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Door Types.

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Presentation on theme: "Door Types."— Presentation transcript:

1 Door Types

2 Standard Students will prepare residential floor plans

3 Think Outside the Box What room has no floor, no windows, no doors and no wall? Internet chat room or a mushroom Why is it important to think outside the box?

4 The result of learning to think beyond the conventional viewpoint results in truly inventive solutions to all types of problems

5 Types of Doors Standard Hinged: Bi-fold By-pass Double Swing
H.C. S.C. Bi-fold By-pass Double Swing Cased Opening Pocket

6 H.C. (Hollow Core) Doors Made with interwoven corrugated hollow cells that support the outer face of the door Lightweight and ideal for low-traffic areas Where would these doors be found in a house?

7 S.C. (Solid Core) Doors Constructed from particleboard or fiber core materials The solid weight helps reduce noise Where would these doors be found in a house?

8 How would you differentiate between S. C. and H. C
How would you differentiate between S.C. and H.C. doors on a floor plan?? Or between the same type of door but different sizes of doors?

9 Bi-fold Doors Two doors connected with hinges Fold together
Attached to a track and hanger fastened to the header

10 By-pass Doors Hang on rollers and slide on a track
Doors slide past each other within the door frame Creates more space

11 Double Swing Doors Uses half as much space for a doorway
Opens in both directions On smooth invisible track with concealed inset hinges

12 Cased Opening Doors A three sided frame without hinge preparations

13 Pocket Door Interior door that opens by gliding along a track into a recess in the wall

14 Floor Plan with Doors

15 Floor Plan with Doors

16 Window Types

17 Why do we have windows? Light Ventilation Decoration
Energy (heat and cold, in and out) View

18 Parts of a window 1. Frame: Forms a precise opening in which a window sash fits 2. Glass: A framed sheet of glass within a window frame 3. Grilles (aka: window pane, muntin): Any bar that divides window glass into smaller panes 4. Head: The horizontal part forming the top of the frame

19 Parts of a window 5. Jamb: The vertical parts forming the sides of the frame 6. Sash: An assembly of stiles and rails made into a frame for holding glass (the moving section of the window) 7. Sill: The horizontal part forming the bottom of the frame

20 Types of Windows Single Hung Double Hung Casement Awning Jalousie
Sliding Palladian Picture Clerestory Elliptical/Arched

21 Single Hung Consists of one sash that move up and down
Only the bottom sash can open

22 Double Hung Consists of two sashes that move up and down
Only half of the window can be open at one time

23 Casement Hinged vertically and swing in and out Operate with a crank

24 Awning Similar to casement windows
Hinged horizontally and swing in and out

25 Jalousie Horizontally placed narrow strips of glass or wood
Lowered by a crank or rod Most popular in the mid-century

26 Sliding Inexpensive price makes them common
Move on top and bottom tracks and slide past each other

27 Palladian Consists of a group of three windows with an arch over the center Become popular over the last century

28 Picture Large fixed windows bordered by 2 casement/double-hung windows

29 Clerestory Windows on a wall in between two roof lines

30 Elliptical or Arched Often placed above double hung or fixed windows in modern homes

31 Bay Window Window projecting from the wall to form an alcove of a room; usually created with 3 windows

32 Floor Plan Symbols

33 Floor Plan Symbols for Windows

34 Bay Window Construction

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