
Architectural Airflow: Thermodynamics of the Revolving Door
Pressure, Climate Control, and the Invisible Mechanical Valves in Megatall Urban Skyscrapers
David Meadows(Author)
epubli (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 4. April 2026
205 pages
978-3-565-38288-0 (ISBN)
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Description
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The revolving door is often viewed as a frustrating, slow-moving bottleneck at the entrance of hotels and corporate headquarters. However, without this specific invention, the modern skyscraper would be physically impossible to heat, cool, or even safely navigate. It is not just a door; it is an essential thermodynamic valve.
Tall buildings act like massive chimneys. In the winter, heated air rises through the elevator shafts, creating a powerful "stack effect." This phenomenon generates a massive vacuum of negative pressure at the ground floor. If standard hinged doors were used, the pressure differential would make them impossibly heavy to pull open, or violently slam them shut, sucking freezing street air into the lobby.
This text breaks down the fluid dynamics and pressure systems of megatall architecture. You will explore how the revolving door maintains a constant airlock, saving billions in global HVAC energy costs, while simultaneously acting as a critical fire safety mechanism to control oxygen flow.
Stop pushing against the wind. Discover the hidden physics of urban climate control and how a 19th-century patent remains the unsung hero of modern architectural engineering.
More details
Edition
1. Auflage
Language
English
File size
0,99 MB
ISBN-13
978-3-565-38288-0 (9783565382880)
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Author
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