The invention relates to modular building units for use in the construction of largely prefabricated offices, hotels and apartment blocks, and buildings of a similar general nature. Such modular building units are box-like structures which can be manufactured and fitted-out off-site and then transported to a construction site for final assembly to form the internal rooms of a building. The building is assembled by stacking the individual modules in a horizontal and vertical array and securing them together to form a rigid structure. The invention provides a novel mechanism for securing the adjacent modules together.
Particularly in the construction of hotels, apartments and student accommodation it is known to construct the buildings from lightweight building modules each of which is a skeletal steel shell formed from lightweight structural steel sections welded into a box-like structure and lined with boarding such as plasterboard, plywood or oriented strand board (OSB). Each building module is made initially as such a lined shell, and is then fitted-out to the desired standard of internal decoration in a factory before being transported to the final building site for incorporation into a building.
Individual building modules for erection in a horizontal and vertical array into such a building are described and claimed in copending Patent Application No W068004. Other building modules are known, made primarily from wood frames and wood boarding.
A difficulty arises in the securing together of the individual modules. A first module can be swung into position by crane and bolted or otherwise secured to the building foundations. A next module can then be swung into position alongside, but the edge that lies alongside the foundations immediately adjacent to the original secured module is obscured from access, and only the accessible sides of the base of the module can be secures to the foundations. Similarly with all subsequent storeys of the building, only the first module to be swung into position can be secured on all bottom edges. All subsequent modules have at least one bottom edge obscured by the adjacent module or modules, so securing is limited to those non-obscured edges.
The invention provides a mechanism for securing together room-sized building modules in the construction of a building as claimed in the claims herein. The mechanism can be used in the securing of the first course of building modules to a foundation or base structure, or for the securing of any subsequent course to the course below. The resulting building is one in which each building module is secured along both long sides and preferably along all sides to the adjacent structure in both the vertical and horizontal directions.
Referring first to
In
If the individual modules were hoisted into position in the above numerical sequence, it will be appreciated that module 1 can be fixed to the foundations (or to the floor below if the illustration was at a higher level in the building) on all four of its base edges, because none of those edges is obscured by an adjacent module when module 1 is the only one on site. When module 2 is hoisted into position alongside, however, it cannot be secured to the foundations or lower course along its short bottom edge that abuts module 1. It has in the past been secured only at the other, exposed, bottom edges. Similarly module 3 has been secured only along two short and one long base edge; and module 4 would have been secured only along one long and one short edge. Exactly the same restrictions apply when hoisting modules 5 to 8 into position and securing them to modules 1 to 4.
What is of importance to this invention is that each module has secured to its outer wall a metal channel member 11 of top-hat section which extends around the outside of the module along each wall that in the finished building is to face the wall of an adjacent module. One such channel member 11 is secured around the top of each module as shown for the modules 1 and 2; and one is secured around the bottom of each module as shown for modules 5 and 6. Each individual module therefore has two such channel members 11 around its periphery or part of its periphery, one at a low level and one at a high level. Each channel member 11 is parallel to the adjacent corner of the module and spaced from that corner by a constant spacing d.
When the modules are stacked together there is a small but constant spacing between the adjacent vertical walls. This is a necessary requirement for acoustic insulation, and is utilized in the fixing mechanism of the invention. A link means 12 is inserted into the spacing left between the adjacent modules 1 and 2 as shown in
When the link means 12 is inserted into the gap between the adjacent modules 1 and 2, the legs 16 flex inwardly until the flanges pass under the channel members 11, and then spring outwardly under their own resilience to hold the link means firmly down with its base strip 13 abutting the top surface of the adjacent modules 1 and 2. The base strip 13 is then secured along its long edges to the modules 1 and 2 below, for example by screws. Self-tapping screws into the structural steel framework of the modules gives a string fastening; or alternatively the base strip could be plug welded or seam welded to a peripheral channel in the top edges of the modules. Shown in
When secured as above, the modules 1 and 2 are fastened together along their top edges in both the vertical and horizontal planes by the link means 12. Moreover, the upstanding resiliently flexible legs 14 and detent flanges 15 are positioned to engage with the lower channel members 11 of the next level of modules 5 and 6 as they are hoisted into position. As each of the modules 5 and 6 is lowered into position onto the tops of the modules 1 and 2, the resiliently flexible legs flex and return with their detent flanges 15 engaging above the channel member 11 of the associated module, providing secure attachment of the next layer of modules around all edges of each module, top and bottom.
The base portion 13 of each insert 12 has another important function. It completely covers and closes the gap between adjacent modules. Therefore when the modules are being erected on site there is only a short time during which rain or dirt can travel down between adjacent modules, which is a highly desirable feature on the building site itself. Also, on completion of the building the creation of a continuous chimney or void from base to roof of the finished building is avoided, which is a great advantage from a fire security viewpoint. In
It will be understood that suitable acoustic insulation will be provided in practice between the adjacent modules and between the modules and the inserts 12, although none is shown in the drawings. For example, an acoustic barrier could be created between adjacent modules by placing a layer of acoustically insulating material such as neoprene foam between the outer walls 10 of each module and the channel members 11; or by covering the outer surface of the channel members 11 with similar material.
Each guide channel has a guide slot 23 formed in its outer face, extending from a divergent jaw 24 to a parallel-sided cup portion 25. Secured at the bottom of the fixing plate 22, and lying inside the guide channel 21, is a resiliently deformable sheet of spring steel 26 which acts as a detent for a connecting pin 27 which will be described later. A circular aperture 28 in the spring detent 26 is positioned to lie alongside the bottom of the cup portion 25 of the guide channel 23 to receive an end of the connecting pin 27.
The connecting pin 27 is located on a lower end of an insert bar 29. When two modules of a single storey of a building are in their final positions adjacent one another as shown in
The guide channels 21 may be provided at any location and at any height on the mutually facing outer sides of the building modules. If they are provided at a low level, near to the base of the modules, then it may be desirable to incorporate additional guide means to facilitate the engagement of the pin 28 in the guide channels 21 as the insert bar is lowered from the top of the adjacent modules.
Desirably as each level of the building is completed a cover strip of steel is secured over the small gap between adjacent modules, to keep out the weather on site before the building is finished and to act as a fire break in the finished building. Such a cover strip also assists in the securing together of the adjacent modules, as it connects together the top edges of the adjacent modules in the horizontal plane. The invention therefore embraces a building method in which such a metal sheet, with a gutter formed therein, is secured over the junctions between the tops of adjacent modular building units in the building at each storey. Preferably the gutters formed in those metal sheets conduct rain water and/or condensation to the outside of the building.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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02281640 | Dec 2002 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB03/05270 | 12/3/2003 | WO | 1/30/2006 |