bridgebuster
Active member
- Jun 27, 1999
- 3,969
My parish is going to solicit bids for the demolition of a two story masonry building. I'm helping out with writing a scope of work and preparing information for bidders. The building was constructed in 1969 but there are no plans available; so I've had to do some minor demo on my own. Here are some particulars:
115' x 45 in plan, approximately 18 feet in height. The exterior walls (from grade to top of seconf floor)and interior bearing walls are 8x8x16 CMU.
There is a 20 x 72 basement; the walls are 8x12x16 CMU.
The second floor deck and the first(ground) floor deck over the basement is 6"x16" precast concrete plank with a topping.
Two questions - I'm hoping to avoid getting out the sledge hammer, pick, and shovel:
My guess is that the entire first (ground) floor is precast plank and not a combination of plank and slab on grade; in order to avoid differential settlement.Is that logical?
If most of the first floor is slab on grade, would you construct a perimeter wall about four feet deep (this is NE Pennsylvania) to support the exterior walls or just thicken the slab on grade? I'm guessing an 8" block wall on a 12 x 24 concrete footing.
115' x 45 in plan, approximately 18 feet in height. The exterior walls (from grade to top of seconf floor)and interior bearing walls are 8x8x16 CMU.
There is a 20 x 72 basement; the walls are 8x12x16 CMU.
The second floor deck and the first(ground) floor deck over the basement is 6"x16" precast concrete plank with a topping.
Two questions - I'm hoping to avoid getting out the sledge hammer, pick, and shovel:
My guess is that the entire first (ground) floor is precast plank and not a combination of plank and slab on grade; in order to avoid differential settlement.Is that logical?
If most of the first floor is slab on grade, would you construct a perimeter wall about four feet deep (this is NE Pennsylvania) to support the exterior walls or just thicken the slab on grade? I'm guessing an 8" block wall on a 12 x 24 concrete footing.