I am hoping you can help me. My architect designed my staircase for me, and my handrail ended up in the middle of nowhere in the middle of a pane of glass, when the builder built it.
Am I going mad or has the builder started the stairs in the wrong position, hence making the railing land in the middle of the glass.
Thanks so much in advance for your help.
Miss Cat.
citizen
Sep 13, 18 2:03 am
Have your architect give us a call.
Non Sequitur
Sep 13, 18 7:48 am
are you paying your architect to perform site visits?
Volunteer
Sep 13, 18 8:15 am
The drawing shows the railing to be secured to the vertical member between the windows at the top of the stairs and the wall at the bottom. The photo does show it to be secured between the windows at the top of the stairs; the bottom attachment is not shown.
What is on the other side of the stairs, ie wall, glass panel, open?
The top end of the railing could be made more attractive in several ways.
Non Sequitur
Sep 13, 18 8:26 am
Look at the elevation drawing. The "architect" shows one of the handrail supports mounted directly to glass. I'd say the contractor built it right and the designer fucked up.
Volunteer
Sep 13, 18 10:49 am
I see the attachment to the glass now on the drawing. The attachment of the railing at the top on the vertical member between the glass panels (above tread #16) and the one shown halfway down on the wall plus one at the bottom of the stairs on the wall (not shown) should be enough for a stable railing for this one story application, no?
SneakyPete
Sep 13, 18 11:23 am
That's probably a revit handrail wielded
by a lazy intern.
Non Sequitur
Sep 13, 18 12:21 pm
probably?
AdrianFGA
Sep 13, 18 8:52 am
Elevation shows top of stair almost aligned with the window mullion, the pic shows the stair starting left of that mullion by maybe 2/3 of a tread
Wood Guy
Sep 13, 18 10:17 am
It's pretty common for architects, builders and engineers to make mistakes on stairs. It's clear from the images that the top riser as built does not land where drawn. Somebody changed something, for some reason. You need to find out why, and someone needs to come up with a solution.
proto
Sep 13, 18 3:36 pm
^^^^this...also, what does your architect say? what does your contractor say? what do the permit documents say?
randomised
Sep 13, 18 11:04 am
They put the mullions in the wrong place!!!
Rusty!
Sep 13, 18 11:16 am
This is the problem with architectural minimalism where things are meant to be perfectly aligned. You fuck up and now that fuck up just stands there looking dum. You can't even cover it up with a gargoyle.
Wilma Buttfit
Sep 13, 18 11:18 am
You CAN cover it up with a gargoyle. That's what I would do.
Rusty!
Sep 13, 18 11:22 am
Miss Cat should pay us for coming up with a sensible solution.
Wilma Buttfit
Sep 13, 18 11:25 am
It's worth at least 2 cents, each.
AdrianFGA
Sep 13, 18 2:33 pm
@randomised - did
you mean the millions
randomised
Sep 13, 18 2:57 pm
Doesn't look thát expensive.
Non Sequitur
Sep 13, 18 3:02 pm
Does anyone know where I could get a good parametric gargoyle revit family?
Rusty!
Sep 13, 18 3:08 pm
A family of gargoyles is called a clan. You need a parametric gargoyle Revit clan.
Non Sequitur
Sep 13, 18 9:39 pm
Yes, thank you Rusty. I must have this
Wilma Buttfit
Sep 13, 18 9:50 pm
Are they affordable? Can I print one myself?
JLC-1
Sep 13, 18 4:05 pm
are they in vertical position? then they're right
Miles Jaffe
Sep 13, 18 7:29 pm
That's embarrassing. For both the builder and the architect.
And somebody correct me if I'm wrong but the rail as drawn does not look like it meets code - isn't it supposed to extend horizontally at least one tread width at the landing?
kjdt
Sep 13, 18 9:40 pm
If it's in a place that has adopted IRC or NFPA for residential then yes, and it's supposed to level out - i.e. the 1 foot extension should be horizontal, not diagonal. But we don't know where this is, and some states have no residential code.
There's no way to tell from the info provided whether the stair is in the wrong place, or the windows, or both - the original poster should consult her contract regarding CA services, and pose the question to her architect.
Rusty!
Sep 13, 18 10:35 pm
"isn't it supposed to extend horizontally at least one tread width at the landing?" Yes according to IBC but not to IRC. Residential code is fine with it terminating right at first riser. This desig
n is an assault at OCD people, but little else.
OneLostArchitect
Sep 13, 18 8:04 pm
I sometimes ask myself if I’m a good architect. I look at that elevation and say... holy fuck.
citizen
Sep 13, 18 8:05 pm
The stair is fine. The windows are in the wrong place.
OneLostArchitect
Sep 13, 18 8:05 pm
both architect and builder fucked up in my opinion
( o Y o )
Sep 13, 18 9:14 pm
Ms. Cat Campbell,
The person who wrote the post above is an idiot.
Steeplechase
Sep 15, 18 3:01 pm
Tempered glass and laminated glass are two different things. Nor is a guard needed.
b3tadine[sutures]
Sep 13, 18 9:18 pm
someone didn't pay extra for construction administration.
b3tadine[sutures]
Sep 13, 18 11:08 pm
What's the revision cloud indicating? You're hiding something.
cajunarch
Sep 15, 18 9:36 am
I guess we won't comment either on what appears to be a washer/dryer pair under the stairs, in a position sure to cause multiple head traumas over the life of the house? Not even sure if they will fit as drawn once the material for the underside of the stair is installed
justavisual
Sep 17, 18 5:00 am
judging by the door swings on the cabs under the stairs this is not in America...
Wood Guy
Sep 17, 18 8:48 am
Good catch
justavisual
Sep 17, 18 11:49 am
in Europe we draw door swings opposite of how they're drawn in America - so this is quite correct - it just depends where you are :)
Everyday Architect
Sep 17, 18 12:13 pm
You just rocked Rick's world with that. Now he's going to have to reevaluate offering architectural services in Sweden.
Wood Guy
Sep 17, 18 12:14 pm
I use European windows regularly. Not only is the handing shown opposite the US convention; you also show windows from the interior, while we show them from the exterior. It's always confusing and has caused some expensive mistakes.
justavisual
Sep 17, 18 1:48 pm
2 hinges on one side and a handle on the other - makes sense to us that the triangle would go the other way! But America does everything differently - its okay as long as you know and can work it through.
MADINA AZAMOVA
Sep 17, 18 5:49 pm
The handrail was most likely supposed to be installed on the opposite side of the stair. It was drawn incorrectly,so was installed incorrectly.
Hi Guys,
I am hoping you can help me. My architect designed my staircase for me, and my handrail ended up in the middle of nowhere in the middle of a pane of glass, when the builder built it.
Am I going mad or has the builder started the stairs in the wrong position, hence making the railing land in the middle of the glass.
Thanks so much in advance for your help.
Miss Cat.
Have your architect give us a call.
are you paying your architect to perform site visits?
The drawing shows the railing to be secured to the vertical member between the windows at the top of the stairs and the wall at the bottom. The photo does show it to be secured between the windows at the top of the stairs; the bottom attachment is not shown.
What is on the other side of the stairs, ie wall, glass panel, open?
The top end of the railing could be made more attractive in several ways.
Look at the elevation drawing. The "architect" shows one of the handrail supports mounted directly to glass. I'd say the contractor built it right and the designer fucked up.
I see the attachment to the glass now on the drawing. The attachment of the railing at the top on the vertical member between the glass panels (above tread #16) and the one shown halfway down on the wall plus one at the bottom of the stairs on the wall (not shown) should be enough for a stable railing for this one story application, no?
That's probably a revit handrail wielded by a lazy intern.
probably?
Elevation shows top of stair almost aligned with the window mullion, the pic shows the stair starting left of that mullion by maybe 2/3 of a tread
It's pretty common for architects, builders and engineers to make mistakes on stairs. It's clear from the images that the top riser as built does not land where drawn. Somebody changed something, for some reason. You need to find out why, and someone needs to come up with a solution.
^^^^this...also, what does your architect say? what does your contractor say? what do the permit documents say?
They put the mullions in the wrong place!!!
This is the problem with architectural minimalism where things are meant to be perfectly aligned. You fuck up and now that fuck up just stands there looking dum. You can't even cover it up with a gargoyle.
You CAN cover it up with a gargoyle. That's what I would do.
Miss Cat should pay us for coming up with a sensible solution.
It's worth at least 2 cents, each.
@randomised - did you mean the millions
Doesn't look thát expensive.
Does anyone know where I could get a good parametric gargoyle revit family?
A family of gargoyles is called a clan. You need a parametric gargoyle Revit clan.
Yes, thank you Rusty. I must have this
Are they affordable? Can I print one myself?
are they in vertical position? then they're right
That's embarrassing. For both the builder and the architect.
And somebody correct me if I'm wrong but the rail as drawn does not look like it meets code - isn't it supposed to extend horizontally at least one tread width at the landing?
If it's in a place that has adopted IRC or NFPA for residential then yes, and it's supposed to level out - i.e. the 1 foot extension should be horizontal, not diagonal. But we don't know where this is, and some states have no residential code.
There's no way to tell from the info provided whether the stair is in the wrong place, or the windows, or both - the original poster should consult her contract regarding CA services, and pose the question to her architect.
"isn't it supposed to extend horizontally at least one tread width at the landing?" Yes according to IBC but not to IRC. Residential code is fine with it terminating right at first riser. This desig n is an assault at OCD people, but little else.
I sometimes ask myself if I’m a good architect. I look at that elevation and say... holy fuck.
The stair is fine. The windows are in the wrong place.
both architect and builder fucked up in my opinion
Ms. Cat Campbell,
The person who wrote the post above is an idiot.
Tempered glass and laminated glass are two different things. Nor is a guard needed.
someone didn't pay extra for construction administration.
What's the revision cloud indicating? You're hiding something.
I guess we won't comment either on what appears to be a washer/dryer pair under the stairs, in a position sure to cause multiple head traumas over the life of the house? Not even sure if they will fit as drawn once the material for the underside of the stair is installed
judging by the door swings on the cabs under the stairs this is not in America...
Good catch
in Europe we draw door swings opposite of how they're drawn in America - so this is quite correct - it just depends where you are :)
You just rocked Rick's world with that. Now he's going to have to reevaluate offering architectural services in Sweden.
I use European windows regularly. Not only is the handing shown opposite the US convention; you also show windows from the interior, while we show them from the exterior. It's always confusing and has caused some expensive mistakes.
2 hinges on one side and a handle on the other - makes sense to us that the triangle would go the other way! But America does everything differently - its okay as long as you know and can work it through.
The handrail was most likely supposed to be installed on the opposite side of the stair. It was drawn incorrectly,so was installed incorrectly.