Stairs in winter
by Odon Czintos
Title
Stairs in winter
Artist
Odon Czintos
Medium
Painting
Description
Stairway, staircase, stairwell, flight of stairs, or simply stairs are names for a construction designed to bridge a large vertical distance by dividing it into smaller vertical distances, called steps. Stairways may be straight, round, or may consist of two or more straight pieces connected at angles.
Special stairways include escalators and ladders. Some alternatives to stairways are elevators, stairlifts and inclined moving sidewalks as well as stationary inclined sidewalks.Where there is insufficient space for the full run length of normal stairs, alternating tread stairs may be used. Alternating tread stairs allow for safe forward-facing descent of very steep stairs. The treads are designed such that they alternate between treads for each foot: one step is wide on the left side; the next step is wide on the right side. There is insufficient space on the narrow portion of the step for the other foot to stand, hence the person must always use the correct foot on the correct step. The slope of alternating tread stairs can be as high as 65 degrees as opposed to standard stairs which are almost always less than 45 degrees. The advantage of alternating tread stairs is that people can descend face forward. The only other alternative in such short spaces would be a ladder which requires backward-facing descent. Alternating tread stairs may not be safe for small children, the elderly or the physically challenged. Building codes typically classify them as ladders and will only allow them where ladders are allowed, usually basement or attic utility or storage areas not frequently accessed.
The image on the right illustrates the space efficiency gained by an alternating tread stair. The alternating tread stair appears in the image's center, with green-colored treads. The alternating stair requires one unit of space per step: the same as the half-width step on its left, and half as much as the full-width stair on its right. Thus, the horizontal distance between steps is in this case reduced by a factor of two, reducing the size of each step.
The horizontal distance between steps is reduced by a factor less than two if for construction reasons there are narrow "unused" steps.
There is often (here also) glide plane symmetry: the mirror image with respect to the vertical center plane corresponds to a shift by one step.
Alternating tread stairs have been in use since at least 1888
Uploaded
February 19th, 2012
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Viewed 1,612 Times - Last Visitor from New York, NY on 04/23/2024 at 6:51 PM
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Comments (30)
Gerlinde Keating
This is a beautiful image! One can almost feel the cold. Great depth - Congratulation on your sale, Oden!
Sharon Kosmin
When I started looking at your website, I was a bit confused with your 'childlike' paintings. Because my curiousity got the best of me, I kept going. Then I started viewing image after image that just blew me away. Your paintings and photography are just wonderful and I thank you for the opportunity to view them. I am an aspiring artist who, at present, can produce a good finished painting, but continually struggle with taking the leap to creative freedom. I will return to your site everytime I feel the need to push myself to think outside the box. Your talent truly inspires me! sk