ᐅ How is this facade constructed?

Created on: 31 Jul 2019 20:20
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Bauherr am L
Below you can see a picture of a house whose exterior (especially the materials and color combination) we find very appealing. The facade is partly coated with light gray plaster. However, between the windows there are panels? These match the frame color of the windows, and the front door, garage door, canopy, and flashing also coordinate perfectly with it.

Now for the main question: How are these facade sections with a different material finish between the windows constructed? Are these small areas made with a curtain wall system? Is it very expensive? Or is it simply that the plaster was omitted there and panels were mounted instead?
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guckuck2
31 Jul 2019 22:11
Yes, I think so. Expensive and unfortunately cool would be Alucobond panels as a curtain wall façade.
rick201831 Jul 2019 23:00
That's what we will do
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guckuck2
1 Aug 2019 06:19
rick2018 schrieb:

We will do that

Do you have a price per square meter?
rick20181 Aug 2019 08:22
The panels we want alone cost 114€ net per m2 (10.8 sq ft). In addition, there are insulation, substructure, milling the base trim, bending...

Unnegotiated gross price is just under 260€ per m2 (10.8 sq ft).
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Bauherr am L
13 Mar 2020 23:26
Bauherr am L schrieb:

37025

I’m bringing this post up again because it’s becoming urgent, and we still don’t have a complete solution. Here’s the original question once more:

It concerns the section clad in aluminum (color matches the window frame) between the upper floor windows. We would like to have the same. Behind the aluminum cladding in our case is the load-bearing masonry. The insulation and the rest of the facade are ETICS (external thermal insulation composite system) with plaster.

The solution discussed so far here was to use better insulation behind the aluminum panel between the windows (thinner insulation with the same thermal value compared to ETICS) and then cover it with aluminum. That part is clear.

However, in this picture, the windowsill also runs continuously underneath, which looks good and also makes functional sense to direct water running down on the metal panel away. How is that solved? Or is the basic plan flawed?

I’m grateful for any further help!
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Matthias 40
14 Mar 2020 21:45
If the windowsill is to run continuously, you will have no choice but to make the part where the panels are fixed thinner than at the windows. Specifically, this can be achieved by using thinner wall thicknesses in this area or by using thinner insulation.

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