Title: Floors & Floor Construction
1 Floors Floor Construction
- What lies beneath the surface that we see?
-
- Concrete slab is it on grade, or on a frame?
- Wood joist construction what direction do the
pieces run? - Steel frame steel decking how easy or
difficult is it to make alterations in this
surface? - Why are these different materials used? What are
the pros and cons of using them?
2Floors
- What is a floor required to do?
- A building's primary horizontal planar surface
- Support live loads people, furnishings, and
movable equipment - Support dead loads the weight of the floor
itself, any non-movable, - built-in components on the floor
3The depth (thickness) of the overall floor
construction is directly related to the size and
proportion of the structural bays it must span
across, and to the strength of the materials used
in the floor.
4Flooring materials
- Flooring can be made of many possible materials.
- Building code requirements may dictate the
performance requirements of a floor material. - The ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act)
specifies the degree of friction, slip
resistance, of flooring materials used in public
spaces. - We are probably most familiar with wood, stone,
concrete, sheet vinyl, ceramic tile, and carpet
as the surfacing materials on the floors we
encounter every day
5The distance a piece of material has to span is
directly related to its size. The size of these
steel floor trusses is based on the distance they
must span, and the load they must carry.
6The Prada showroom in New York city designed by
Rem Koolhas.
7Wood floor joists and wood flooringin a house.
The direction of the floor boardsis a result of
the direction of the floor joists.
8Wood flooring
9Concrete flooring
10- Colored concrete floors were very popular in
the 1930's and 40's in the desert southwest
because they were easy to clean and cool in the
extreme desert heat. - The majority of the floors were colored red
and usually scored in a grid pattern. - Concrete floors have become very popular again,
due to low material cost, durability, and
expanded design possibilites through color
additives.
11Concrete colors, synthetic natural pigments
- Concrete can be tinted different colors.
- When coloring concrete either natural or
synthetic pigments may be used. - Synthetic pigments are chemically the same as
natural pigments, but there are other
differences. Natural pigments tend to be less
expensive, but their range of colors is limited
and they don't have the tinting strength of
synthetics. - Natural pigments tend to produce warmer colors,
which seem closer to the colors you see in nature.
12Concrete flooring
13Steel reinforcing, called rebaris placed to be
inside the concrete slab
14Steel rebar are numbered, 1, 2, 4, 5, 12, 16, et
cetera.Each number equals that many eights of an
inch.A number 12 rebar is 12/8, or 1 ½ in
diameter
15Raised access flooring
- Raised access flooring consists of load bearing,
easily removable panels supported above the
building slab on pedestals. The cavity created is
used to house services which may be safely
concealed and protected but which remain readily
accessible for maintenance, alteration and
expansion.
16Raised access flooring
17Glass
- Glass is a practical and beautiful material that
is strong enough to be used structurally, even
as flooring.Floor panels are usually
manufactured from two or more layers of annealed
glass laminated together. Sandblasting or
screen printing to the top surface not only gives
anti-slip properties but also design
opportunities.
18Glass interior wall panels
19Glass flooring
20Glass flooring
21Glass block flooring
22Glass flooring
23Wood frame construction of floors
24Wood frame construction
25Wood floor system
26Wood joists, (2 x10s) on brick foundation, on
concrete footing
27Steel construction
28Steel framing
- Recently, steel framing has begun to make strong
inroads into the residential building market. - The move to steel in home construction has been
fueled by rapidly increasing lumber prices and a
need to conserve timber products. - Steel homes use nearly the same framing
techniques employed in wood-framed buildings, and
construction costs run about the same. Unlike
wood, however, steel is impervious to termites.
It provides added resistance to fire and
earthquake. - Steel ceiling joists can span greater distances
than wooden ones, allowing new design
possibilities for architects and builders.
29Steel in house construction
30Steel skeleton for a house.Most of the pieces of
steel used here are called light gauge steel,
meaning that the pieces are relatively thin, and
light.
31Steel skeleton for a house.These steel pieces
are much larger than those used in the previous
images. These are I sections, made of thick,
heavy steel plate.
32Tile a small, thin, modular piece of material.
- Porcelain floor tile
- Quarry tile
- Metal tile
- Travertine tile
- Granite tile
- Marble tile
- Limestone tile
- Slate tile
- Cork tile
- Glass tile
- Carpet tile
33Cork flooring
34Vertical Sections
35Elevations
36Plan (Plan-Section)
37- an informative web site is
- www.howstuffworks.com
- type in 'how house construction works' into their
search function.