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Window sill

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Books placed on an interior window sill or stool

A window sill (also written windowsill or window-sill, and, less frequently, in British English, cill) is the horizontal structure or surface at the bottom of a window. Window sills serve to structurally support and hold the window in place.

The exterior portion of a window sill provides a mechanism for shedding rainwater away from the wall at the window opening. Therefore, window sills are usually inclined slightly downward away from the window and wall, and often extend past the exterior face of the wall, so the water will drip off rather than run down the wall.

Some window sills are made of natural stone, cast stone, concrete, tile, or other non-porous materials to further increase their water resistance.

Windows may not have a structural sill or the sill may not be sufficiently weather resistant. In these cases, a strip of waterproof and weather resistant material (steel, vinyl, PVC) called a sill pan may be used to protect the wall and shed the water. Like the sill, a sill pan will usually be inclined and protrude from the wall.

Types of window sill

A window sill in the most general sense is a horizontal structural element below a window opening or window unit in masonry construction or framed construction and is regraded as part of the window frame. The bottom of a window frame sits on top of the window sill of the wall opening.[1]

A window sill may span the entire width of a wall from inside to outside, as is often the case in basic masonry construction, making it visible on both the interior and exterior of the building. In such a case the exterior window sill and interior window sill would be two sides of the same structural element.

Conversely, a window sill may only extend from the internal wall structure to the outside and not be visible from the building's interior. In that case the window likely has a shelf-like piece of interior trim work—often made of wood, tile, or stone—which is distinct from the exterior window sill. The technical term used by carpenters, window manufacturers, and other professionals for this piece of trim work is window stool, but it is also referred to as a window sill. In residential buildings, some people use this latter kind of interior window sill or stool to store houseplants, books, or other small personal items.

See also

References

  1. ^ Sturgis, Russell (1901). A Dictionary of Architecture and Building: Biographical, Historical, and Descriptive. vol. 3. New York: The Macmillan Co.


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