Hammer Beam Roof Structure

It uses reinforced posts curving slightly outward from the wall to support the weight.
Hammer beam roof structure. A hammer beam truss is a cathedral roof truss with an open center. The hammer beam bent is often associated with religious structures great halls or great rooms. Unless the structure has the ability to resist the outward thrust present at the bottom of the hb truss the modified hb truss is the way to go. Not a true truss the construction is similar to corbeled masonry see corbel in that each set of beams steps upward and inward by resting on the ones below by means of curved braces and struts.
Diagram of a hammerbeam roof hammerbeam roof systems developed in english architecture in the medieval period. The hammer beam roof is the crowning achievement in english gothic architecture and open timber roof design. A hammerbeam is a form of timber roof truss allowing a hammerbeam roof to span greater than the length of any individual piece of timber in place of a normal tie beam spanning the entire width of the roof short beams the hammer beams are supported by curved braces from the wall and hammer posts or arch braces are built on top to support the rafters and typically a collar beam. We usually use the hammer beam itself as a robust bending member as the hammer post vertical and brace into the post go into significant compression.
Hammer beam roof english medieval timber roof system used when a long span was needed. A hammer beam timber frame bent pictured above is a beautiful and more complicated design and creates dramatic vaulted spaces. The hammer beam is the short beam at the base that attaches to the wall. Modified hammer beam trusses can use a lower tie beam or steel rods to.
1 there is no hammer post on the hammer beam 16 17 as sometimes found in a type of arch brace truss 18 or. Herland s experience at winchester in the early 1390s. Hammer beam trusses can have a single hammerbeam or multiple hammerbeams. I learned recently that these structures in an open timber roof are called hammer beam type roofs.
A false hammerbeam roof truss has two definitions. There are many ways to embellish this design from through tenons and radius cuts to decorative pendants or finials. A true hammer beam truss like the one shown here relies on exterior buttresses reminiscent of the flying buttresses of notre dame cathedral to hold it in place and keep the roof planes from spreading apart. This analysis is based on drawings made in 1913 to facilitate the repair of the roof and on the author s archaeological reconstruction of the carpentry based on those drawings.