MasterFormat Division 14: Conveying Equipment

Division 14 covers vertical and horizontal transportation systems—elevators, escalators, dumbwaiters, moving walks, lifts, and turntables that move people and materials within buildings. Learn how Division 14 organizes specification sections, connects to UniFormat and OmniClass, and how The Construction Standard provides licensed access to authoritative, edition-aware Division 14 data through CSI Dynamic Standards.

MasterFormat Division 14 organizes the specification sections, cost codes, and work results for conveying equipment across the construction industry. As part of CSI's consensus-based classification system, Division 14 provides the authoritative structure that specifiers, estimators, contractors, and software platforms use to organize conveying equipment work.

What Division 14 Covers

Division 14 covers vertical and horizontal transportation systems—elevators, escalators, dumbwaiters, moving walks, lifts, and turntables that move people and materials within buildings.

This division includes elevators, escalators and moving walks, lifts, dumbwaiters, turntables, scaffolding, and transportation systems.

Division 14 contains multiple levels of sections and subsections that organize this scope into a precise, consensus-based hierarchy. These sections provide the numbering backbone for project manuals, bid packages, cost databases, and BIM models. When teams reference Division 14 consistently, every document from concept estimate to closeout speaks the same language.

Licensed through The Construction Standard, CSI Dynamic Standards includes the authoritative, always-current section numbers and titles for Division 14—searchable, cross-referenced, and edition-aware.

Common Division 14 Work Results

Common Division 14 work results include Dumbwaiters, Elevators, Escalators and Moving Walks, Lifts, Turntables, Scaffolding. These examples help teams orient the division, but they are not a substitute for current licensed standards access. MasterFormat section titles, numbering depth, and coordination notes can change as CSI updates the standard. For production specifications, estimating templates, cost databases, procurement workflows, or software integrations, teams should validate every Division 14 reference against CSI Dynamic Standards.

  • 14 10 00 – Dumbwaiters
  • 14 20 00 – Elevators
  • 14 30 00 – Escalators and Moving Walks
  • 14 40 00 – Lifts
  • 14 70 00 – Turntables
  • 14 80 00 – Scaffolding
Who Uses Division 14
  • Vertical transportation consultants
  • Elevator and escalator manufacturers
  • Architects planning building circulation
  • Code compliance reviewers evaluating accessibility

Whether you write specifications, estimate costs, coordinate BIM models, or build software that references conveying equipment, Division 14 numbers and titles are the shared vocabulary your work depends on.

Why Division 14 Matters in Project Delivery

Division 14 is used wherever teams need a stable reference for scope, responsibility, and deliverables. Designers use it to organize specifications. Estimators use it to structure takeoffs and cost assemblies. Contractors use it to align bids, submittals, RFIs, and closeout documents. Owners and facility teams use it to keep project records searchable after turnover.

When Division 14 is out of date, copied from an old PDF, or mixed with local aliases, coordination breaks down quickly. A section number in a project manual may not match a cost code in an estimate. A BIM object may point to a stale classification. A procurement package may separate work differently than the specification. Current, licensed MasterFormat access reduces those mismatches by keeping every team aligned to the same controlled source.

How Division 14 Connects to Other Standards

UniFormat

Division 14 maps to UniFormat D (Services)—the vertical and horizontal transportation services that move people and materials through the building.

OmniClass

OmniClass Table 23 (Products) classifies conveying equipment products; Table 22 (Work Results) covers installation.

These cross-references are maintained by CSI through governed crosswalks—not assembled ad hoc by individual project teams. Through The Construction Standard, licensed access to CSI Dynamic Standards gives teams these relationships so they can navigate between specifications, elements, and lifecycle categories without manual remapping.

Related MasterFormat and Classification Lookups

Division 14 is part of the broader MasterFormat system and should be read alongside related CSI standards. MasterFormat organizes work results for specifications and procurement. UniFormat organizes building elements for early estimating and conceptual planning. OmniClass extends classification across spaces, products, activities, phases, and information used through the facility lifecycle.

Use Division 14 pages as an orientation point, then move into the current CSI Dynamic Standards platform when a project, template, data model, or commercial product depends on authoritative numbers and titles. The Construction Standard is designed for that workflow: find the relevant division, understand the classification context, and access the current standard instead of relying on stale spreadsheet exports or uncontrolled copies.

Why Edition Awareness Matters

MasterFormat evolves through consensus-based updates. Projects that span multiple years may reference different editions. Division 14 sections may be added, renumbered, or revised between editions. Without edition awareness, teams risk referencing obsolete section numbers, creating specification conflicts, and generating RFIs that delay construction.

Licensed through The Construction Standard, CSI Dynamic Standards gives teams full edition context for Division 14—teams know which edition applies at each project milestone, what changed, and where those changes affect their work.

The Licensing Relationship

CSI—the Construction Specifications Institute—stewards Division 14 as part of MasterFormat. CSI Dynamic Standards includes MasterFormat, UniFormat, and OmniClass as a connected, edition-aware system. The Construction Standard provides licensed access to CSI Dynamic Standards:

  • Always current: Section numbers and titles reflect the latest CSI-approved updates
  • Edition-aware: Teams know which edition applies and what changed between releases
  • Cross-referenced: Governed relationships to UniFormat and OmniClass stay maintained
  • Integration-ready: Enterprise solutions carry Division 14 data into the tools you already use

Access Current CSI Standards

CSI Dynamic Standards provides authorized access to MasterFormat, UniFormat, and OmniClass through a connected, edition-aware platform. Create an account to view access options, or review pricing for organization-wide standards use.

COMMON QUESTIONS
Division 14 – Conveying Equipment covers this division includes elevators, escalators and moving walks, lifts, dumbwaiters, turntables, scaffolding, and transportation systems. It provides the authoritative section numbering used in project manuals, cost databases, bid packages, and BIM models across the construction industry.
Vertical transportation consultants, Elevator and escalator manufacturers, Architects planning building circulation, Code compliance reviewers evaluating accessibility—anyone who writes specifications, estimates costs, manages submittals, or builds software that references conveying equipment work results needs authoritative Division 14 section numbers and titles.
Division 14 maps to UniFormat D (Services)—the vertical and horizontal transportation services that move people and materials through the building. OmniClass Table 23 (Products) classifies conveying equipment products; Table 22 (Work Results) covers installation. CSI Dynamic Standards includes these governed crosswalks—licensed through The Construction Standard—so teams can navigate between standards without manual remapping.
If your organization uses Division 14 section numbers, titles, or descriptions in deliverables, templates, products, or platforms that others rely on, CSI Standards licensing is necessary. The license ensures you're working with authoritative, CSI-approved data that stays current with consensus-based updates.

Ready to Get Started?

CSI Dynamic Standards includes MasterFormat, UniFormat, and OmniClass as a connected, edition-aware system. The Construction Standard provides licensed access—built for the speed of your work.