The present invention relates to facades for buildings.
Many facades are currently made in masonry using small elements, and/or concrete casing formwork.
These facades are relatively heavy and in some cases difficult to produce.
They do not provide satisfactory treatment of the thermal bridges at the interfaces with the structure and at particular points (balconies, loggias, changes in the direction of the wall and so forth), either in terms of interior or exterior thermal insulation.
When the building comes to the end of its life, these facades have necessarily to be demolished since there is no way of dismantling them.
Attempts to develop lightweight facades such as semi-curtain walling have so far failed to satisfy all of the following requirements:
These problems have been solved by the invention which, in particular:
Excellent levels of thermal and acoustic insulation can be achieved.
To this end, the invention relates to a building facade comprising essentially, and in the following order:
said facade being characterized in that the first insulating element is basically continuous across the surface of the facade, being in particular essentially free of air pockets, two adjacent breadths of this first insulating element being separated by a flat surface of said profiled elements projecting forwards of the floor edges.
The type of facade elements used for the exterior envelope is not limited. They may for example be metal wall cladding (sheet metal, optionally corrugated, etc.) or a timber facing. These facade elements or in other words this exterior facing are advantageously fixed to vertical profiled elements (which may for example be Z sections) which are themselves fixed to said profiled elements, above the rain barrier, or to a horizontal framework fixed to these vertical profiled elements or vertical Z sections. An air gap occupies the full depth of the Z sections, for example 2 cm.
An air gap advantageously at least 2 cm thick is thus created between the rain barrier and the outer facing (allowing for vertical air circulation), in the volume corresponding to the depth of the vertical profiled elements to which the exterior facing is fixed.
The rain barrier, which is a flexible plastic sheet, is fixed to the exterior face of said profiled elements. Alternatively a sheet of timber or OSB (Oriented Strand Board), or equivalent, may be inserted between profiled elements and rain barrier, to improve the acoustic performance of the facade.
The latter are fixed to the floor edges by any suitable method, a particularly practical method being from the outside, several forms of which will be detailed later.
Said first insulating element preferably occupies virtually the entire volume corresponding to the depth of said profiled elements. There is no need for the thickness of insulating element to be exactly the same as the depth of said profiled elements, but it is essential that the surface of the facade be covered by as continuous as possible a layer of insulating material. The layer of this first insulating material is thus interrupted, between two adjacent breadths, only by the thickness of a thin wall, perpendicular to the facade, of said profiled elements.
The possibilities of arranging the second between floors interior insulating element, the vapor barrier and said lining, creating an interior insulation system, are multiple, and several examples will be detailed below.
The building facade of the invention offers very good mechanical properties, at the level currently required in terms of impact resistance, or relative to cleaning cradles for example, or to the effects of earthquakes in the case of residential buildings situated in medium-risk zones and where the height does not exceed 28 meters, in particular.
Opaque and glazed parts are both easily catered for, and it is very easy to apply the invention to the most varied types and styles of construction.
Airtightness, produced by applying an independent vapor barrier film, is good, while excellent thermal and acoustic insulation can be achieved.
The facade of the invention is easy to dismantle and its cost of manufacture is moderate.
Said profiled elements preferably have
In a simple and practical embodiment, the flat rear and front surfaces are in planes parallel to the main plane of the facade, and the flat middle surface is in a vertical plane perpendicular to said main plane. This means that breadths of insulating elements of generally parallelepiped shapes can be installed on either side of said flat middle surface to maximize the space occupied by the insulating element.
In a first variant of this particular embodiment, the flat rear surface is on only one side of the plane of the flat middle surface. Said flat middle surface can thus easily be fixed, by screws, for example, to a bracket on the opposite face of said flat middle surface from that with the flat rear surface. This fixing is easily done from the outside of the building, the bracket having previously been fixed to the floor edge in the same way.
Three particularly practical embodiments may be mentioned.
In the first embodiment, said flat front surface is positioned on the same face of the flat middle surface as the flat rear surface: the profiled element is basically U or C shaped (the edges of the profiled element are bent into flanges).
In the second embodiment, said flat front surface is positioned only on the opposite face of the flat middle surface from that with the flat rear surface: the profiled element may be approximately a Z (two adjacent arms of the Z being perpendicular).
In the third embodiment, the flat front surface is positioned on both faces of the flat middle surface.
In a second variant, which can be combined with the first variant, said profiled elements are essentially inscribed within H profiled elements—that is, they are H profiled elements, or differ from an H only by the absence of one end part. This brings us back in particular to the shapes of the three embodiments of the first variant.
The H profiled elements can easily be fixed to the floor edges from the outside. All that is required is to first fix to the floor edge a fixing bracket having a first part to be fixed to the flat middle surface of a first H profiled element (upper) and a second part to be fixed to the flat middle surface of the second H profiled element (lower). Said flat front surface of each profiled element covers one of the two lateral edges of a panel or breadth of said first insulating element, or two such lateral edges of adjacent panels or breadths.
Said profiled elements are made from any material offering the high mechanical properties required at reasonable thicknesses and weights: a metal, especially aluminum, and preferably a reinforced plastic may be mentioned. Reinforced plastic has excellent mechanical properties in profiled elements within wall cross sections, good insulating performance, solving the problem of thermal bridges at the floor edges, and good fire properties. These advantages will be detailed later.
The profiled elements are advantageously made of pultruded resin and glass fiber composite, which may in particular be continuous and/or in the form of mats. The resin employed may be an acrylic, polyester, vinylester or epoxy resin.
These materials offer the required mechanical properties.
They are excellent thermal insulators—with a thermal conductivity of around 0.2 W/mK, they are a good solution to the thermal bridge problems. They are also excellent electrical insulators.
They have very good fire resistance, are self-extinguishing, and do not emit toxic fumes in the event of fire, in the case of many of them.
To give an indication, the thickness of the walls of the profiled elements is around 4 to 10 mm, which in particular gives satisfactory continuity of the insulating layer created by the juxtaposition of breadths of insulating elements on either side of said middle wall.
Said first and second insulating elements are preferably selected from inorganic fiber-based insulating materials such as glass wool, rock wool, plant fibers such as hemp, flax and cotton wool, or fibers of animal origin such as sheep's wool.
Said interior lining is preferably based on a plasterboard sheet (of type BA 25 or thicker) or multiple superposed such sheets (at least two BA 13, etc.).
The invention also relates to an assembly of components as described above for making such a facade.
A clearer understanding of the invention will be gained from the following description of the accompanying drawings, in which
Profiled elements 1 are fixed vertically at regular intervals of 600 mm to the floor edges 0.
The profiled elements 1 are U-shaped: each has a concavity which is not visible and which is situated, in the case of the profiled elements nearest the viewer, on the left-hand side.
Each profiled element 1 has a flat rear surface 1a and a flat front surface 1b parallel to the latter. These are joined together by a perpendicular flat middle surface 1c. The latter is about 120 mm wide and is 6 mm thick.
The profiled elements 1 may be made of polyester resin reinforced with continuous glass fibers, and glass fiber mats.
The profiled elements 1 are fixed to the floor edges 0 by brackets 2. The floor edges 0 do not have to be exactly plumb with each other, so this mode of fixing the profiled elements 1 is compatible with no contact between these elements 1 and a floor edge 0, i.e. with a non-zero—but small—distance between a profiled element 1 and a floor edge 0.
The brackets 2 are made of metal or reinforced plastic. They are screwed both into a floor edge 0 and into a flat middle surface 1c of a profiled element 1.
The insulating material 3 consists of 120 mm thick panels of glass wool sold by Saint-Gobain Isover under the name Panolène Facade. This glass wool has a thermal conductivity of 0.032 W/mK.
The glass wool is inserted into the concavity of the U-profiled elements 1. When presented to the floor edges 0, it is first stuck on spikes 31 fixed to the floor edges 0. The spikes 31 are bent up on the outside of the glass wool 3 when the glass wool 3 is in place.
A rain barrier 4 is then applied to said flat front surfaces 1b of the profiled elements 1, on top of the insulating material 3—see
The exterior covering the facade, although part of the system of the invention, has no special features and is not described in any greater detail here.
The construction of an internal insulation for a facade according to the invention will now be described.
Referring to
The rails 51 are metal U profiled elements with perpendicular flanges. On this subject, and in the rest of the description of the interior insulation, application WO 2006/061538 is also referred to.
Also fixed to the floor edges 0 are bottom tracks 52 and top tracks 53. The distance between these and said flat rear surfaces 1a is chosen so that the lining sheets of the interior insulation rest against the bottom tracks 52 and top tracks 53.
Contact and spacer elements 54 are then fixed into the horizontal rails 51, each time for example by a certain elastic deformation of the rails.
As seen in
The insulating element 5a is a glass wool whose thickness may be chosen anywhere between 80 and 120 mm, and with a thermal conductivity of 0.032 W/mK from Saint-Gobain Isover under the name Isoconfort 32.
Rail holding elements 55 are then attached to the contact and spacer elements 54—
Then, as shown in
The vertical rails 56, like the horizontal rails 51, are metal U profiled elements with perpendicular flanges. The holding elements 55 engage with the contact and spacer elements 54 in such a way as to allow easy adjustment of their position so that they are perpendicular to the facade and can then be locked. They also engage with the vertical rails 56, fixing them in the desired position perpendicular to the facade.
A vapor barrier 5c is applied to the flat back of the rails 56.
The vapor barrier is advantageously a moisture regulating membrane marketed under the name Vario by Saint-Gobain Isover. A standard vapor barrier may consist of a 100 to 200 μm thick polyethylene sheet, for example.
As shown in
Numerous variants are possible for installing the second insulating element 5a, the vapor barrier 5c and the interior lining 5b.
In particular, the combination made up of the horizontal rails 51, the contact and spacer elements 54, the holding elements 55 and the vertical rails 56 can easily be replaced.
Thus, it is possible to fix spikes 31 as described above to that face of the profiled elements 1 which is toward the building interior, to allow the second insulating element 5a to be skewered to it and retained on it. Alternatively, the function of such spikes 31 may be performed by vertical profiled elements (such as U elements) fixed to that face of the profiled elements 1 which is toward the building interior, between two floors.
The vapor barrier 5c can be applied on top of the spikes 31 or on top of the vertical U profiled elements.
In front of the vapor barrier 5c, uprights M 36 to French standard NF DTU 25.41 can be fixed in runners R 36 to the same standard, from the floor and ceiling, back to back (in pairs) in a vertical position. These uprights M 36 are U profiled elements. The volume corresponding to the depth of these uprights is left empty (air gap).
Two sheets of BA 13 type plasterboard 5d (or a single sheet of BA 25) are fixed to the uprights M 36.
In this embodiment the fixings of the plasterboard sheets 5b are independent and not connected to the profiled elements 1.
The resulting facade meets the standards for mechanical strength and is easy to dismantle. It provides excellent thermal and acoustic insulation. No masonry or equivalent wall is required between the first or exterior insulating material and the second or interior insulating material between floors.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
07/60031 | Dec 2007 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR08/52358 | 12/18/2008 | WO | 00 | 9/29/2010 |