The present invention relates generally to the construction industry, and relates more specifically to pre-manufactured utility walls. The pre-manufactured utility walls of the present invention may be pre-plumbed, pre-wired, prefinished, preassembled, and pre-bundled double stud walls, and may comprise electrical and communications wiring for adjacent walls, an electrical service panel, water heater, kitchen and bath plumbing, fans, support for interior cabinets, and a toilet mounting support with a water-resistant interior surface, a vapor barrier, insulation, plumbing chase, studs for framing, and a water and air barrier with a water resistant exterior surface.
The pre-manufactured utility walls can be specifically adapted for use in construction of multi-story buildings. The pre-manufactured utility walls may be stacked in a vertical fashion so that utility components may be shared between floors of a multi-story building. The pre-manufactured utility walls may also be specifically adapted for use in lift-slab construction. The pre-manufactured utility walls may be designed for space efficiency, easy transport, and rapid installation.
Conventional residential, institutional and commercial construction typically involves extension of various utility lines into a unit space so that utilities may be installed and connected during the final phases of building construction. Installation of individual utility components and connection to pertinent main supply and waste resources is typically a time-consuming and costly phase of building construction. The skills of various trades people are typically required, and coordination of the various trades are difficult to organize and construction often proceeds in a piecemeal fashion depending on the work performed by the various trades people.
The inventors have discovered that normal utility components found in a residence, institutional or commercial setting can be efficiently and conveniently consolidated and assembled into a single pre-manufactured component at a site other than the building site. By grouping these normal utility components together in a standardized fashion, the installation of utilities for a given building unit can occur more quickly, in a matter of hours rather than days or weeks and at a reduced cost. In addition to cheaper, faster, and more organized and reliable construction, the pre-manufactured utility walls of the present invention also provide other benefits including, but not limited to, increased consistency and quality of craftsmanship, reduced exposure of the various utility components to undesirable elements due to their fabrication in a controlled environment, more environmentally-sound and socially responsible construction practices, and increased convenience and accessibility to utility components for maintenance.
In a preferred embodiment, the pre-manufactured utility walls of the present invention present are assembled as follows: (a) laying out the bottom and top plates of the wall to a predetermined length based on a standard template; (b) pre-punching the bottom and top plates to correspond with penetrations in the slab per a specified template; (c) manufacturing a non-weight bearing double stud wall with metal studs and fasteners to fit within stud runners located within the pre-punched bottom and top plates of predetermined length; (d) installing reinforcement plates, lifting rods and framing pockets within the non-weight bearing double stud wall to assist moving, hoisting and transportation of the finished wall; (e) installing the water heater or other heating systems and accessories within the cavity area and all supply and waste plumbing to prescribed locations within the non-weight bearing double stud wall; (f) installing all fire protection piping to prescribed locations within the non-weight bearing double stud wall; (g) installing an electric panel, wiring and outlets to prescribed locations within the non-weight bearing double stud wall; (h) attaching blocking at predetermined locations on the interior side of the non-weight bearing double stud wall to act as reinforcing for interior casework and fixtures; (i) installing acoustic blanket insulation within the cavity of interior metal stud wall; (j) installing thermal batt insulation within the cavity of exterior metal stud wall; (k) attaching one layer of exterior sheathing board to the exterior side and one layer of interior sheathing board to the interior side of the non-weight bearing double stud wall; (l) applying a weather resistive barrier to the exterior side of the exterior sheathing board; (m) attaching horizontal furring to the exterior side of the exterior sheathing board; (n) installing rigid insulation between the horizontal furring; (o) attaching vertical furring to the horizontal furring on the exterior side of the exterior sheathing board; (p) installing exterior finished panels and associated flashing components to vertical furring channels; (q) installing the access panel on the exterior side of the non-weight bearing double stud wall; (r) installing interior finish material on the interior sheathing board.
The present invention of a pre-manufactured utility wall may also incorporate the possibility of RF controls, heating and cooling ducting or piping, and gas piping. The present invention may further utilize recycled products and materials and incorporate alternative energy sources and methods of environmental control. The foregoing and other objectives, features, and advantages of the invention will be more readily understood upon consideration of the following detailed description of the invention, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
The particular materials and methods used to assemble the utility walls of the present invention, and the particular sequence of construction steps disclosed in connection with the utility walls as described in detail herein, are exemplary embodiments of the present invention only and are, in no way, intended to be limiting.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate various exemplary embodiments.
Before describing the invention and the figures, some of the terminology should be clarified. Please note that the terms and phrases may have additional definitions and/or examples throughout the specification. Where otherwise not specifically defined, words, phrases, and acronyms are given their ordinary meaning in the art. Exemplary embodiments may be better understood with reference to the drawings, but these embodiments are not intended to be of a limiting nature.
The utility walls of the present invention may be pre-manufactured and pre-bundled wall with preassembled sections. The utility walls may include kitchen and bath plumbing, a unit's electrical service panel, exhaust vents/fans, HVAC/gas, and any associated electrical and communications distribution wiring for the adjacent walls. The utility wall's plumbing may include the kitchen and bath supply, waste lines and vent ducting. The utility wall may have a finished interior surface and contain pre-installed exhaust vents/fans and vent trims. The utility wall further may include thermal and sound insulation, encapsulate a unit's plumbing chase, and an exterior sheathing and a weather resistive barrier. The utility wall may have a finished exterior surface, and may include fire-rated sheathing and insulation to act as integral air and vapor barrier. Furthermore, the utility wall may include features that allow the stacking and connection of utilities from one building level to the next which permits ready construction of multi-story buildings.
As used herein, “pre-manufactured” refers to construction manufacture that occurs wholly or in part at a location other than the building site.
As used herein, “preassembled” refers to the assembly of the various utility wall components that occurs wholly or in part at a location other than the building site.
As used herein, “pre-bundled” refers to utility wall component(s) that are protected, packaged, secured or otherwise made ready for transportation to the building site.
The kitchen unit of the present invention may be pre-manufactured and preassembled kitchen unit and may include cabinets, preinstalled plumbing, plumbing connections, electrical wiring, vent ducting, countertops, at least one sink, exhaust vents/fans and light fixtures to be installed in the kitchen on the utility walls.
The bathroom vanity of the present invention may include at least one sink and have preinstalled plumbing for installation on, or connection to, the bathroom on the utility walls.
The cabinets of the present invention may be pre-manufactured and preassembled cabinets that may include integral exhaust fans, light fixtures, refrigerator and/or washer and dryer for installation on, or connection to, the utility walls.
Referring in detail to the drawing figures,
The next step of constructing a utility wall for the present invention involves installing the supply and waste plumbing and extending these lines vertically above the top plate 102 to connect with the utility walls 101 above in a multi-story building scenario.
As shown in
The next step of constructing a utility wall for the present invention involves installing the fire protection piping and electrical wiring as shown in
As shown in
The pre-fabrication of utility wall 101 is completed as illustrated by
In one example, the utility wall is delivered to a building site as a pre-manufactured, pre-plumbed, pre-wired, prefinished, preassembled and pre-bundled component. Possible cladding materials that may be used for the rain screen panels include, but are not limited to, phenolic resin board, metal panel, cementitious board, wood siding, gypsum reinforced fiber cement panel, precast concrete panel and ceramic tile. The utility wall may be an all-encompassing finished unit on both the interior and exterior sides.
This invention does not preclude the elimination of one or more parts of this utility wall to achieve a more efficient installation method in the field. For example, the utility wall 101 could arrive on site without the horizontal furring 123, rigid insulation 124, vertical furring 125, exterior cladding 126, interior finish material 127, and access panel 128 and vent hood 129.
The utility wall 101 is composed of metal stud framing 105, an integrated acoustical blanket insulation layer 118 within the interior stud of the utility wall 101, an interior sheathing board 121 and an interior finish material 127. The utility wall 101 arrives on site with all of the plumbing 110A-D and necessary blocking 117 associated with the kitchen sink, counters, cabinets, toilet, and shower already in place. The utility wall 101 also includes the shower valves, shower head, and associated trim. The utility wall 101 further contains the unit's electrical panel 114 and water heater 112 behind an accessible panel 128. The exterior side of the utility wall 101 is composed metal stud framing 105, an integrated thermal batt insulation layer 119 within the exterior stud of the utility wall 101, fire-rated exterior sheathing board 120, a weather resistive barrier 122, horizontal furring 123, rigid insulation 124, vertical furring channels 125, exterior cladding 126, an access panel 128, and vent hood and trim 129.
All of the unit's utility connections occur at the utility wall 101. The electrical and communications main lines run in the utility wall 101. At each unit, the electrical service feeds directly into the utility wall's 101 electrical panel 114. Wiring connections to other wall components occur via preinstalled wiring. Electrical and communications connections are carried out at the time of installation of each adjacent utility wall 101. The utility wall 101 has vents 129 located respectively in the bathroom and kitchen on top portions of utility wall 101. The utility wall 101 also has plumbing 110A-B for supply and waste for connecting the bathroom vanity and sink with a sink and kitchen unit. There is a plurality of outlets 116 located in the utility wall 101 for the bathroom and kitchen. The utility wall 101 that arrives on site also has a pre-integrated shower head and shower valves.
It should also be noted that relative terms are meant to help in the understanding of the structures and are not meant to limit the scope of the invention. Similarly, the term “head” is meant to be relative to the term “base,” and the term “top” is meant to be relative to the term “bottom.” It should further be noted that the term “right” is meant to be relative to the term “left,” and the term “horizontal” is meant to be relative to the term “vertical”. It should be further noted that although the present invention is described using certain structures such as fasteners, however, any other types of means can be used to attach the walls.
The terms and expressions that have been employed in the foregoing specification are used as terms of description and not of limitation, and are not intended to exclude equivalents of the features shown and described. This application is intended to cover any adaptations or variations of the present invention. It will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art that any arrangement that is calculated to achieve the same purpose may be substituted for the specific embodiment shown. It is also to be understood that the following claims are intended to cover all of the generic and specific features of the invention herein described and all statements of the scope of the invention which, as a matter of language, might be said to fall there between.
This application is a continuation of copending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/155,319, filed Jun. 7, 2011, which is in turn a continuation-in-part of copending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/796,625, filed Jun. 8, 2010, titled “Construction System And Method For Constructing Buildings Using Premanufactured Structures,” and also a continuation-in-part of copending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/796,603, filed Jun. 8, 2010, titled “Premanufactured Structures For Constructing Buildings.” The entirety of each of these applications is incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20140069035 A1 | Mar 2014 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13155319 | Jun 2011 | US |
Child | 14077565 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12796625 | Jun 2010 | US |
Child | 13155319 | US | |
Parent | 12796603 | Jun 2010 | US |
Child | 12796625 | US |