Collar beam

Roof framing: element #5 are the collars
An old collar beam roof in the Netherlands. Image: Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands

A collar beam or collar[1] is a horizontal member between two rafters and is very common in domestic roof construction. Often a collar is structural but they may be used simply to frame a ceiling. A collar beam is often called a collar tie but this is rarely correct. A tie in building construction is an element in tension rather than compression and most collar beams are designed to work in compression to keep the rafters from sagging.[2][3] A collar near the bottom of the rafters may replace a tie beam and be designed to keep the rafters from spreading, thus are in tension: these are correctly called a collar tie.

  1. ^ Ensminger, Robert F.. The Pennsylvania barn: its origin, evolution, and distribution in North America. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992. 324. Print.
  2. ^ Maginnis, Owen B.. Roof framing made easy: a practical and easily comprehended system, adapted to modern construction, for laying out and framing roofs, adapted to modern construction .... New York: O.B. Maginnis, 1896. 7. Print.
  3. ^ Nicholson, Peter. Practical carpentry, joinery, and cabinet-making; being a new and complete system of lines, for the use of workmen: founded on accurate geometrical and mechanical principles, with their application in carpentry, to roofs, domes, centring, &c.; in joinery,. London: T. Kelly by J. Rider, 1826. 31. Print.