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Best Stair Layout

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Best Stair Layout - The building code determines how carpenters should build stairs and steps, but the history of how it all came to be is fascinating. Copyright 2024 Tim Carter

Best Stair Layout - It's All About Human Stride

You probably give little thought to why the stairs in your home are built the way they are. I’m talking about how high you need to lift your foot to get up to the next step and how deep the flat tread is when your foot falls. The vertical face of a stair is called a riser, and the flat step is a tread.

I’ve built many staircases in my career. I also had the good fortune to go up and down many steep ship ladders (stairs) on the USS George Washington (CVN 73). I was on board for an in-depth 24-hour media tour as she carved crescent-shaped courses 200 miles off the North Carolina coast. New young naval aviators were doing their daytime and nighttime qualification tail hooks for the first time. The only elevators on this huge aircraft carrier are for airplanes, not sailors.

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I’ve also climbed up and down staircases in very old New England houses. These staircases are very steep and were built before building codes existed. You may have had the same experience and held on to the handrail for dear life as did I!

It’s important to realize that the building code we use in the USA is in flux. The code is revised every three years. Some things in the code stay the same, and some things change. The section dealing with stairs and steps has changed over the fifty years I’ve been in the building trades.

Decades ago, I felt the code had the best solution for the formula carpenters use to construct staircases in homes. The code contained a simple formula that stated code-compliant steps would be ones where the sum of two risers and one tread had to fall between 24 and 26 inches.

If you remember your high school math classes, you realize this formula gives a carpenter like me about 20 or 30 combinations to fit the ceiling height and floor space a staircase consumes in a house. Sixteenths of an inch is the limiting factor. Expensive cutting equipment is required to cut risers and treads in dimensions less than a sixteenth of an inch.

7.5-Inch Risers & 10-Inch Treads = Magic

The formula's sweet spot is 25 inches. Stairs that have a 7.5 inch riser and a 10-inch tread are perhaps the most comfortable and safest set of steps you can build and use. I always did everything possible to make sure the steps in the houses I built used this combination.

François Blondel - The Father of Safe Stairs

It turns out this formula was discovered by François Blondel, a famous French architect and civil engineer. He lived in the 1600s.

I decided to dig deeper into this fascinating topic. Two websites bubbled to the top of my Internet search. Practical Architecture and Hopific contain facts that shed light on how Blondel came to develop his stair-building formula. Today’s building codes use Blondel’s formula to create the safest and best staircases.

Stride Studies Held the Answer

Blondel published a book titled Cours d’Architecture in 1675. He focused first on the length of the average stride a person did when walking on level ground. His data at the time showed it to be 24 inches.

Ladders used by workers and soldiers were the next thing to study. Back then it turns out the average distance between ladder rungs was 12 inches. That holds true to this day. Go check your ladders and step ladders.

Blondel applied his findings to regular and shallow step and staircases. You’ll often find these shallow steps on a gentle slope in a garden. For example, if a riser is just one or two inches, the tread is going the be deeper. The tread keeps getting shallower as the riser height increases.

Ladder Rungs Haven't Changed in Hundreds of Years

You can see how this theory and formula translates to ladders and step ladders. Both are staircases that have a very shallow tread, and a much higher riser of one foot. It’s all math and rarely does math lead us astray. I think it’s remarkable François discovered this important relationship with crude measuring tools, no electronic calculators, or the Internet.

Keep in mind it’s very important that the riser height in a set of steps remains constant. The building code allows for a minor discrepancy, but it’s dangerous to introduce different riser heights or tread depths. Both create a severe trip or fall hazard. Do whatever is necessary to ensure the risers and treads remain the same from top to bottom.

Winder stairs and steps use the same formula in the winder section.

Factor in Finished Flooring

A common mistake rookies make when laying out a staircase is to forget about the finished flooring surface thickness at the top and bottom of a set of steps. It’s best to make a simple drawing showing exactly what happens where the staircase contacts the subfloor surfaces and at any intermediary landings.

You must give serious thought to all this math when drawing plans for a home. It’s vital you provide enough horizontal space for the total run of a set of steps. Another tip is to make your stairs at least 42 inches wide. The building code minimum is 36 inches which is quite comfortable for hobbits. Larger humans appreciate the extra six inches, believe me!

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