Category Archives: Concrete

What is Concrete and how is it placed?

Concrete is a mixture of two components: aggregates and paste. The aggregate component is normally composed of sand and gravel or crushed stone. The paste component is normally comprised of cement, water and admixtures.

Concrete is usually placed using either the form-and-pour or form-and-pump method. Both methods usually involve the design and construction of formwork around the repair section (or new construction application), in order to shape the final grade of the concrete section to be placed. Placing concrete into a horizontal concrete repair section would be the exception, wherein formwork is generally not required.

Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto, ON

art gallery

Ontario was required to accommodate newly acquired collections, and to ensure the success of the AGO for years to come. A critical part of the project involved the design and construction of a new foundation system to support the 5-storey center-piece tower. To facilitate the construction of the tower’s foundation within the footprint of the existing structure, Isherwood Associates designed a network of micro-piles, to be installed from the original subfloor of the building to the shale bedrock 20 m (65 ft) below. The restricted access conditions also necessitated a pile design that provided extremely high strength and was small enough to allow the mini-drill rigs to be used in an area with less than 2.75 m (9 ft) of headroom.

A critical component of the micropile design was the KING MS Micropile which maximized pile strength, providing typical 28-day compressive strength breaks exceeding 60 MPa (8600 psi). Plastic properties of the MS Micropile allowed the grout to be pumped through a 0.85 mm (3/8 inch) tube, through typical pile lengths of 30 m (100 ft). Geo-Foundations Contractors Inc was able to proceed with production pile installation after testing a single, pre-production test pile which was load tested to 800 tonnes.

Geo-Foundations crews also faced logistical challenges related to the placement of concrete for underpinning areas within the central core of the building. To overcome this challenge, they chose to form and pump MS-S10 in larger sections of foundation wall and In-Pakt Precision in smaller, sections. Both of these products met the strength and pumpability requirements and the pre packaged materials allowed Geo-Foundations to produce small batches and maintain the sequencing of the underpinning work.