The invention relates to a building complex consisting of multi-storey ring-shaped buildings having sectors which are trapezoidal in plan view, form a regular polygon ring and enclose a courtyard having a central stairwell, the storeys of said sectors being uniformly offset from one another in the height direction and being connected to the stairwell by passages which run in a spoke-like fashion, said stairwell having a staircase which circulates in the direction of ascent of the storeys and which has a height of ascent between the passages corresponding to the storey offset.
In order to be able to use one stairwell which is common to all sectors and storeys to easily move around within a ring-shaped building in the form of a regular polygon ring having sectors which form storeys offset from one another in the height direction, it is known (WO 1998/041715 A1) to provide a central stairwell within the courtyard enclosed by the polygon ring, said central stairwell being connected to the individual storeys of each sector by a respective spoke-like passage. Since the stairwell has a staircase which circulates in the direction of ascent of the storeys and which has a height of ascent between the passages corresponding to the storey offset, then despite the storey offset between the individual sectors any storey can be reached from any storey, wherein in each case only the height difference between the respective storeys has to be overcome. Within the ring-shaped building, therefore, sectors are obtained which are delimited from one another in the height direction and which enable the ring-shaped building to be advantageously divided using simple structural means, without having to dispense with a storey-by-storey connection between the sectors, which do not require their own stairwells for this purpose. If multiple ring-shaped buildings of this type are constructed, the advantages of these ring-shaped buildings can be utilized in each case per se, but it would be advantageous to connect these ring-shaped buildings to one another in such a way that the advantages achieved for the individual ring-shaped buildings can be extended to a building complex consisting of multiple such ring-shaped buildings.
The problem addressed by the invention is therefore that of forming, in the case of a building complex consisting of a plurality of polygonal ring-shaped buildings, a connection between the individual ring-shaped buildings so that it is possible to walk from ring-shaped building to ring-shaped building without having to use the central stairwells to exit and enter the individual ring-shaped buildings.
Proceeding from a building complex of the type outlined in the introduction, the invention solves the stated problem in that, in the case of ring-shaped buildings comprising an even-numbered polygon ring, the mutually identical ring-shaped buildings are arranged at the vertices of a polygon corresponding to the polygon ring and, in the case of ring-shaped buildings comprising an odd-numbered polygon ring, said ring-shaped buildings are arranged in an alternating fashion, in each case offset through an angle of 180°, at the vertices of a polygon having twice the number of vertices, and in that the ring-shaped buildings following one another along the polygon are connected by passages which run between the storeys of the mutually opposite connecting sectors with a corresponding storey offset, wherein, between the two connecting sectors of each ring-shaped building, there is a number of sectors which in the case of an even-numbered polygon ring corresponds to half the number of vertices minus two and in the case of an odd-numbered polygon ring corresponds to half the number of vertices plus one, minus two.
As a result of these measures, the situation is achieved whereby the mutually opposite connecting sectors of directly successive ring-shaped buildings not only run parallel to one another but also have a corresponding storey offset, so that the mutually corresponding storeys of said connecting sectors can easily be connected to one another by passages. It is thus possible to pass from one storey of a connecting sector of one ring-shaped building directly into the corresponding storey of the connecting sector of the ring-shaped building that is adjacent in the course of the polygon arrangement.
Although the number of vertices of the polygonal ring-shaped buildings can be selected differently, preference is generally given to ring-shaped buildings which have six or five vertices. Ring-shaped buildings which form a regular hexagon are thus arranged at the vertices of a hexagon, whereas, in the case of ring-shaped buildings in the shape of a pentagon, the buildings have to be arranged at the vertices of a decagon.
The subject matter of the invention is shown by way of example in the drawing, in which
A ring-shaped building R for a building complex according to the invention comprises, as shown in
In order to be able to link such polygonal ring-shaped buildings R to one another to form a building complex, the ring-shaped buildings R are arranged at the vertices of a polygon, the number of vertices of which depends on the number of vertices of the polygonal ring-shaped buildings R. A distinction must be made here between ring-shaped buildings R comprising an even-numbered polygon ring and ring-shaped buildings R comprising an odd-numbered polygon ring. While ring-shaped buildings R comprising an even-numbered polygon ring can be arranged at the vertices of a polygon having the same number of vertices, ring-shaped buildings R comprising an odd-numbered polygon ring have to be provided at the vertices of a polygon having a number of vertices that corresponds to twice the number of vertices of the polygon ring. This is due to the fact that, in the case of even-numbered polygon rings, the sectors 1 are in each case located diametrically opposite one another in pairs, but in the case of odd-numbered polygon rings a sector 1 is in each case located diametrically opposite a vertex of the polygon, which, if the ring-shaped buildings R are arranged in an alternating fashion offset through an angle of 180°, leads to the situation whereby, for ring-shaped buildings R in the shape of an odd-numbered polygon ring, the ring-shaped buildings R must be arranged along a polygon having twice the number of vertices.
The exemplary embodiment of
Although ring-shaped buildings comprising a polygon ring with six or five vertices are usually used, the invention is not limited to these numbers of vertices. Since the connecting sectors of the ring-shaped buildings must always be perpendicular to the polygon side between the ring-shaped buildings to be connected, so that the passages 6 between the connecting sectors run in the direction of this polygon side, the angle between the two connecting sectors corresponds to the angle between two polygon sides, which in turn has the result that, in the case of an even-numbered polygon ring of the ring-shaped buildings, there must be between the connecting sectors a number Zg of sectors which corresponds to half the number of vertices Eg of the polygon ring minus 2: Zg=Eg/2−2. In the case of an odd number of vertices Eu of the polygon ring, there must be between the two connecting sectors of a ring-shaped building a number Zu of sectors which corresponds to half the number of vertices Eu plus one, minus two: Zu=(Eu+1)/2−2.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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A50212/2017 | Mar 2017 | AT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/AT2017/050027 | 11/30/2017 | WO | 00 |