Traditional Purlin And Rafter Roof Construction
And clasped purlins of which only one.
Traditional purlin and rafter roof construction. There are three types of purlins in wood construction. 50mm wide by 75mm 100mm or 125mm deep are all common. The support system for the roof is comprised of ridgepole and rafters or purlins. Building with them is known as stick framing.
This diagram shows the major components of a traditional rafter. Through purlins pass over the top. Every piece is measured cut and fastened together to form the rafter. The timbers are often 400mm or so centres and vary in size according to span.
Principal purlins in wood construction also called major purlins and side purlins are supported by principal rafters and support common rafters in what is known as a double roof a roof framed with a layer of principal rafters and a layer of common rafters. In architecture or structural engineering or building a purlin or purline is a horizontal structural member in a roof. The longitudinal horizontal beam that is sitting on a post or the principal rafter of a truss and used to support common rafters. These are normally only required to trussed rafter roofs and not for traditional purlin and rafter roof construction.
Purlin plates under purlin principal purlins and common purlins. A truss roof using factory made trusses which are delivered to site complete and just erected. Purlins support the loads from the roof deck or sheathing and are supported by the principal rafters and or the building walls steel beams etc. Principal purlins are further classified by how they connect to the principal rafters.
Building control guidance note purlin and rafter roofs timber sizes and construction details. In architecture structural engineering or building a purlin or historically purline purloyne purling perling is any longitudinal horizontal structural member in a roof except a type of framing with what is called a crown plate. Exposed rafters are a feature of some traditional roof styles. Rafters are the traditional means of framing a roof.
There are two basic methods of pitched roof construction. All the figures are based on roofing tiles or slates laid on. Parts of a traditional queen post roof truss. With rafters it runs in perpendicular from the walls to the ridge while with purlins it runs to the ridge in parallel.
Butt purlins tenon into the sides of the principal rafters. With this layout the upper level which is typically framed construction rather than log the ceiling slash roof can use rafters and purlins to add log elements. This arrangement offers support for the roof adds interior aesthetic if you opt to match the rafters and purlins with the wall logs. Sizes used in traditional roofing construction.
Using a combination of rafters and purlins is common. Traditional or cut roofs usually comprise a series of sloping timbers rafters fixed to a wall plate at their feet and a ridge board or possibly a wall plate at their head.