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Retrofit Books for concrete, steel, etc... 1

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westheimer1234

Structural
Jun 19, 2009
110
Any recommendation for good retrofit books for concrete, steel, anchor bolt, foundation, etc..

I'll be working inside a plant were majority of what they do "retrofit" existing stuff..

thanks,
 
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"Structural Renovation of Buildings - Methods, Details, and Design Example", Alexander Newman, McGraw-Hill, 2001.

Not bad reference book to have on your desk.
 
Just remember: Be creative but use engineering judegement! Retrofits are just darn fun.
 
Anybody remember "5 Stars", a concrete repair material manuf, publication? Very good reference material as well.
 
LOL! No one should be without that technical reference. I've got to get one.
 
Are Andy and Opie in it too?

Priceless, Mike.
 
Seriously; you may want to check out the ACI library (Concrete International), PCA, Concrete Repair Institute etc. Usually there are some good articles about specific projects or applications. Also, you might want to view the publishers like McGraw-Hill for a specific book covering this type of subject. Likely, you will need more than one source.
 
I left the design world permanently for this side of the fence. The grass is so much greener where there aren't architects...

As far as books, there aren't many dedicated retrofit/repair/rehab books available. Most of what you'll depend on are the same references you used for design.

There are a few books that I always have close by.
- "Structural Renovation of Buildings" - Newman
- "Deterioration, Repair and Strengthening of Structures" - Sidney Johnson.
- "Concrete Repair Manual" - ACI

For foundations there is, "Foundation Repair Manual" by Brown. It is OK.

Other books that are indispensible include the books I have on materials and failure mechanisms. In industrial/plant environments corrosion, chemical attack, galvanic potential, hydrogen embrittlement, stress-corrosion cracking, etc. come into play infinitely more than in other sectors. You also must choose repair materials carefully - so know what is available and what it can/can't do and resist.

While your creativity will be utilized to a great extent don't hesitate to research methods that have been successful in the past (see beton1's post above). Also, find out what capabilities your in-house machine shop, maintenance staff, and local contractors have. Don't be the bonehead that specs some exotic repair that no one can perform.

Everything else I have is pretty subject specific, aside from some timber books, which don't get opened that often. You may have some old mill building trusses however...
 
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