Yeah. I think DER is widely panned around here. Wrong choice for this location. Hopefully whomever Morguard uses for Bonnie Doon is much better.Love the density, but man the architecture is just disappointing...
Yeah. I think DER is widely panned around here. Wrong choice for this location. Hopefully whomever Morguard uses for Bonnie Doon is much better.Love the density, but man the architecture is just disappointing...
Huh?Kind of ironically the company associated itself with a name to that of an onomatopoeia version of dumb. Kind of fitting though.
I'd love to see your schedule to get 2 floors a week unless you're working 24 hour shifts2 floors a week+ are reasonably for that floor plate.
They are pouring the 6th floor and will still need the roof of the portion that juts out. The tower portion is pouring the 5th floor. Once they get to the 7th floor, the tower portion will speed up.A happy night shot.
The rate they're going it will be 25 stories tall by the end of the year.
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I've been in the industry for a very long time. I have yet to see 2 floors/week unless there are a multitude of items. 24 hours shifts, 2 cranes, designed to do half slabs, etc.For the tower portion, it shouldn't be a problem, and I speak from experience as part of what one had to apprenticed. They are flyforms at this stage...Parkades and podium are normally the time consumption aspects for they have to be specifically formed for a one-time usage.
Just cure the concrete faster, duh. Can't you just use a hair dryer on it?I've been in the industry for a very long time. I have yet to see 2 floors/week unless there are a multitude of items. 24 hours shifts, 2 cranes, designed to do half slabs, etc.
on a typical floor
Day 1: fly decks, m&e rough in
Day 2: rebar
Day 3 rebar inspection, pour slab
Day 4: form & pour columns and core
Day 5: strip colums & core
repeat and hope no wind days shuts down the crane
you can only move as fast as the crane and concrete needs to cure. Today with the size of columns engineers are designing , you require the crane to put up form work for columns. Also the amount or rebar and rebar designs I am seeing now is crazy, gone are the days of just bars 16 oc.
If you have a way to do 2 floors a week, I'm all ears and I'm sure a lot of concrete contractors would be as well
Just cure the concrete faster, duh. Can't you just use a hair dryer on it?
I've been in the industry for a very long time. I have yet to see 2 floors/week unless there are a multitude of items. 24 hours shifts, 2 cranes, designed to do half slabs, etc.
on a typical floor
Day 1: fly decks, m&e rough in
Day 2: rebar
Day 3 rebar inspection, pour slab
Day 4: form & pour columns and core
Day 5: strip colums & core
repeat and hope no wind days shuts down the crane
you can only move as fast as the crane and concrete needs to cure. Today with the size of columns engineers are designing , you require the crane to put up form work for columns. Also the amount or rebar and rebar designs I am seeing now is crazy, gone are the days of just bars 16 oc.
If you have a way to do 2 floors a week, I'm all ears and I'm sure a lot of concrete contractors would be as well