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Curtain Walls

Introduced by Ar. Ashok Puri

Paras Gulia Neeraj Kalra 4th year

Contents
Introduction to Curtain Walls Origin Types Concerns In system Infills Similar systems

Introduction to Curtain Wall


A curtain wall system is an outer covering of a building in which the outer walls are non-structural, but merely keep the weather out and the occupants in. As the curtain wall is non-structural it can be made of a lightweight material reducing construction costs. When glass is used as the curtain wall, a great advantage is that natural light can penetrate deeper within the building. The curtain wall faade does not carry any dead load weight from the building other than its own dead load weight. Curtain wall systems are typically designed with extruded aluminum members, although the first curtain walls were made of steel. The aluminium frame is typically infilled with glass, which provides an architecturally pleasing building, as well as benefits such as daylighting.

Origin of Curtain Wall


Buildings were constructed with the exterior walls of the building (bearing walls, typically masonry) supporting the load of the entire structure. The development and widespread use of structural steel and later reinforced concrete allowed relatively small columns to support large loads and the exterior walls of buildings were no longer required for structural support. The exterior walls could be non-load bearing and thus much lighter and more open than the masonry load bearing walls of the past. This gave way to increased use of glass as an exterior faade, and the modern day curtain wall was born

Glass curtain wall of the Bauhaus Dessau, Germany 1926

Glass curtain wall of the KantGarage (parking garage), Berlin, 1929/30

Oriel Chambers (1864) and 16 Cook Street (1866), both built in Liverpool, England, by local architect and civil engineer Peter Ellis, are characterised by their extensive use of glass in their facades. Towards the courtyards they even boasted metal framed glass curtain walls which makes them two of the world's first buildings to include this feature. The extensive glass walls allowed light to penetrate further into the building utilizing more floor space and reducing lighting costs in short winter months. The 1970s began the widespread use of aluminum extrusions for mullions. Aluminum offers the unique advantage of being able to be easily extruded into nearly any shape required for design and aesthetic purposes. Today, the design complexity and shapes available are nearly limitless. Custom shapes can be designed and manufactured with relative ease.

Oriel Chambers, Liverpool, England,1864

16 Cook Street, Liverpool, England,1866.

Extensive use of curtain walls in present times at large scale Image- Cybercity ,Gurgaon

Curtainwall Types
Storefront Stick Wall I-Beam Wall Pressure Wall Unitized Wall Window Wall

Storefront
Storefronts are non-load-bearing glazed systems that occur on the groundfloor, which typically include commercial aluminum entrances. They are installed between floor slabs, or between a floorslab and building structure above. Typically field-fabricated and glazed, storefronts employ exterior glazing stopsat one side only. Provision for anchorage is made at perimeter conditions. While sometimes used as a low-cost alternative to curtain wall systems for lowrise buildings, performance requirements for storefront are generally less stringent,and materials may require more frequen tmaintenance.

Stick Wall
Stick curtainwall systems are shipped in pieces for field-fabrication and/or assembly. These systems can be furnished by the manufacturer as stock lengths to be cut, machined, assembled, and sealed in the field, or knocked down parts pre-machined in the factory, for field-assembly and -sealing only. All stick curtainwalls are field-glazed. Frame assembly requires the use of either, a) shear blocks to connect vertical and horizontal framing elements or b) screw-spline construction, in which assembly fasteners feed through holes in interlocking vertical stacking mullions into extruded races in horizontals. Shipped in pieces as: Stock Lengths-orKnocked Down (KD)

I-Beam Walls
Once very popular, I-Beam walls have seen market penetration decrease. I or H shaped, structural, vertical back members are set into openings in the field, with horizontals then clipped to verticals. After glazing, extruded aluminum interior trim is cut and snapped into place at vision areas. Since unexposed spandrel areas receive no interior trim, savings in material and finish (painting or anodizing) can result, partially offset by added field labor. Of course, maintaining vapor retardant continuity at interior trim joints can be challenging if any positive building pressure is present

Pressure Walls
any stick curtainwalls are called pressure walls, because exterior extruded aluminum plates are screwapplied to compress glass between interior and exterior bedding gaskets. A snap-on cover or beauty cap is then used to conceal pressure plate fasteners. Performance of any field-assembled or field-glazed curtainwall is only as good as field workmanship allows, limited by variables such as weather, access, and job site dirt and dust. Many critical seals are necessary, even in systems that are designed to drain or weep rain penetration from the system back to the exterior. Compartmentalization of each lite is strongly recommended to isolate glazing pockets.

Pressure plate and snap-on cover

Unitized Walls
Factory-assembled and factory glazed under controlled conditions. Units are hung from the floor above on pre-set anchors. To accomplish as many critical seals as possible in controlled factory conditions, and minimize dependence on field labor, unitized curtainwall systems have been developed. Unitized curtainwalls are factoryassembled and -glazed, then shipped to the job site in units that are typically one lite wide by one floor tall. Most unitized curtainwall systems are installed in a sequential manner around each floor level, moving from the bottom to the top of the building.

Only one unit-to-unit splice, usually a translucent silicone sheet or patch, needs to be field-sealed. Seal bedding is visible through the sheet. Only one anchor per mullion needs to be attached to the face of the floor slab. The horizontal gutter weather-seal is sometimes called a chicken head detail, due to its unique configuration. Interlocking unitized curtainwall frame members are weather-stripped to seal to one another, both horizontally and vertically. This accommodates thermal expansion and contraction, inter-story differential movement, concrete creep, column foreshortening, and/or seismic movement.

Window Wall
Window wall systems span from the top of one floor slab to the underside of the slab above.Window wall employs large, sidestacking window units, contained in head and sill receptors, also called starters, which accommodate movement and drainage, but require field-applied perimeter sealants. Slab covers can be fabricated from aluminum extrusions, sheet, panels, or even glass. Window walls easily accept operable windows, and unlike curtainwall, can easily be installed non-sequentially. _________________________________ Hybrid systems combine characteristics of multiple wall types. For example, some four-side silicone wall systems use stick wall grid frames, with factory glazed carrier frames.

Concerns
Loads-Dead load, Wind load, Seismic load, Snow load, Thermal load, Blast load Air Infiltration Water penetration Deflection Strength Thermal criteria

Infills
Glass Fabric veneer- Unlike glass or stone, fabric is much faster to install,
less expensive

Stone veneer- Thin blocks (3 to 4 inches (75100 mm)) of stone Panels- Metal panels, fiber-reinforced plastic (FRP), stainless steel etc . Louvers Windows and vents

CURTAINWALL AND COMPONENTS


Profiles and depths will vary, but component names are fairly similar Some of the terminology..

Head: The horizontal frame member which forms the top of a frame
Head

Sill: The bottom horizontal in the framing system

Sill

Jamb: The vertical frame member forming the side of an opening, or the side of a door

Jamb

Mullion: A vertical framing member separating fixed lights of glass


Mullion

Intermediate Horizontal: The horizontal member used between two lites of glass
Intermediate Horizontal

Pressure Plate: An exterior extrusion that is mechanically fastened to hold the glass in place in CURTAINWALL applications

Pressure Plate

Cover: The finished snap on piece at the exterior of the building applied to the pressure plate

Pressure Bar Cover

Cover

Screw Splines: Anchoring method in which screws are used in splines to assemble the framing

Screw Splines

Shear Blocks: Anchoring system utilizing an aluminum block to secure horizontals to the verticals

Shear Blocks

Steel Reinforcement: Steel channel or tube needed to stabilize the mullion in certain conditions- can be used with curtainwall OR storefront

Steel Reinforcement

Other Systems

SPDER CURTAN WALL SYSTEM

CAPPED CURTAN WALL SYSTEM

SLCONE STRUCTURAL GLAZNG SYSTEM

HALF CAPPED CURTAN WALL SYSTEM

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