The subject matter of the present application is in the field of small modular buildings used for selling retail goods and services.
Small modular buildings for retail food, drive-thru, auto service, and other businesses are known. Examples include those shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,109,956 to Casale et al. (easily installed food service facility modules for shopping center parking lots); U.S. Pat. No. 5,613,331 to LaGanke (modular oil change and lubrication center for mall parking lots); U.S. Pat. No. 8,622,453 to Karapetian, Jr. (mobile food service unit with drive-thru capability); U.S. Published Application No. 2009/0255195A1 to Bridgman et al. (drive-thru system and method for building in a parking lot); and U.S. Published Application No. 2015/0075271A1 to Tracy et al. (modular, portable, drive-thru tire tread wear and brake testing system for temporary set-up in existing parking lots).
Installing such small retail goods-and-services buildings in existing parking lots, such as those associated with malls and large department stores, places a high premium on efficiency with respect to delivery, assembly or installation, and use. Failure to achieve any of these with respect to a particular building installation can make it impractical.
Another common problem is the regulation and cost associated with putting additional signage in an existing store parking lot. Pylon-type signage limits are often restrictive, and the existing store or mall may not be able to accommodate adequate signage for a complementary business operating out of a modular building installed in the parking lot.
The present invention is a modular building system, particularly suited for installation of a small modular building in an existing parking lot, for example to house a small retail business complementary to an existing store's business in the store's parking lot. Suitable small retail businesses include, but are not limited to, drive-thru coffee and specialty food establishments smaller than typical full-menu, full-service fast food restaurants.
In a first form, the present system comprises three modular building sections sized to make substantially full use of a standard (non-“wide load”) trailer or tractor-trailer bed for delivery, for example on the order of 9′ (feet) wide by 27′(feet) long. A first building section comprises a main rectangular one-story service area approximating a first trailer bed and configured to be delivered on a first trailer. Second and third building sections comprise dimensionally similar, smaller “cube” sections. The second and third cube sections are configured to be delivered on a second trailer, and to be assembled by stacking them on top of one another to form a multi-story utility tower connected to the main rectangular section when installed in a parking lot.
In a further form, a fourth modular section comprises a carport sized and configured to fit the remaining third of the trailer occupied by the tower cube modules, in complementary relationship to the other modules.
While two tower cubes plus a carport is a preferred combination to substantially fill the space on a trailer bed, it would also be possible to size two tower cubes to substantially fill the trailer bed. If the tower cubes fill the trailer bed, then the carport section may be sized to fit or nest over one of the modular tower cubes (or over the main rectangular building section) in order to stay within the dimensions of the trailer bed.
The modular building sections are fully pre-built prior to being loaded onto the trailers and delivered to the parking lot. By “pre-built” is meant substantially finished and ready for use (kitchen or other retail business appliances, electrical wiring, plumbing, heating and cooling systems, bathrooms, seating, etc.) modules, ready to be connected into a single building and to be hooked up to pre-installed utilites in the parking lot.
The upper tower cube comprises large, flat, elevated side walls suitable for functioning as billboards for business signage at a height above the roof of the main ground level building module. These elevated signage walls comply with sign ordinances due to their height and due to their being an integral part of the building.
In a further aspect of the invention, the modules are anchored to the parking lot using a tie-down system secured in concrete tube forms placed in holes drilled in the parking lot.
In a further aspect of the invention, utilities are provided to the modular building site in the parking lot with directional bore utilities, for minimal disruption to the parking lot surface and subsurface. A “force main” or pressurized type sewer is preferred for similarly minimal disruption to the parking lot.
Particular dimensions and geometry descriptions such as “cube” and “rectangle” are used herein to mean generally or more or less so, and encompass within their scope manufacturing variances, customized or business-specific functional features, variations in trailer widths and lengths, and other factors that will be apparent to those skilled in the art.
These and other features and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the detailed description below, in light of the accompanying drawings.
Referring first to
Modular building 20 is configured for retail sale of goods and/or services, ideally complementary to the business of any existing store S, for example a drive-thru for coffee, donuts, etc. Modular building 20 may also include walk-in or sit-down service for a small number of customers, with limited seating and an ADA-approved restroom. Another possible example of a complementary small business suitable to be conducted from modular building 20 is a pharmacy or other typical in-store department of existing main store S, such that modular building 20 functions as a physically separate department of the main store, with corresponding signage, that can be accessed directly from the parking lot.
Modular building 20 includes a one-story or ground-level main rectangular service module 30, a two-story tower 40 connected to main service module 30 to form a contiguous single building with a common interior, and a drive-thru carport 70.
Main service module 30 houses the equipment and work staff needed to provide the goods or services (e.g., coffee) for drive-thru customers, and optionally includes seating for customers if sit-down service is offered. Equipment will depend on the type of business, but things such as stoves and ovens, refrigerators and freezers, counters, sinks, dishwashers, computers, cash registers/terminals, coffee-brewing machines, drive-thru order taking systems, lighting, and display boards and cabinets would be typical for a food-related business.
Tower 40 includes upper and lower modular cube sections 50, 60 each of which comprise a room. Upper section 60 is the “mechanical” room, housing the primary in-house electrical and plumbing apparatus such as HVAC equipment, junction boxes and breaker panels, and water tanks and treatment. Lower section 50 is a restroom, meeting ADA standards, with a door 33′ connecting it with the interior of main service module 30 for the use of workers and customers. Lower section 50 may also include a janitorial storage area for cleaning supplies.
Utilities 18 such as water, electrical power, gas, sewer, and/or communications are provided to the modular building 20 via one or more directional bores schematically shown at 16 in
Modular building 20 includes a rigid drive-thru carport 70 comprising a sidewall 72 and a roof 71 connected to the main service module 30, for example at the roof 31. Drive-thru service features such as cashier and food delivery windows 32 are provided in the main service module 30, at least one of which (
Likewise, if a third tower cube (not shown, but substantially the same as either one of modules 50, 60) is desired for a taller assembled tower, or if modules 50 and 60 are sized differently to take up the entirety of the trailer bed on their own, the example illustrated carport sidewall and roof dimensions can be sized to fit or nest against one of the sidewalls and over an upper edge or roof portion of the adjacent tower cube module for delivery on the same trailer.
The lower steel frame/foundation members 34a, 54a, 74a of the modular building 20 are secured in the pre-installed concrete tube forms 90 via angle iron members 92 connected at one end to the steel frame/foundation members and at their other end to hook anchors 94. The lower ends of hook anchors 94 extend down into the interiors of concrete tube forms 90, where they are connected to reinforced steel anchor structures 95 located in the concrete tube forms. In the illustrated example, anchor structures 95 are formed from a vertical rectangular array of spaced rebar 96 connected with a spaced array of horizontal steel hoops 98 to form a lattice-like column. Once the anchors 94 and anchor structures 95 are positioned in concrete tube forms 90, concrete 93 can be poured into the tube forms, flowing around the anchors to harden and secure the modular building in place.
It will be understood that other known anchoring structures and techniques suitable may be suitable for securing modular building 20 to an existing parking lot, but the structure and method disclosed above is preferred and believed to be superior to other tie-down type foundations. The manner of assembling or connecting the pre-finished modules 30, 40, 50, and 70 to one another will be apparent to those skilled in the art, and may comprise any known technique or combination of techniques, such as but not limited to the use of self-tapping metal screws, coarse-threaded bolts through pre-formed bores in frame members, nailing, structural adhesives, and combinations thereof.
The modular nature of the main service module 30 and the tower cube modules 40, 50, their simple manner of assembly to one another and placement and anchoring on a parking lot building site, and the centralized utility function of the upper tower module allow different combinations of modules to be assembled as needed or desired with differing relative positioning to one another. For example, as shown in
It will finally be understood that the disclosed embodiments represent presently preferred examples of how to make and use the invention, but are intended to enable rather than limit the invention. Variations and modifications of the illustrated examples in the foregoing written specification and drawings may be possible without departing from the scope of the invention. It should further be understood that to the extent the term “invention” is used in the written specification, it is not to be construed as a limiting term as to number of claimed or disclosed inventions or discoveries or the scope of any such invention or discovery, but as a term which has long been used to describe new and useful improvements in science and the useful arts. The scope of the invention supported by the above disclosure should accordingly be construed within the scope of what it teaches and suggests to those skilled in the art, and within the scope of any claims that the above disclosure supports in this application or in any other application claiming priority to this application.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/714,824 filed Aug. 6, 2018 by the same inventors (Konczak and Stevens), the entirety of which provisional application is hereby incorporated by reference. This application is also related to the co-pending U.S. design patent application Ser. No. 29/659,039 entitled “MODULAR DRIVE-THRU BUILDING” filed Aug. 6, 2018 (attorney docket no. KON-002-D), also by the same inventors (Konczak and Stevens).
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 62714824 | Aug 2018 | US |