Manual of Purpose-Made Woodworking Joinery

(Barry) #1

102 Designing and making stairs to current building regulations


SITE MEASUREMENTS

Traditionally, accurate information required for the
production of wooden stairs was considered essen-
tial; measurements on working drawings produced
by others (and the newly- built stairwell) were not
assumed to be correct, unless checked on site by an
experienced, responsible person.

Advanced Craft joinery students made it and helped
me to install it in 1989. Note the listing of the various
regulations that are ticked as having been met.
Meticulous checks like this are essential at the design
stage.


Up

Bullnose
step

Metric scale 1:10

Ex 75 × 75 mm
Newel post

Bulkhead
position
above

Handrail
900 mm above
pitch line

2

1

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

1.670m

13
14

15

16 ‘B’

1.793 m
‘A’ or ‘B’ extended joists
to be taken into loft space
to achieve a degree of
cantileverage to landing
Extended
joists

Level
handrail
balustrade
900 mm above
landing

Form opening in stud
wall to attic area

‘A’

2.820m

Meeting the stair regulations
Total rise = 2950 ÷ 16 = 184.37 mm rise
Going on straight flight = 220 mm
2R+G on straight flight = 588.74 mm
2R+G on tapered steps = 603.74 mm
Pitch on straight flight = 40º
Pitch on tapered steps = 38º

ü ü ü ü ü ü

Ex 75 × 40 mm
half newel post

Figure 6.27
Staircase designed
and installed in an
actual loft conver-
sion.
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