Amtech Elevator Services

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Houston, United States

amtechelevator.com
Elevator manufacturer· Elevator service

Amtech Elevator Services Reviews | Rating 2,6 out of 5 stars (2 reviews)

Amtech Elevator Services is located in Houston, United States on 1289 N Post Oak Rd #100. Amtech Elevator Services is rated 2.6 out of 5 in the category elevator manufacturer in United States.

Address

1289 N Post Oak Rd #100

Phone

+1 7139237251

Best known for
Fresh Sushi
Biggest weakness
Inconsistent service
Most praised
Value for Money
Recommended for
Families, Sushi lovers
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C

Centreone Leasing

Amtech does not care about their customers period. They would only come to our building one week later after a service call is placed despite the fact we have a full maintenance service agreement. They are so under-staffed that each of their techs is responsible for more than 100 elevators at any given day making it impossible to maintain all tickets properly. Yet they keep charging us quarterly fees with absolutely no service done and even charged overtime rates when it was never authorized and forced us to pay an outrageous amount for waiting outside for 5 minutes. Their new general manager Megan Milford, maintenance manager Fred Lawrence and sales rep Joe Harrison are so indifferent to our request and call for help that the only phrase to them is \Shame on you and your entire team!\ - Bruce Pham, Facility Manager - DO NOT EVER SIGN ANY CONTRACT WITH AMTECH!

F

Faith G.

8/13/2020 - approx 5:55pm, on 45 S. One of the drivers, in a work truck with the plate #DMJ 3156, proceeded to enter the lane I was in, which happened to be the entrance lane to the Nasa bypass, almost taking out the front end of my car. His back bumper was at my driver's side wheel. I honked my horn, to hopefully keep him from hitting me, which did nothing to deter him, so I was forced to slam on my brakes to avoid being hit and possible bodily injury due to the speed and enclosed nature of the bypass entrance. There were no vehicles behind me at the time, and he could've easily entered the lane legally and without conflict. My horn honking, however, did seem to anger him, as he began flipping me the middle finger, as if to imply I had somehow been in the wrong in the first place. He, then proceeded to continue flipping me off once he realized I was taking a picture of the truck, which includes the plate number, company name, as well as his lovely middle finger. Management and HR should have a nice sit down with this charming employee, seeing as this is the face of their company and the impression that's being left on the public.

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