This application is a 35 U.S.C. § 371 national stage of International Application No. PCT/EP2016/055687 filed on Mar. 16, 2016, published in English under PCT Article 21(2), which claims the benefit of priority to Swedish Patent Application No. 1550316-2 filed on Mar. 16, 2015, the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
The present invention relates to a building access system having the features of the first part of claim 1. The invention also relates to a method for providing a building with a building access system having the features of the first part of claim 25.
In recent times the requirements on buildings, e.g. multi-tenant buildings with several storeys, but also buildings with one or a few storeys only, being equipped with means admitting easy access for everyone by means of elevators are increasing. These requirements make the buildings more expensive since elevator arrangements are costly installations. Particularly if the building only comprises two, three or four floors, the conclusion might be that it is not worth the price installing an elevator arrangement at all.
This problematic is even more pronounced within the existing building stock, particularly for residential buildings, since it not only involves considerable investments to provide existing, e.g. older buildings with elevator arrangements. Such buildings are generally not adapted for receiving an elevator arrangement, and a considerable reconstruction of the building may be required, since such an installation is very space demanding. It may for example require using some of the available space normally used for apartments close to the staircase. Elevator arrangements must also be so located that easy access is provided for each apartment in the building.
These factors may in some instances even make it questionable whether it is worth the investment to equip an existing building with an elevator.
A more attractive alternative may in such a case be to demolish the building and instead construct new buildings equipped with elevator arrangements.
JPH1135254 proposes a home elevator for installation in an existing one or two-family building. It comprises an open deck on a lower floor and a veranda on an upper floor and is arranged for connection to an exterior wall on the window side of an existing house. Entrance is provided through respective landings. The elevator room goes up and down between the floors Entrance is provided through sliding doors to the veranda and the open deck. Such an arrangement is limited to be used for a one-family house, and in particular there is no safe connection to the building.
DE 102005050066 shows a system wherein a separate supporting structure, with supporting elements resting on the ground, and cross bars connected thereto, is arranged to support a number of balconies, such that all vertical loads on the balconies are taken up thereby. An elevator arrangement uses the same supporting structure as the balcony arrangement, and the elevator runs via rails connected to the supporting structure. Since buildings move with respect to the ground, or vice versa, several problems may be associated with such a construction. It is also a disadvantage of such a system that the provisioning of a soil foundation is not always desirable, or even possible.
It is also known to equip existing residential buildings with external elevator arrangements. Such external elevator arrangements are then built in connection to existing staircases, where a wing is built out next to each stairwell. This is an extremely expensive and space demanding alternative, which also is very time consuming to build and install, and out of question where available external space is limited, e.g. in areas where the building stock is dense.
Thus, the option based on existing solutions is to undertake an expensive, time-consuming installation, requiring space that for example normally is used as living areas, for the installation, which may reduce the size of existing living areas or other localities, e.g. offices or anything else, and is very costly. It may be so costly that it requires increasing the costs for the apartments, offices or similar that is not acceptable to tenants or owners.
The alternative would be either to demolish the building, or to leave it as it is, which may be unsatisfactory, in particular if other renovation measures are to be undertaken, since the standard of the building will then not be increased to a level corresponding to the costs for taking such other measures.
Also for the building of new houses it is sometimes a disadvantage that the costs and the space demanded for equipping the buildings with an elevator are unnecessarily high, e.g. if low-cost alternatives are to be built, or for more temporary buildings, which then may have to be built without an easy access facility comprising an elevator.
Particularly considering the fact that residential densification in urban areas is becoming more and more attractive at the same time as there is a need for less expensive apartments, further at the same time as the requirements on access facilities are increasing, it is realized that none of the existing solutions is satisfactory.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a building access system as initially referred to through which one or more of the above mentioned problems can be solved.
A particular object is to provide a building access system which is less space demanding than hitherto known access systems comprising an elevator facility.
It is particularly an object to provide a building access system which is cheap and which is easy and uncomplicated to install on a building, and which further meets high safety standards, in use as well as during mounting.
It is a particular object to provide a building access system which can be installed without demanding access to, and reducing available internal space on existing buildings, neither living areas, nor in the stairwells.
Still further it is a particular object to provide building access system which is easy to fabricate and to mount.
It is a particular object to provide a building access system which is easy to transport to the building where it is to be mounted.
Still another object is to provide a building access system which can be mounted in a fast manner.
Another particular object is to provide a building access system which is flexible, which with advantage can be used when building new buildings, and also for existing buildings, independently of whether they are equipped with balconies or not, and substantially independently of how apartments, offices etc. are organized in the building.
Still other objects are to provide a building access system which meets high security standards and further which is aesthetic and comfortable for the residents of the building.
Therefore, a building access system as initially referred to is provided which has the characterizing features of claim 1.
It is also a particularly an object to provide a method for providing a building with an access system having the features of the first part of claim 25 through which one or more of the above mentioned objects can be met.
Therefore, a method is provided which has the characterizing features of claim 25.
Advantageous embodiments are given by the respective appended sub-claims.
The invention will in the following be further described, in a non-limiting manner, and with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
In still other embodiments, balcony modules, for one or more storeys or planes, may be provided which are adapted to be disposed on one side only, or even on three sides, of an elevator module. It should also be clear that balconies disposed on two or more sides of an elevator module may be disposed in parallel planes, or in planes which are not parallel, but e.g. vertically displaced (in a mounted state) with respect to one another. The number of planes may also be different on different sides. Such and other different implementations and variations are of course also to be covered by the present invention if the building access system comprises separate modules; i.e. the elevator modules and balconies or balcony modules are not integrated, or integrated in different manners, e.g. one module comprising an elevator module and one, two or three balconies, or balcony modules, for each plane, cf. examples in
In
In the shown embodiment the balconies are provided with water protective arrangements 11 as will be further described below with reference to
The mounting arrangement 3 is connected to the wall 4 of the building as will be further described below.
It should also be clear that the inventive concept is not limited to any particular kind of mounting arrangement, but that the modules, separately, or as one or more integrated modules, may be connected to an external wall of a building in any appropriate manner. The mounting arrangement may alternatively, or additionally, be connected to mounting elements, also denoted second, suspending, mounting elements, of different kinds and arranged in different manners. The mounting arrangement may then e.g. be connected thereto and exclusively or additionally supported thereby, whereby such second, suspending, mounting elements may comprise bars or beams forming part of, or being fixedly connected to, the attic joist floor, or to the wall of the building. Still further, separate, e.g. different, mounting arrangements or elements may be used for elevator modules and balcony modules, and the elevator modules may be supported and carried by means of soil foundations, whereas the balcony modules are connected to the building, in the sense of carried and supported thereby via the part of the mounting arrangement connected to and supported thereby.
Further, balcony should be interpreted in a broad sense; it may e.g. in some instances, at least at the bottom floor, be a veranda, a terrace or similar; it may also relate to any kind of platform etc. Still further it does of course not have to be a glass balcony, it may alternatively comprise one or more solid walls, railings etc. The balcony door may in some embodiments comprise but a door in a balcony railing or a door of semi-height, on condition that there is a door in the elevator shaft which is closed except for when the elevator arrives. Different kinds of elevators may also be used. The elevator module may be exclusively mounted to the wall, or provided with additional supports as well, but which does not require any real fundament, or catch trap, although the use of such elevators of course is not excluded. Alternatively, the elevator module is supported, solely or additionally, by a fundament on the ground or a soil foundation of any appropriate kind, whereas the balcony module(s) is/are connected to the building. An inner balcony door 7, leading to the living area, is illustrated by means of dashed lines.
The mounting arrangement 3′ comprises two first vertical structural hollow sections (only one shown) adapted for connection of the elevator module 2′ to the house wall 4. Each first vertical structural hollow section is L-shaped with a first leg section 31 adapted to interconnect the elevator module 2′ with the house wall 4 in a vertical direction, and a second leg section 32 perpendicularly disposed with respect to the first leg section 31 and adapted to be disposed at a respective lower side edge of the elevator module 2′.
In
In an alternative embodiment (not shown) the first vertical structural hollow sections are integrated in the elevator module for attachment together with the elevator module to a house wall. Also for integrated building access systems the mounting arrangements may be partly or wholly integrated with the building access system; alternatively, the mounting arrangements are separate therefrom, and in still other embodiments parts of the mounting arrangement are integrated, other parts not. In exemplary embodiments mounting arrangements are integrated in an elevator module forming part of an integrated module. Many variations are possible.
The mounting arrangement 3′″ here comprises at least partly separate mounting arrangement structures 3A, 3B for the balcony module 1′ and for the elevator module 2′. The first mounting arrangement structure 3A comprises two first vertical structural hollow sections 33′ (only one shown), see e.g.
For explanatory reasons the elevator module 2′ is illustrated in a state just before mounting to the mounting arrangement 3′″ connected to the house wall 4 and ground respectively.
The mounting arrangement 3″″ here comprises second, suspending, mounting elements 36, 36, e.g. comprising bars or beams forming part of or being fixedly connected to the attic joist floor of the building (or in alternative embodiments, not shown, to the wall of the building). The first vertical structural hollow sections 33″″, 33″″ are connected to, and e.g. suspended by the second, suspending, mounting elements 36, 36.
For explanatory reasons the elevator module 2′ is illustrated in a state just before mounting to the mounting arrangement 3″″ in
The elevator module 2′ may alternatively be arranged to be supported or carried by a soil foundation 3B as in
In
A grate floor 12 is adapted to be disposed on top of the supporting floor frame structure 6′.
A roofing structure 22 is connectable to the lower side of the supporting floor frame structure 6′. The roofing structure comprises ridges or seams, here disposed in parallel and extending in a direction from one side section 64 towards the other 64 of the frame structure 6′. It may be connected to the frame structure 6′ in any appropriate manner, and it is adapted to form a roof of another balcony located below, unless it is the lowermost balcony, in which case it just forms a base plate or a bottom roof; the functioning is the same. One purpose of the ridges is to conduct water leaking through the grate floor and the frame structure towards the sides of the balcony. It may e.g. be made of sheet metal. In one embodiment it comprises corrugated metal.
In an advantageous embodiment the mounting arrangement further comprises console elements 34 having the shape of an inverted L and comprising a first leg portion 34′ for connection to the wall of the building, and a second leg portion 34″ disposed perpendicularly thereto onto which the second vertical structural hollow section 33′ rests. The console element further comprises a wedge 340 adapted to the shape of the console element and comprising a number of through holes 341, 341 for bolting to the wall of the building.
In advantageous embodiments console elements similar to console elements 34 are also provided for providing additional support to first vertical structural hollow sections intended for supporting the elevator module.
The frame structure 6 may here be connected to said horizontal beams by means of fastening elements (not shown), e.g. comprising bolts and nuts or similar, through mating holes 65 in the frame structure 6 and holes 35′ in the horizontal beams 38 respectively. It should be clear that the pull-rods 35 cannot be provided on the side of a supporting floor frame structure facing an elevator module for practical reasons. It should also be clear that different additional supporting elements can be provided for in any desired manner also when the supporting floor frame structure (6, 6′) is connected directly to second vertical structural hollow elements (33′), cf.
To the left in
The protective arrangement 155 further comprises a bottom plate portion 111 and a rear plate portion 112. The bottom plate portion 111 is connected to, or integral with, the outer lower edge of the front portion and is arranged to slope slightly outwards. It comprises a plurality of drainage holes 114 adjacent the interface with the outer plate portion 110 allowing water to flow out through said holes. At the opposite end of the bottom plate portion, and preferably integral therewith, the rear plate portion 112 extends, in a mounted state, substantially in parallel to the wall of the building, and at its upper edge being provided with an outwardly sloping water fall-off portion 113 adapted for connection to the lower side of an inner roofing 22, at the outer edges thereof, below the frame section 64. By means of holes 116 disposed in bottom edge portions of the frame sections, water is allowed to flow through said holes 116, onto the water fall-off portion 113, and down onto the outwardly sloping bottom portion 111 and out through the drainage holes 114 provided therein. The first outer plate portion 110 mainly protects against rain water falling in onto the building.
As discussed with reference to
Also the elevator module, or respective elevator submodules, may be provided with corresponding or similar water protective arrangements.
It should be clear that the invention is not limited to the explicitly illustrated embodiments but that it can be freely varied within the scope of the appended claims.
For mounting of the building access system on an existing building, old balconies (if any) are removed. If the building does not comprise any balconies, doors need to be taken up in the wall, or a window be replaced. If so called French balconies are provided, such doors may with advantage be used.
The building access system may comprise partially or entirely integrated mounting arrangements, or entirely separate mounting arrangements. It is also not restricted to any particular mounting arrangements as long as it can be securely, reliably, and easily mounted onto a wall of a building, and further allows secure and reliable and easy mounting of the elevator and balcony modules thereto.
It may be provided as substantially pre-fabricated modules for transportation to the building where it is to be mounted, or as separate elements.
A module may also comprise an integrated module comprising an elevator module and one or more balcony modules, on more than one side of the elevator module, or on one side only, and/or with balconies in one or more planes (vertically seen in a mounted state).
The building access system may further be provided with a water protective arrangement or not. It should also be clear that the water protective arrangement can be used as a separate entity that can be added, or be built in from the beginning. The water protective arrangement can also be used with other types of balconies, glass balconies or not. It may also be fabricated as an optional add-on product, applicable for many different types of balconies, or other types of platforms etc.
It is a particular advantage of the invention that a building needing to be provided with an elevator, will through the inventive concept at the same time be provided with balconies, or if balconies were already provided, with new balconies, which adds considerably to the value and comfort of the building.
A further advantage resulting from the invention is that one or more extra floors may be cost efficiently added on top of existing, lower buildings, e.g. on top of 2, 3 or more storey buildings. It is estimated that the cost for such an addition can be achieved at a cost that is about 50% in comparison with new production.
It is also an advantage that a very easy access to an elevator is provided from each apartment or office or similar.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1550316 | Mar 2015 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2016/055687 | 3/16/2016 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2016/146682 | 9/22/2016 | WO | A |
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International Search Report and Written Opinion for PCT/EP2016/055687, dated May 31, 2016, 9. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20180073238 A1 | Mar 2018 | US |