STAIRCASE PRODUCED BY 3D PRINTING OF A CEMENTITIOUS MATERIAL
20200032520 ยท 2020-01-30
Assignee
Inventors
- Yoan Arrondeau (Nanterre, FR)
- Philippe Da Costa (Nanterre, FR)
- Emmanuelle Font (Nanterre, FR)
- Emmanuel Tual (Nanterre, FR)
- Fabrice Alexander (Nanterre, FR)
- Romuald Deniau (Nanterre, FR)
- Olivier Ghedin (Nanterre, FR)
- Serge Lim (Nanterre, FR)
- Christophe Costa (Nanterre, FR)
- Virginie Lenormand (Nanterre, FR)
- Laurent Demontfaucon (Nanterre, FR)
- Thierry Tempez (Nanterre, FR)
- Pierre Couque (Nanterre, FR)
Cpc classification
B33Y10/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
E04F11/116
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E04F11/1802
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
B33Y80/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
E04F11/032
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
International classification
E04F11/032
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
Abstract
Spiral staircase including a flight held by a central core and an external stairwell, characterized in that the flight and the stairwell are produced by 3D printing from a material.
Claims
1. Spiral staircase including a flight held by a central core and an external stairwell, characterized in that the flight and the stairwell are produced by 3D printing from a material.
2. Staircase according to claim 1, the stairwell being produced with a wall (20, 21) hollowed internally at least in places.
3. Staircase according to claim 1, the flight being produced with steps at least partially hollowed internally.
4. Staircase as claimed in claim 1, the central core being interrupted by an opening accompanying the steps and vertically marking out a stair railing.
5. Staircase according to claim 1, including a handrail produced by printing.
6. Staircase according to claim 1, being printed in sections and these sections being assembled with one another.
7. Staircase according to claim 1, including, at each storey, a setback extending over some of the thickness of the wall of the stairwell in order to receive a corresponding floor slab.
8. Staircase according to claim 1, having a vertical axis.
9. Staircase according to claim 1, having a curved axis.
10. Staircase section for producing a staircase as defined in claim 1.
11. Building including a staircase as defined in claim 1.
12. Method of manufacturing a staircase as defined in claim 1, including the step consisting in printing the staircase using a material.
13. Method according to claim 12, the staircase being printed in sections that are intended to be assembled.
14. Method according to claim 13, the staircase being printed on site.
15. Method according to claim 12, the staircase being printed at the same time as the stairwell.
Description
[0033] The invention can be better understood upon reading the following detailed description, of nonlimiting implementation examples thereof, and upon examining the appended drawing wherein;
[0034]
[0035]
[0036]
[0037]
[0038]
[0039]
[0040]
[0041]
[0042] The helical staircase section 10 shown in
[0043] The assembly is produced in accordance with the invention by the printing of material.
[0044] Various concrete printing devices are proposed today which allow the section 10 to be produced. These devices include a head supplied with a nozzle through which the cementitious material is extruded, the head being borne by a robotic arm making it possible to move the head three-dimensionally, the movements being controlled according to the structure to be produced.
[0045] The material is chosen for the compatibility thereof with the printing process.
[0046] The sections 10 can be manufactured in a workshop outside the building site or on the site itself, or in situ. In this case, the device used for printing hangs, for example, on the section of the bottom that has just been produced and/or on a column passing through, for example, the core.
[0047] The material used can be a conventional concrete, a HPC, a UHPFRC, etc.
[0048] The stairwell 11, the flight 12 and the core 13 can be produced without a metal reinforcement.
[0049] The stairwell 11 can include a curved wall 14 which substantially describes, when seen from above, three quarters of a circle, and which is closed by a wall 15 forming a right angle, in which the opening 17 for the entry door is produced.
[0050] The walls 14 and 15 can be produced, as is illustrated, with a double-wall 20, 21 hollow structure, which makes it possible to lighten the staircase.
[0051] The outermost wall 21 can extend over a height that is less than that of the inner wall 20, such as to allow the latter to fit into the corresponding opening of the floor slab.
[0052] Once printed, the wall or walls of the staircase can advantageously serve as formwork and thus be filled with a material. The formwork consisting of the walls of the staircase can be completed by other formwork elements.
[0053] The inner wall 20 can be printed with a handrail 23, as is illustrated.
[0054] A landing 26 can be printed with the steps 30 of the flight 12.
[0055] In a variant, the staircase section 10 can be produced with a solid wall instead of the double wall 20, 21.
[0056] The stairwell 11 can be given an outer shape that is different to that illustrated in
[0057] By way of example,
[0058] A set-back 38 is formed in the thickness of the wall 33 such as to allow fitting in a corresponding hole of the floor slab, like the example of
[0059]
[0060] The handrail 23 can be produced not as a projection but as an indentation in the wall of the stairwell 11, as illustrated in
[0061] In the variant illustrated in
[0062] The solid parts 43a and 43b extend in the mid-region of the stairwell sides located opposite the corner including the entry opening 17.
[0063] The solid parts 43c and 43d join in the corner including the entry opening 17.
[0064] In the three corners opposite the entry opening 17, the wall of the stairwell 11 can be hollowed out, as illustrated, such as to lighten it and define passages 50 for networks, for example water, gas, telephone and/or electricity.
[0065] It is possible to produce the steps 30 with an arch 52, as is illustrated in
[0066] The arch 52 can be hollowed internally, as illustrated, in order to lighten it.
[0067] The steps 30 are preferably printed with a nosing 54, as illustrated in
[0068] The core 13 can be given various shapes.
[0069] It is possible for the core 13 to not be solid but hollow.
[0070] It is possible to place, in the hollowing of the core 13, a lighting, for example a lamp or a light guide where daylight is injected using a light concentrator.
[0071] It is also possible to produce it hollow, with an aperture 55 that is helical in portions, as is illustrated in
[0072] The invention is not limited to the examples that have been described above.
[0073] For example, it is possible to produce the staircase such that the axis thereof, i.e. the longitudinal axis of the core 13, is not vertical but curved, which can be interesting for superstructures where the last storeys are set back.
[0074] It is possible to produce the stairwell 11, the core 13 or the flight 12 at least partially from light-transmitting concrete, and the stairwell 11 can be apertured elsewhere other than at the entry opening 17.
[0075] It is possible to produce the steps 30 such that the nosing thereof, when seen from above, is not rectilinear in radial orientation, but curved. This offers greater possibilities as regards aesthetics and can also make the staircase more pleasant to travel through by giving the steps a shape that is more suited to the stride of a person climbing the staircase.
[0076] It is possible to further produce, by printing, a skirting along the steps.
[0077] The flight 12 of the staircase can have a shape other than circular. For example, it is elliptical or polygon. The same applies to the stairwell 11.
[0078] It is possible, for example, to make, in the wall or walls of the staircase, reservations for example for receiving a system for attaching concrete walls and sails, to receive an electrical system, or for receiving a fluid system or a dry riser.
[0079] Reservations can also be made in the wall or the walls of the staircase for casting structural posts or for the incorporation of reinforcement, notably prestressing or post-stressing reinforcements.
[0080] In the flight, a reservation may be made for receiving a fluid transport system or a dry riser.
[0081] It is also possible to incorporate during the printing of the staircase the doorframe of one or more landing doors.
[0082] It is also possible to print an elevator shaft at the same time as the staircase.
[0083] It is also possible to print at the same time as the staircase a technical duct. This duct may for example serve as a conduit for supplying or discharging cold or hot water, or as a ventilation column or air conditioning. The duct can also serve as a sheath for an electrical network.