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22 | PEOPLE FLOW

• Hilton Worldwide is the leading

global hospitality company with

more than 600,000 rooms in

85 countries

• KONE is affiliated with every

Hilton Worldwide brand. It is

currently working with over 400

Hilton properties and franchise

owners around the globe

• KONE is listed as a Strategic

Partner on the Hilton Suppliers’

Connection website, which

provides owners, developers and

architects access to KONE

solutions and technical data

• Over 50 percent of the

equipment KONE maintains

is from 3rd-party manufacturers

PARTNERS IN

GUEST FLOW

program, more of our hotels in their

key markets. We look for opportunities

to bias our chain to company travelers

so we can increase travel market share.

KONE showed a willingness to position

Hilton Worldwide as first choice for

travel.”

“Since Hilton classified KONE as one

of their strategic accounts, our business

has increased,” says Fleming. “We were

recently awarded a modernization proj-

ect and some new installations based on

this strategic relationship.”

For instance, KONE received two

new projects in Nashville and Dallas, as

part of Home2 Suites, Hilton’s first new

brand in two decades. The first Home2

locations opened in early 2011, with

more than 100 planned by the end of

2014 in the US, Mexico and Canada.

As the new chain offers a “green-

focused extended-stay hotel experi-

ence,” the new Home2 brand is a natu-

ral fit for the KONE machine-room-less

(MRL) elevator and the KONE EcoDisc®

hoisting machine, innovations that

can cut energy consumption by up

to 70 percent compared to traditional

hydraulic drives. KONE, which intro-

duced MRL equipment to the US

market, is the leading supplier of this

sustainable technology. Meanwhile all

KONE factories are ISO14001 certified

to meet strict environmental standards.

“We’ve been able to convince them

that it’s more advantageous to use

machine-room-less rather than hydraulic

elevators,” says Fleming. “It’s a sleek

design that offers a smoother ride,

looks good and is beneficial to the

environment.”

Indeed, Perry points to sustainability

as “absolutely one of KONE’s strong

points. KONE has highly sustainable

solutions that are energy-efficient and

can reduce costs. Hilton’s corporate

culture embraces sustainability. We have

specific goals to achieve in sustainability

and KONE can deliver sustainable solu-

tions to support our company’s long-

term goals in this area.”

SETTING THE STANDARDS

In July, Perry and Fleming invited

Hilton’s Design and Construction

project managers to tour sites in

Memphis, where the machine-room-

less KONE EcoSpace™ and KONE

MonoSpace® elevators are in operation.

“The tour brought KONE solutions

to life,” says Perry.

“The goal was to give the project

managers a first-hand look at the ben-

efits of using KONE machine-room-less

solutions versus a hydraulic solution.

“This approach will definitely reap

benefits for KONE, because we don’t

have other elevator companies offering

tours of this type.”

Hilton also invited KONE to take part

in submitting suggestions for escalator

and elevator standards for the whole

chain.

A SEAT AT THE TABLE

While the focus of the relationship thus

far is in North America, KONE is going

to be involved as the hotel company

expands into fast-growing emerging

markets. Two years ago, just 15 percent

of Hilton’s new builds were outside

the Americas. Today, the company has

880 hotels, totaling more than 151,000

rooms, in the pipeline and is expected to

enter several new countries by year-end.

“There will be a lot of opportunity to

expand our relationship and introduce

KONE to our key people outside the

US,” Perry says.

And what else might lie in the future

for this relationship?

“Anything where mobile technology

can be used during a guest stay would

be considered innovative and bene-

ficial,” says Perry. “If a guest can use his

or her mobile device on an elevator to

get to and from the guest room, or if

the room key could be programmed

so that the guest does not have to press

any buttons on the elevator but rather

can wave the room key in front of an

electronic eye – these would be interest-

ing solutions to consider.”

“KONE Destination Control Systems

(DCS) are being utilized more and more

in the hotel environment,” explains

Fleming. “When a guest swipes his or

her card key at the lobby level, it will

automatically know what floor to go

to and which elevator is the closest to

respond to that call.”