Simmon Posted yesterday at 15:14 Posted yesterday at 15:14 Hi everyone i am trying to organize windows for a new block of flats. Some of the triple glazed windows weigh in average 350 to 450 kg on 2m by 2 m openings. I am very worried about fitting such have windows on outer layer brick works. is there any alternative way of fitting safely by creating an extra support on brick works or something better but acceptable by building regs. thanks in advance.
Redbeard Posted yesterday at 17:23 Posted yesterday at 17:23 Could you perhaps build them in plywood boxes like some do for EWI and fix back to both brick and block? In EWI the EWI would form the reveal, but in your case perhaps you could tape in airtight and waterproof tape over the ply 'end-grain' and cover that end-grain and tape with, say, 25/ 32mm scotia moulding?
torre Posted 23 hours ago Posted 23 hours ago Do you mean safety once installed rather than handling? Taking Velfac as an example (as we'll be having them) They bridge the cavity below the window with 3mm or 5mm steel plates at the load points and the fixings are into the centre of inner leaf block work. Not ideal from a bridging perspective but at those weights hard to avoid
Simmon Posted 22 hours ago Author Posted 22 hours ago 1 hour ago, torre said: Do you mean safety once installed rather than handling? Taking Velfac as an example (as we'll be having them) They bridge the cavity below the window with 3mm or 5mm steel plates at the load points and the fixings are into the centre of inner leaf block work. Not ideal from a bridging perspective but at those weights hard to avoid Yes, I am worried for the weight on Brick work after installation of such a heavy windows. thanks
Simmon Posted 22 hours ago Author Posted 22 hours ago Yes, I am worried for the weight on Brick work after installation of such a heavy windows. thanks
FuerteStu Posted 21 hours ago Posted 21 hours ago (edited) How much would the same surface area of brickwork weigh? .... At some point a structural engineer would have signed off if the designs? No? Edited 21 hours ago by FuerteStu 1
JohnMo Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago 3 hours ago, Simmon said: Yes, I am worried for the weight on Brick work after installation of such a heavy windows. thanks Where is your structural design? Should be zero need for such questions, if your building is designed. 2
Iceverge Posted 16 hours ago Posted 16 hours ago I would sit them on a precast sill on the outer leaf. Preferably one with no more than a 25mm upstand for thermal bridging. Plenty of flexible sealant for the brickwork to window connection. Strap and tape the window to the inner leaf for security and efficiency purposes
Alan Ambrose Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago +1 Yeah suggest you must have an SE look at this and do some calcs & designs. A useful check would be the weight of the windows that were being removed plus details of how they’re fixed and how the openings are presently supported. If you’re not modifying the existing apertures, the new supports, if required, may also reduce the window size allowed by a bit.
ADLIan Posted 9 hours ago Posted 9 hours ago OP states this is a ‘new block of flats’. If this ‘new build’ then surely all design, method statements, competencies etc, etc should be sorted. Not the sort of question to be thrown out to a load of strangers on the internet. 4
Redbeard Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago A question: ''350 - 450kg?'' I have just looked at the order conf for one of my windows - 3G timber approx 2.3m2 - weighs 82kg. Yours are nearly double the area, so say double that weight - 164kg. I find it hard to understand what gives you the extra 190-290kg. Or have I misread the Q?
Mr Punter Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago If you have to ask the question here, you are not competent to undertake this work. 2
Simmon Posted 1 hour ago Author Posted 1 hour ago 6 hours ago, Redbeard said: A question: ''350 - 450kg?'' I have just looked at the order conf for one of my windows - 3G timber approx 2.3m2 - weighs 82kg. Yours are nearly double the area, so say double that weight - 164kg. I find it hard to understand what gives you the extra 190-290kg. Or have I misread the Q?
Redbeard Posted 52 minutes ago Posted 52 minutes ago 5 hours ago, Mr Punter said: If you have to ask the question here, you are not competent to undertake this work. Thanks for that?! At least it encouraged me to check the relative weights of alu vs timber. From motorcycling days I always thought of alu as very light, but then I never rode a wooden motorcycle...Rest assured that I never have installed alu windows and do not intend to, so all is well from that point of view!
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