ISO 2848

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Short description: Building construction standard for positioning

ISO 2848 (Building construction – Modular coordination – Principles and rules) is an international standard for the construction industry that describes the aims of modular coordination and gives the rules to be used in establishing the dimensions and positioning of buildings and their components.

Overview

ISO 2848:1984, published by International Organization for Standardization, is an ISO standard used by the construction industry.[1]

Adherence to the standard means that major dimensions such as grid lines on drawings, distances between wall centres or surfaces, widths of shelves and kitchen components are multiples of the basic module.

Definitions

Cross section of a wooden joist layer, where "6 M" (or "6 modules") indicates a distance of 600 mm" (from center to center).

ISO 2848 is based on multiples of 300 mm and 600 mm. As dimensions increase, preference is given to lengths which are multiples of 3, 6, 12, 15, 30 and 60 basic modules. For smaller dimensions, the submodular increments ​14 M and ​12 M are preferred.

The numbers 300 and 600 were chosen because they are preferred numbers due to their large number of divisors – any multiple can be evenly divided into 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 12, 15, 20, 25, 30, etc., making them easy to use in mental arithmetic. This system is known as "modular coordination".

A related standard is British Standard 6750.

Basic module

Basic module (metric)
Unit systemISO 21723:2019
Unit ofLength
SymbolM 
Conversions
1 M in ...... is equal to ...
   millimeter   100 mm
   decimeter   1 dm
   inch   ≈3.937 in
Basic module (imperial)
Unit systemISO 21723:2019
Unit ofLength
SymbolM 
Conversions
1 M in ...... is equal to ...
   inch   4 in
   millimeter   101.6 mm
   decimeter   1.06 dm

The underlying unit of size given in ISO 2848 for modular coordination is the 'basic module'.[1] The 'basic module' is represented in the standards by the letter M, and has two standard definitions. It is primarily defined as 100 mm (3.937 inches), with the proviso that in countries using imperial units it is defined as 4 inches (101.6 mm).[2]

Further reading

  • British Standard BS 6750: Modular coordination in building.

References