Doors and Windows

Air Force Corporate Standards

Connect interiors and exteriors with doors and windows to provide daylighting, passive thermal comfort methods, and to lower life cycle costs. Provide an efficient thermal envelope and cost-effectively integrate passive heating and cooling systems. Design the building envelope to control the transfer of these elements: heat, air, moisture, light/radiation, and noise. Design each control strategy holistically and use an integrated design approach to optimize building performance while promoting occupant comfort, health, safety, security and productivity.

Respond to the federal requirements and locate a building with its longest dimension along an east-west axis. Maximize opportunities for windows with shading along the south exposure. Promote daylighting. Consider solar heat gain with thermal heat storage when appropriate for the local climate.

Ensure shading elements are fully functional and correspond to the solar azimuth angle and the solar altitude angle to block direct sunlight during periods of the year when mechanical cooling is needed.

Select doors and windows for a long life span with the possibility of one or more uses during that time. Provide durable long-lasting windows and doors in all high-use areas and in all exposures subject to weathering and UV light. Lower life cycle costs by selecting low-maintenance materials. Hardware types and finishes will be long-lasting, showing minimal effects of use over their lifespan.

Windows may be of different sizes and proportions based on the direction a wall is facing, but a facility’s overall design will be cohesive and of consistent quality. Use an organized placement and pattern of windows that coordinates with the overall facility design.

Ensure the type and level of quality of doors and windows is appropriate for the Facility Group designation.

Sustainability

Following the directives of UFC 1-200-02, determine whether passive design strategies are cost-effectively incorporated before the active and mechanical systems are designed. Integrate windows to support passive systems. Concentrating windows on south-facing walls is encouraged when climate appropriate.

Evaluate life-cycle cost effectiveness of passive (non-mechanical) ventilation and cooling systems such as shading integrated with window systems. Passive thermal comfort methods are allowed and encouraged. Operable windows, when permitted, must be coordinated to ensure interiors are secure and protected from rain, snow and inclement weather.

Window and door systems should enhance indoor environmental quality and must promote thermal comfort, moisture control and daylighting. Material specifications should include consideration of environmentally preferable products, products with recycled content, as well as low-emitting and biobased products.

Resilience

Consider documented risks associated with weather and climate and life-cycle cost effectively develop passive systems such as increased thermal performance, exterior solar shading and interior thermal insulating shades, to reduce energy use.

Provide acceptable thermal insulating values for doors and windows in locations subject to extreme heat or extreme cold. Consider passive systems such as solar shading, location of doors and windows and increased insulation as the first priority.

Respond to potential high winds, hurricanes and typhoons with acceptable doors and windows to meet the documented risks and provide operable protection systems, such as rolling or folding shutters, when functionally required.

UFC 1-200-01 General Building Requirements
http://www.wbdg.org/ffc/dod/unified-facilities-criteria-ufc/ufc-1-200-01

UFC 1-200-02 High Performance and Sustainable Building Requirements
http://www.wbdg.org/ffc/dod/unified-facilities-criteria-ufc/ufc-1-200-02

UFC 3-101-01 Architecture
http://www.wbdg.org/ffc/dod/unified-facilities-criteria-ufc/ufc-3-101-01

UFC 4-010-01 DoD Minimum Antiterrorism Standards for Buildings
http://www.wbdg.org/ffc/dod/unified-facilities-criteria-ufc/ufc-4-010-01

AFI 32-6002 Family Housing Planning, Programming, Design, and Construction
https://www.wbdg.org/FFC/AF/AFI/afi_32_6002.pdf

USAF/DOE Design Guide for Military Family Housing Energy-Efficient Revitalization and New Construction
http://www.wbdg.org/FFC/AF/AFDG/milfam.pdf

US Air Force Family Housing Design Guide for Planning, Programming, Design and Construction
http://www.wbdg.org/FFC/AF/AFDG/familyhousing.pdf