Regarding Our Domain Finecraftz.com

Due to some technical difficulties, Our Website Finecraftz.com will be unavailable temporarily.

Updates as usual will always be available on Finecraftz.In

Thanks for bearing with us.



Search This Blog

Translate

We provide cost effective and customised solutions for residential,commercial,corporate establishments.With years of experience,you can be rest assured of best services.

Finecraftz Architects and Interior Designers provides a wide range of programming, planning, and architectural design services. Our mission is to design buildings that enhance both the built and the natural environment. Teamwork forms the core of our firm's philosophy, combining the professional skills of our firm's personnel with job specific consultants to create focused and effective project teams.

Our comprehensive services integrate the multi-disciplined resources of a larger company, while still offering the personal attention and flexibility of a small office. Our designers use sophisticated CADD systems and electronic media as well as traditional forms of drawing in order to communicate effectively with our clients.

Finecraftz Architects and Interior Designers focuses particular attention on the careful investigation design solutions that are both practical and beautiful. We can use the newest building technologies or very traditional ones, choosing materials and methods that best reflect the needs of our clients. We also focus attention on future growth, so that our clients' buildings can absorb future growth and with minimal disruption. Our firm addresses budget and cost control issues from the early schematic phase to final construction documents.


Email: finecraftz@gmail.com, info@finecraftz.co.in


______________________________________________________________________________________________

Louvers

A louver (American English) or louvre (British English), from the French l'ouvert; "the open one") is a window, blind or shutter with horizontal or, less often, vertical slats, that are angled to admit light and air, but to keep out rain, direct sunshine, and noise. The angle of the slats may be adjustable, usual in blinds and windows, or fixed.

Louvers originated in the Middle Ages as lantern-like constructions in wood that were fitted on top of roof holes in large kitchens to allow ventilation while keeping out rain and snow. They were originally rather crude constructions consisting merely of a barrel. Later they evolved into more elaborate designs made of pottery, taking the shape of faces where the smoke and steam from cooking would pour out through the eyes and mouth, or into constructions that were more like modern louvers, with slats that could be opened or closed by pulling on a string.

More modern louver windows comprise slats of glass, opened and closed with a metal lever, or they may be shutters of wood, plastic or other material.

Some modern louver systems serve to improve indoor daylighting. Fixed mirrored louver systems can limit glare and of redirect diffuse light. Such louvers may be integrated in between two panes of double glazing.

Louvers are rarely seen as primary design elements in the language of modern architecture, but rather simply a technical device. However, there are examples of architects who use them as part of the overall aesthetic effect of their buildings. The most well-known example is Finnish modernist architect Alvar Aalto who would create aesthetic effects in the facades of his buildings through the combination of different types and sizes of louvers, some fixed some moveable, and made mostly from wood (e.g. the various buildings of the Helsinki University of Technology). A second example, taking influence from Aalto, is the second-generation modernist architect Juha Leiviskä.

Additionally, louvers are used as semi-passive means of thermal control on spacecraft. They are also available as an accessory for some automobiles.

No comments:

Post a Comment