Elevator phone lines in Brookhaven are losing the copper they run on
Brookhaven incorporated in 2012 and built up quickly. The Peachtree Road and Dresden Drive corridors are lined with mid-rise residential and mixed-use buildings, and the elevators in them all need an emergency phone that connects to a live monitoring center, not a dead copper pair.
The cause is the same everywhere. The emergency phone in an elevator car has always connected over a plain analog copper line. After FCC Order 19-72A1 removed the requirement that carriers maintain that copper network, the lines started disappearing: retired without notice, priced toward retirement, and no longer installed new. The elevator did not change. The code did not change. But the line its phone depends on is going away, and a Brookhaven building owner is the one who answers for it at the next inspection.
The Brookhaven building stock we work with
Brookhaven is heavy on newer multifamily: Town Brookhaven and the apartment communities along Peachtree Road, plus medical office buildings near Children’s Healthcare at Scottish Rite. These were largely wired in the VoIP era, which means their elevator phones may already be non-compliant without anyone noticing.
DeKalb County Fire Rescue and what an inspector checks
DeKalb County Fire Rescue is the authority having jurisdiction in Brookhaven. We replace the analog or unverified VoIP line in your elevator with a dual-pathway connection that holds up under a county inspection and gives the cab a clear line to a monitored answering point.
ASME A17.1, the elevator safety code, requires two-way emergency communication in every passenger elevator: the cab phone must reach a person who can send help, it must keep working when building power is lost, and the connection must be reliable. An inspector for the DeKalb County Fire Rescue verifies exactly that. An elevator emergency phone connected to a dead copper pair, an unmonitored office line, or a VoIP service that drops with the building internet is a violation that gets written up.
How the replacement works in a Brookhaven building
We do not replace your elevator phone. The cab phone, the hall fixtures, and the hoistway wiring stay as they are. A dual-pathway device installs in the elevator machine room, connects to the existing cab phone, and replaces the copper line with a connection that reaches the monitoring center two independent ways at once: cellular and building broadband, with automatic failover. Brookhaven is a short drive from the Justin Hall Consulting Clairmont Road base, inside the same DeKalb service radius as Decatur and Dunwoody.
How a dual-pathway elevator line works
The replacement device installs in the elevator machine room and connects to the existing cab phone. It reaches the monitoring center two independent ways at once, with automatic failover. If one path drops, the other carries the call.
That dual pathway is the point. A cellular-only device has one point of failure. For a line whose whole job is to work after something has already gone wrong, two independent pathways with automatic failover is what makes the replacement a real upgrade over the copper it replaces.
What it costs a Brookhaven building
A traditional copper elevator line runs roughly $80 to $280 per line per month, and that figure keeps climbing as carriers price copper toward retirement. A dual-pathway replacement line starts under $30 per month. For a single-elevator Brookhaven building that is a saving every month; for a portfolio of cabs it is a significant annual budget recovery, on top of removing the inspection risk.
We start every Brookhaven engagement with a free audit: we inventory every cab phone, gateway, and line, flag what will not pass a DeKalb County Fire Rescue inspection, and give you a fixed-cost cutover plan before the renewal date.
Our Brookhaven process
- Audit. We inventory every passenger elevator in the building or portfolio: the cab phone, the line technology, the monitoring connection, and the inspection calendar.
- Plan. You get a written cutover schedule and a fixed monthly cost per line, with the renewal and inspection dates mapped so nothing is a surprise.
- Install. The dual-pathway device goes into the machine room and connects to the existing cab phone. In almost every case the elevator does not need to be shut down.
- Verify. Before we leave, we confirm the cab phone reaches a live 24/7 monitoring center over both pathways, and we document it so the DeKalb County Fire Rescue inspector has clear proof.
Whether the building is in DeKalb County or anywhere else in Georgia that we serve, the standard is the same: a code-compliant elevator emergency line that a fire inspector accepts without a second look.