Cal. Code Regs. tit. 8, § 3034
(a) Passenger and Freight Enclosures, General. All elevator cars shall be permanently enclosed on all sides and the top, except that portion which is used as an entrance or entrances.
Exceptions:
2. Emergency exit panels.
(3) No elevator car shall have more than one compartment. Two compartments in the same horizontal plane will be permitted, provided that access to the landings can be had through only one of them.
Exceptions: Passenger elevators or freight elevators may have two compartments, one of which is located immediately above the other provided the compartmented elevator conforms to the following requirements:
3. Where either or both compartments are intended for passenger service, the minimum rated load for each compartment shall conform to the requirements of Section 3037(a).
Where one compartment is intended for freight use, its minimum rated load shall conform to the requirements of Section 3037(a) or shall be based on the freight loads to be handled, if greater than the minimum rated load required by Section 3037(a).
Where both compartments are used exclusively for freight, the minimum rated load of each compartment shall conform to the requirements of Section 3037(a).
The rated load of the elevator shall be the sum of the rated loads of the individual compartments.
5. All hoistway doors shall be closed and locked and the car doors for each compartment closed before the car can be operated.
(4) An emergency exit with a cover shall be provided in the top of all new elevators except observation-type elevators and in the top of all passenger elevator cars installed since June 5, 1947. On elevators installed after April 16, 1970, the emergency exit shall conform to the following:
(C) The exit cover shall open outward and shall be hinged or otherwise attached to the car top and so arranged that the cover can be opened from the top of the car and from inside the car by means of a spring return 5 pin or disc tumbler lock that allows the exit to be opened from the car with a key and from the top of the car without a key.
The key shall be accessible to authorized personnel and no other key to the building shall unlock the emergency exit lock, except where access switches are furnished, the key used to operate the access switch may also unlock the car top emergency door lock.
Exception:
2. The exit cover of a lower deck of a multideck elevator shall be openable from either compartment.
(7) Glass may be used in elevator cars provided:
(A) Glass, other than safety glass, shall be used only for covers for certificates, lighting fixtures, or other appliances necessary for the operation of the elevator providing no one piece shall exceed 1 square foot in area and the total area, excluding electric lamps, shall not exceed 4 square feet.
Exception: Existing wire glass or shatterproof glass in car doors.
(8) Apparatus or equipment, other than that used in connection with the operation of the elevator, shall not be installed inside the elevator car.
Exceptions:
2. Lighting, heating, ventilating, air conditioning and sound equipment for the car.
(9) Permanent guardrails, either fixed or capable of being raised from a retracted position, shall be provided around all sides of the work area of the car top where a hoistway enclosure is not furnished to provide a safe work area for maintenance work on the car and in the hoistway.
(b) Passenger Car Enclosures.
(1) The enclosures for passenger elevators may be of metal, wood, or other substantial material subject to the following:
(2) Where car doors are used, means for ventilation shall be provided. Vent openings shall not be located in the portion of the enclosure walls extending from a point 1 foot above the floor to a point 6 feet above the floor. Vent openings less than 1 foot above the floor shall reject a ball 1 inch in diameter. Vent openings above the 6 foot level shall reject a ball 2 inches in diameter.
Vent openings shall reject a ball ¾ inch in diameter, or shall be protected by substantial baffles, or shall be located above a ceiling, to prevent objects projecting from the car into the hoistway.
Ventilating fans or blowers, if used, shall be securely fastened in place and located above the ceiling or outside the enclosure.
(3) Side emergency exits, to allow passage between elevator platforms, shall be installed in the adjacent enclosures of elevators in adjacent hoistways where there are not intervening hoistway partitions, counterweights, or any fixed obstructions other than separator beams, and where the vertical distance between adjacent landings exceeds 30 feet.
Exceptions:
2. Where the horizontal distance between elevator car platforms exceeds 2 feet 6 inches, side exit doors are prohibited.
(G) Be of the same material and construction as required for the enclosure.
Keys for unlocking side emergency exit doors shall be kept on the premises in a location available to qualified persons in case of emergency.
(4) Vision panels are not required, but where used shall:
(5) Passenger elevator car enclosures of glass may be installed in hoistways designed for the purpose of view or aesthetic values. These special car enclosures shall conform to the following as a minimum:
(D) The glass product-type shall be a laminated glass with a minimum total nominal thickness of .550 or 9/16 -inch. The composition will be two lites of minimum ¼ -inch glass with a tolerance of ± 1/32 -inch. The inner lite may be heat treated or plate glass. The outer lite may be tinted, or reflective, but shall not have a rated strength and impact resistance less than ¼ -inch plate glass. Heat treated glass may be annealed, heat strengthened or fully tempered.
Joining or laminating the two glass lites together shall be an interlayer of polyvinyl butyral not less than .060 inches thick.
The glass product-type shall meet the requirements of ANSI Z97.1-1972 for safety glazing materials and Federal Specification DD-G-00451(b).
(E) Glazing of these glass units shall have the following minimum glazing dimensions in the metal or gasketed frames with pressure stops:
4. Edge clearance not less than ⅛ inch
Glass shall be centered in the sash opening with centering shims (a minimum of three shims per edge). Shims and setting blocks will be 80 to 90 durometer neoprene, permanently attached to the sash rabbet, and functioning as a cushion between the metal and the glass.
The vinyl shall be protected at all edges with a continuous protective covering or tape along all edges. The tape shall be impervious to oil, water, or solvent. Glass should not be exposed to surface temperatures exceeding 130'F for prolonged periods of time.
Side emergency exit doors shall:
(c) Freight Car Enclosures:
(2) Existing freight elevator cars shall be enclosed not less than 6 feet high, except for the necessary entrances. The enclosure may be of wood, metal, or other recognized material, solid or openwork, but if openwork is used, the design shall be such as to reject a ball ½ inch in diameter, except enclosures installed before June 5, 1947, shall reject a ball 2 inches in diameter.
That portion of the enclosure in front of the counterweight, or in front of any obstruction within 4 inches of the car, shall extend to the car top. Where no car top is provided, the enclosure shall extend to the crosshead height or to a height of 8 feet if the cross head height is less than 8 feet.
This enclosure shall extend 6 inches each side of the a counterweight; and if openwork is used, shall reject a ball ½ inch in diameter.
Exception: Where the enclosure of a power freight elevator is cut away at the front of the car to make the shipper rope accessible, such opening in the enclosure shall be cut to within 30 inches of, and not less than 24 inches from, the car platform and so located as to reduce the hazard to a minimum.
(3) Hinged or removable panels shall not be provided in car tops except for emergency exits.
Exception: Existing elevators without contacted car doors or gates in hoistways, where the upper terminal landing entrance is protected by a gate 41 inches to 45 inches high, any portion of the car top within 18 inches of the line of the edge of the threshold shall be hinged so that it will fold back if obstructed in its descent.
(d) Car Doors and Gates, General Requirements.
(1) A door or gate shall be provided at each entrance to the car.
Exceptions:
3. Existing elevators that have been converted from shipper rope operation and which never had car gates. This exception applies to conversion of operation only without addition to the number of stations from which the car can be operated.
(2) Each car door or car gate shall be equipped with an approved-type electric contact, located so that the contact is not readily accessible from inside the car. Car door or gate contacts shall conform to the following:
(A) Operation of the elevator driving machine when the car door or gate is not in the closed position shall be possible only by a car-leveling or truck-zoning device or when a hoistway access switch is operated.
Exception: The limited movement of elevators equipped with advance start or pulse start feature. See Section 3021(d)(1)(E).
(C) They shall be maintained in the open position by the action of gravity or by a restrained compression spring, or by both, or by positive mechanical means.
Exception: For elevators which can be started from the car only, and whose car door or gate is provided with a door closer, and whose hoistway doors are provided with door closures and interlocks meeting the requirements of the exception to Section 3021(g), the car door or gate contact may permit starting of the car when the car door or gate is closed to within 4 inches of the nearest face of the jamb; or on center-opening doors when the doors are closed within 4 inches of each other.
(6) Car doors or gates shall be arranged so that when the car is stopped, they may be opened by hand from inside the car. The force required at the edge of horizontally sliding doors to open the door(s) shall not exceed 75 pounds.
Exceptions:
(e) Passenger Car Doors and Gates.
(1) There shall be not more than two entrances to the car.
Exception: Elevators installed before June 5, 1947, with more than two original entrances.
(2) Horizontally sliding doors shall be provided at each car entrance opening of automatic operation elevators and at any car entrance opening remote from the operator of elevators having other types of operation.
Exceptions:
2. Vertically-sliding, power-operated gates of the balanced, counterweighted type may be used provided their operation is sequenced with power-operated bi-parting hoistway doors as outlined in Section 3022(c) and the construction of the gate conforms to Sections 3034(f)(3) and 3034(f)(5).
Exception: The height of vertically-sliding, power-operated gates permitted by Section 3034(e)(2).
(3) Doors and gates, when in the fully closed position, shall protect the full width and height of the car entrance opening.
(5) Collapsible-type gates, where allowed, shall conform to the following:
(A) When fully extended (closed position), reject a ball 3 inches in diameter.
Exception: Gates installed on elevators before June 5, 1947.
(B) Have alternate vertical members act as guides at both top and bottom.
Exception: Gates installed on elevators before June 5, 1974.
(f) Freight Car Doors and Gates.
(3) Car doors and gates shall conform to the following:
(4) Collapsible type gates shall conform to the following:
(5) Vertically sliding doors or gates shall conform to the following:
(g) Illumination of Cars.
(2) The minimum illumination measured at the landing edge of the car platform when the car and landing doors are open shall be not less than:
(3) Passenger elevator cars shall be provided with emergency lighting in accordance with Article E700, Part 3, Title 24, CAC, and conforming to the following:
(4) Light control switches are required and shall:
(6) Light bulbs or tubes in passenger elevators shall be installed behind a protecting cover.
Exception: Light bulbs mounted in a recess approximately the diameter of the bulb and recessed behind the parent surface a distance not less than the diameter of the bulb.
1. Amendment of subsections (a) and (b) filed 10-25-74; effective thirtieth day thereafter (Register 74, No. 43).
2. Amendment of subsection (a)(4) filed 11-6-74; effective thirtieth day thereafter (Register 74, No. 45).
3. Amendment of subsection (a)(4) filed 9-5-75; effective thirtieth day thereafter (Register 75, No. 36).
4. Amendment of subsections (a)(7)(B), (d)(6) Exception No. 2, (g)(5), (g)(6) and repealer of (d)(1) Exception No. 3 and No. 4 and new Exception No. 3 filed 6-23-77; effective thirtieth day thereafter (Register 77, No. 26).
5. Amendment of subsection (a)(4) which was filed 9-5-75 (Register 75, No. 36), was approved by the Building Standards Commission 3-26-76. History note printed in Register 78, No. 30 for technical reasons.
6. Amendment of subsections (a)(3) and (a)(4) filed 12-4-86; effective thirtieth day thereafter (register 86, No. 49).
7. Editorial corrections (Register 95, No. 26).