MikeSharp01 Posted yesterday at 11:55 Posted yesterday at 11:55 Round the corner from us they ar building 3 houses on a single plot. They have scrapped out three levels - the road rises past the plot, without any trenches just flat. On Thursday I noticed they were just pouring concrete onto these three flat levels, no services- nothing, you can see from the picture below what that looks like. Are they just short circuiting the passive slab build up to do without the N layers of type 1 and the pea shingle sub-base without any peripheral drainage or what what is going on top of these ponds of concrete?
Mr Punter Posted yesterday at 12:18 Posted yesterday at 12:18 Is it piling mats - concrete blinding to stabilise a piling rig?
MikeSharp01 Posted yesterday at 19:30 Author Posted yesterday at 19:30 7 hours ago, Mr Punter said: Is it piling mats - concrete blinding to stabilise a piling rig? the crosses might indicate that although they seem quite far apart for piles don't they? It will be interesting to see what happens next - I will report back.
Iceverge Posted yesterday at 20:10 Posted yesterday at 20:10 Very interesting. What was the sub grade like before they poured? Any mesh or rebar? Keep us posted
Iceverge Posted yesterday at 20:17 Posted yesterday at 20:17 Google tells me it may be blinding concrete. https://speedeck.uk/our-solutions/construction/working-platforms/ A thin layer of weak concrete in place of a thicker layer of compacted aggregate. The real foundations come later but it'll be a nice surface to work from and greatly reduces muck away and haulage etc...... Maybe @Gus Potter or @saveasteading could confirm?
Mr Punter Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago 14 hours ago, MikeSharp01 said: the crosses might indicate that although they seem quite far apart for piles don't they? It will be interesting to see what happens next - I will report back. They can often be at 4m centres.
Gus Potter Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago 23 hours ago, Iceverge said: The real foundations come later but it'll be a nice surface to work from and greatly reduces muck away and haulage etc. That looks a good theory.
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