Owing to the unsightly nature of mechanical and electrical pipes and cables, it's normal practice for these to be housed within vertical riser ducts. The positioning of vertical riser ducts is important to minimize the length of pipe and cable runs to keep costs to a minimum. It's also preferable that pipes within ducts run vertically unhindered through a building, particularly sanitary waste pipes so foul waste doesn't go around pipe bends.
Vertical riser ducts are subject to very stringent design guidelines as they breach floors and are susceptible voids for the spread of fire. For this reason, they are usually heavily fire protected.
Though vertical riser cables and pipes are normally concealed within ducts, there is some practicality to having them exposed for the means of periodic servicing. Cables are usually fed to sockets and light fittings through vertical riser conduits which are surface mounted to walls and columns. Like vertical riser ducts, cables and pipes that breach floors are often sleeved through fire-protected collars to prevent the likelihood of fire spread between floors.
In some extreme cases, building service pipes are used as visual features and fully exposed, the Llyod's Building in London by architect Sir Richard Rogers is a perfect example.
In commercial and larger residential developments, wet or dry risers are required for the means of fighting fires in an emergency. Built adjacent to fire-fighting stairs, these vertical pipes run the full height of the building to provide a direct water feed to each floor. The dry riser has a ground coupling pipe on the building's exterior that the fire service can connect to a fire hydrant or other water supply. Similarly, these pipes have couplings on each floor where hoses can be attached to fight fires nearer their sources. Wet risers are similar to dry risers, but are connected to the water mains supply of the building.
Though normally referred to by name, stairs and elevators are vertical access risers. Like other risers, their positioning is important to minimize the time inhabitants of a building take to evacuate in an emergency. Incidentally, the vertical part of a step is called a riser, but this is not to be confused with a term "vertical riser."