This invention relates to louver-type pergolas/roofs, in particular pergolas built of rotatable slats supported in multiple hinges distributed along the length of the slat.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,306,210 discloses a louver type roof structure including a plurality of parallel slats 10 mounted on hinges 11 which in turn are mounted on carrier beams 12 (
Pergolas of the same louver type are produced by Pas-Cal™ (
The axes of hinge rotation in both above designs are disposed approximately under the middle of the slat profile. The slats are pivotable by 45-70° between the closed position and the extreme open position.
AU-B-33573/84 discloses a louver type roof structure comprising a support frame and a plurality of slats (louvers). The slats have box-like profile for rigidity as they are supported only at their ends. The axis of rotation is usually within the profile and the range of rotation may be close to 180° as there are no intermediate supports.
In accordance with the present invention, there is provided a louver type roof structure including a plurality of elongated parallel slats mounted on slat hinges pivotally supported on carrier beams transverse to the slats. The slats are pivotable between a closed position in which the slats lie roughly in one plane and their longitudinal adjacent edges overlap each other with respect to that plane, and an open position in which the slats are spaced apart. The slats have an upper surface facing the sky in the closed position and an opposite lower surface. The slat hinges are mounted to the slats at their lower surface and they allow pivoting of the slats between the closed position and an extreme open position by an angle of at least 90°, preferably 110°. The pivoting axes of the slats with such slat hinges are disposed substantially under one of two longitudinal edges of the slats when the slats are in the closed position and the plane is horizontal. Preferably, the pivoting axis is under the edge overlapped by an adjacent slat.
In one embodiment of the present invention, the roof structure further comprises a border slat disposed between two slats of said plurality, overlapping therewith when the two slats are in closed position. The border slat is adapted to be displaced when urged by a first of the two slats when it pivots towards its extreme open position. The border slat is spring-loaded so as to return to the overlapping position when the first slat returns to its closed position.
The border slat may slide under or over the second of the two slats when urged by the first slat. Preferably the border slat is carried by sliding hinges mounted to its lower surface and slidingly supported in the carrier beams. Preferably, the border slat is identical to at least one of the plurality of parallel slats and the sliding hinges are formed with same means for mounting to the slat as the slat hinges.
In another embodiment of the border slat, it may be adapted to rotate when urged by the first slat. Preferably, the border slat is carried by rotary hinges mounted to its lower surface and the rotary hinges are pivotally supported in the carrier beams.
The rotary hinges and the slat hinges preferably have pivoting levers, each of the rotary hinges being connected by its pivoting lever, via a movable rod, to the pivoting lever of the slat hinge of the second slat, for synchronous pivoting of the border slat and the second slat. The connection of the rotary hinge to the movable rod allows disconnection therefrom when the first slat urges the border slat and reconnection thereto when the first slat returns to its closed position.
The connection of the rotary hinge to the movable rod may comprise a lug associated with the pivoting lever of the rotary hinge and a socket associated with the movable rod and receiving the lug. The socket is open at one side thereof so as to allow the disconnection, while the lug is urged by a spring towards the socked so as to provide the reconnection.
Preferably, the rotary hinges are the same as at least some of the slat hinges and the border slat is the same as at least one of the plurality of parallel slats.
The border slat allows building the roof structure with two or more subsets of adjacent slats, slats of each subset being connected by their hinges for synchronous pivoting apart from the other subsets. A border slat is disposed between each two subsets so that each subset may be pivoted to the extreme position independently from the other subsets.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a slat hinge for use in the above-described louver type roof structure, allowing pivoting of the slats to extreme angles of at least 90°, preferably 110°. The hinge provides pivoting of the slats around an axis disposed substantially under one of the two longitudinal edges of the slats.
The slats used in the roof structure may have each two C-shaped channels along the edges thereof, the channels being open at the downside surface of the slat, and in such case the hinge has teeth for snapping into the two channels. Furthermore, the hinge has a spring-loaded element locking the teeth in at least one of the channels after the snapping.
The hinge is preferably made of one integral piece of material, for example, injection-molded plastic.
The adjustable pergola of the present invention provides for larger extreme angles of slats' opening bringing a number of advantages:
Furthermore, the pergola of the present invention may be built with groups of slats, where each group is independently openable to the extreme angle of 90° and more.
In order to understand the invention and to see how it may be carried out in practice, an embodiment will now be described, by way of non-limiting example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
With reference to
The slats 10 have a generally Z-shaped profile, as described above, with an upturn 4 at one (higher) edge, and a downturn 3 at the other (lower) edge. The slats in their closed position are overlapping so that the “lower” edge of each “higher” slat is received in the upturned “higher” edge of the adjacent “lower” slat. The adjectives “higher” and “lower” refer to the common orientation of the pergola where the beams 24 are inclined such that the upturned edge 4 of the slat is higher than the downturned edge 3 so as to provide run-off of rain water down the pergola without accumulation and leaking between slats.
The edges of the slat profile end in C-shaped channels 1 (at the “lower” edge) and 2 (at the “higher” edge), both channels being open towards the underside of the slat.
With reference also to
The hinge 34 further comprises two cylindrical lugs 52 for pivotal mounting to the carrier beam 24, and another cylindrical lug 54 at the end of the lever 38 for engagement to the movable rod 22.
The carrier beam 24 has a sectional profile 56 with a lower part 57 formed as a closed box and a U-shaped upper part 58. The closed-box profile imparts rigidity to the beam 24 while the arms of the U-shaped upper part allow elastic deformation so that the lugs 52 of the hinge 34 can be inserted in openings made in those arms.
The pergola 30 has two or more carrying beams 24 which may be supported on pillars, on a roof structure, embedded in a wall, etc. (not shown here). Each of the slats 10 is supported by a hinge 34 on each beam the slat crosses. The levers 38 of the hinges 34 mounted on one beam are rotatably engaged to a movable rod 22 by the lugs 54 inserted in openings 55. The rod 22 is engaged for longitudinal displacement to a driving mechanism (powered or manual) which may be fixed at various positions, thereby providing for simultaneous rotation and fixation of the slats 10 to various angular positions.
As seen in
It is often convenient to open or close only part of the slats. For this purpose, groups of adjacent slats may be engaged to different movable rods which are moved by separate drives. For example, in
In the pergola of the present invention, a “border” slat 10C is mounted on a special sliding connector 64 (see also
With reference to
The rod 162 has an open conical socket 155 instead of the regular opening 55. The lug 54 is held in the narrow bottom of the socket 155 by a pre-loaded spring 170. In this position of the lug 54, the slat 110 may be pivoted by the movable rod 162 together with the regular slats 10D, 10E, etc.
If the adjacent slat 10C is opened, it urges the border slat 110 to rotate and the lug 54 leaves the socket 155 overcoming the spring 170. Thus, the displacement of the border slat 110 allows the adjacent slat 10C to reach the extreme open position.
The slats 10 and 110 as well as the hinges 34 and 134 may be designed identical by carefully selecting the geometry of the slat profile. This would be the most effective solution from production and economical point of view.
If standardized profiles are used, there may be some interference between the displaced border slat 110 and its neighbor 10D, as shown in the zone X. In such case, the next slat 10D may be given some freedom of rotation by making the corresponding opening 156 in the movable rod 162 slightly elongated and spring-loading the corresponding lug 54 by another spring 171. It will be appreciated that the elongation of the opening 156 may be rather small and will not require wider movable rod 162.
Although a description of specific embodiments has been presented, it is contemplated that various changes could be made without deviating from the scope of the present invention as defined by the claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2574344 | Miller | Nov 1951 | A |
4268995 | Villa | May 1981 | A |
4926599 | Scholz | May 1990 | A |
5306210 | Smit | Apr 1994 | A |
6061962 | Sosa | May 2000 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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198433573 | Jan 1985 | AU |
1 103 670 | May 2001 | EP |
2821641 | Sep 2002 | FR |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060040607 A1 | Feb 2006 | US |