The present disclosure relates to a method and apparatus for protecting building infrastructure, fixtures, and features located on or within structures.
In any given residential or commercial structure, several features are incorporated at a reasonable height to be accessible by the building occupants, such as plumbing components, electrical systems, or fixtures. Multiple safety features may be integrated into the building framework or otherwise fixed on or within the building after construction. The features may be required by governmental codes or contracts and generally are intended to help protect the well-being of occupants or materials located within the buildings in the case of an emergency. Some well-known examples of these safety features include fire alarms, gas detectors, defibrillators, fire axes, fire hoses, fire extinguishers, and sprinkler systems. In commercial and industrial buildings such as warehouses, sprinkler systems are just one example of a fire safety measures that can be mandatory per relevant local, state, or federal codes and ordinances.
While there are multiple types of sprinkler systems for commercial and industrial buildings, of particular note is the Early Suppression Fast Response system (ESFR). Unlike earlier counterparts, such as control mode systems, ESFR systems are designed to extinguish fires as opposed to simply controlling them. The systems are able to discharge larger volumes of water at faster rates as compared to other types of sprinkler systems. Like most well-known sprinkler systems, ESFR and other industrial systems have heads that protrude from piping that permeates the building and are capable of spreading water over large areas. Heads are generally located near the top of the building or on the ceiling to ensure efficient covering of a potential fire with pressurized water. Other components of these systems, however, need to be located closer to the floor, can be mere inches off of the ground, to be easily accessible by building personnel or fire departments. For example, fire department connections (FDCs) can be incorporated into sprinkler systems to allow a fireman crew to connect to the system and subsequently boost the pressure of the system via a pump to facilitate the extinguishing of the fire. FDCs must be at a height such that the crew can reach and utilize the FDC. Other examples of such components include alarm valves, gate valves, main drain connections, and fire department connections. To accommodate components like these, sprinkler systems incorporate pipe sections often referred to as “downspouts” that supply water pressure at lower levels of the building. As their name suggests, downspouts extend downwards from the main overhead piping complex, generally following a structural component of the building. Particularly in storage warehouses where the large square footage requires dissemination of beams throughout the structure, a downspout will buttress a beam in one or multiple locations within the warehouse.
Because downspouts are located in the building such that they are accessible by relevant personnel, they are also more exposed and prone to be damaged accidently during the ordinary course of business, a concern pertinent to all of the building safety features discussed above. Commercial and industrial buildings can have heavy equipment such as forklifts operating within the walls, and errant operation of such equipment can lead to accidental damaging of these components. This is of particular concern with a feature such as an ESFR system because damaging of an accessible component (e.g. an FDC) or a downspout could lead to massive flooding and countless dollars in damages to the structure and materials housed within, not to mention the obvious safety concerns surrounding such flooding. Damages to other safety features (i.e. fire extinguishers, defibrillators, or axes/hoses encased in glass) pose similar issues that are equally concerning: fire extinguishers could rupture, defibrillators could expose energized wires, and broken glass cases could pose hazards for building personnel.
In one embodiment, the present disclosure provides a method and apparatus to protect building-related elements from high-impact collisions while still enabling personnel to access the element that the apparatus or method is protecting. The present disclosure is intended to protect building-related elements from collisions, such as from heavy equipment, that could injure or damage the element.
In one embodiment, the present disclosure comprises an apparatus configured to protect building-related elements from collision damages. The apparatus comprises a first bumper member comprising an anterior portion and a posterior portion, the first bumper member defining a cavity; and a frame rail connected to the posterior portion of the bumper member. The frame rail can be configured to be coupled to a surface and the bumper can configured to deflect impact forces around a portion of the cavity.
In another embodiment, the present disclosure comprises a method of protecting building-related elements from collision damages, comprising the steps of providing a protection apparatus, and installing the protection apparatus on a surface. The protection apparatus comprises a first bumper member comprising an anterior portion and a posterior portion, the first bumper defining a cavity; and a frame rail connected to the posterior portion of the bumper member and configured to be coupled to a surface. The bumper can be configured to deflect impact forces around a portion of the cavity. This deflection of impact forces can eliminate or mitigate damage to a building element disposed within the bumper cavity.
In another embodiment, the present disclosure comprises an apparatus configured to protect building-related elements from collision damage, comprising: a first guard bar lumen having a linear side, a curved side, a first arm member, and a second arm member, the first and second arm members extending from the linear side at a first angle between the linear side and the first arm member and a second angle between the linear side and the second arm member; a second guard bar lumen having a linear side, a curved side, a first arm member, and a second arm member, the first and second arm members extending from the linear side at a first angle between the linear side and the first arm member and a second angle between the linear side and the second arm member; and a first angle iron having a first portion coupled at the first angle to a second portion, a second angle iron having a first portion coupled at the second angle to a second portion. The first angle iron can be coupled to the first and second guard bar lumens along at least a portion of the first angle of the first and second guard bar lumens, and the second angle iron can be coupled to the first and second guard bar lumens along at least a portion of the second angle of the first and second guard bar lumens.
The present disclosure describes advantages over the art by providing a method and apparatus for protecting building-related elements from collision damages while simultaneously allowing for facile access to the protected elements. In one exemplary embodiment, a protection apparatus can protect against high-impact collision damages, such as from heavy equipment operation. In another exemplary embodiment, the protection apparatus can be installed in a building after construction (retrofitted) and affixed around a building-related element.
The bumper members 12, 14 can additionally have arms 26, 28 that outwardly extend from the posterior portion 24. The bumper members 12, 14 can be coupled to two frame rails 16, 18 that lend structural support to the apparatus 10 and facilitate coupling of the apparatus 10 to a surface. The bumper members 12, 14 can be coupled to the two frame rails 16, 18, via a weld, rivet, screw, nut, bolt, or other suitable attachment mechanism. The bumper member 12, 14 can be coupled to the frame rails 16, 18 via both the posterior portions and the arms 26, 28. The frame rails 16, 18 can be angel irons configured to couple to two parallel edges of a column; however, the frame rails 16, 18 could take the form of any structural element or suitable component capable of lending structural support to the apparatus 10 and facilitating coupling of the apparatus 10 to a surface. For example, a frame rail can take the form of an angle iron, a rail, a bar, a strip, a sheet, a ring, a pole, or other suitable component. In one exemplary embodiment, the frame rails 16, 18 can be angle irons having holes 20 configured to receive a bolt that threads through a column and causes the angle irons to engage the column edges when tightened.
The bumper members 12, 14, arms 26, 28, are preferably made of standard ASTM A36, hot-rolled steel plate (1″ thick on the arms) and (⅜″ thick on the angles). Alternatively, grade 50 steel can be used.
The present disclosure provides at least the following advantages over prior art:
1) protection of building-related elements from high-impact collision damages, such as from heavy equipment;
2) facile access to said elements while the elements are protected; and
3) ability to protect elements after the building is already constructed.
Persons skilled in the art will readily understand that these advantages (as well as the advantages indicated in the summary) and objectives of this system would not be possible without the particular combination of structural components and mechanisms assembled in this inventive apparatus and described herein.
The disclosure can be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the spirit or essential characteristics thereof. For example, each of the new structures described herein, can be modified to suit particular local variations or requirements while retaining their basic configurations or structural relationships with each other or while performing the same or similar functions described herein. The present embodiments are therefore to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive. Accordingly, the scope of the inventions are established by the appended claims rather than by the foregoing description. All changes that come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are therefore intended to be embraced therein. Further, the individual elements of the claims are not well-understood, routine, or conventional. Instead, the claims are directed to the unconventional inventive concept described in the specification.
Where reference if made herein to a method comprising two or more defined steps, the defined steps can be carried out in any order or simultaneously (except where the context excludes that possibility), and the method can include one or more other steps which are carried out before any of the defined steps, between two of the defined steps, or after all the defined steps (except where the context excludes that possibility).
Terms that traditionally infer a sequential order, such as “first” or “second” or “third”, are used to distinguish one element from another element and are not necessarily meant to denote that an element is the primary or initial element in any given sequence of elements. For example, “a first wire” does not necessarily signify that the wire is the first in a sequence of wires or the first wire to be changed or modified by a method or apparatus. Instead, “a first wire” can only indicate that the wire is separate and distinguishable from another wire, such as “a second wire” or “a third wire.”
The disclosure presented in the written description and the various features and advantageous details thereof are explained more fully with reference to the non-limiting examples included and as detailed in the description which follows. Descriptions of well-known components and processes and manufacturing techniques are omitted so as to not unnecessarily obscure the principal features of the disclosure as described herein. The examples used in the description which follows are intended merely to facilitate an understanding of ways in which the disclosure can be practiced and to further enable those skilled in the art to practice the disclosure. Accordingly, the examples should not be construed as limiting the scope of the disclosure.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20210324625 A1 | Oct 2021 | US |