New Commercial Elevator Installation in Pearland, Texas
Turn-key elevator installs for new commercial construction in Pearland and across Harris County. Hydraulic, traction, and MRL — speced to the building, not to whatever's easiest for us to order. One Texas-licensed contractor from the architect's shaft drawings through the TDLR final-inspection certificate.
How we run a new-construction install in Pearland
We slot in as the elevator contractor on commercial projects in Pearland during the design or pre-construction phase. Pre-construction work includes shaft-draft review with the architect, code-compliance review (IBC, ASME A17.1, ADA, fire/life-safety), equipment selection and sizing for the building's actual traffic profile, and structural-load coordination with the general contractor.
Equipment phase covers ordering, long-lead component management (controllers, jacks, hoist machines), rail layout, plumbness verification, pit and machine-room rough-in coordination, and sub-trade coordination with electrical, fire alarm, and sprinkler. We deliver buildable drawings — and we flag conflicts in the architect's set early, when they're still cheap to fix on paper.
Installation, commissioning, and turnover include cab assembly, fixtures, drive and controller install, full safety acceptance testing, TDLR final inspection coordination, and owner training with a complete documentation hand-off — schematics, controller passwords, parts list, and warranty paperwork.
For the full scope and process detail, see the new-construction services page.
Why developers and GCs in Pearland pick Arise
Pearland sits south of Beltway 8 along Highway 288 — fast-growing medical office, retail, and multifamily corridors.
- Owner-operator on every job. A working mechanic — not a project coordinator — is on your build. Same person who'll service the equipment after handover, if you keep us.
- 25+ years across every brand. Schindler, Otis, Kone, ThyssenKrupp, Dover, Westinghouse, Fujitec, Mitsubishi. We know what's actually buildable in your shaft drawings before we sign.
- Open-protocol equipment, every install. Your building never gets locked into one vendor's service monopoly. Schematics and access codes delivered with the keys.
- Real schedules, not optimism. Lead-time letters from suppliers go in the bid package — no "we'll figure it out."
- No forced maintenance contract. Optional first-year contract at a discount if you want it; bid the contract competitively if you don't. Either works.
Frequently asked questions — Installation in Pearland
Do you handle new commercial elevator installations in Pearland?
Yes. We work directly with general contractors and developers in Pearland on commercial new-construction installs — hydraulic, traction, or MRL. Single contractor from shaft-draft review through state TDLR final inspection. We deliver buildable shaft drawings, structural coordination, equipment specification, install, and commissioning.
What types of elevators do you install?
Hydraulic (1–6 stops, low-rise — most common), traction (mid-rise to high-rise), and machine-room-less / MRL (mid-rise where the GC needs to recover machine-room floor space). We size capacity, speed, and grouping based on actual building usage modeling, not boilerplate.
Are you locking my building into proprietary equipment?
No. Every installation we do is built on non-proprietary, open-protocol equipment any qualified contractor can service afterward. Schematics and software documentation come with the keys on day one. If you ever leave Arise, the next contractor can pick up where we left off — no vendor-required lock-in.
What's the typical lead time on a new install in Pearland?
From signed contract through commissioned-and-inspected: 16–28 weeks for hydraulic, 24–40 weeks for traction or MRL. Long-lead controllers and custom jacks drive most of the variance — we'll show you the actual lead-time letter from the equipment supplier on the day of contract, so the schedule is grounded in real dates, not optimism.
Ready to talk about your Pearland project?
Send us your project (architect's plan set, or just a description of the building, the floors served, and the expected traffic). We'll come back within a week with equipment recommendations, a line-item budget, and a realistic schedule.