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Precast concrete in mixed construction (PDF)

N° 19. Precast concrete in mixed construction.
State-of-art report (68 pages, ISBN 978-2-88394-059-8, April 2002) - PDF format
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Description

fib Bulletin No. 19

Title: Precast concrete in mixed construction

Category: State-of-art report

Year: 2002

Pages: 68

Format approx. DIN A4 (210x297 mm)

ISBN: 978-2-88394-059-8

DOI: doi.org/10.35789/fib.BULL.0019

Abstract: The purpose of this publication is to show how precast concrete may be mixed in combination with other structural materials to maximise overall building performance. The other materials are:

  • cast insitu concrete, reinforced and post-tensioned,
  • structural steelwork,
  • timber and glue-laminated timber,
  • masonry in brickwork and blockwork,
  • glass and glazing.

The aim is to provide a companion volume to composite Floor Structures [FIP, 1998] and to show some of the many other ways that precast concrete can be used to advantage with other materials. The term mixed precast construction is used to describe these other combinations.

The intention is not to discuss design calculations - that is for a future 'fib Guide to good practice'. Instead, the bulletin is meant as a 'State-of-art' publication showing photographs, sketches and details of precast concrete with other materials. There are no design equations, although some technical information on how to combine the materials, e.g. bearings, connections, tolerances, thermal and shrinkage effects, etc., is included if appropriate.

Thus, the document focuses on the use of mixed construction in multistorey buildings, offices, housing, grandstands, parking garages, and industrial warehouses, etc. i. e. on precast concrete as the main construction material and looks at the manner in which other materials can be integrated.

Chapter by chapter the strengths and weakness of each material studied are assessed as part of the total building design. In some cases it is obvious that the load carrying performance of one material outweighs another. In other cases aspects such as thermal, fire, vibration, fatigue, creep, acoustic, seismic and visual characteristics, and the geographical local availability of that material, may be critical. A world-wide survey, presented in Table 1.1, found that precast concrete is a universal building material, but mixed construction is limited mostly to developed countries where structural steelwork and types of timber, such as glue-laminated timber, is readily available. In addition there may be design, detailing, production, transportation, erection and maintenance limitations, which do or do not favour mixed construction.

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