T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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176.1 | Spiral Staircase | REGINA::FINGERHUT | | Thu May 22 1986 09:39 | 22 |
| What do you mean by "Can I do it myself"? You can erect it yourself
but it would be difficult to design and build it yourself.
I put one in from my basement to my second floor. It's the only
thing that would fit. From the basement to first floor is 4 1/2'
diameter and the top half is 5' diameter. The cost was $1800 and
it's all wrought iron. The $1800 included 10 feet of railing along
the second floor balcony. I checked around with a lot of companies.
There are a lot which make expensive wood ones. If you want wrought
iron I recommend the company I used. A salesman comes to your house
to take measurements, and they ship it to you in pieces. I put
mine up myself (just me, alone). It was tricky to do but only took
1 day for the whole thing. The company is Mylen Industries and
they're in the Boston phone book. I believe the salesman's name
in this area is Peter Colossi or something like that.
One more thing... My building inspector was very picky about
spiral staircases. If you're getting a building permit to do this,
(I wouldn't bother), then make sure the building inspector knows
the diameter of the staircase, the distance between ballisters,
and the size of each step well in advance.
|
176.2 | Are you sure you want a spiral? | GIGI::GINGER | | Thu May 22 1986 14:49 | 16 |
| I designed and built a wood spiral staircase for my house. About
$200 total. Its a one story, 8', affair with steam bent rail. Fine
Woodworking has had several articles on spiral and circular stair
building. Not the kind of wood work done by Rough Carpenters with
sledge hammers, but not impossible for carefull workers.
However, I would seriously question putting a spiral stair as the
main stair to the second floor of a house. Have you ever thought
of carrying things, like a mattress maybe, up a spiral stair? Also
lots of people find them very intimidating to climb, (my mother
was very proud of herself for getting up and down mine) and I dont
think most people would feel comfortable with small kids around
them.
Ron, always ready with an opinion, Ginger
|
176.3 | Spiral Staircase | GRECO::ANDERSON | Home of the Convoluted Brain | Thu Jun 04 1987 11:04 | 11 |
| Hello,
I'm new to the conference because I'm going to be a home owner (three
family) for the first time in the near future. My first question
revolves around spiral staircases (external). The property that
I am buying has an awful (= ugly) set of stairs leading up to the
third floor apartment. Has anyone ever built or purchased such
a beast, a spiral staircase that is. Does anyone have plans for
same said?
Craig
|
176.4 | Spiral Stairs | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Thu Jun 04 1987 11:23 | 8 |
|
I bought and installed one. It was made in Peekskill,NY by Mylen
Industries. It goes up for 2 stories. I installed it by myself,
which was interesting.
I checked out a lot of brands and this was the least expensive.
I think I paid around $1500 for it.
|
176.5 | | FROST::SIMON | Blown away in the country...Vermont | Thu Jun 04 1987 14:02 | 17 |
| Is this to be *THE* stairway to the apartment, or just an emergency
type of affair? In general spiral stairs are not recommended for
a general purpose stair as they are not really as safe as a
conventional stairway. The width of the tread varied along the
length of the step and tends to create a very narrow tread where
you actually put your foot. I was looking into spiral stairs
myself just recently and after much talking and reading decided
against them.
I did find a place in Vermont that will custom make spirals for
you if you are interested. Three stories sound like a pretty long
walk on a spiral stair.
Just my .02�
-gary
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176.6 | Spiral stairs | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Thu Jun 04 1987 14:12 | 16 |
| I have a spiral staircase as the only stairs to the second floor
of my house. I have them because the house is small and they take
up less room than straight stairs. It's very hard to bring furniture
up spiral stairs. In my case, that's not a problem, because I have
a balcony which looks down over the first floor and I can lift
furniture up that way.
In your case, I don't think a spiral staircase is the way to go,
because of the other Note you entered about how economical certain
apartment improvements are. It would be very expensive to put in
a 3 story spiral staircase. It's probably close to $4000 installed.
I don't know what a carpenter would charge to rebuild your wood
stairs out of pressure treated wood, but probably less than half
that.
|
176.7 | Good results from Boston mfg. | SPCTRM::MAJORS | Ward, ease up on the Beaver | Thu Jun 04 1987 14:22 | 18 |
| We had a spiral staircase made for our loft area in our contemporary
home. A wonderful manufacturer, located off the Southeast Expressway
in Boston, designed and fabricated it to our specs. The process
was that we supplied the measurements, i.e. height from finished
floor to door opening a of opening, etc. The fabricator
then produced shop drawings for our approval and verification. The
stairway was then fabricated and assembled in their plant (so they
know everything fits exactly). It was then dissembled, painted,
and packaged for shipment. I picked it was with a light Toyota truck.
My wife and I assembled it in about 3 hours. Instructions were very
straight forward, and all parts were stamped with a part number so
that stairs trea installed in the proper sequence.
They manufacture a complete line of exterior as well as interior
stairs. It was a neat experience to see everything fit EXACTLY.
I can look up his name and number if you are interested.
|
176.8 | the Iron Shop | ERLANG::SUDAMA | Living is easy with eyes closed... | Thu Jun 04 1987 19:32 | 15 |
| I have a catalogue from i place called:
The Iron Shop
P.O. Box 128
400 Reed Road
Broomall, PA 19008
(215) 544-7100
I have never bought anything from them, but they have a wide selection
of interior and exterior spiral and straight staircases that appear
to be of good quality and easy to install. You might want to get
a catalogue��rom them just so you could compare prices with some
of the other places that have been suggested.
- Ram
|
176.9 | IRON SHOP | INANNA::SUSEL | | Sun Jun 07 1987 20:44 | 12 |
| I bought a stairway, {not spiral}, from the IRON SHOP. They offer
very good consultation. I spoke to the owner's son , Neil, I believe.
I am very satisfied with the quality. Their booket is very
informative. When you acll, make sure you have all your measurements
ready. I steered away from a spiral, because it was to go to a
dormer, and seemed too confined. If I had the room, though, I may
have gone for one of their Large spirals.
Good Luck in your decision.
Bruce
|
176.10 | Code considerations | NEBR::HARRISON | Bob Harrison, CIM Engineering | Thu Mar 03 1988 08:38 | 13 |
| O.K. ... to continue the discussion on spiral stairs
I'll be finishing my attic soon (hip roof - foursquare) and the only
means of a primary staircase (without serious rearraingement on the
second floor) is a 3'6" spiral in the hallway. Now, with a 3-6, the
clear walk space between pole and rail is 1'6". I'm estimating that the
usable living space in the attic (open floor plan bedroom and 1 bath)
will be in the 300 - 350 sq ft. range.
I'm willing to put a second egress (exterior fire ladder / platform)
off the back of the house.
Now the question ... is this going to meet code in Ma. ?
|
176.11 | spiral staircase | VIDEO::FINGERHUT | | Thu Mar 03 1988 08:58 | 13 |
| This is the kind of question that only your building inspector
can answer. I have a spiral staircase as my only means of egress
for 3 bedrooms. Different inspectors interpret the code differently.
Besides the pole to rail distance, you have to have a 7" wide step
at a distance 12" from the pole. Then you have to have a 9" max
distance between ballisters.
My guess is that your staircase is too narrow. A fireman carrying
a hose over his shoulder needs 22" to go up a staircase. You've
only allowed 18".
BTW, how do you plan to get any furniture up there?
|
176.12 | Marginal | STAR::SWIST | Jim Swist ZKO1-1/D42 381-1264 | Thu Mar 03 1988 09:02 | 9 |
| I'll look in the Mass building code tonite, but I have two reactions:
1) How are you going to get anything into the attic with stairs
that narrow? (Bed, dresser, etc). You may need that outside staircase
just to get anything bigger than yourself into that room.
2) Even if the codes permit it, (and if I had to guess, I'd say
no), would YOU want a narrow winding egress like that as your
sole exit with the house filled with smoke and the lights off?
|
176.13 | more on the situation | NEBR::HARRISON | Bob Harrison, CIM Engineering | Thu Mar 03 1988 09:14 | 14 |
| re -.1
Furniture will be mostly in the form of built-ins (platform for
a matress, window seat in dormer, etc.) Building materials and
major fixtures will come in through the large opening I'm
planning to have when framming the dormer.
If I go with a Iron Shop prefab spiral, I can always knock it down
for any major flow of material up or down.
The 9" max distance between ballisters is no problem, the 7" wide
step 12" from pole is something I'll have to calculate.
Well, looks like I'll be calling town hall with this one.
|
176.14 | TOH and spiral stairs | OASS::RAMSEY_B | Put the wet stuff on the red stuff | Wed Jul 11 1990 14:52 | 4 |
| Custom spiral staircases were discussed in last years This Old House.
If you can borrow someones taping of last years shows, or contact the
station, you can get the information from the manufacture of the
custom stairs.
|
176.15 | OUT DOOR SPIRAL STAIRCASE | UNXA::DERZINSKI | | Tue Sep 03 1991 16:03 | 13 |
|
A want to build an out-door spiral staircase connecting an upper
and lower deck. The height is 10 feet. Each stair has a length
of 32 inches, giving a 6 foot diameter. The project will be
built using Pressure Treated Lumber. Does anyone know where I
can locate some plans for such a beast. I have been to my local
library and have not found anything. A found a article in Family
Handyman October 1987 that list manufactures of spiral staircase
kits. I contacted one company that makes an outdoor mahogany
kit. Its on the way. Is mahogany a good wood for outdoor use? I
would appreciate any suggestions, ideas comments, references for
books, ect.
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