Awnings General Contractor
Awnings General Contractor
What are awnings?
Awnings are overhangs attached to the exterior walls of a building or a home. They are typically made of canvas, woven acrylic, cotton, polyester, or vinyl. They are stretched over a frame of wood, aluminum, iron, or steel. However, aluminum is often the preferred material for its lightness and ease of use and repair.
Awnings hang over doors and windows, and you’ll often find them stretched out on poles to cover entire decks or sections of a yard, similar to a tent or a full canopy.
The main purpose of awnings is to protect against sunlight, rain, snow, and heavy winds. You may have seen awnings at restaurant patios, protecting patrons from sun and rain, and allowing them to comfortably dine and enjoy each other’s company outside, no matter the weather situation.
There are a number of different types of awnings. The main kind is called a propulsion awning. This type, in comparison with a canopy, extends out over a window or door from the exterior wall of a building.
There are two kinds of propulsion awnings: manual and motorized.
With manual awnings, you have to turn a crank until the awning has extended from the wall to its full extent, covering the window or door, and shading the space beneath it.
With motorized awnings, you have only to press a button, and the awning extends outward, or retracts back to its resting place, as you intend. These motor-operated awnings use an electric motor that is often invisible, being hidden within the roller of the awning.
When considering the different types of awning materials available, you may want to look into solar shade screens. They are made of acrylic canvas or a mesh fabric that allows a greater degree of visibility through the fabric than the other, often more popular, materials.
Also available are “smart awnings.” These include solar and wind sensors. The motor automatically retracts the awning during periods of intense wind or stormy weather, and automatically extends awnings when the sun comes out.
When you get in touch with an awning contractor, ask if the company provides free estimates for the job. Many contractors often do. And be sure to go over all the different options for fabrics and frame materials with your awning contractor.
Who should install awnings?
Awnings help you cut back on your energy bills. When the sun is not shining directly into your home through windows and glass doors, your house does not heat up as fast and to as high a degree as it would without awnings installed. This subsequently frees you from having to run the air conditioner for long periods of time.
With an awning installed over your porch or patio, you can enjoy eating, resting, and entertaining outside on hot summer days.
Some people like to be outside during a rainstorm. But without shelter, you’d quickly get soaked! Having an awning allows you to enjoy a calming rain shower and remain dry and sheltered.
Additionally, many homeowners do not necessarily have a shed or a garage for possessions that would fare badly in extreme weather. You may want to keep items like grills, lawn mowers, bags of gardening soil, and woven lawn chairs sheltered from the elements. An awning or a canopy can protect these items. It’s an economical way to store useful yard items without building a shed or a garage.
What are the benefits and drawbacks to awnings?
Manually extending awnings are low-cost and easily adapted to many different kinds of decks and patios. But you have to crank them open and closed depending on the weather. This could be very inconvenient for a homeowner in a climate prone to swiftly changing weather patterns. One moment you may be cranking the awning open as the sun comes out, at another moment you’d have to return to crank the awning closed as winds pick up, the hail begins, and you move everything inside.
Motorized awnings, with their retractable lateral arms and electric motor, offer the most comfortable alternative to manual awnings. Of course, these may cost a bit more than their manual counterparts. And anything with a motor may call for future repairs to keep the awning system in shape. Think about the cost of the luxury as you make your decision. Remember: You can always talk with your awnings contractor about the pros and cons to the costs and mechanics of manual versus motorized awnings.
Winds greater than 25 miles per hour have the potential to damage your awnings. Though awnings offer protection from the sun and the rain, you have to keep in mind that they require your attention when it comes to winds. You’ll have to be there to bring the awnings back in toward the
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