The present invention relates to building construction, and more particularly, to decorative corner posts attachable to corners formed by exterior walls, decorative column panels and trim attached to column cores, and window or door mantles.
In the construction or renovation of modern buildings having a classic or colonial style, decorative corner posts attachable to the exterior walls provide a cost effective technique for simulating structural corner posts. Such decorative corner posts can be fabricated by a supplier and delivered to the building site for installation before or after the wall exterior siding, depending on the type of post and whether the siding is wood or vinyl. The corner posts can be made of wood or cellular PVC. The latter is often preferred, because raw material of the desired color can be purchased, cut, and seam welded into intricate decorative designs. In an analogous manner, decorative trim panels and molding can be applied to raw column cores on porches or the like.
With conventional corner posts and columns of this kind, the installer drills pilot holes through the post or panels for screwing or nailing the post or panel against the converging walls or column core. Window and door mantles are similarly fastened to a building wall. A careful installer would try to minimize the visibility of the fastening penetrations, but especially with pre-colored posts, panels, and mantles, any touch-up required after the installation adds to the labor cost of what should be a simple and straight forward installation.
In a general aspect, the inventive concept is directed to attaching a decorative cover having a closely conforming trim piece to a building structure, by first attaching the decorative cover with a fastener through holes in the cover, and then sliding the closely conforming trim piece along the attached cover until the trim piece overlays and hides the fastener.
Installation of a decorative corner post is simplified by a trim piece that is slidable between an installation position and a final position, selectively exposing and then covering holes through which the corner post is attached to the walls at the corner of the building.
In one embodiment, an angled body has adjacent panels that form an inner corner having inner flat surfaces adapted to closely engage the building corner, and outer flat surface forming an outer corner. A trim piece closely conforms to and is slidable vertically along the outer surfaces between an installation position and a final position. Each panel of the body has a through hole from the outer to the inner surface at the final position of the trim piece. In the installation position of the trim piece the through holes are exposed for receiving screws to secure the body directly to the building walls, and thereafter the trim piece can be shifted to the final position to cover the holes and screws.
In the preferred embodiment a nailing flange extends from the inner flat surface of each panel, beyond the side edges, so the nailing flanges are readily accessible.
In the associated method, the trim piece is shifted to the installation position to expose the holes, and the internal corner of the corner post is placed against the corner of the building. The corner post is attached to the walls through the holes, and then the trim piece is shifted into the final position.
A given corner post would typically have the flange extend over the full vertical height of the building corner, with the shiftable trim pieces and associated holes located at least at the top and bottom of the corner post.
It can thus be appreciated that the installation of a corner post according to the invention immediately hides all nail or screw penetrations, thus avoiding unsightly blemishes or the need to fill, sand, and touch up such penetrations.
The same inventive concept can be used to provide decorative trim unit for columns, such as between a porch and the underside of an overhang or roof. A multi-side (generally four-sided) core for the column extends between and is fixed to a floor and a roof or the like. The trim unit has an angled (e.g., three-sided) front body for covering some but not all sides of the core. The front body is fastened such as by nailing or screwing to the core through mounting holes and then another, (e.g., one-sided) back body is connectable to the back edges of the front body and can also be nailed or screwed to the back side of the core, thereby completing the covering of all surfaces of the core. The mounting hole and fastener for each side of the body is at location near the top and optionally bottom of the core, such that after the fasteners have been driven in, top and optionally bottom molding or similar trim pieces can be slid over to hide the fasteners, and then glued in place.
When installing a mantle according to another aspect of the invention, the vertical base of the mantle is attached to the building wall through mounting holes, while a lower, slidable trim piece is at a bottom, installation position vertically spaced from an upper trim piece that is fixed to the base. The lower trim piece is then shifted upwardly and glued to the lower surface of the upper trim piece, thereby covering the mounting holes and completing the decorative portion of the mantle.
A preferred embodiment will be described below with reference to the accompanying drawing, in which:
As shown with further reference to
A trim piece 36 closely conforms to and is slidable vertically along the outer surface between an installation position 38 and a final position 40. Each panel of the body has a through hole 42, preferably counter bored, passing from the outer to the inner surface at the final position of the trim piece. In the installation position of the trim piece the through holes are exposed for receiving screws to secure the body directly to the building walls, and thereafter the trim piece can be shifted to the final position to cover the holes and screws.
The post as described above is pre-fabricated and delivered to the building site, where the installer slides the trim piece to the installation position 38 to expose the holes 42, then places the post against the building corner as shown in
The body 12 and trim piece 36 are preferably made of solid cellular PVC, whereas the flange is preferably made of a semi-rigid vinyl.
Preferably, for use with vinyl siding, each body panel 14, 16 includes a thicker base portion 44, 46 in which the holes are located and which defines the inner surface that closely overlies the walls 102, 104 and a thinner rim portion 50, 52. The rim portions 50, 52 extend from of the base portions, and define the side edges 28, 30 of the outer surface 26, with a vertical channel 54, 56 formed between the base portion and the nailing flange. During installation, the flanges 32, 34 are nailed to the walls 102, 104 through holes 82, either before or after the post is screwed in through holes 42. The channels 54, 56 have a width similar to the overall thickness profile of vinyl siding, for receiving the edges of the vinyl siding. The depth of the channels provides sufficient tolerance for receiving edges on siding elements that may not all be exactly the same length, while presenting a uniform external interface between the siding and the side edges 28, 30 of the post.
In a further preference, a lateral edge 66, 68 of each base portion forms a bottom of a respective channel 54, 56, a groove 70, 72 extends vertically in the bottom of each channel, and the nailing flange has a fin 74, 76 that is secured via interference or press fit in the groove. A flat tab portion 78, 80 with a vertical row of nail holes 82 adjacent the outer edge is substantially coplanar with the inner surfaces 20, 22 of the body, whereby both the inner surfaces 20, 22 and the tabs 78, 80 of the nailing flange lie flat against the unfinished walls 102,104.
The trim piece preferably has sides 58, 60 that extend beyond the side edges 28, 30 of the outer surface 26 and include guide surfaces 62, 64 slidable along the side edges (e.g., rim portions) of the outer surface. The sides 58, 60 also extend toward the nailing flange 32, 34, whereby the guide surfaces 62, 64 cooperate with the side edges 28, 30 to prevent the trim piece from pulling away from the outer surface of the body. To facilitate nailing of the flanges, the tabs 78 and row of holes 82 can extend laterally beyond the outer edges of the trim pieces, but this is not necessary so long as the row of holes is accessible laterally outside of the edges 28, 30 of surface 26.
Typically, one trim piece 36 with holes 42 is located adjacent the top 86 of the post and another trim piece 84 with holes 42′ is located adjacent the bottom 88 of the post. Additional trim pieces such as shown at 90 in
The body 12 is preferably uniform at least adjacent the top 86 and bottom 88 of the post, such that during fabrication (or even on site) the top 36 and bottom 84 trim pieces can easily be fit onto the body with the sides 58, 60 of the trim pieces positioned in close relation with the rims 50, 52. As is evident from
Through holes 126, 126′ are provided from the outer to the inner surfaces of at least the first body, whereby at least the panels of the first body can be attached with fasteners 128 to the respective portions of the core 96. The first body has first edges 130a, b and the second body has second edges 132a, b which are joinable with each other when the first and second bodies are both conforming to the core. This joining is preferably also by glued and lock mitered edges. When the edges are so joined the first and second bodies provide a decorative external cover for the entire core.
A unitary, rectilinear trim piece 134 having three sides closely conforming to and slidable over the respective outer surface of the three panels of the first body 116, is shifted between an installation position at which the holes 126 are exposed for receiving fasteners 128 and a final position at which the holes are covered. The second body 114 can likewise carry a slidable trim piece 136 for hiding a hole 126′ and fastener 128′ into the core. Preferably, each of the bodies has a portion of a top trim piece or cornice 138, 140 for the column that rigidly projects transversely from the bodies, such that a complete cornice is formed when the bodies are joined and the edges 142, 144 of the top pieces are glued to each other.
In the illustrated embodiment, preferably each panel of the first body has a vertical short groove 146 adjacent the top and preferably the bottom of the column, and the first trim piece 134 has a plug or lug projection 148 or the like which can travel in the groove. The lug and groove align and guide the trim piece 134 (and analogously 136) during travel. In the installation position shown in
It should be appreciated that the bottom of the column can be trimmed in a corresponding manner, i.e., such as bottom trim piece 134A shown adhered in the final position to rigid base 138A in
The base 152 of the mantle can include laterally extending flat flanges 164 with nail holes 166, for initial mounting of the mantle unit to the building wall 168 in a manner that permits siding strips of the like (not shown) to be slid into a channel 170 formed between the flange 164 and a frontal portion 170 of the base, as described with respect to
This application is a continuation in part and claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. §§120 and 121 of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/383,976 filed Mar. 21, 2009 for “Prefabricate Corner Post”.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12383976 | Mar 2009 | US |
Child | 13404177 | US |