Wiki: Open riser stairs

Another article for your persusal and infinite praise....

Open riser stairs

[[Image:Stair_620-9.jpg|233px]]

Open riser stairs are popular for garden and decking use. They're easy and low cost to construct.

==Safety== Stair falls are a significant cause of injury, disability and death. Several points will be considered to ensure the stair design doesn't make this problem any worse.

==Indoor use== For use in habitable spaces an extra piece of wood needs to be added to reduce the maximum size of gap between neighbouring treads to under

100mm. This can be a horizontal strip of wood halfway up each gap, or the whole gap can be closed with some sheet material.

These stairs are fairly unpopular for indoor use. Their open nature doesn't give a sense of security, and some people are phobic about open stairs. On the other hand they're cheap and easy to make, and provide plenty of character.

==Finish== When stairs are not carpeted the right finish should be chosen to minimise slip. Non-slip floor varnishes are available. Stick-on grip strips are not recommended, and can actually cause falls.

Outdoor steps may be grooved to improve grip. However this does make the wood rot quicker. Another option is to incorporate very fine sand in the varnish. One way to do this is to sprinkle a little sand onto the first wet coat, and when dry apply a 2nd coat of varnish to bond the sand more firmly. Very little sand is needed.

==Fixings== There are various ways to fix the triangular step support pieces in place. If a single nail or other fixing were used with each triangular support piece, a single failure could cause a nasty accident. 2 fixings per triangle is safer. Don't be tempted to nail these in from underneath, as they could then work out unnoticed.

==Dimensions== A single storey 3' wide pine stair using 2x6 rails and 8x1 treads can support several times the weight of people on every step, or obese people standing on every other step.

Calculations will be needed for other stair sizes and timber dimensions. For any application the stair should have a good margin of safety, and be able to support triple the maximum human weight that could possibly be placed on it.

==Handrails== Wherever the location, any stairs with more than one step should always have a handrail. A second handrail on the other side is an optional extra that reduces the risk of falls.

==See Also==

  • [[Cut String Stairs]]
  • [[Special:Allpages|Wiki Contents]]
  • [[Special:Categories|Wiki Subject Categories]]

[[Category:Wood]] [[Category:Projects]] [[Category:Safety]]

NT

Reply to
meow2222
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Whilst pre made Decking Stair Stringers are available its much cheaper to build your own.

Proper deck boards are slip resistant especially when traffic is 'across' the board rather than along its length. Instead of grooves machined into the surface, deck boards should have the surface machined away leaving a series of ribs proud of the surface.

How about alternate tread staircases? I built one once & my head still hurts from working it out :-)

Reply to
The Medway Handyman

Those are a different (but related) type of stair though. I think John's stair article was about those.

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guess the picture will make it clearer.

Maybe you could explain the difference?

Yes, an article on those would be good too. You fancy saying something about them?

NT

Reply to
meow2222

Mark space ratio ;-)

same as cut string at a much steeper pitch really...

Reply to
John Rumm

right

Yes, plus there must be various rules for them that are different, and different pros/cons etc.

NT

Reply to
meow2222

OK. The deck boards have (square) grooves machined into their surface, rather like the crennels & merlins on a castle wall. All this does is reduce the surface area available to contact the shoe sole.

Proper deck boards have the surface machined away leaving a series of trianguar ribs proud of the surface which increases grip.

Yes. Working out how to make them causes your head to hurt :-)

I think just mentioning they exist would be fine.

Reply to
The Medway Handyman

right, ta

I think there may be a misunderstanding here. Maybe it'll be clearer once the diagram's up.

cheers, NT

Reply to
meow2222

Good picture here

formatting link

Reply to
The Medway Handyman

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