Suite consistency - Mixing and matching windows and doors

15 December 2020

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3 min read

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Architects often specify the same joinery throughout a home to ensure consistency of design. But if budget is a constraint, choosing the best joinery available and using it throughout the home can make doing this cost-prohibitive, which often results in joinery being chosen from suites that are at the lower end of the price range to achieve consistency.

Fortunately, we have two joinery suites that solve this problem, allowing designers to specify from the premium suite for the focal points of the home such as living and dining areas, and specify joinery from an almost identical, mid-range suite in less demanding parts of a home.

“What we’ve found is that other joinery suite ranges on the market are different from each other, for example, one range will have flat and square facings, while the other will have scalloped facings,” Altus Window Systems’ Haydon Rogers says. “This lack of consistency makes it harder to use different suites on the same home as aesthetically it is visually noticeable and often means that you would use the premium version of the product only for a consistent look, which in turn makes it cost more.”

The two suites, the Atlantic High-Performance Suite and the Pacific Architectural Suite, which are visually almost imperceptibly different have many common features but differ markedly in price. This allows designers to keep costs down by easily interchanging the two.

You can have your cake and eat it too.

Suite consistency - Mixing and matching windows and doors

The Pacific Architectural Suite is often specified for larger family homes. “It complements well-chosen materials, fixtures and fittings and can easily handle big units with vast glazing expenses,” Haydon says. Unit heights can be up to 2.8 metres high in this suite, and the minimum wind zone rating for any of the products in this range is extreme, which means it can be specified in almost any application.

With a flat and square front face, it is a contemporary, high-quality suite. In contrast, the Atlantic High-Performance Suite is generally specified for grand homes, Haydon says. “It suits edgy architecture, extreme locations, heavyweights and requirements of the highest quality.” The products in this range can reach up to 3.2 metres in height, and well exceeds extreme wind zone requirements. The flat and square front facings fit perfectly with those in the Pacific Architectural Suite.

Both these suites have seismic frame options, a hopper window option, identical sill details with a chevron track and can be paired together in the same area, for example by specifying Atlantic High-Performance Sliding Doors with Pacific Architectural Awning Windows next to them, there will be no aesthetic inconsistencies.

Suite consistency - Mixing and matching windows and doors

This ability to use two suites, one at the higher end and one at a lower price point, is a new way for designers to ensure cost restraints can be made, without compromising on quality or visual aesthetics.