1.4 m
Door clear opening width 0.8 m (minimum for wheelchair access)
Car internal height 2.0 m
Floor level accuracy (levelling) ±12 mm (wheelchair transfer)
Controls height 900–1,200 mm from floor (reachable from wheelchair)
Braille / tactile markings Required on buttons
Audible annunciation Required (floor level announcement)
Waiting time ≤ 60 seconds for accessible routes

The firefighting lift dimensions (1.1 × 1.4 m car) are also the minimum accessible lift dimensions — no coincidence. The firefighting lift is designed to accept a stretcher, which requires the same clearances as a wheelchair + attendant.


§G.2 Escalators and Universal Access

Standard escalators are not considered accessible for wheelchair users, people with mobility impairments, or those using prams/pushchairs. Buildings required to meet universal access standards (NBC 2016 Part 3 — Barrier Free Design) must provide lift access as an alternative to every escalator.

Escalator handrails must:
– Extend 300 mm horizontally beyond the top and bottom of the escalator run (safety overhang)
– Be at 900 mm height from step nose (standard handrail)
– Children’s handrails: 760 mm from step nose (where provided)


§H — Exam Traps and Anchors

Trap Correct Answer
“Firefighting lift required above 24 m” Wrong — trigger is > 18 m floor level; 24 m is the refuge area trigger
“Hydraulic lifts can be used in any high-rise building” Wrong — hydraulic lifts max travel ~21 m (approximately 5 storeys); not suitable for high-rise
“MRL lifts have no machine room anywhere” Precise answer: MRL lifts have compact drive units within or immediately above the shaft; the traditional separate machine room is eliminated, but the drive electronics and motor occupy a defined maintenance space
“Escalators at 35° have higher capacity than at 30°” Wrong — steeper angle → lower cos θ → lower capacity for the same speed and step width
“Supply voltage in India is 220 V single-phase” Wrong — IS 12360 specifies 230 V single-phase / 400 V three-phase
“RCD trips at 30 mA in 300 ms” Wrong — RCD trips at 30 mA in 30 ms (not 300 ms); IEC 61008
“Phase conductor colour in India is black” Wrong — Phase = Red; Neutral = Black; Earth = Green (IS 732)
“Escalator with 800 mm step can carry 2 persons per step” Wrong — 800 mm step width → 1 person per step; 1,000 mm → 2 persons
“LED efficacy is comparable to incandescent” Wrong — LED efficacy (80–200 lm/W) is 10–20× incandescent (8–15 lm/W)
“Classroom requires 500 lux per IS 3646” Wrong — classroom = 300 lux; drawing office = 500 lux
“Firefighting lift is an evacuation route for occupants during fire” Wrong — firefighting lift is exclusively for fire service use; occupants must evacuate via pressurised staircase
“Transformer core must be solid to minimise resistance” Wrong — core must be laminated to suppress eddy currents; solid core wastes energy as heat

§I — Mini-Check: Practice Questions

MCQ 1 — Firefighting Lift Trigger

A residential apartment building has 8 floors above the fire service vehicle access level. The top floor is at a height of 22 m above access level. Which of the following is correct regarding firefighting lift requirements under NBC 2016?

(A) No firefighting lift is required — the building is below the 24 m refuge area trigger.
(B) A firefighting lift is required — floors exceed 18 m above access level.
(C) A firefighting lift is required only if the building has a basement deeper than 10 m.
(D) A firefighting lift is required only in commercial buildings, not residential.

Answer: (B)

Rationale: The NBC 2016 Part 4 firefighting lift trigger is floors more than 18 m above fire service vehicle access level. At 22 m, this building meets the trigger regardless of occupancy type. The 24 m threshold is for refuge areas — a different, independent requirement. Option (C) describes the basement condition, which is an alternative (not additional) trigger.


MCQ 2 — Lift Type Selection

A 4-storey hospital with floor-to-floor heights of 4 m (total travel ~12 m) requires a lift for stretcher transport. The architects prefer smooth, quiet acceleration and have no space above the roof for a machine room. Which lift type is most appropriate?

(A) High-speed gearless traction lift
(B) Machine Room-Less (MRL) traction lift
(C) Hydraulic lift
(D) Geared traction lift with rooftop machine room

Answer: (C)

Rationale: Travel distance of ~12 m is well within the hydraulic lift’s maximum range (~21 m). Hydraulic lifts are specifically recommended for hospitals and nursing homes because of their smooth, quiet operation and because the load is carried directly to the ground (no overhead structural requirement). They are ideal for goods/stretcher use at low rise. MRL would work but adds complexity; geared and gearless traction are over-engineered for 4 storeys; the question explicitly states no machine room space above the roof, ruling out option (D).


NAT 1 — Escalator Capacity

An airport departure hall installs escalators with 1,000 mm step width, operating at 0.65 m/s at a 30° inclination.

(a) Calculate the hourly capacity (persons/hour).
(b) If the inclination is changed to 35° at the same speed and step width, what is the new capacity?

Solution:

(a) At 30°:
– P = 2 (1,000 mm step)
– V = 0.65 m/s
– θ = 30°; cos 30° = 0.866
– L = 0.4 m

N = (3600 × 2 × 0.65 × 0.866) / 0.4 = (3600 × 2 × 0.65 × 0.866) / 0.4 = 4,055 / 0.4 = 10,131 persons/hour

(b) At 35°:
– cos 35° = 0.819
N = (3600 × 2 × 0.65 × 0.819) / 0.4 = 3,833 / 0.4 = 9,583 persons/hour

Capacity reduction: 10,131 → 9,583 ≈ 5.4% reduction from steepening the angle by 5°.


NAT 2 — Lumen Method

A drawing office (10 m × 6 m) requires 500 lux maintained illuminance. Luminaires produce 4,000 lumens each. Utilisation factor U = 0.65, maintenance factor M = 0.80.

Calculate the number of luminaires required.

Solution:

N = (E × A) / (F × U × M) = (500 × 60) / (4,000 × 0.65 × 0.80)

= 30,000 / 2,080 = 14.4 → 15 luminaires (round up)

500 lux confirms drawing office classification (IS 3646).


MCQ 3 — Lux Level

Per IS 3646, maintained illuminance for a general classroom is approximately:

(A) 100 lux (B) 300 lux (C) 500 lux (D) 750 lux

Answer: (B)

Chapter 6 complete. Chapter 7 begins: Urban Design.