PEinVA
Structural
- Nov 15, 2006
- 321
Our office is currently in the middle of a hotel renovation in DC Metro area, and the concrete slab is defined on structural drawings as 6.5" typically reinforced 2-way concrete slab. The spans are typically 12'-14', nothing really out of the ordinary.
The hotel is completely stripped at this point, and this when our firm typically walks the site to see if there is any other structural issue pressing that should get addressed while still early in the job. While walking the site I noticed a number of joints in the midspan of the slab in the east-west direction of the slab and I found this rather odd, as I could not see any rebar crossing the joint, and as we all know, this is where bottom steel wants to be.
After reviewing some cores and other openings in the slab, it looked as if the bottom 1.5"-2" was precast with the bottom mat and then the "topping" upper slab was poured over this on-site. Our only thought is that the 2" precast layer was utilized as "stay in place" formwork. The area around columns looks like the column tops were poured with the upper slab, but I'm worried we don't have the shear depth we thought had. As with any renovation there will be a number of new cores, and I'm trying to determine how to work with shear around columns.
Has anyone seen this type of construction? My boss had heard of it, but never actually saw it in practice. There is nothing on the construction documents referencing this option, I'm sure it was a VE/Contractor substitution.
I'm also worried the slab won't act compositely, how would this have been achieved?
Thanks guy!
RC
All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.
Edmund Burke
The hotel is completely stripped at this point, and this when our firm typically walks the site to see if there is any other structural issue pressing that should get addressed while still early in the job. While walking the site I noticed a number of joints in the midspan of the slab in the east-west direction of the slab and I found this rather odd, as I could not see any rebar crossing the joint, and as we all know, this is where bottom steel wants to be.
After reviewing some cores and other openings in the slab, it looked as if the bottom 1.5"-2" was precast with the bottom mat and then the "topping" upper slab was poured over this on-site. Our only thought is that the 2" precast layer was utilized as "stay in place" formwork. The area around columns looks like the column tops were poured with the upper slab, but I'm worried we don't have the shear depth we thought had. As with any renovation there will be a number of new cores, and I'm trying to determine how to work with shear around columns.
Has anyone seen this type of construction? My boss had heard of it, but never actually saw it in practice. There is nothing on the construction documents referencing this option, I'm sure it was a VE/Contractor substitution.
I'm also worried the slab won't act compositely, how would this have been achieved?
Thanks guy!
RC
All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.
Edmund Burke