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STANDARD

SPECIFICATIONS FOR
CONSTRUCTION WORKS
2019

Module 02 – Concrete
Edition 2.0
Acknowledgement
The Standard Specification for Construction Works 2019 is a collaborative experience
involving the efforts and responses of many people involved during the review process.
The Ministry of Works of the Government of the Kingdom of Bahrain would like to express
its deepest appreciation to the following persons for the help, assistance and collaboration
provided.

 H.E. Essam Bin Abdulla Khalaf – Minister of Works

 Mr. Ahmed A. Aziz Al Khayat – H.E. Undersecretary, Public Works Affairs


(Chairman, Specifications Steering Committee)

 Ebrahim Hassan Al-Hawaj - Assistant Undersecretary, Technical Services


(Vice Chairman, Specifications Steering Committee)

 Specifications Steering Committee Members

 Mr. Sameer Abdul Karim Affouni


 Mr. Shaifful Anuar Bin Mohd Yunus
 Mr. Radzlan Bin Ramli
 Mr. Khalifa Kadhim
 Mr. Mohammed Saeed Al Ekri
 Mr. Ayman Mohammed Saeed Nasser
 Mr. Wasantha Kahaduwa
 Mr. Mahmoud Mohammed Seffo
 Mr. Subah Al-Sabah
 Ms. Mona Yousif Ahmed Rashid
 Dr. Faisal M. Falih
 Mr. Mouathe Ali Hasan Ali
 Mr. Yassin Eisa Adam Khaleel
 Mr. Francisco Victor T. Feniz

 Technical Working Group

 Mr. Francisco Victor T. Feniz (TWG Leader)


 Mr. Orlando C. Lansangan
 Mr. Mouathe Ali Hasan Ali
 Dr. Muthiah Raj Daniel
 Mr. Gilbert S. Fuentes
.
and all other organizations who contributed in updating of Standard Specifications for
Construction Works

Standard Specifications for Construction Works


Ministry of Works

Copyrights Statement

Standard Specifications for Construction Works is solely owned by the Ministry of Works, P.O. Box 5,
Manama, Kingdom of Bahrain. No contents of this document may be reproduced, stored in the retrieval
system or transmitted in any form or by any means, either in whole or in part, without prior written permission
of Ministry of Works.

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Introduction

The Standard Specifications are published as a series of 21 stand-alone modules each addressing

a single distinct area of the construction process. This stand-alone module 02 is an integral part of

the Standard Specifications.

The purpose of the MoW STANDARD SPECIFICATIONS FOR CONSTRUCTION is to provide the

design professional with a guide for accepted construction practices for Ministry of Works projects.

As an aid to the designer, these Standard Specifications are provided for the inclusion in proposed

development projects for ease, efficiency and cost savings.

The Standard Specifications are not intended to limit the design responsibility of the design

professional. However, they establish a minimum acceptable criterion and/or quality for use within

Ministry of Works projects.

The design professional may increase the requirements of an item contained in the Standard

Specifications to meet job requirements, but when this is done, there should be no reference for

that item on the drawings to the Ministry of Works Standard Specifications and a new specification

should be included with the drawings or project contract documents.

The design professional must review all Standard Specifications to be sure that they are adequate

for the proposed project based on the job site conditions; the design professional is solely

responsible for the designs submitted under his seal.

In order to keep design standards current with changing regulations and improved construction

materials and practices this section will be updated and maintained by the concerned authorities of

the Ministry of Works. Prior to starting a new project, the design professional should contact the

concerned Directorate of the Ministry of Works to verify that he/she has the latest document

revisions.

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Module List

Module
No Module Title
01 Guidance and General Specifications

02 Concrete

03 Earthworks

04 Glass and Glazing

05 Joinery and Carpentry

06 Ironmongery

07 Internal Finishes including Thermal Insulation

08 Painting and Decorating (Internal & External)

09 Metalwork

10 Roofing

11 Structural Steel (and Coatings)

12 Structural Timber

13 Masonry

14 Plumbing and Sanitary

15 Mechanical Installation in Buildings

16 Electrical Installation

17 Sewerage, Pipelines and Pipework

18 Sewerage M&E Works

19 Roadworks

20 Landscaping

21 Dredging, Reclamation and Shoreline Protection

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Table of Contents
CLAUSE DESCRIPTION PAGE
Introduction 2
Module List 3
Table of Contents 4
Foreword 6

1 PART 1 MATERIALS 6
1.1 Sources Approvals………………………………………………………………………… 6
1.1.1 General……………………………………………………………………………………... 6
1.2 Repair and Protection Systems………………………..……………………………….. 19
1.3 Delivery, Site Storage, Handling and Protection of Materials………………………..19

2 PART 2 METHODOLOGY AND WORKMANSHIP 21


2.1 Method Statements……………………………………………………………………… 21
2.2 Mix Development………………………………………………………………………… 21
2.3 Pour Preparation…………………………………………………………………………. 30
2.4 Batching……………………………………………………………………………………35
2.5 Mixing………………………………………………………………………………………36
2.6 Transporting……………………………………………………………………………….37
2.7 Placing and Finishing……………………………………………………………………. 37
2.8 Curing and Protection…………………………………………………………………… 43
2.9 Post-concreting…………………………………………………………………………... 44
2.10 Non-Compliant Concrete………………………………………………………………... 47

3 PART 3 PRE-CAST CONCRETE 48


3.1 Source and Type Approval……………………………………………………………… 48
3.2 Methodology and Workmanship……………………………………………………….. 49

4 PART 4 SPECIAL CONCRETE 51


4.1 General……………………………………………………………………………………. 51
4.2 Lightweight Concrete……………………………………………………………………. 51
4.3 Pavement Concrete……………………………………………………………………… 52
4.4 No-Fines Concrete………………………………………………………………………. 53
4.5 “Granolithic” Concrete…………………………………………………………………… 53
4.6 Glass-Reinforced Cement (GRC)……………………………………………………… 53
4.7 Mortars, Grout and Render……………………………………………………………... 54

5 PART 5 SUMMARY 55
5.1 Approvals…………………………………………………………………………………. 55
5.2 Reference Documents…………………………………………………………………... 59

Abbreviations 66

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Foreword

This specification provides the basis for using concrete in construction. It covers the main

requirements for selecting materials, identifying the concrete mixes required, the procedures for

controlling the quality and requirements of producing, placing and finishing concrete.

This specification must be read in its entirety, as it is structured in order of work-flow, which means

that items or activities appear in several places in the specification corresponding to the

progression of the construction process.

For larger or more complex or specialist projects, a project-specific Particular Specification for

concrete may be also be provided, which will, together with the drawings, Client’s brief and details

of the ground and service environments, provide a basis for selecting appropriate concrete

materials.

An assessment of the environment must be made as part of the design process. Concrete of

appropriate durability characteristics must be adopted. Quality control testing of production

concrete is based on Acceptance Strength (AS), which is defined as the higher of the Structural

Strength (SS) required by the Designer, and the Durability Strength (DS) obtained from the

concrete mix required for durability purposes. The Flow Chart (attached) summarises the main

stages involved in producing concrete to comply with this specification.

Absence of clauses for materials and methods does not necessarily signify that they cannot be

used. Proposals for use of innovative methods and materials are encouraged and are subject to

review and approval by the Client.

Where the word approved is used in this specification, this means that the Client or Engineer has

been consulted and has confirmed that the item or procedure is acceptable in the specific context

for which approval has been requested.

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1 PART 1 MATERIALS

1.1 Source Approvals

1.1.1 General

A quality system shall apply for the supply and placement of concrete which conforms to this
specification and complies with the relevant requirements of ISO 9001 including quality records,
hold points, witness points and method statements.

The Contractor shall submit to the Engineer a list of suppliers from whom he proposes to purchase
materials and services. All materials and associated testing shall be obtained from suppliers and
laboratories operating an accredited third-party quality assurance system in accordance with ISO
9001. Documentary evidence shall be provided to demonstrate that the third-party accreditation is
current and covers the materials or services being supplied, including but not limited to:

 Cement
 Aggregate
 Admixtures
 Reinforcement
 Testing.

Where suppliers do not operate a suitable quality system then a proposed schedule of
independent testing and auditing by an Accredited Laboratory or Accredited Testing Body shall be
submitted for approval. The cost of undertaking such independent testing and auditing shall be at
the Contractor’s expense.

1.1.2 Cementitious Materials

1.1.2.1 Portland Cement

The cement to be used throughout the Works shall be obtained from manufacturers approved in
writing and shall be strength class 42.5N or 52.5N to GSO 1914.

Cement shall comply with the tricalcium aluminate (C3A) contents required in Table 1.

Cement type for each mix shall be as shown in Tables 7 and 8, and in accordance with Building
Research Establishment SP1.

Table 1 C3A Contents for Cements


Cement Type Applicable Standards C3A content
Portland cement (PC):
Ordinary Portland cement GSO 1914 Type I
(OPC)
Moderately sulphate
3.5%-8%
resisting Portland cement
(MSRPC)
Sulphate resisting ≤ 5.0%
GSO 1914 Type V
Portland cement (SRPC)

Cement shall be certified by the manufacturer as complying with the requirements of the
appropriate Standard(s). Before ordering cement, the Contractor shall submit details of the
proposed supplier and information on the proposed methods of transport, storage and certification
for approval and show that the quantity and quality required can be attained and maintained
throughout the construction period.

Having obtained approval, the Contractor shall not change the agreed arrangements without
permission. Each consignment of cement shall be accompanied by a certificate showing the place

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of manufacture and the results of standard tests carried out on each day’s bulk production included
in the consignment.

Cementitious materials shall be free from lumps and other deleterious matter and shall be
otherwise undamaged when used. Before a concrete placement is started, sufficient cementitious
materials shall be in storage at the batching plant to complete the placement.

1.1.2.2 White Cement

Cement for white concrete shall be white cement obtained from manufacturers approval in writing
and shall comply with the requirements of GSO 488. Strength class shall be not less than 42.5 N.

A key advantage of using white cement for decorative and architectural concrete is that it provides
a neutral tinting base and consistent colours results. Every colour option is possible with it, from
pure white to bright and pastel colours. However, appropriate trial mixes shall be undertaken and
care exercised at the batching plant to prevent contamination of cement silos, aggregate bins and
other equipment with material which could alter the intended colour or lead to blemishes.

1.1.2.3 Blast-Furnace Slag

Ground granulated blast-furnace slag (GGBS) shall be used in a combination of Portland Cement
to GSO 1914 and GGBS conforming to BS EN 15167. Where the use of blast furnace slag inter-
ground with Portland cement is proposed, this shall be from an approved source. (Additive for
Green Concrete)

The chemical and mechanical properties of the GGBS shall be as in Table 2.

Table 2 Chemical and Mechanical Properties of GGBS


Parameter Limit Acceptance inspection
Limit
Fineness (m2/kg) ≥ 275 ≥ 250
Compressive strength 7-day ≥ 12 ≥ 10
(N/mm2) 28-day ≥ 32.5 ≥ 30
Glass content (%) ≥ 67 ≥ 62
Or activity index
Activity index 7-day ≥ 45% ≥ 40%
28-day ≥ 70% ≥ 60%
Initial setting time Not less than PC Not less than PC – 15
minutes
Soundness (mm) ≤10 ≤ 11
Moisture content (%) ≤ 1.0 ≤ 1.25
Insoluble residue (%) ≤ 1.5 ≤ 2.0
Magnesia (%) ≤ 14 ≤ 15
Sulphur (%) sulphide ≤ 2.0 ≤ 2.5
SO3 ≤ 2.5 ≤ 2.6
Loss on ignition (%) ≤ 3.0 ≤ 3.5
Manganese (%) ≤ 2.0 ≤ 2.5
Chloride ≤ 0.10 ≤ 0.11
Chemical moduli CaO+MgO+SiO2 ≥ two-thirds
CaO + MgO ≥ 1
SiO2
CaO ≤ 1.4
SiO2

1.1.2.4 Pulverised Fuel-ash (“Fly-ash”)

Pulverised fuel ash (PFA) shall only be used as a combination manufactured from Portland cement
to GSO 1914 mixed in the concrete mixer with pulverised fuel ash conforming to BS EN 450 or

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ASTM C618. Where the use of pulverised fuel ash inter-ground with Portland cement is proposed,
this shall be from an approved source. (Additive for Green Concrete)

1.1.2.5 Micro-silica

Micro-silica (MS), sometimes termed “silica fume”, shall comply with BS EN 13263.

If the use of concrete incorporating MS is instructed or agreed, the Contractor shall provide a
method statement giving details of the micro-silica material and the method for its incorporation
which shall be in accordance with internationally recognised standards such as BS EN 13263,
ASTM C1240 or Norwegian Standard NS 3045, and this Specification, and be subject to the
approval of the Engineer.

The concrete mix used shall be a standard ready-mix supplier’s mix, complying with this
Specification and with test results from trial mixes and satisfactory production tests demonstrating
compliance with requirements of this Section continuously over the six months before use. If not a
standard ready-mix supplier’s mix, then the requirements set out below shall be followed for
laboratory and plant/field trials.

Micro-silica shall not contain more than 0.2% silica metal by or any deleterious materials. The
material must originate from silicon plants producing silicon or ferrosilicon with silicon contents
higher than 85% which shall be demonstrated by documentation.

Micro-silica shall be incorporated in slurry from and must be thoroughly dispersed in the concrete,
and wherever possible delivered and stored in slurry form. Storage must include agitation to avoid
the MS settling and forming lumps.

Attention is drawn to the health hazards associated with micro-silica, particularly in the powdered
form, and the need to adopt protective systems to reduce dust generation and the potential risk of
hydrogen evolution due to silica metal contamination. These shall be addressed in the Contractors
HSE submissions. (Additive for Green Concrete)

1.1.2.6 Natural Pozzolan

Natural Pozzolan shall comply with BS EN 197-1 section 5.2.3 and ASTM C 618 – 03.
Natural Pozzolan classified as Class N according to ASTM C 618 – 03, can be used as a
partial replacement of cement. The amount of natural Pozzolan that will be used as
cement replacement shall be established based on the durability and compressive
strength requirement.

Natural Pozzolans shall conform to the requirements both physical and to chemical
composition prescribed in table1 and table2 below.

Table 1 Physical Requirements


Physical Requirement Allowable
Percentage
Fineness: amount retained when wet-sieved on 34% Maximum
(No.325) sieve
Strength: with Portland cement at 7 days, percent of 75% Minimum
control
Strength: with Portland cement at 28 days, percent 75% Minimum
of control
Water requirement, percent of control 115% Maximum
Soundness: autoclave expansion or contraction 0.8% Maximum
Density: maximum variation from average 5% Maximum
Percent retained on (No.325) sieve, maximum 5% Maximum
variation, percentage points from average

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Table 2 Chemical Requirements

Chemical Requirement Allowable


Percentage
Silicon dioxide (SiO2) plus aluminium oxide 70% Minimum
(Al2O3) plus iron oxide (Fe2O3)
Sulphur trioxide (SO3) 4% Maximum
Chloride (Cl) 0.1%
Maximum
Magnesium Oxide (MgO) 2% Maximum
Moisture content 3% Maximum
Loss on ignition 10% Maximum

1.1.2.7 Sampling and Testing

Representative samples of the proposed cementitious materials are to be taken and forwarded to
an independent laboratory approved by the Engineer for analysis as frequently as deemed
necessary at the Contractor’s expense before the source is approved. For pre-existing mixes, or
minor works, details of proposed cements shall be submitted for approval.

The analysis of the cementitious materials shall include all the parameters required to assess the
material against its corresponding standard including:

a) physical properties (fineness, initial setting time, soundness

b) mechanical properties (early and standard strength of prisms)

c) chemical properties (major oxides, chloride, sulphur trioxide, insoluble residue, loss on ignition
and sodium oxide equivalent).

1.1.3 Aggregates for Concrete

1.1.3.1 Aggregates General

Aggregate shall comply with the requirements of BS EN 206 and BS 8500 and shall be of normal
weight and from natural sources, unless light weight aggregates are required by the Particular
Specification.

The Contractor shall obtain approval of proposed aggregate sources, and shall select suitable
aggregate and samples of sand and stone for specified testing before obtaining aggregate.

Aggregate to be used in the construction of structures for retaining aqueous liquids shall comply
with BS EN 1992-3.

The use of re-cycled concrete as aggregate may be feasible in some circumstances and
Contractors are encouraged to consider submitting well-supported technical proposals to this
effect.

1.1.3.2 Source Approval Testing

Laboratory tests according to BS 812, as identified in Table 3, shall be made for source approval
and subsequently at regular intervals to confirm the suitability of aggregate.

The criteria in Table 3 shall be ascertained by testing in accordance with BS 812 and BS EN
12620, unless indicated otherwise, to assess the suitability of aggregate. The test results shall
comply with the limits given in BS EN 12620 or as otherwise stated in Table 3.

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Table 3 Properties of Aggregates
Acceptance Criteria
Test Reference
Coarse Aggregates Fine Aggregates
Grading (BS 812-103.1) Standard
Hollow shells content ≤ 3% by mass retained on 2.36 mm sieve to BS 410
(BS 812-103.1)
Material passing 75 micron ≤ 1% (uncrushed) ≤ 3% (uncrushed)
sieve (BS 812-103.1 wet- ≤ 2% (crushed) ≤ 12% (crushed) *RAK
sieving method). ≤ 10% (crushed) **Gabbro
Magnesium sulphate material loss material loss
soundness (BS 812-121) ≤ 10% ≤ 10%
Specific gravity (BS 812-2) > 2.6 > 2.6
Water absorption ≤ 2% ≤ 2%
(BS 812-2)
Clay lumps and friable ≤ 1% ≤ 2%
particles (ASTM C142)
Organic impurities not darker than colour plate 3
(ASTM C40, ASTM C87) comparative mortar strength 95% at 7 and 28 days
Acid soluble sulphate ≤ 0.4% ≤ 0.4%
content (BS 812-118)
Acid soluble chloride content
(BS 812-119)
Reinforced ≤ 0.03% ≤ 0.06%
Unreinforced - -
(see also clause 2.2.4.6)
10% fines value for coarse 100 kN -
aggregates (BS 812-111)
Elongation (BS 812-105.1) ≤ 35% -
Flakiness (BS 812-105.2) ≤ 30% -
Potential alkali reactivity Clause 1.1.3.6
Los Angeles abrasion test, Surfaces: -
if required (ASTM C131 & wearing ≤ 30%
ASTM C535) other ≤ 35%
Drying shrinkage ≤ 0.075% -
(BS 812-120)
Moisture content To be allowed for in concrete mixing
(BS 812-109)
*maximum limit for crushed fine aggregates fines content for Ras Al Khaima limestone aggregates
**maximum limit for crushed fine aggregates fines content for Gabbro limestone aggregates

1.1.3.3 Supply Approval Testing

The frequency of tests for ongoing supply approval shall be in accordance with the following table.
Tests marked * shall be carried out as in Table 4 or per 100 m³ whichever is the more frequent.
The frequency of testing can be reduced, subject to approval, where historic data showing
consistent compliance is available.

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Table 4 Frequency of Testing Aggregates
Frequency (once per period of days)
Test Reference
Coarse Aggregates Fine Aggregates
Grading (BS 812-103.1) 1* 1*
Hollow shells content 1* 1*
(BS 812-103.1)
Material passing 75 micron sieve 1* 1*
(BS 812-103.1 wet-sieving method).
Magnesium sulphate soundness 30 -
(BS 812-121)
Specific gravity and water 7 7
absorption (BS 812-2)
Clay lumps and friable particles 7 -
(ASTM C142)
Organic impurities - 30
(ASTM C40, ASTM C87)
Acid soluble sulphate and chloride 3.5 1
content
(BS 812-118 & 119)
10% fines value for coarse 7 -
aggregates (BS 812-111)
Elongation & flakiness 3.5 -
(BS 812-105.1 & 2)
Potential alkali reactivity Source approval only
(Clause 1.1.3.6)
Los Angeles abrasion test, if Source approval only
required
(ASTM C131 & ASTM C535)
Drying shrinkage (BS 812-120) Source approval only
Moisture content (BS 812-109) 2/day * 2/day *

The combined grading of aggregate shall be determined on a daily basis, and shall be consistent
for all deliveries, and the proportion of coarse and fine aggregates shall be selected to comply with
the concrete mix requirements. The percentage passing any sieve size as determined by approved
trial mixes shall be the target grading for all concrete of that type. The combined grading of the
Works concrete shall not vary by more than 4% on any sieve from that target.

1.1.3.4 Fine Aggregates

Fine aggregate for concrete shall consist of natural sand having hard and durable particles, or
subject to written approval, of other inert materials having similar characteristics. It shall not
contain harmful materials such as iron pyrites, coal, mica, shale or similar laminated materials
such as flat and elongated particles, or any materials which may attack the reinforcement, in such
a form in sufficient quantity to affect adversely the strength and durability of the concrete. If
necessary, fine aggregates shall be washed and sieved to remove deleterious substances.

As defined in BS EN 12620 fine aggregate shall be mainly capable of passing through a 4 mm BS


test sieve and shall be graded so that when mixed with the coarse aggregate and cement a
concrete of maximum density is produced.

Crushed sand may be added to natural sand in approved proportions in order to achieve the
required grading. Crushed sand alone may not be used without approval.

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The use of washed beach sand as fine aggregate may be permitted, provided that the grading and
salt content are maintained within the limits given in Table 3. Beach sand shall be dug from above
high water level and washed thoroughly. Before taking sand from any area, the salt content shall
be established and only sand from approved areas shall be used.

Sand for mortar shall comply with BS 1199 and BS 1200, or BS EN 13139.

1.1.3.5 Coarse Aggregates

Coarse aggregates shall consist of gravel, or crushed stone, free from coating of clay or other
deleterious substances.

As defined in BS EN 12620 coarse aggregate shall be mainly retained on a 5 mm BS 410 test


sieve; the grading shall be within the limits prescribed in BS EN 12620, so that when mixed with
the approved fine aggregate and cement a workable concrete of maximum density is produced.

1.1.3.6 Alkali Reactivity

Aggregate shall not contain any materials that are reactive with alkalis in the aggregate itself or in
the cement, the mixing water or in water in contact with the finished concrete or mortar in amounts
sufficient to cause excessive localised or general expansion of the concrete or mortar.

The Contractor shall initially assess an aggregate source by petrographic examination in


accordance with ASTM C295 or BS 812-104, and testing in accordance with ASTM C289. If
potential alkali-aggregate reactivity is indicated, then mortar bar tests in accordance with ASTM
C1260 (NBRI method) shall be carried out. A 14-day expansion greater than 0.1% shall be
considered indicative of alkali reactivity.

1.1.4 Mixing water

1.1.4.1 General

The Contractor shall make his own arrangements and obtain approval for the provision of fresh
water for the manufacture and curing of concrete.

1.1.4.2 Quality

Water and ice to be used for mixing concrete and mortar shall:

 be fresh (“potable”) water and free from sediment and dissolved or suspended matter which
may be harmful
 shall comply with the requirements of BS EN 1008
 shall not affect the setting time, strength, durability, or appearance of the concrete

Water quality for mixing concrete and mortar shall not exceed the limits required as below:

 sulphate (SO3) content: 500 mg/l


 chloride ion content: 350 mg/l
 total dissolved solids: 2,000 ppm
 suspended solids: 2,000 ppm
 alkali bicarbonate / carbonate (HCO3)/(CO3): 1,000 ppm

The chloride and sulphate contents of each concrete mix shall also comply with the overall limits
given elsewhere.

1.1.4.3 Sampling and Testing

Water samples from the intended source of supply shall be taken for analysis before any concrete
work is commenced, and at intervals throughout the duration of the Contract. If the samples are
unacceptable the Contractor shall either change to a new supply or take steps to improve the
existing source, as approved.

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Tests to verify the sulphate and chloride contents shall be carried out at monthly intervals.

1.1.5 Admixtures

1.1.5.1 Admixtures General

Admixtures shall comply with BS EN 934-2 or any equivalent standards, and the product must be
certified by an accredited laboratory and subject for approval by the Materials Engineering
Directorate (MED). Approved admixtures shall be used as a means of:

 achieving workability with the lowest appropriate water-cement ratio in order to achieve
durability
 controlling and retarding setting
 reducing bleeding and associated plastic settlement and cracking
 integral waterproofing (see also clause 2.2.1.1)
 reducing the risk of scaling and damage due to Delayed Ettringite Formation
 inhibiting corrosion of embedded steel
 controlling wash-out in underwater concrete.

Admixtures other than those specified herein shall only be used provided that the prior approval of
the Engineer has been obtained and any information or test results required by him have been
provided and are to his satisfaction.

Admixtures containing chlorides or other materials which could cause deterioration of the concrete
and embedded metals, shall not be used.

1.1.5.2 Admixture Trials

The concrete tests and trials described in this Specification shall be performed to ensure the
specified strengths are achieved and comparison shall be made with concrete manufactured
without the admixture(s) to demonstrate that the density has not been significantly reduced
through the use of admixtures.

When more than one admixture is to be used together in one concrete mix, the compatibility of the
various admixtures shall have been ascertained by the tests and trials, and shall be certified by the
manufacturers.

1.1.6 Fibres

1.1.6.1 Polypropylene Fibres

Polypropylene fibre reinforcement shall be 100% virgin polypropylene fibres specifically


manufactured for use as a concrete reinforcement and so certified by the manufacturer. It shall
contain no reprocessed olefin materials. The fibre dosage shall provide a minimum surface area of
200 m² of fibres per cubic metre of concrete. The length of each fibre shall be between 10 mm and
50 mm. Fibres may be monofilament or fibrillated.

Polypropylene fibre reinforcement may be included to improve control of early shrinkage, but not
as a substitute for conventional reinforcement unless specifically required by the Particular
Specification.

1.1.6.2 Other Fibres

The following other fibres shall comply with the relevant particular specification

 glass fibres, for use in glass-reinforced cementitious products


 steel fibres for use in floors, precast items and sprayed concrete
 carbon and other fibres, for use in strengthening works.

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Steel Fibre shall be deformed steel fibre Type 1, 2 or 3 in accordance with ASTM A820 except that
Type 1 fibre may be either circular or rectangular in section. Fibre shall be produced from mild
steel or cold drawn wire.

i) Fibres may be collated with fast-acting water-soluble glue, or may be uncollated individual
fibres.
ii) Fibres shall be stored in dry sealed containers until required for use and shall be free from
corrosion, oil, grease, chlorides and deleterious materials which may reduce the bond between
the fibres and the concrete.
iii) Fibres shall be hook ended of minimum diameter 0.45 mm and minimum strength 1050
N/mm2.
iv) Fibres shall be of low carbon content conforming to BS EN 14889-1
v) Fibres shall have an aspect ratio in the range of 40 to 90 for lengths of 30 mm to 90 mm.
Tolerances shall be in accordance with ASTM A820.
vi) Fibre type shall be selected on the basis of compliance with the particular specification and on
suitability and ease of use in the batching, mixing and concrete placement processes
proposed, as demonstrated by site trials.
vii) Fibres which tend to form fibre balls during batching and mixing shall not be used.

1.1.7 Reinforcement

1.1.7.1 Carbon Steel Reinforcing Bar

Reinforcement for use in reinforced concrete shall comply where appropriate with BS 4449, BS
4482, BS EN 1992 and BS 8666, or ASTM A615. Evidence of independent testing for strength and
ductility shall be submitted.

High yield deformed bars shall be Grade B500 complying with BS 4449: 2005, unless otherwise
approved

Reinforcement for bridge structures shall comply with the requirements in BS EN 1990 & BS EN
1991-1-7.

1.1.7.2 Welded Steel Wire Fabric

Welded steel wire fabric (“mesh”) reinforcement for use in reinforced concrete shall comply where
appropriate with BS 4483, BS EN 1992 and BS 8666, or ASTM A615.
Welded wire fabric to be used for the reinforcement of concrete shall conform to the size and
dimensions shown on the plans.
Mesh fabric shall not be supplied on rolls. Sheets of fabric shall be flat and any tendency to curve
or twist shall be corrected before fixing.

1.1.7.3 Stainless Steel Reinforcement

Where specified and shown on the Drawings, stainless steel reinforcement shall be hot rolled
austenitic stainless steel Type 1.4436 to BS EN 10088-1, with a minimum tensile strength of 510
N/mm². Test certificates and product analysis certificates shall be provided. Stainless steel Type
1.4301 is strictly excluded.

1.1.7.4 Epoxy-coated Reinforcement

Epoxy-coated reinforcement shall not be used.

If epoxy-coated reinforcement is found in existing concrete that forms part of the works, the
Contractor shall report the same to the Engineer.

1.1.7.5 Non-metallic Reinforcement

The use of non-metallic reinforcement such as Fibre Reinforced Polymer (FRP) and Glass Fibre
Reinforced Polymer (GFRP) containing carbon or Aramid fibre, may be feasible in some
circumstances, or required by the Particular Specification, and Contractors are encouraged to
consider submitting well-supported technical proposals to this effect.

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The use of non-metallic reinforcement shall be in accordance with the recommendations of ACI
Committee 440, Guide for the design and construction of concrete reinforced with FRP Bars (ACI
440.1R-01) and Institute of Structural Engineers, Interim guidance in the design of reinforced
concrete structures using fibre-composite reinforcement, Institute of Structural Engineers press,
1999.

1.1.7.6 Dowel Bars

Unless required otherwise by the Particular Specification, dowel bars shall be of carbon steel or
stainless steel, as shown on the Drawings, and complying with the requirements of this
specification. Approved bond breakers shall be used.

1.1.7.7 Tie Wire

Tying wire shall be galvanised mild steel of diameter approximately 1.5 mm. Tying wire shall have
the same minimum concrete cover as detailed for reinforcement.

Tying wire for bridge superstructures, architecturally-important concrete, and any faces of concrete
structure, even if protected, in contact with soil or ground water shall be 1.2 mm diameter stainless
steel wire.

1.1.7.8 Spacers

Only approved spacers may be used in permanent Works. Before spacers are approved for use in
the Works, their capability to securely hold the reinforcement in position during concreting without
detriment to concrete placement, compaction or durability shall be fully demonstrated.

Concrete spacers shall be of similar concrete grade to the parent concrete and shall have non-
metallic ties. The spacers shall have 30-minute water absorption, tested in accordance with the
principles of BS 1881-121, not more than 3.5% by weight.

All laitance shall be removed from concrete spacers, by blasting or other approved means during
or following manufacture, from all embedded faces, to ensure bond to surrounding concrete.

Concrete spacers shall be provided in accordance with BS 7973.

Plastic spacers shall only be permitted with the approval of the Engineer. Plastic spacers will
normally only be allowed for concrete which is not subject to rain, sea-water or humid conditions.
The contractor shall demonstrate the plastic spacers in accordance with BS EN 7973 and are
appropriate for the specific application and reinforcement configurations, and able to achieve the
specified spacing and cover without distortion.

1.1.7.9 Sampling and Testing

Prior to approval the Contractor shall provide copies of the manufacturer's certificates of test
results relating to the steel reinforcement to be supplied, and shall additionally provide
independent test results obtained from an approved laboratory. Samples for testing shall be
selected randomly from each consignment of reinforcement delivered to the site representing
different days’ production at the manufacturer's works. One test shall be carried out per 30 tons
each size of bars delivered to site.

1.1.8 Pre-stressing

1.1.8.1 Pre-stressing Components and Equipment

The use of pre-stressing (in either pre- or post- tensioned pre-cast construction, or post-tensioned
in-situ construction) shall be covered by Particular Specifications.

The source, type and details of components (e.g. tendons, ducts, anchorages, vent pipes,
stressing equipment) from the proposed pre-stressing system, and associated materials (for

MODULE 02 -- CONCRETE Page 15


example, grouts), shall comply with the Particular Specification and shall be the subject of
submissions for approval.

Pre-stressing work shall be executed by a specialist firm which is familiar with the proposed pre-
stressing system, and details of the proposed firm and its supervisory personnel to be assigned to
the project, shall be submitted by the Contractor for approval. Likewise, if the specialist firm is to
perform any design associated with the pre-stressing application, details of the design personnel to
be assigned to the project, shall be submitted by the Contractor for approval

Where pre-post-tensioned pre-cast elements are proposed to be used in the works the Contractor
shall submit to the Client all relevant details of source, unit and concrete type for approval,
including:

 The standards to which the unit was manufactured


 Certification that the products and production techniques meet the standard above
 Statement from supplier confirming the concrete is appropriate for the intended use, project,
location, ground conditions, service environment and design life
 Structural design calculations and drawings for the proposed elements
 Amount, type and cover of pre-stressing
 Amount, type and cover of reinforcement
 Grade and composition of concrete, to demonstrate compliance with relevant clauses of this
Specification.

1.1.8.2 Grouts for Pre-stressing

Grouts, sampling and testing of grouts, and grouting operations, for pre-stressing, shall be covered
by Particular Specifications, and shall be the subject of detailed method statements, all in
accordance with Concrete Society Technical Report 47, Transport and Research Laboratory
Contractor Report 24, and other best practice documents, and BS EN 446 and any other
applicable standards.

Cements for grouts shall as a minimum comply with relevant sections of this specification.

1.1.9 Formwork Materials

1.1.9.1 Temporary

The Contractor shall obtain approval of the methods and materials proposed. Details of formwork
for special finishes shall be approved before materials are ordered. Formwork shall provide
concrete of the shape, lines and dimensions shown on the Drawings.

Formwork shall be constructed from materials of sufficient strength, supported to provide rigidity
during placing and compacting concrete without discernible deflection, and shall be removable
without disturbing the concrete.

Formwork panels shall have true edges for accurate alignment and shall be fixed with either
vertical or horizontal joints. Where chamfers are required the fillets shall be cut to provide an even
line. Joints shall not permit leakage of grout, nor steps and ridges in exposed surfaces.

1.1.9.2 Permanent Formwork

Permanent formwork of GRP, or of steel (fro example, for use in composite flooring), are to be
used where indicated on the Drawings, and in accordance with the Particular Specification. The
minimum wall thickness of the GRP shall be 5 mm.

1.1.9.3 Rough Formwork

Rough formwork shall be butt-jointed, seasoned, sawn timber.

1.1.9.4 Fine Formwork

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Fine finish formwork shall be used for all concrete surfaces unless detailed otherwise on the
Drawings. This finish shall be obtained from forms designed to produce a hard smooth surface
with true, clean arises.

1.1.9.5 Controlled Permeability Formwork

Controlled permeability formwork, if required by a Particular Specification, shall be a proprietary


system designed for and with a track-record in concrete construction, shall be generally robust and
fit for purpose, and shall be the subject of a submission for approval, in accordance with Concrete
Society Technical Report 52.

1.1.9.6 Shutter Ties

Internal ties shall be metal. Removable ties shall be located so that the specified cover to
reinforcement is maintained to all surfaces including that of the tie-holes. If ties are left in, cover
shall be as specified for reinforcement or as approved. Tie cavities in the cover area shall be
roughened and filled with approved non-shrink mortar or epoxy mortar.

1.1.9.7 Release Agents

Shutter release agents shall be correctly selected to achieve the required finish with the intended
concrete mix and formwork material.

1.1.10 Curing

1.1.10.1 Curing Water

Water to be used for curing concrete and mortar shall be fresh (“potable”) water, subject to the
same requirements as mixing water.

1.1.10.2 Curing Compounds

Curing compounds shall be aluminised or white resin-based and shall be compatible with coatings,
waterproof membranes or other materials that may subsequently be applied to the surface of the
concrete.

The curing efficiency of curing compounds shall be subject to Engineer’s approval.

1.1.10.3 Thermal Insulation Materials

Thermal insulation materials used for curing shall be robust, non-absorbent, and generally fit for
purpose.

Their use shall be determined by the requirements of this Specification in relation to early-thermal
behaviour, heat and cracking.

1.1.11 Tanking Membranes

1.1.11.1 External Sheet Tanking Membrane

External sheet tanking membrane to concrete substructures shall be an impervious, cold applied
flexible laminated sheet, consisting of multi-layer high density cross laminated polyethylene film
with a backing of self-adhesive rubber bitumen compound to give a combined thickness of 1.5 mm
and protected with silicone coated release paper. The mass of the membrane shall be not less
than 1.6 kg/m² gross. A special grade of compound formulated for hot climates shall be used, with
at least 10 years of successful usage in the Middle East. The laminate shall withstand cracking of
the substrate up to a crack width of 0.6 mm. Minimum test performance data shall be as in Table5.

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Table 5 Properties of External Sheet Tanking Membranes

Property Test Method Results


Tape Strength ASTM D638 Long. 4.2 N/mm
Trans. 4.8 N/mm
Tensile Strength ASTM D638 Long. 42 N/mm²
Trans. 48 N/mm²
Elongation Film ASTM D638 Long. 210%
Trans. 160%
Tear Resistance ASTM D1004 Long. 270 N/mm
Trans. 270 N/mm
Adhesion to Primed ASTM D1000 1.8 N/mm
Concrete
Adhesion to Self ASTM D1000 1.8 N/mm
Puncture Resistance ASTM E154 290 N 65 mm
Water Resistance ASTM D570 After 24 hours 0.14%
After 35 days 0.95%
Environmental Resistance ASTM D543 Conforms
Moisture Vapour ASTM E96 0.3 g/m²/24 hours
Transmission Rate
Adhesive Softening Point ASTM D36 Not lower than 103°C

Primers shall be compatible with the membrane, recommended by the membrane manufacturer,
suitable for single-coat application and specially formulated for hot climates, containing 50%
aromatic hydrocarbon solvents and 50% bitumen solids, giving an average coverage of
approximately 10 to 12 m² per litre, dependent on texture and porosity of concrete surface.
Cold applied rubber/bitumen mastic compound, or bitumen putty for trowel application, or other
product compatible with the membrane, recommended by the membrane manufacturer, shall be
used for moulding into fillets and collars. Similarly, tapes shall be used for sealing around pipes
and irregularities. All such materials shall be formulated for hot climates.

1.1.11.2 Brush or Spray-applied Tanking Membrane

Coatings shall be solvent based bituminous compounds complying with BS 3416 Types 1 and 2.
They shall be applied in two coats and the second coat shall incorporate non-asbestos fibre
reinforcement and shall be applied to a minimum thickness of 1.5 mm.

This includes asphalt modified materials and fibre reinforced materials.

1.1.11.3 Polythene Sheeting

Polythene sheeting does not constitute a water-proof membrane for surface protection.

Polythene sheeting for use in curing applications must be strong enough to resist tearing during
fixing and wind forces during the curing period. This will normally require 500 gauge in a double
layer, or 1,000 gauge

1.1.11.4 Protection Board

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Waterproofing membrane shall be protected from mechanical damage by a bitumen-impregnated
board of minimum thickness 3.0 mm, which shall be weather, water and rot-proof.

1.1.12 Jointing Materials

Materials for use at expansion/contraction joints, including those listed in Table 6, shall be
compatible with the service conditions, required joint size and movement accommodation, and are
subject to approval.

Table 6: Jointing Materials

Joint Material
Contraction joint  Rubberised bitumen paint for joint faces
 sealant on de-bonding tape, for exposed edges
 free-flowing sealing fluid for rapid sealing
Expansion joint in a non-  non-absorbent closed-cell polyethylene joint filler
water-retaining structure

Design joint in a water-  continuous water stop strip of copper, rubber, rubber
retaining structure and steel or PVC
 bituminous paint for copper water stop
 bituminous compound to fill copper water stop
Where required  injection hoses
Joint sealants  purpose-made compressible, elastic product, with
movement accommodation factor suitable for the
application in question
 backing rod
Expansion joint filler  purpose-made cellular, compressible, elastic product
Bond breakers  polyethylene tape, or closed cell polyethylene foam
in strip or solid circular section
Bond breakers for dowel  bitumen paint which shall not affect the setting of the
bars concrete
Water stops and water  proprietary products as required
bars

1.2 Repair and Protection Systems

1.2.1 Concrete Repair

In the event of concrete being found non-compliant in relation to test criteria, or suffering from
construction defects such as cracking or low cover, a course of action will be determined as in
Clause 2.10 of this Specification, which may include repairs.

Repair materials and material testing requirements, for repairs to concrete structures shall be as
stated in BS EN 1504, unless particular requirements are determined for the particular project
circumstances.

1.2.2 Cathodic Protection

If cathodic protection is to be installed as part of the concrete construction work (sometimes


termed “cathodic prevention”), or if cathodic protection is to be installed onto an existing concrete
structure, it will be the subject of a Particular Specification, which will require compliance with BS
EN ISO 12696.

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Installation may require some system materials and components to be mounted on the
reinforcement cages and thus be incorporated into the concrete during concrete pouring. In this
case, the Contractor shall clearly address the following in his method statement for concreting
operations, and shall make appropriate preparations:

 System components may obstruct normal concrete placement and vibration


 System components are fragile and could be damaged by normal concreting operations
 Good vibration is necessary to ensure intimate contact between concrete and all surfaces of all
embedded system components
 The Particular Specification may require electrical monitoring during concreting operations to
detect short-circuits
 In the event of short-circuits being detected during or after concreting operations, it may be
necessary to remove the freshly placed concrete by water blasting before it hardens.

1.3 Delivery, Site Storage, Handling, and Protection of Materials

1.3.1 General

All materials delivered to site shall be recorded, stored and handled in accordance with this
specification.

The Contractor shall provide information as required, and to the satisfaction of the Client with
regard to materials delivered elsewhere for eventual use on the Project. This includes materials for
the manufacture of ready-mixed concrete.

A record of all deliveries must be made, retained and made available by the Contractor to the
Client upon request. The records must include:

 The date, time, amount and method of delivery


 The party delivering (i.e. name of company, contact details, and unique delivery reference)
 The person responsible for accepting the delivery
 The condition of materials delivered
 The location of use or storage after delivery

1.3.2 Ready-Mixed Concrete

Requirements for controlling delivery to site of ready-mixed concrete are covered under Clause 2.6
of this Specification.

1.3.3 Batched Concrete, Materials Storage

1.3.3.1 Cementitious

Cement and Cementitious materials shall be delivered in bulk or in sealed and marked bags, and
protected from the weather by enclosed transfer systems or other approved coverings.

The Contractor shall provide approved silos, painted a light colour, to store sufficient bulk cement
for continuity of work, and the cement shall be placed therein upon delivery. Approved precautions
shall be taken to prevent cement dust causing a nuisance.

Alternatively, the Contractor shall provide ventilated sheds, painted a light colour, with raised floors
for the storage of sufficient bagged cement for continuity of work. Each consignment shall be
stacked separately for inspection, and approval before use. The cement shall be placed in the
sheds upon delivery and shall be used in the order in which it was delivered.

Cement shall not be used after more than 6 months from its manufacture.

The temperature of the cement shall not exceed 65°C at the time of incorporation into a concrete
mix.

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Micro-silica shall be delivered and stored in slurry form. Storage shall include agitation to avoid the
micro-silica settling and forming lumps.

1.3.3.2 Aggregates

Aggregate shall be stored in concrete-based bins with the base laid to falls to provide drainage
away from the storage area or on stages to prevent intermixing and the inclusion of dirt and foreign
materials. Each size of aggregate shall be stored separately. Storage bins shall be emptied and
cleaned regularly.

Aggregate storage shall be covered with approved shading.

1.3.3.3 Mixing Water

Water shall be stored in approved, clean, covered containers painted white, which are protected
from sun, wind and dust, and contamination from any other source. Pipe work shall be protected
from sun and insulated.

1.3.3.4 Admixtures

Admixtures shall be stored in accordance with the manufacturer’s instructions.

1.3.3.5 Fibres

Fibres shall be stored in accordance with the manufacturer’s instructions.

1.3.4 Reinforcement

Steel reinforcement shall be stored in an approved manner above ground, at a location covered by
a concrete ground slab, under cover and racked as necessary, at least 150 mm above ground slab
level. Canvas or similar covers shall be provided for the reinforcing bars and used to prevent the
deposit and accumulation of deleterious materials on the bars, and for protection from aggressive
elements, humidity and salt-laden dews, and deterioration, until incorporation into the works.
Similar provision shall be made to cover the bars in the reinforcement bending area. Stored
materials shall be inspected once per week and removed from site if deteriorated.

1.3.5 Pre-stressing

Pre-stressing materials, (for example, tendons, ducts, anchorages, stressing equipment) shall be
stored in an air-conditioned “indoor” environment, at all times from delivery to site and
incorporation into the works. Stored materials shall be inspected once per week and removed from
site if deteriorated.

1.3.6 Other Materials

Other materials, such as surface protection or jointing materials, shall be stored in accordance with
the manufacturer’s instructions.

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2 PART 2 METHODOLOGY AND WORKMANSHIP

2.1 Method Statements

For every construction operation or linked set of operations, the Contractor shall submit for
approval, a Method Statement and corresponding Inspection and Test Plan.

The Method Statement shall describe in detail the sequence, staff, equipment and other details of
how the operation is to be performed.

The Inspection and Test Plan shall be a checklist of all inspections, checks and tests necessary for
the Contractor to perform to ensure compliance with the project specification. The Inspection and
Test Plan shall be incorporated in the Project Quality Plan and Quality Management System,
together with examples of all other forms needed to provide documentary evidence, including
space for recording the result, time, date and name of observer, against each entry.

2.2 Mix Development

2.2.1 Durability Requirements

2.2.1.1 Definitions

Concrete mixes shown in Tables 7 and 8 below are intended to provide concrete which is durable
for typical applications in the respective Service Environment Zones, provided the concrete is
constructed in accordance with this Specification. Project-specific requirements for Design Service
Life may be addressed by concrete mixes required by the Particular Specification.

The number of mixes may be increased by the Particular Specification, or the mixes in any of the
Service Environment Zones may be enhanced by the Particular Specification to provide greater
durability.

The concrete shall be capable of being transported and readily compacted by the approved
methods, to a dense impermeable mass without segregation, bleeding or plastic cracking. The
concrete shall be free from crazing, thermal cracks, drying shrinkage cracks, or any other cracks,
of width exceeding the maximum allowable under the Design or under BS EN 1992-1, whichever is
the lesser. The slump shall be kept to the minimum compatible with the approved placing and
compacting requirements.

Cement content shall always refer to the total content of all cementitious materials used in a
concrete mix (e.g. cement, blast-furnace slag, pulverised fuel ash, or micro-silica).

Cement replacement percentage (%) (Additive for Green Concrete) is defined as follows:

 Blast-furnace slag, or pulverised fuel ash: % of total cementitious content


 Micro-silica: % of Portland cement

Water-cement ratio shall always refer to the ratio of the water content to the total content of all
cementitious materials used in a concrete mix (for example, cement, blast-furnace slag, pulverised
fuel ash, or micro-silica).

“SP” indicates that a super-plasticizing admixture complying with this specification is likely to be
necessary to achieve a suitable workability.

“WP” indicates that an integral water-proofing admixture complying with this specification is likely
to be necessary to achieve adequate water-tightness and durability. The proven integral
waterproofing system with at least 10 years of successful usage in the Middle East shall be
proposed with a comparative study of all the available waterproofing system with regards to

MODULE 02 -- CONCRETE Page 22


performance / life cycle costing / warranty and justifications for the proposed system for Engineer /
Client’s approval.

2.2.1.2 Concrete Service Environment

For each construction element, the Designer will identify the Service Environment Zone from Table
7, and this will be stated on the Drawings or in the Particular Specification, based on the required
Design Service Life and the most severe Service Environment applying to each concrete element:

Table 7 Service Environment Zone


Zone Description of Service Environment
1  Internal, OR
 No exposure to sulphate or chloride, OR
 Low criticality, e.g. blinding
2  Underground above capillary-rise zone (CRZ), OR
 Exposed to water-soluble sulphates (SO4) < 1.5 mg/l
or chloride (Cl-) < 0.5 g/l
3  External above ground, OR
 Exposed to wind-blown chlorides
4  Exposed to seawater, submerged, OR
 Underground solid elements, below water-table, OR
 Exposed to water soluble sulphates (SO4) 1.5–3.0 g/l
or chloride (Cl-) > 12 g/l, OR
 Moderate criticality
5  Exposed to seawater, splash, spray or tidal, OR
 Exposed to non-potable water
(e.g. from plant watering, fire-fighting, or industrial sources), OR
 Underground solid elements, in CRZ, OR
 Exposed to water soluble sulphates (SO4) > 3.0 g/l
or chloride (Cl-) > 12 g/l, OR
 High criticality
6  Underground hollow elements – in or below CRZ
(e.g. basements, tunnels, culverts or pipes), OR
 Water-proof, i.e. water-retaining or water-excluding, OR
 Exposed to water soluble sulphates (SO4) > 3.0 g/l, or chloride (Cl-)
> 12 g/l, with pressure head > 5 x section thickness, OR
 Subject to severe abrasion or impact, OR
 Very high criticality
Criticality

Low Service life < 30 years, unreinforced or non-structural concrete


Moderate Service life 30–60 years
High Service life 60–100 years, difficult to inspect and maintain
Very High Service life > 100 years, difficult to inspect and maintain,
water-retaining or water-resisting

2.2.1.3 Concrete Durability and Strength

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For each element, the Contractor shall provide a concrete mix complying with the criteria given in
Tables 8 and 9, for the required Service Environment Zone, or other criteria which may be stated
in the Particular Specification.

The criteria given in Tables 8 and 9, and the procedures to be followed for approval of concrete
mixes are designed to produce concrete of the durability required for the appropriate Service
Environment Zone, as well as adequate strength, and to provide a simple means of monitoring for
durability during production.

The limits on cement content and water-cement ratio are specified primarily for durability and may
result in a concrete mix which has a characteristic strength greater than that required by the
structural design. This is the expected consequence of complying with all the criteria in Tables 8
and 9, and is not an added or special benefit.

The strength resulting from the criteria on cement type and content, cement replacement type and
content, and water-cement ratio, shall be referred to as the Durability Strength (DS). The
characteristic DS shall be determined by:

 Historical data for standard mixes, checked when sufficient test results become available from
production, or
 Test from trials, and
 Applying a standard deviation which shall not be greater than 5.5 MPa.

The characteristic strengths are for concrete which has been cured at a temperature of 20°C ±
1°C, and are the values below which no more than 5% of the test results fall. The 7-day strengths
shall be used only as a guide.

The Designer will also identify the concrete strength required by the structural design of each
construction element, and this will also be stated on the drawings on in the Particular Specification,
and shall be referred to as the Structural Strength (SS), ranges from 35 up to 70 MPa for precast
pre-stressed concrete slab units.

The densities of the grades of concrete shall be as approved after trials, or from approved records
from standard mixes.

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Table 8 Reinforced Concrete Mixes

MPa Units
Service Environment Zone
Criterion
1 2 3 4 5 6
Indicative
35 40 40 40 45 50
Strength1
Type of a: OPC or
OPC

OPC
Any

Portland --- b: MSRPC or OPC OPC


Cement SRPC
a: GGBS a: GGBS2
Type of Cement a: GGBS2 & MS or
--- --- --- --- or PFA or MS or
Replacement b: PFA & MS
b: none b: PFA
A: GGBS 35-55%; a: GGBS 50-70% &
a: GGBS 56-70%
Cement or PFA 20-30%; MS 5-10%
% --- --- --- or
Replacement or MS 5% b: PFA 20-25% &
b: PFA 25-35%
b: none MS 5-10%
kg/m3

Minimum
330

360
350

360 380 380


Cement Content
Maximum
Ratio kg/m3

430

450

460

Cement 460 480 480


Content3
Maximum
0.50

0.45

0.42

0.42 0.40 0.38


W/C Ratio
Admixture Type --- --- --- SP SP SP SP & WP
Note 1: 28-day characteristic cube strength is indicative only. The strength generated by the
structural and durability requirements shall govern.
Note 2: for sulphate resistance, where the alumina content of the slag exceeds 14%, the tri-
calcium aluminate content of the Portland Cement shall not exceed 10%.
Note 3: maximum cement content may need to be limited below this value to control temperature
rise (Clause 2.3.1.2).

Table 9 Unreinforced Concrete Mixes


Units

Service Environment Zone


Criterion
1 2 3 4 5 6
MPa

Indicative
20 25 30 35 40 50
Strength1

Type of a: OPC or
a: OPC or a: OPC or
Any

Any

Any

Portland --- b: MSRPC or


Cement b: SRPC b: SRPC
SRPC
Type of a: GGBS a: GGBS a: GGBS
Cement --- --- --- --- or PFA or MS or PFA or MS or PFA or MS
Replacement b: none b: none b: none
a: GGBS 35-55%; a: GGBS 56-70% a: GGBS 56-70% or
Cement or PFA 20-30%; or PFA 25-35% PFA 25-35%
% --- --- --- or MS 5-10% or 10% MS or 10% MS
Replacement
b: none b: none b: none

MODULE 02 -- CONCRETE Page 25


Units
Service Environment Zone
Criterion
1 2 3 4 5 6
Minimum

kg/m3

280

310

330
Cement 340 360 380
Content
Maximum

Ratio kg/m3

380

410

430
Cement 440 460 480
Content3
Maximum
0.65

0.55

0.50
0.50 0.45 0.40
W/C Ratio
Admixture
--- --- --- SP SP SP SP & WP
Type
Note 1: 28-day characteristic cube strength is indicative only. The strength generated by the
structural and durability requirements shall govern.

Note 2: for sulphate resistance, where the alumina content of the slag exceeds 14%, the tri-
calcium aluminate content of the Portland Cement shall not exceed 10%.

Note 3: maximum cement content may need to be limited below this value to control
temperature rise (Clause 2.3.1.2).

Table 9a equivalency between cubic mould strength and cylindrical mould strength
Characteristic Characteristic
Compressive cylinder strength cube strength Cylinder/cube
strength class fck,cyl fck, cube strength ratio
N/mm2 N/mm2
C8/10 8 10 0.80
C12/15 12 15 0.80
C16/20 16 20 0.80
C20/25 20 25 0.80
C25/30 25 30 0.83
C30/37 30 37 0.81
C35/45 35 45 0.78
C40/50 40 50 0.80
C45/55 45 55 0.82
C50/60 50 60 0.83
C55/67 55 67 0.82
C60/75 60 75 0.80
C70/85 70 85 0.82
C80/95 80 95 0.84
C90/105 90 105 0.86
C100/115 100 115 0.87
Note 1: Symbol “C” is Cylindrical Mould Strength.

2.2.2 Mix Design

2.2.2.1 General

Before placing concrete, approval shall be obtained for the concrete mix proposed for each
element in accordance with tables 7, 8 and 9

The mixes shall also be designed to provide the workability necessary to consistently achieve
placing and compaction of the concrete under the range of conditions likely to be experienced on
site, including variations in ambient temperature and concrete delivery time.

2.2.2.2 Ready-mixed Concrete


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Ready-mixed concrete plants shall be subject to approval, and shall hold current accreditation to
an approved quality scheme.
Standard ready-mix supplier’s mixes shall be used, and satisfactory production test results shall be
submitted which demonstrate compliance with requirements of this Specification continuously over
the six months before use.

Where historic data to demonstrate compliance is not available, trial Mixes shall be performed, in
accordance with Clause 2.2.3, or if required by the Particular Specification.

The previous production results, and/or Trial Mix results, shall clearly demonstrate the following:

1. compliance with the criteria of Tables 8 and 9.


2. the characteristic Durability Strength (DS) resulting from the proposed mix
3. compliance with the required characteristic Structural Strength (SS)

The higher value of either the characteristic Structural Strength (SS) or the characteristic Durability
Strength (DS), shall be the basis for acceptance testing during routine production and shall be
designated the Acceptance Strength (AS).

2.2.2.3 Site-batched Concrete

Laboratory trial mixes shall be performed. These shall followed by site trial mixes if required by the
Particular Specification. Trial mixes shall be performed in accordance with Clause 2.2.3.

The Trial Mix results, shall clearly demonstrate the following:

1. Compliance with the criteria of Tables 8 and 9.


2. The characteristic Durability Strength (DS) resulting from the proposed mix
3. Compliance with the required characteristic Structural Strength (SS)

The higher value of either the characteristic Structural Strength (SS) or the characteristic Durability
Strength (DS), as measured in the laboratory trials and confirmed by the field trials, shall be
selected as the basis for acceptance testing during routine production and shall be designated the
Acceptance Strength (AS).

2.2.2.4 Compressive Strength Testing

Sampling for test purposes shall comply with BS EN 12350-1. The making and curing of
specimens shall comply with BS EN 12390-2.

The characteristic strengths are for concrete which has been cured at a temperature of 20°C ±
1°C, and are the values below which no more than 5% of the test results fall. The 7-day strengths
shall be used only as a guide.

If concrete specimens are cured at higher temperatures or for longer periods than BS EN 12390-2
requires, the adjusted characteristic strength shall be calculated as follows for OPC, MSRPC or
SRPC and for curing temperatures up to 27°C.100f'/f = A + B log10 [24D (T+12)/1000]:
Where:

f' = adjusted required characteristic strength


f = specified characteristic strength
T = curing temperature
D = age at testing in days
A and B are coefficients from Table 10.

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Table 10 Coefficients used for calculating strength

Recorded Cube Strength (MPa) A B


Less than 15 10.0 67.5
15 to 35 20.0 60.0
Greater than 35 30.0 52.5

The mean strength shall exceed the characteristic strength by a margin of at least 1.64 times the
standard deviation expected from the concreting plant, except that no standard deviation less than
3.5 N/mm² shall be used as a basis for designing a mix.

2.2.3 Trial Mixes

2.2.3.1 Laboratory Trials Mixes

Laboratory Trial Mixes shall be carried out to determine the mixes to satisfy the Specification with
the available materials. Trial mixes should be undertaken across the range of W/C ratios and
ambient conditions likely to be experienced during the works.

Laboratory Trial Mixes shall be tested to determine the following properties of mixes proposed for
Field Trials:

1. Compressive strength at 28 days


2. Flexural strength if required
3. Nil/negligible bleeding in accordance with ASTM C232 (non-vibrating)
4. Air content if applicable.
5. Cement content and free water/cement ratio
6. Workability
7. Workability retention, from time of mixing to the greater of 3 hours or the projected maximum
time of completing concrete pouring and finishing operations.
8. Fresh and hardened concrete densities.

If required by the Particular Specification, Laboratory Trial Mixes shall also be tested at ages
stated in the Particular Specification, to determine any of the following durability-related properties
(or similar) of mixes proposed for Field Trials. Compliance shall be demonstrated with reference to
limits provided in the Particular Specification:

9. Absorption in accordance with BS EN 1097-6 or equivalent.


10. Initial surface absorption tests (ISAT) in accordance with BS 1881-208 or equivalent.
11. Penetration of water in accordance with DIN 1048 or equivalent.
12. Chloride penetration in accordance with Nordtest NT Build 492 or equivalent.

If any of the values obtained for the required properties are unacceptable, the mixes shall be
redesigned and re-tested.

2.2.3.2 Plant / Field Trial Mixes

Plant or Field Trial Mixes shall be prepared under full-scale site conditions and tested in
accordance with BS 1881 or equivalent. The Contractor shall submit a proposal for the scope and
nature of Field Trials, which shall be commensurate with the complexity and scale of the works.
Trial mixes should be undertaken across the range of W/C ratios and ambient conditions likely to
be experienced during the works.
Field Trial Mixes shall be made on each of three days; the workability shall equate to the designed
target value. Six cubes from each mix shall be taken for strength testing, three at 7 days and three
at 28 days.

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Further Field Trial Mixes shall be made if the range (the maximum minus the minimum of the three
cube results in any batch) exceeds 15% of the average of that batch, or if the range of the three
batch averages exceeds 20% of the overall average of the batches.

The mixes shall also be tested to determine the following properties:


 Bleeding, as above.
 Free water/cement ratio, as above.
 Temperature rise
 Durability, as above, if required by the Particular Specification
 Workability
 Workability retention, from time of mixing to the greater of 3 hours or the projected maximum
time of completing concrete pouring and finishing operations.

The average 28-day characteristic strength for each of the three field trial mixes shall not be less
than the designed mean strength. The results of the above tests shall be acceptable before the
mix is approved. If the trial mix does not meet the specification criteria it shall be redesigned and
re-tested.

The required workability and workability retention shall be determined, for the intended method of
placement, from measurements made in the Plant/Field Trials, as well as the acceptable tolerance
and method of testing.

2.2.4 Production Control

2.2.4.1 Manufacture of Test Specimens

Test specimens shall be manufactured in an on-site laboratory, specially equipped for the purpose,
in controlled conditions.

They shall be made, cured, stored, transported and tested to BS EN 12390-2. The method of
compacting test specimens shall be as approved.

The testing machine shall comply with BS EN 12390-4 or equivalent, and shall be housed in a
laboratory and be calibrated to BS EN ISO 376 when delivered; the calibration shall include the
use of the Foote strain gauge (or equivalent) and be verified at 3-monthly maximum intervals.

2.2.4.2 Sampling and Testing for Strength

A sample of concrete shall be taken at random on eight separate occasions during each of the first
five days of using a mix and tested for compressive strength. The standard deviation shall be
calculated from at least 40 individual cube results each representing separate batches of similar
concrete produced by the same plant under the same supervision. The ‘current margin’ (CM) for
the plant shall be thus established as 1.64 times the standard deviation.

Thereafter one sample shall be taken at random for each grade of concrete from every group of 25
cubic meter made by each batching plant, and at least one sample shall be taken each day that
concrete of a particular grade is made.

In addition to the above requirements, at least one sample shall be taken from each individual
structural unit, or part of a unit, when the latter is the product of a single pour.

From each sample two cubes shall be made for testing at 28 days and two for testing at 7 days.
The 28-day results shall be the mean of the two cubes.

The frequency of sampling may be required to be varied.

The procedures may be required to be repeated when materials or design mixes are changed.

The following information shall be recorded for each cube:

 Cube identification reference


 Concrete grade

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 Site mixed or ready-mixed and supplier
 Location in the structure of the concrete represented by the cube
 Slump and temperature of the concrete

2.2.4.3 Sampling and Testing for Workability

Workability shall be measured by flow table method to BS EN 12350-5 or the slump test BS EN
12350-2 (for slump values not exceeding 175 mm), at the site of the pour, on each truck load of
concrete delivered.

If workability is not appropriate at time of placing and compacting, the concrete may be rejected
and the mix may be required to be redesigned and retested.

2.2.4.4 Testing for Temperature

The temperature of each truck load of concrete shall be measured at site immediately before
placing.

2.2.4.5 Testing for Density

Random monitoring of the plastic density of the concrete shall be carried out weekly, in
accordance with BS EN 12350-6. The results shall be compared with the densities established in
Trial Mixes.

2.2.4.6 Testing for Chloride Content

The constituents of the concrete shall be tested to determine their chloride contents, as required
elsewhere in this Specification.

The Contractor shall submit for approval a calculation of the total estimated chloride content of
each concrete mix, with supporting documentation for chloride contents of each material
component. The calculation shall take account of the variability of chloride content in each material
component. The calculation shall also be updated weekly based on production control test results
from each material component, as in Clause 1.1. In addition, the chloride content in the hardened
concrete shall be tested monthly to BS 1881-124, and shall not exceed the limits in Table 11.

Concrete shall comply with the limits on the individual ingredients as given elsewhere in this
specification and the total values for the concrete mix as in Table 11.

Table 11 Allowable Total Chloride Content

Concrete Total calculated in concrete mix Measured in hardened concrete


Type Action Level Max Value Action Level Max Value
Reinforced 0.16 0.20 0.20 0.30
Prestressed 0.08 0.10 0.10 0.15
Mass 0.40 0.50 0.50 0.65
Note: all value are % chloride ion by weight cement for individual determinations

When the Action Level is exceeded, further testing and inspection and corrective action should be
initiated to identify the causes and control the reoccurrence of high chloride values. Where the
maximum value is exceeded the concrete will be considered non-compliant and at risk of rejection.

2.2.4.7 Testing for Sulphate Content

Concrete shall comply with the limits on the individual ingredients as given elsewhere in this
specification and the total values for the concrete mix as given below.

The total estimated sulphate content (SO3) of the mix calculated from the ingredients including that
present in the cement shall not exceed 3.7% by weight of cement in the mix.

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In addition, regular tests to BS 1881-124 shall be made on the hardened concrete to determine the
total sulphate content, which shall not exceed 4% by weight of cement in the mix.

2.2.4.8 Total Alkali Content

The total alkali content of the concrete calculated in accordance with BRE Digest 330, Part 2 shall
not exceed 3.0 kg/m3 sodium oxide equivalent.

2.2.4.9 Testing for Chloride, Sulphate and Alkali Content

The permissible level of chlorides, sulphates and alkalis quoted in the above Clauses shall not be
considered as mean values for the whole of the Works, but shall apply to any concrete.

2.2.4.10 Acceptability of Test Results

The cube strength results will be unacceptable if:

The 28-day results shall be examined both individually and for the running mean of groups of four
results as described in BRE Digest 326. After forty results have been obtained, the overall average
and the standard deviation of the 40 results shall be calculated. Subsequently, the overall average
and the standard deviation of sets of results shall be calculated on overlapping sets of 4 and 40
results.

Test results will be acceptable if:

 The mean of the group of four test results exceeds the specified characteristic compressive
strength by at least 3 N/mm2
 Any individual test result is not less than the characteristic compressive strength less 3 N/mm2.

The Contractor or supplier will respond by implementing one or more of the following:

 Changing the mix.


 Improving quality control.

If the range of individual strengths of specimens made from the same sample exceeds 15% of the
mean then the method of making, curing and testing specimens shall be checked. In the event of
the range exceeding 20%, the Engineer will order one or more of actions to above.

Further concreting operations shall be suspended until the Engineer is satisfied that an acceptable
mix is available. Proposals to change the mix may require the mix to be re-designed and/or re-
tested, as stated above.

The Engineer shall also review the unacceptable results and shall designate affected structures as
potentially defective in relation to the DS or SS (or both). The Contractor shall respond accordingly
by submitting a proposal for a durability-based or strength-based investigation (or both), of the
designated structures for the Engineer’s approval.

The investigation shall include some or all the following:

 Sampling and laboratory testing.


 Performing durability-related tests if required by the Particular Specification.
 Non-destructive testing.
 Load-testing relevant structural units or parts.
 Submission of the investigation report.
The Engineer shall review the investigation report and instruct the Contractor on the remedial
actions, if any, to be taken. The Contractor shall carry out the investigation and remedial measures
as instructed at his own expense.

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2.3 Pour Preparation

2.3.1 Pour Planning

2.3.1.1 Contractor’s Pour Sequence Proposals

The Contractor shall prepare and submit the following for approval:

 drawings showing proposed limit and sequence of individual pours, location of construction
joints and the height of lifts (unless shown on the design Drawings)
 proposals to minimise thermal and shrinkage strains in the concrete
 calculations and/or trials to demonstrate that shrinkage and thermal strains which will develop
in the concrete from the proposed sequence of placing the concrete in the works, are
acceptable

Calculations and trials utilising the concrete and replicating site conditions shall be carried out at
the Contractors expense as required and to the satisfaction of the Engineer.

The Contractor’s attention is drawn to the need to address the risk of Delayed Ettringite
Formation. The following precautions are outlined within the Specification and shall be strictly
adhered to by the Contractor:

 Limits on the aggregate and cement type and cement content to be used and a requirement
to make appropriate use of admixtures (Clauses 1.1.5.1 and 2.1)
 Restrictions on sulphate content of the cement, aggregates, and the concrete (Clauses 1.1.2,
1.1.3, 1.1.4, and 2.2.4.7)
 Restrictions on chloride content of the cement, aggregates, and the concrete (Clauses 1.1.2,
1.1.3, 1.1.4, and 2.2.4.6)
 Limits on placing, peak, and differential temperatures (Clauses 2.3.1.2 and 2.7.3.1)
 For sections over 0.5 m minimum dimension, monitoring temperatures within trial pours and
the works and extracting cores for testing and examination (Clause 3.6.9).

2.3.1.2 Temperature Control in Concrete Sections

Where the minimum dimension of the concrete element exceeds 600 mm, the Contractor shall
adopt special precautions, subject to Engineer’s approval, to avoid thermal cracking due to
temperature differential. For structures of similar size and shapes to be undertaken at same
climatic conditions, Engineer may allow pours without temperature monitoring, provided all
required precautions for control of temperature is adopted.

Temperature differential is defined as the difference in temperature between the form or face of
concrete pour and the centre of the pour, or at a distance of 1.5 m, whichever is shortest. Peak
temperature is defined as the maximum temperature at any point in a pour.

Concrete shall not be placed until the Contractor’s Pour Sequence Proposals, (and the outcome of
trials where performed), demonstrate that the temperature limits given in Table 12 will not be
exceeded.

The limits given in Table 12 may be revised upwards or downwards on the basis of the
Contractor’s Pour Sequence Proposals.

Furthermore, concrete pours may be rejected if temperature monitoring equipment shows that the
following limits have been exceeded.

Table 12 Maximum Temperature Limits in Hardened Concrete

Temperature Maximum

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Temperature Maximum
Differential 20°C
Peak 65°C (or 75°C where at least 25% PFA or 50% GGBS
have been incorporated in the concrete)

For pours having a minimum dimension exceeding 600mm, the Contractor’s Pour Sequence
Proposals shall also include the following:

 system for monitoring concrete temperatures


 formwork type and removal time
 time intervals between pours
 measurements of concrete heat of hydration
 proposed additional precautions including but not only, thermal insulation, concrete cooling, or
cooling pipes
 calculations of temperature and strain development at internal and surfaces, taking account of
ambient conditions and physical restraints, as well as the items listed above
 reference should also be made to concreting temperatures and concrete cooling techniques,
as defined elsewhere in this Specification

For pours having a minimum dimension exceeding 600 mm, the Contractor shall also undertake a
trial pour under conditions representative of those anticipated during the works. Thermocouples
shall be used to monitor the ambient, core and surface temperature values in the trial pour and in
the works. Cores shall be removed from trial pours and from any parts of the works which fail to
comply with the limits on total sulphate or peak temperature. The cores shall be subject to sulphate
testing to BS 1881-124, petrographic examination, and expansion testing. The expansion testing
shall be to the method in Appendix H of British Cement Association publication “Diagnosis of Alkali-
Silica Reaction”, except the cores shall be nominal 75 mm diameter and 150 mm long (see Annex
A). If the expansion exceeds 500 microstrain during the period of the test, the concrete shall be
assessed to be potentially at risk of developing Delayed Ettringite Formation.

2.3.2 Reinforcement

2.3.2.1 Bending Schedule

The Contractor will be supplied with Drawings detailing the reinforcement required and shall
prepare for approval bending schedules in accordance with BS 8666. Laps and anchorages shall
be 45 bar diameters in length unless detailed otherwise.

2.3.2.2 Cutting and Bending

Steel rod reinforcement shall be cut, bent and fixed to BS 8110-1. Cold bending shall be used
which does not damage the material. Bending hot at a cherry-red heat not exceeding 849°C may
be approved except for bars dependent on cold-working for strength. Bars shall not be cooled by
quenching.

All cutting and bending operations are to be carried out on a hard, free-draining platform, on or off
site, by cropping or sawing, but not by flame-cutting.

2.3.2.3 Fixing and Erection

The number, size, form and position of pieces of reinforcement shall be as shown on the
Drawings. They shall be held in position in the formwork during the placing of concrete by use of
distance pieces and spacer bars.

Links shall be taut so that bars are braced and the inside of their curved parts shall be in contact
with the bars being connected. Tying wire shall be twisted tight with pliers and the free ends shall
be bent inwards.

Top reinforcement in slabs shall be rigidly supported by chairs fabricated from reinforcing steel,
from the bottom reinforcement, as required for working loads.

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Reinforcement shall be grit-blasted before use to remove rust, oil, grease, salt and other
deleterious matter, and where pitting has occurred the causes and products thereof. Repeated
blasting may be required when the reinforcement is in position, or partially cast in. Partially-set
concrete adhering to exposed bars during concreting operations shall be removed.

Reinforcement temporarily projecting from the concrete at joints shall not be bent out of position
without approval, in which event the reinforcement shall be bent over a suitably sized former to
prevent any damage or over-stressing.

Electrical continuity within the reinforcement may be required to be provided and demonstrated in
accordance with the Particular Specification

2.3.2.4 Welding

Electric arc welding may be used, if approved, for joining bars. Covered-alloy or shielded-arc
electrodes shall conform to BS EN ISO 2560. Workmanship shall be to BS EN ISO 17660-1 and
BS EN ISO 17660-2. Joints shall be butt-welded with standard double-V or double-U welds.

Electric arc welding of any reinforcement is prohibited on all bridgeworks.

2.3.2.5 Continuity Reinforcement at Joints

The use of mechanical couplers of any type or form in bridge structures shall only be as detailed
on the Drawings or as instructed by the Engineer. Couplers shall conform to the requirements in
BS 8597.

2.3.2.6 Depth of Cover

The location of reinforcement and nominal dimensions of concrete cover shall be as in Table 13, or
as shown on the Drawings, or in the Particular Specification, whichever is the greater.

The Contractor shall submit for approval, details of his proposed quality control checking of
reinforcement position both before and after concreting, including checking typically at least 5% of
the surface areas of representative elements.

The Contractor will remain fully responsible for providing reinforced concrete with reinforcement
cover depths complying with the minimum cover requirements, that is, nominal cover minus
tolerance. At the commencement of construction, the Contractor shall demonstrate that this can be
achieved by constructing and checking trial panels or by checking the first pours.

The nominal target cover allows for a reinforcement fixing tolerance added to the minimum cover
required for durability. Table 13 below shows the tolerances AND the effect of applying those
tolerances to the nominal cover depths. For precast concrete the tolerances allow for more the
precise fixing expected from manufacturing processes.

Table 13 Depth of Cover to Reinforcement


Category Table 7 Zones Minimum Nominal Maximum
Cover Cover Cover
Internal Zone 1 40 mm 55 mm 70 mm
External Zone 4 50 mm 65 mm 80 mm
submerged solid
External Zone 2, 3, 5, 6 60 mm 75 mm 90 mm
Note
Assumed fixing tolerances for precast : 5 mm and in situ concrete : 15 mm
Nominal cover shall be measured to the reinforcement nearest to the concrete face concerned.

The achievement of cover shall be confirmed by checking by calibrated cover meter after
concreting using a cover-meter in accordance with BS 1881-204.

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2.3.2.7 Pre-pour Inspection

All aspects of reinforcement preparation as in the clauses above, are subject to inspection and
Engineer’s approval before concrete pouring.

2.3.7 False Work

2.3.7.1 False Work Design and Erection

It is the responsibility of the Contractor to design and erect all false work, which shall support all
dead and imposed loads, so that the lines and surfaces of finished members are within permissible
dimensional tolerances.

2.3.7.2 False Work Inspection

The Contractor will perform and record his own inspection of the false work, and shall submit the
same to the Engineer. The Contractor’s inspection and inspection records will include, as a
minimum, confirmation that the false work is

 built as designed,
 solidly founded,
 assembled from members which are straight and undamaged,
 securely and well fixed and connected,
 dimensionally correct

The same requirement for Contractor’s inspection shall apply to back propping or re-propping as
required.

After performing his inspections, the Contractor’s responsible person will issue the Contractor’s
Permit-to-Load, and shall submit the same to the Engineer with the Contractor’s inspection
records.

2.3.8 Formwork

2.3.8.1 Formwork Design

It is the responsibility of the Contractor to prepare the design for all formwork, which shall support
all dead and imposed loads, so that the lines and surfaces of finished members are within
permissible dimensional tolerances.

2.3.8.2 Formwork Erection

Formwork and supports shall be cleaned and temporary openings shall be provided for the
removal of rubbish. The formwork shall be coated with an approved release agent and the excess
removed. Release agent shall not be allowed to come into contact with concrete already placed or
with reinforcement.

Formwork exposed to direct sunlight during the curing period shall be shaded.

2.3.8.3 Controlled Permeability Formwork

If required by the Drawings or the Particular Specification, Controlled Permeability Formwork shall
be fixed to the forms in accordance with the manufacturer’s instructions.

2.3.8.4 Formwork Inspection

Not less than 24 working hours notice shall be given for the inspection and approval of the
formwork and reinforcement, prior to which concrete shall not be placed.
Formwork shall be inspected in accordance with the requirements for false work inspection, plus
the following additional requirements:

 reinforcement

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 depth of cover to reinforcement
 embedded items
 checking washing and cleaning

2.3.9 Jointing

2.3.9.1 Construction Joints

Joints shall be positioned to reduce their impact on the structural performance and durability of the
elements. In general horizontal joints shall be positioned at least 500 mm above ground level and
at least 500 mm above high water in marine locations. The positions should be as shown in the
approved drawings, and in accordance with the Contractors Pour Sequence Proposals (Clause
2.3.1.1).

Joints shall be formed square to the work with keyways included.

Upon removal of the formwork, the joint face shall be inspected, and if the soundness of the
concrete is not approved the Contractor shall investigate and remedy defects to the Engineers
satisfaction.

Chemical surface retarders shall not be used.

Construction joints shall be sealed with an approved sealant on debonding tape at external and
liquid-contact faces.

Construction joints in water-retaining structures shall incorporate an approved water bar and
construction joint details shall be submitted to the Engineer for approval.

All construction joints are required to be leak-proof, unless an allowable rate of leakage is stated in
the Particular Specification.

In the event of leakage, the effects of the leakage on both durability and serviceability shall be
assessed and other corrective action taken in accordance with Clause 2.10.

2.3.9.2 Design Joints

Expansion and contraction joints shall be as shown on the Drawings.

A contraction joint in a non-water-retaining structure shall form a plane of discontinuity in the


member. The concrete face first cast shall be painted with two coats of approved paint before the
adjacent concrete is placed. The adjacent concrete shall include a groove against the joint for
sealant. The exposed edges shall be sealed with an approved sealant on approved de-bonding
tape.

If a contraction joint may be vulnerable to contamination, the joint shall be sealed immediately with
an approved fluid as soon as the formwork has been removed.

An expansion joint in a non-water-retaining structure shall be formed as for a contraction joint, but
joint filler shall be included so that the adjacent concrete members can expand.

A design joint in a water-retaining structure shall include a continuous waterstop strip fixed across
the joint as shown on the Drawings. The concrete shall be free from honeycombing and worked
against the embedded part of the strip. Projecting portions of the strip shall be protected from
damage during operations and, in the case of rubber and plastic, from light and heat.

Paint shall be applied to the lips of the loop of copper water stop and the loop filled before
embedding in the concrete, all in accordance with manufacturer’s instructions and an approved
method statement.
The method of jointing water stops shall be in accordance with the manufacturer's instructions.

Injection hoses shall be provided if required by the Particular Specification.

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All design joints are required to be leak-proof unless an allowable rate of leakage is stated in the
Particular Specification.

2.3.9.3 Cold Joints

In the event of a cold joint, normally considered to be any unplanned break in concreting
operations, concrete shall be removed to the approval of the Engineer and treated as a
construction joint.

2.3.9.4 Joint Sealants

Before application of the joint sealant, the surfaces of the joint shall be cleaned, dried and primed,
and a backing rod shall be installed, in accordance with the manufacturer’s instructions.

The joint shall be finished true and flush with the adjacent surfaces, subject to the manufacturer’s
instructions for final profile.

2.3.9.5 Water-stops and Water-bars

Approved water-stops/water-bars shall be provided in all joints subject to water pressure, from
either ground water or water-storage.

2.4 Batching

2.4.1 Batching Equipment

2.4.1.1 Machinery and Water Supply

Batching shall be by weigh-batching machines equipped with accuracy checks for the weighing
mechanism. The machines shall be cleaned, checked and adjusted regularly as approved.

The water supply to the concrete mixers shall have an approved metering system to control and
record the amount.

Very strict control is to be maintained to ensure that the correct quantity of admixture is used at all
times. The equipment to be used for dispensing and the method of incorporating the admixture in
the concrete shall be to the approval of the Engineer.

2.4.1.2 Calibration

Weighing and water-dispensing equipment shall be checked and calibrated at the start of
preliminary concrete tests and at weekly intervals, and the accuracy shall be maintained within the
tolerances. The necessary test weights and the like shall be kept available on site.

Scales shall be checked over their complete range by a specialist at intervals not exceeding 6
months. In the event of non-compliance on calibration, all concrete produced since the last
compliant calibration will be at risk of rejection.

A calibrated container shall be used to check the accuracy of admixture dispensers once each
month. The results of these checks shall be notified to the Engineer.

2.4.1.3 Preparation and maintenance

Batching equipment shall be maintained in fully operational condition enabling consistent


measuring of concrete constituents within tolerances as shown in 2.4.1.4.

2.4.1.4 Tolerances

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Batched materials shall be measured out within the tolerances in Table 14 and discharged into the
mixer without loss:

Table 14 Batching Accuracy


Material Accuracy % of the weight
Cement ± 2% of cement in the batch
Aggregate ± 2% of each aggregate in the batch
Water ± 2% of water added to the batch
Admixture ± 5% of admixture to be added to the batch

The batched quantities shall be adjusted to compensate for variation in the moisture content of the
aggregates with the approval of the Engineer.

2.4.2 Records

Daily batch print out returns showing the quantities of all concrete compositions such as cement,
other cementitious or cement replacement materials, aggregates, water, and admixtures and the
total volume batched of each grade of concrete for each section of the works shall be provided to
Engineer when required.

2.5 Mixing

2.5.1 General

Concrete shall be mixed in batches in machines. The constituents shall be thoroughly mixed
before discharge. The machines shall be capable of discharging while running.

An adequately drained concrete slab shall be provided as a working platform unless other
arrangements are approved.

Concrete mixing equipment must enable effective mixing of concrete constituents to provide
uniform and required consistence, based on an approved testing frequency. Performance of the
mixer must comply with uniformity tests (ASTM C94) performed regularly.

Micro-silica shall be incorporated in slurry from and must be thoroughly dispersed in the concrete.

No additional water shall be added during mixing except with approval of the Engineer.

The entire batch shall be discharged before the mixer is recharged.

2.5.2 Admixtures

Admixtures shall be dosed into the mixing water within the time allocated for adding water to the
mix, using approved dispensing equipment.
2.6 Transporting

2.6.1 Equipment

Concrete shall be transported by means, which prevent contamination (by dust, rain, and so on)
segregation or loss of ingredients, and shall be transported and placed within the planned period
and without significant loss of workability.

Ready-mixed concrete mixer trucks shall be subject to approval. Truck-type concrete mixers shall
be painted white and shall comply with the requirements of BS EN 12001.

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2.6.2 Delivery Control

Ready-mix concrete delivery notes shall record the following information:

 Type of cement and cement content


 Type of cement replacement materials and content
 Maximum specified water/cement ratio
 Estimated free water/cement ratio of delivery
 Acceptance strength (AS) of concrete
 Date, time and place of commencement of concrete mixing
 Registration number of truck and name of depot
 Date and time of truck arrival
 Date and time of discharge of concrete from truck

The Contractor shall also record for each delivery:

 Position in the structure where the concrete delivery is placed


 Whether test cubes were taken from the delivery
 Actual slump measurements
 The amount of any water added on site

2.7 Placing and Finishing

2.7.1 General

Concrete shall be placed in the position and sequence indicated on the Drawings, or as directed
by the Engineer. Placing shall not commence until the following requirements have been
completed:

 the fixing and condition of reinforcement and items to be embedded has been approved
 the condition of the containing surfaces or formwork has been approved
 the Contractor’s responsible person has issued the Contractor’s Permit-to-Load and has
submitted the same to the Engineer with the Contractor’s inspection records

At least 24 hours’ notification shall be given by the Contractor to the Engineer of the intention to
place concrete.

2.7.2 Preparation

2.7.2.1 Placing on Ground

Before placing concrete for reinforced work on the ground, the formation shall be compacted as
specified and a screed of blinding concrete at least 50 mm thick shall be applied to form a surface
for construction.

All concrete placed below ground level shall be laid on a waterproof membrane and the sides of
such concrete below ground level shall be protected by a waterproof membrane, as defined
elsewhere in this Specification.

2.7.2.2 Placing on Rigid Substrates

Before placing concrete on or against rock, masonry, brickwork or old concrete, any loose material
shall be removed and the surface washed down, and water seepage shall be stopped or
channelled away from the work.

For mass concrete placed against masonry or brickwork the following shall apply:

 The mortar joints in the face-work shall have fully hardened.


 The surface shall be soaked prior to placing for a minimum of 30 minutes, and standing water
removed by air hose.

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 The concrete shall be worked around ties and bond stones and into open joints.

2.7.2.3 Placing Underwater

Concrete to be placed in water shall normally be the subject of a Particular Specification. The
Contractor’s Method Statement for placing concrete underwater shall address, as a minimum, Mix
Design, Additives, Washout, and Placement Trials.

Underwater concrete shall be placed with minimum disturbance of the water. Concrete shall not be
placed into running water or waves. The specified concrete grade shall be used and the mix
design shall provide for good flowing ability but without segregation or washout (of cement).

Tremie pipes, bottom-dump skips or other approved placing equipment shall be used. Segregation
shall be avoided.

Placing shall be commenced in approved sections and continued to completion.

The Tremie pipe shall be buried in the concrete and the pipe must not be emptied until the pour is
complete. If a bottom-dump skip is used, the contents shall be covered by canvas or similar before
lowering into the water. The doors shall be opened when the skip is resting on the bottom with no
tension in the support cable, and the skip shall be lifted gradually so that the concrete flows out
steadily.

2.7.2.4 Placing at Night

If approval has been given for placing at night or in dark interiors, adequate lighting shall be
provided where mixing, transportation and placing are in progress.

2.7.3 Ambient Conditions

2.7.3.1 High Temperature Concreting

Concrete shall not be placed when the limits in Table 15 are exceeded:

Table 15 Temperature Limits for Concreting

Temperature Maximum
Concrete 32°C
Ambient shade 40°C

Most concreting operations performed between the months of April and October inclusive should
be considered “High Temperature Concreting”, and should comply with “Recommendations for Hot
Weather Concreting” in ACI 305, and with Concrete Society/CIRIA “Guide to the construction of
reinforced concrete in the Arabian Peninsula”.

The following measures may be required amongst others to control the placing temperature:

 Shade aggregate, cement silos, water tanks and concrete plant.


 Paint concrete plant white.
 Run concrete plant with flake ice before mixing or transporting concrete.
 Use chillers to cool the mixing water.
 Add flake ice as a proportion of the mixing water.
 Place concrete at night.
 Use liquid nitrogen.

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As a minimum, the Contractor shall supply suitable equipment and record the following, at the
place of concreting, before and after every pour, or at 3-hourly intervals during every pour,
whichever is the more frequent:

 maximum/minimum thermometers
 shade and sun temperatures
 wind speed
 relative humidity

2.7.3.2 Plastic Shrinkage

The Contractor shall take all necessary measures to prevent plastic shrinkage cracking. These
measures shall include avoiding placing concrete under environmental conditions when plastic
shrinkage is likely to occur (refer to ACI 305 and Concrete Society/CIRIA Guide, as above).

Special precautions are likely to be required for concrete containing micro-silica, flat slabs, or when
drying is promoted by high surface temperatures or exposure to wind.

2.7.3.3 Inclement Weather

Placing shall not take place in the open during high winds, storms, sand-storms or heavy rains. If
such conditions are likely to occur, the Contractor shall as a minimum provide protection for the
materials, plant, formwork and work-force so that work may proceed, or consider postponing the
pour. If strong winds are prevalent, protection of the newly-cast concrete from the effects of drying,
driving rain and/or sand/dust shall be ready before concrete is poured.
2.7.4 Placing Operations

2.7.4.1 General

Concrete shall be placed directly in its final position without segregation or displacement of the
reinforcement, embedded items and formwork.

Concrete shall be carefully placed in horizontal layers which shall be kept at an even height
through the work. The depth of layers and time between placing of layers shall be such that each
layer can be properly merged into the preceding layer before initial set takes place. The depth of
layers shall be determined from the type of plant the Contactor proposes to use.

The size and sequence of pours shall be planned so as to minimise internal and external restraint
and associated thermal and shrinkage cracking. The size of pours shall be maximised consistent
with the rate of supply, placing and compaction.

Joints shall be at pre-determined locations. Construction shall generally proceed progressively from
one end of the structure and chequerboard placing shall be avoided.

Adjacent pours shall be placed within a period of 2 to 4 days, unless approved, to optimise the
requisite strength gain and minimise the effects of relative thermal movement and shrinkage
cracking.

2.7.4.2 Equipment

Concrete shall generally be placed without segregation by pumping or bottom-opening skips.


Concrete shall not be dropped into place from a height exceeding 1.5 m. If chutes are used their
slopes shall not cause segregation, and spouts or baffles shall be provided.

The use of slip-forms or paving trains shall comply with the Particular Specification covering all
aspects of placing with these specialised techniques, and the Contractor’s method statements
shall be supported by engineering justifications.

2.7.4.3 Placing Time

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Concrete and mortar must be placed and compacted within 90 minutes of water being added to
the mix or otherwise included via damp aggregates. This period may be extended only with the
use of approved concrete mixes with extended workability retention, which has been demonstrated
in Trial Mixes.

Partially-set concrete shall not be used in the Works.

2.7.4.4 Tremie

Approved Tremie pipes shall be used. If a rigid Tremie pipe is used, its discharge end shall be kept
below the surface of the fresh concrete at all times. The pipe must not be emptied until the pour is
complete.

2.7.4.5 Continuity of Placing

Concrete placing shall not be interrupted except where joints occur, and shall continue after
normal hours if necessary to achieve this.

Placing in each section of work shall be continuous between construction joints. The Contractor
shall make provision for standby equipment. If the placing of concrete is delayed due to breakdown
of equipment or other cause, then the Contractor shall erect vertical stop-ends and form a
construction joint or remove the concrete already placed and restart after repair of the breakdown,
as directed.

Before placing is resumed at a joint the set surface shall be roughened to remove laitance and
expose the aggregate; the concrete shall have gained sufficient strength to ensure that aggregate
is not in any way damaged or loosened within the matrix. If damaging materials, e.g. saline water,
have come into contact with the surface of the joint the concrete shall be cut back to an approved
depth to remove contamination and the roughened surface cleaned by compressed air or water
jets, and brushed and watered immediately before placing.

2.7.4.6 Compacting

Concrete shall be compacted during placing by approved internal vibrators, to a minimum of 98%
of the density of the relevant test cubes. The vibrators shall operate at a frequency of not less than
10,000 cycles per minute, and shall be designed for continuous operation. The performance of
vibrators shall suit the working conditions, and they shall generally not be less than 75 mm
diameter. The radius of influence shall ensure that the mass under treatment is compacted at a
speed commensurate with the rate of supply of concrete.

2.7.4.7 Vibration

Vibrators shall be operated such that each layer of concrete is well compacted and is thoroughly
intermixed with the previously placed layer at the joint line, and shall be withdrawn from the
concrete in a manner that does not form voids.

Vibration shall not to be applied directly or indirectly to concrete after the initial set has taken place,
nor shall it be used to make concrete flow in formwork.

2.7.4.7 Cathodic Protection

If cathodic protection is required by the Particular Specification, then special care is required in
concrete placing to avoid damage to any components to be included within the concrete. Trial
pours of full-scale mock-ups shall be made, incorporating the reinforcement cages and the
cathodic protection components, and subject to comprehensive pre- and post- pour testing. Under
such circumstances, special training shall be provided to members of the Contractor’s supervision
team and workforce for placing, compaction and vibration operations.

2.7.5 Finishing and Tolerances

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2.7.5.1 Minimum Requirements

A fine finish shall be provided unless detailed otherwise on the Drawings.

The finished faces of fine-finished concrete shall be sound, even coloured, even-textured and free
from defects. Arises shall have a 20 mm by 20 mm chamfer unless detailed otherwise on the
Drawings.

The surface of all finishes shall be protected from water drops.

2.7.5.2 Unformed Surface Finish

On upward-facing surfaces which do not require formwork or special finish, the finish shall be
produced by proper placing, compacting and finishing operations alone.

For a fair finish, screeding shall be used, carried out by sliding and tamping a screed board
running on the top edges of the formwork, or on screeding guides, to give a dense concrete skin.

For a fine finish to unformed surfaces, screeding shall be used as described for a fair finish. When
the concrete has stiffened and the film of moisture has disappeared, a steel or wooden float shall
be used to provide a glossy or sandpaper surface as required. Working shall be the minimum
compatible with the required standard of finish.

2.7.5.3 Chemical Retarders

Chemical surface retarders, if approved, may be used to produce an exposed aggregate finish,
and the Contractor shall demonstrate that the durability of the concrete surface is not reduced.

Exposure of aggregates and/or removal of the laitance will reduce durability, and additional
durability provisions may be required by the Particular Specification as a result.

2.7.5.4 Wire-Brushed Finish

After removal of the formwork, the surface of the concrete shall be abraded by stiff wire brushes
and water to remove the cement laitance and expose the aggregate.

Exposure of aggregates and/or removal of the laitance will reduce durability, and additional
durability provisions may be required by the Particular Specification as a result.

2.7.5.5 Bush-Hammered Finish

Bush-hammering is likely to introduce micro-cracking into the concrete, which may reduce
durability, and additional durability provisions may be required by the Particular Specification as a
result.

The surface shall be abraded by carborundum stones to remove irregularities. Within three weeks,
the surface shall be bush hammered to remove the cement laitance and expose the aggregate.
Approved bush hammers shall be worked to within 12 mm of corners and arises; the remaining
12 mm shall be hand-chiselled to match. Bush hammers shall be operated perpendicularly to the
surface, and the remaining exposed aggregates shall not be loose or fractured. The treated
surface shall be washed with water and stiffly brushed. The exposed aggregate shall be clean and
free from film.

2.7.5.7 Carborundum Finish

Carborundum finish shall be achieved by sprinkling carborundum grit on the unset surface and
working-in by wooden float. The grit shall vary in size between 1.18 mm mesh and 0.60 mm mesh
and shall be distributed evenly over the surface from a 1.18 mm hand-screen at the rate of 2.15
kg/m².

2.7.5.8 Control Panels

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Before pouring concrete into the permanent works, the Contractor shall produce specimen panels
of finished concrete for approval. The approved panels shall be retained by the Contractor for
reference by the Engineer at any time to determine the acceptability of concrete finishes in the
Works.

2.7.5.9 Tolerances

The tolerances of concrete surfaces shall be as stated on the Drawings. Outline guidance on
tolerances for concrete surfaces are defined in Table 16.

Table 16 Outline Tolerances for Concrete Surfaces

Description Tolerance
Foundations and Buried Concrete BS 5606, Table 1
Exposed Concrete BS 5606, Table 1
Floor Slabs for Self-levelling Floor BS 8204-1, Class SR3
Compound BS 5606 Deviation from plane ± 25 mm
Concrete Wearing Surface BS 8204-2, Class SR2
BS 5606 Deviation from plane ± 15 mm

2.7.5.10 Vacuum Dewatering

Vacuum dewatering of the concrete, if required by the Drawings or the Particular Specification,
shall be carried out by a specialist contractor with at least five years’ experience of application of
the process in the Middle East.

Vacuum dewatering shall be achieved by the use of specialist system incorporating a filter mat and
vacuum extraction of water at a suction pressure of between 0.6 and 0.8 atmospheres.

Concrete with micro-silica shall not be used in areas subject to vacuum dewatering. Where blast
furnace slag or pulverised fuel ash are used, the test results of fineness of the cement and cement
substitute material shall be submitted to the specialist contractor, and written acceptance of
suitability obtained. For all mixes, the details of mix design shall be submitted to the specialist
contractor and written acceptance of suitability obtained.

Following submittal of the contractor's method statement and initial approval, a trial area of
vacuum dewatering shall be carried out. The trial area of slab shall be at least 100 m² and shall not
be part of the permanent Works, and shall be laid using the mix, equipment and personnel
proposed. Finishes and joints within the trial area shall match the requirements of the final slab.

Vacuum dewatering shall be carried out on each part of the slab for a period of one minute for
each centimetre of slab thickness, or as otherwise established by trial or during the progress of the
Works and agreed by the Engineer.

2.8 Curing and Protection

2.8.1 Importance of Curing

Curing must be recognised as an important process in the construction and therefore must be
properly included in the Contractor’s method statements, and inspection and test plans.

Concrete containing blast-furnace slag, pulverised fuel ash, or micro-silica requires particular
attention to curing.

Concreting shall not take place until all Hessian, polythene and a supply of fresh water is on the
site and ready for use, and the relevant Method Statements and Inspection and Test Plans have
been submitted and approved.

Failure by the contractor to maintain proper and effective curing on the structures for the periods
and in the manners specified shall result in the Engineer designating any affected areas as

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potentially defective as in Clause 2.10. The Contractor shall respond accordingly by submitting a
proposal for a durability-based or strength-based investigation (or both), of the designated
structures for the Engineer’s approval.

In certain circumstances such as construction of marine structures, concrete will require curing
methods and durations which should follow the principles of this and subsequent Clauses, but
should be adapted to be feasible in the construction environment, and these methods and
durations will be subject to Engineer’s approval.

2.8.2 Duration

Concrete shall be protected as follows, immediately after placing, for the periods, from casting,
shown in Table 17 unless approved otherwise:

1. from the environment, including:


 sunshine and drying winds by approved shading and windbreaks
 cold, rain or running water and
2. from contamination by sea or brackish water, oil, fuel and other deleterious materials

Table 17 Curing Periods


Zones 1, 2 or 4, or no Zones 3, 5 or 6, or slag,
slag, pfa or ms pfa, ms
Environmental Protection (EP)
Initial water curing period First 7 days First 10 days
Further water curing period Total of 14 days Total of 28 days
or curing compound (that is, days 8–14) (that is, days 11–28)
Contamination protection
During and after the EP Total of 28 days Total of 28 days

2.8.3 Application Methods

2.8.3.1 Curing Compounds

Curing compounds shall be applied shall be in accordance with the manufacturer’s


recommendations.

In the event that coatings to be applied to the concrete surface would be inconsistent with the use
of curing compounds, the wet curing shall be continued up to a total of 14 days and 28 days
respectively.

2.8.3.2 Horizontal Upper Surfaces

The following measures shall be taken to prevent the loss of moisture in the surface of the
concrete:

 Polythene sheeting shall be placed immediately after finishing.


 After final set has taken place, the polythene shall be replaced either by ponding, or by wet
hessian covered with polythene; and the hessian kept permanently damp.
 After the initial water curing period, either the water curing shall be continued, or the hessian
and polythene may be removed and an approved curing compound shall be applied.
2.8.3.3 Horizontal Lower Surfaces (Soffits)

The following measures shall be taken to prevent the loss of moisture in the surface of the
concrete:

 Soffit formwork shall be retained for the duration of the initial water curing period.
 After the initial period, the soffit formwork may be removed and an approved curing compound
shall be applied.

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2.8.3.4 Vertical Surfaces

The following measures shall be taken to prevent the loss of moisture in the surface of the
concrete:

 Polythene over wet hessian shall be secured to the surfaces immediately after removal of the
formwork. The hessian shall be kept permanently damp.
 After the initial water curing period, either the water curing shall be continued, or the hessian
and polythene may be removed and an approved curing compound shall be applied.

2.8.3.5 Alternative Methods

Alternative methods of curing may be applicable, such as fog spray, leaving formwork in place or
applying surface coatings, but must be approved before use.

2.8.4 Insulation

Insulation in the form of insulating formwork, insulating blankets and/or other approved insulating
materials, shall be left in place until it can be removed without causing thermal distress to concrete
in thick sections as described in section 2.3.1 of this Specification. The curing period above may
then be reduced in proportion subject to approval.

2.8.5 Protection of joints

Rebates formed to receive sealant and the surfaces of construction joints shall be protected from
the curing compound by wet hessian to ensure proper curing of the joint surface and adjacent
concrete. The protection shall remain in place until the joint surface is sealed.

2.9 Post-concreting

2.9.1 False work and Formwork Removal

2.9.1.1 Strength

Formwork shall be removed without damage to the concrete, but not until the concrete has
sufficient strength to support itself. Centres and props may be removed when the member has
sufficient strength to carry itself and any loading. External loading shall not be applied until the
concrete has reached the 28-day characteristic strength.

The information in Table 18 is a guide to the minimum periods between placing concrete and
removing formwork. Reference should also be made to Clause 2.8, Curing and Protection.

Table 18 Guide to Formwork Removal Periods

Cement Type Configuration Lift Height Minimum Period


Vertical sides of Not exceeding 12 hours
beams, walls, 1.2 m
columns exceeding 1.2 m 36 hours
Soffits of main n/a Shutter and props to be
OPC, MSRPC slabs and beams removed after 14 days.
and SRPC Prop supports to be
maintained for additional 14
days or achieving 90%
specified comprehensive
strength of the concrete.
Other cement To be determined in accordance with:
types CIRIA Report 136, “Formwork Striking Times – criteria, prediction and
methods of assessment”

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After removal of formwork, remedial work shall not be undertaken until the concrete has been
inspected and approved.

2.9.1.2 Removal Permit

Removal of false work or formwork shall not commence until the following requirements have been
completed:

 the concrete strength has been approved


 any back-propping or re-propping required has been installed, inspected and approved in
accordance with the requirements of Clause 2.3.7.2 for false-work inspection before concreting
 the Contractor’s responsible person has issued the Contractor’s Permit-to-Unload and has
submitted the same to the Engineer with the Contractor’s inspection records

At least 24 hours notification shall be given by the Contractor to the Engineer of the intention to
remove false work or formwork.

2.9.1.3 Re-use of Formwork

When formwork is to be reused, it shall be cleaned immediately after removal from previous use
and shall be stored separately.

Prior to re-use clean and repair all damage caused by placing, removal or storage. Forms to be
reused shall be straight, clean, free from nails, dirt, hardened concrete, rust, and other injurious
matter with edges and surfaces in good condition.

Reuse of formwork that would reduce quality of exposed-to-view concrete will not be permitted.
Forms shall not be reused for Architectural concrete if there is any evidence of surface wear or
defects that would impair the appearance of the surface.

2.9.2 Below-Ground External Tanking

2.9.2.1 Sheet Tanking Membrane

This section covers both membranes onto which concrete is to be poured, and membranes which
are applied to concrete after casting.

Sheet tanking membrane shall be applied as per the design, drawings, and any Particular
Specification, and installed in accordance with the manufacturer’s recommendations and standard
details. Typical requirements to be followed are set out below.

Generally, for floor slabs, the membrane shall be applied to the blinding concrete, which shall be
placed to extend at least 200 mm outside the lines of the floor slab.

Typically for a membrane being applied onto a cast vertical face, the dry surface shall be cleaned
and primed in accordance with manufacturer’s instructions. A fillet 25 mm by 25 mm of bitumen
putty shall then be formed at the corner between the wall and the protruding membrane-covered
blinding layer. The membrane shall then be backed to the wall, brought down over the fillet, and
extended over the protruding margin of the bottom membrane to form a watertight seal. A layer of
concrete or mortar shall be placed over the jointed section. Minimum 150 mm overlaps shall be
provided at joints.

Cold applied rubber/bitumen mastic compound, or bitumen putty for trowel application, or similar
approved product shall be used for moulding into fillets and collars, and tapes shall be used for
sealing around pipes and irregularities.

Typically, the membrane shall extend to 75 mm below finished ground level where it shall be
tucked into a 20 mm by 20 mm continuous rebate, secured by canalised hardwood battens fixed at
300 mm centres by shot-fired masonry nails, and pointed with approved sealant.

Typically, above membrane tuck-in level, the vertical edges of concrete structures shall be coated
to 200 mm above finished ground level, or other level as detailed on the Drawings, with an

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approved pitch extended epoxy resin, or similar approved coating to a minimum thickness of 250
microns.

2.9.2.2 Brush-Applied Tanking membrane

Substructures shall be protected externally, where required, with a two-coat brush-applied tanking
membrane applied to the top of blinding concrete and to the outside surfaces of all buried
concrete.

The surfaces shall be cleaned and brought to a fine finish, as in Clause 2.7.5 of this Specification,
before coating, in accordance with manufacturer’s instructions. Each coat shall be applied at the
rate specified by the manufacturer.

2.9.2.3 Protection Board

All membranes shall be protected from mechanical damage during backfilling by an approved
permanent protection board. The board shall be neatly cut to closely abut at joints which shall be
continuously taped with 75 mm wide strips of heavy-duty self-adhesive tape.

2.9.3 Above-Ground Coatings

2.9.3.1 Requirement

All exposed surfaces of reinforced concrete elements shall be protected by a water repellent,
chloride resistant coating, except as specifically shown on the Drawings.

2.9.3.2 Surface Preparation

Surfaces shall be lightly grit blasted to remove all contamination such as oil, grease, loose
particles, decayed matter, laitance, mould release oils and curing compounds.

Any surface defects and blow holes shall be filled to produce a fine finish as in Clause 2.7.5 using
a proprietary product such as an acrylic modified cementitious repair fairing coat (or mortar for
larger defects), the durability performance of which shall be no less than the original concrete. The
repair shall be completed at least 48 hours before application of coatings.

2.9.3.3 Application

The complete coating system, including primers, shall be applied in accordance with the
manufacturer’s instructions.

Coatings shall be applied by a specialist applicator approved by the manufacturer and the
Engineer, and shall have at least five years’ proven successful experience.

A method statement for application shall be submitted for approval giving full details of all
proposed equipment and application methods and safe access provisions. The method statement
shall include wet and dry film thickness tests, pull off tests and any other quality control tests
appropriate to the coating performance.

Sample panels of each coating type shall be prepared, as the basis of approval by the Engineer of
both the material and the applicator, on L shaped panels comprising vertical and horizontal
surfaces of at least 1 m² each.

Full records of areas coated, quantity of material applied, ambient and substrate temperature, and
humidity during coating and curing, shall be kept on a daily basis and submitted to the Engineer.

2.10 Non-Compliant Concrete

2.10.1 Identification

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The Contractor shall immediately bring all defects and/or the need for repair to the attention of the
Engineer, who may designate the concrete concerned as non-compliant.

Whether or not it has been brought to the attention of the Engineer by the Contractor, concrete
may be designated non-compliant by the Engineer on the basis of various conditions such as the
following:

 unacceptable test results


 low depth of cover to reinforcement
 cracks, honeycombing or other defects
 finish or appearance not consistent with approved control panel

2.10.2 Investigation

The Contractor shall respond accordingly by submitting a proposal for an appropriate investigation
of the designated structures for the Engineer’s approval.

The investigation shall include some or all the following:

 Sampling and laboratory testing.


 Performing durability-related tests if required by the Particular Specification.
 Non-destructive testing.
 Load-testing relevant structural units or parts.
 Submission of the investigation report.

2.10.3 Reporting

The Engineer shall review the investigation report and instruct the Contractor on the remedial
actions, if any, to be taken. The Contractor shall make clear records of the location and nature of
the corrective action. The Contractor shall carry out the investigation and remedial measures as
instructed at his own expense.

2.10.4 Concrete Repairs

Repair materials, material testing requirements, and procedures for repairs to concrete structures
shall be as stated in BS EN 1504, unless particular requirements are determined for the particular
project circumstances.

Repair procedures may include techniques such as the following or others as approved:

 Resin injection of cracks


 Cutting out and reinstatement of concrete using polymer modified cementitious repair mortars
 Demolition and recasting

Proposed methods and materials for carrying out repairs to defective concrete work shall be
submitted by the Contractor in the form of a detailed proposal for approval by the Engineer.

No work shall be carried out until the Engineer's approval has been obtained. Any concrete work,
finish or surface which has been repaired before being inspected by the Engineer shall be liable to
rejection.

In general, repairs and remedial methods shall be based on the use of cementitious materials.

3 PART 3 PRE-CAST CONCRETE

3.1 Source and Type Approval

3.1.1 Source Approval

The Contractor shall submit the following for approval:

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 name of proposed precast subcontractor
 details of the contractor’s own, or subcontractor’s, facilities, methods and experience
 evidence of assessment of factory production control in accordance with Clause 6.1.3.2 of BS
EN 13369
 details of the inspection schemes being applied in accordance with the guidance in Annex D of
BS EN 13369.

3.1.2 Type Approval

Mass produced concrete products shall generally comply with BS EN 13369 or a specific product
standard, precast concrete products shall comply with BS EN 13369, except where indicated in
Clause 3.1.2 to 3.2.7 below.

The Contractor shall submit the following for approval:

 evidence of demonstration of compliance in accordance with the product standard or Clause


6.1.2 of BS EN 13369.

 details of the proposed acceptance testing at delivery in accordance with Annex F of BS EN


13369.

 evidence of assessment of the product in accordance with Clause 6.1.3.3 of BS EN 13369.

 for precast structural units, full design details with relevant calculations, to demonstrate full
compliance with BS EN 1992-1.
 for precast structural units and bespoke architectural units individual mould drawings,
reinforcement drawings and schedules for each type of pre-cast unit.

3.1.3 Materials Approvals

Materials shall comply with the relevant requirements of this specification.

All inserts, fixings, or shims which remain permanently embedded in the works shall be of stainless
steel and shall be electrically isolated from reinforcing bars.

 All nuts, bolts and screws shall be stainless steel of grade A4-70 to BS EN ISO 3506-1 and BS
EN ISO 3506-2, to the dimensions of BS 3692.

 The screw threads shall be standard coarse pitch ISO to BS 3643-1.

 Structural design shall comply with the requirements of BS EN 1993-1-10 and with The Steel
Construction Institute Publication 123: ‘Concise guide to the structural design of stainless
steel’.

 Washers shall be of grade A4-70 to BS EN ISO 3506-1 and BS EN ISO 3506-2 and
manufactured in accordance with the requirements of BS 4320, Form A.

 Machined fixings shall be of stainless steel grade 1.4404 to BS EN 10088.

 Hexagon socket screws shall have dimensions in accordance with BS EN ISO 4762, BS EN
ISO 4026, BS EN ISO 4027, BS EN ISO 4028, BS EN ISO 4029 and BS EN ISO 7380.

3.2 Methodology and Workmanship

3.2.1 Method Statement Approvals

The principles of Parts 1, 2 and 5 of this specification apply generally, as varied by or added to by
the requirements of this section and the Particular Specification if provided.

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The Contractor shall submit the following for approval:

 details of proposals for casting, handling, storage, transportation, delivery, erection, and
protection, including a detailed programme for the same
 full design details for lifting devices with relevant calculations
 his own inspection and testing plan, including as a minimum, dimensional accuracy, cover to
reinforcement, and twist, squareness and flatness.

Precast products which are not produced by a manufacturer to a recognised standard must be
treated as in-situ concrete.

Precast products which are produced by a manufacturer to a recognised standard must be


accompanied by test data and certification to confirm suitability for the intended application.

3.2.2 Prototype Approvals

The Contractor shall cast samples of each typical type of pre-cast unit for approval, and approved
units shall be retained on site as the control standard for subsequent panel production.

Load testing, water-tightness testing, or other testing, of prototypes, shall be performed in


accordance with the Particular Specification; similarly prototype units may be required as a visual
standard.

3.2.3 Manufacture

Pre-cast concrete units shall be cast on manufactured beds. The beds shall not be liable to
settlement and shall have smooth, hard and level surfaces.
Each unit shall be marked with a serial number and other information in accordance with Section 7
of BS EN 13369.

Steel bars shall not be embedded in the concrete for lifting.

Cubes and flexural strength samples shall be made as required to demonstrate that pre-cast units
have gained sufficient strength to be lifted. Units shall not be removed from the beds until the
representative flexure-test beams reach adequate strength for handling and shall not be placed
until the cubes representing them reach the appropriate 28-day characteristic strength.

All concrete for one pre-cast unit shall be placed in one operation except where a special facing
mix is required, in which case the two mixes shall be placed within 2 hours of each other.

Minimum striking times shall be in accordance with this specification, except in accordance with
the Particular Specification and/or approved submittals.

3.2.4 Storage, Curing and Protection

Handling and stacking shall avoid overstressing and deflection of the pre-cast units.

Units shall only be lifted from inserts provided for lifting.

The Contractor shall ensure that units are protected from contamination (including saline), staining
or damage.

Curing and protection shall comply as a minimum with Clause 2.8, except where otherwise
approved.

3.2.5 Delivery

Units shall be delivered to the construction site in accordance with a pre-planned delivery
sequence, which shall be designed to minimise accumulation of units on site.

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The Contractor’s delivery procedure shall include inspection, acceptance testing and action to be
taken when units are found to be defective, including setting aside and marking products to ensure
they are not incorporated in the works.

3.2.6 Installation

All pre-cast units are to be placed on an even layer of cement mortar, or other approved bedding.

Bedding, backing and jointing shall be in accordance with the approved method statement and/or
Particular Specification.

Shims shall be positioned in accordance with the design and so as to provide a stable bearing.

Preparation and placing of in-situ bedding mortar or concrete stitching joints shall be in accordance
with the approved method statements and programme.

The Contractor shall submit details for approval to demonstrate the proposed materials will provide
the required performance over the intended life in accordance with the design.

3.2.7 Tolerances

Minimum tolerances required for pre-cast units are set out in Table 19 below.
Table 19 Tolerances for Pre-cast Units (dimensions in mm throughout)

Length 0 – 3000 3001 – 4500 4501 – 6000


(and add ± 6 per 6000 over 6000) ±6 ±9 ± 12
Cross section 0 – 500 501 – 750 per extra 250
(each direction) ±3 ±5 ± 12
Straightness or bow (deviation from 0 – 3000 3001 – 6000 6001 – 12000
intended line) ±3 ±5 ± 12
Squareness 0 – 1000 1001 – 2000 over 2000
(max. distance of shorter side from a
longer side, of two sides meeting at a
corner, according to length of longer side) ±3 ±5 ±6

Twist (maximum vertical distance of a


0 – 3000 3001 – 6000 6001 – 12000
corner from the plane containing three
other corners, according to length of
longer side) ±6 ±9 ± 12
max. 6 deviation from a 1,500-long
Flatness straight edge placed on a nominally flat
surface
0 – 3000 Over 3000
Erection (in plan)
±6 ± 10
max. ± 6 deviation out of horizontal, within
Erection (in level)
the plan area
Erection (in plumb) max. ± 6 deviation within a storey height
± 20, or as stated in the Particular
Maximum deviation within total height
Specification

The cumulative nature of tolerances shall be taken into consideration when designing fixings and
joints, ensuring fit between components and positioning and members to meet limits on total
deviation.

4 PART 4 SPECIAL CONCRETE

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4.1 General

All Special Concretes shall have a Particular Specification. In the event that none is provided by
the Client, the Contractor shall prepare a Particular Specification for review and Approval by the
Client.

All Special Concretes shall comply with the requirements of the other sections of this Specification,
the requirements of this section, and the requirements of the Particular Specification.

4.2 Lightweight Concrete

4.2.1 Aggregate

Lightweight aggregate shall comply with BS EN 13055 including some not within the scope of BS
EN 206 and PD 6682-4.

For lightweight aggregates specified in accordance with BS EN 13055, the producer should specify
to the aggregate supplier the requirements for lightweight aggregates given in this clause, together
with the following:

 maximum aggregate size


 grading including tolerances
 target loose bulk density.

Lightweight aggregates shall conform to the following requirements:

 The acid soluble sulphate content shall be not more than 1 % when measured in accordance
with BS EN 1744-1;
 For furnace bottom ash or clinker, the loss-on-ignition shall be not more than 10 % when
measured in accordance with BS EN 1744-1.

Where fine lightweight aggregate is to be used, the method of determination of the water
absorption shall be selected by the producer and documented. The producer shall supply details of
the test method to the specifier, if requested (see BS 8500-1, 5.2).

There is no standard test method; the most appropriate technique will depend on the type of
lightweight aggregate used. The specifier may require a different method to be used.

The method given in BS EN 1097-6, Annex C is not applicable to aggregates with particle sizes
less than 4 mm.

4.2.2 Storage

Lightweight aggregate should be stored in single-size fractions in enclosed free-draining bays to


minimise moisture fluctuations through the stockpile and prevent intermixing with normal-weight
aggregate.

4.2.3 Batching

The moisture content of lightweight aggregate shall be monitored daily and the water absorption or
free moisture content of the aggregate shall be allowed for when calculating the water to be added
to the batch.

4.2.4 Admixture

Concrete mixes incorporating lightweight aggregate shall incorporate appropriate pumping aids.

4.2.5 Placing and compaction

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The method of placing and compacting the concrete shall prevent flotation of coarse aggregate
and formation of excessive blowholes in the finished surface.

4.2.6 Testing

Lightweight aggregate concrete testing shall be in accordance with BS EN 206-1, Annex A.

4.3 Pavement Concrete

4.3.1 General

The principles of parts 1, 2 and 5 of this specification apply generally, as varied by or added to by
the requirements of this section and the Particular Specification.

4.3.2 Testing

A sample of mass concrete for paving shall be taken at random on eight separate occasions
during each of the first five days of using a mix and tested for flexural strength. The standard
deviation shall be calculated from at least 40 individual results each representing separate batches
of similar concrete produced by the same plant under the same supervision. The current margin
for the plant shall be thus established as 1.64 times the standard deviation.

Thereafter one sample shall be taken at random for each grade of concrete from every group of
25 cubic meter made by each batching plant, and at least one sample shall be taken each day that
concrete of a particular grade is made.

In addition to the above requirements, at least one sample shall be taken from each individual
structural unit, or part of a unit, when the latter is the product of a single pour.

From each sample two specimens shall be made for testing at 28 days and two for testing at
7 days for control purposes. The 28-day result shall be the mean of the two specimens.

The frequency of sampling may be required to be varied.

The procedures shall be repeated when materials or design mixes are changed.

4.4 No-Fines Concrete

The aggregate for no-fines concrete shall be coarse graded from 10 mm to 20 mm. A small
percentage of fines from 10 mm to 5 mm may be added to improve the strength if approved.
Cement shall be mixed with the aggregate in the proportion of 1 to 8 by volume. Segregation of the
cement grout shall be prevented.

4.5 “Granolithic” Concrete

Granolithic concrete for heavy duty concrete floor finishes shall consist of one part cement to three
parts of combined crushed coarse and fine aggregate by weight. The combined aggregate grading
shall be as in Table 20.

Table 20 Aggregate Grading for Granolithic Concrete


BS Sieve (mm) Percentage Passing
14 100
10 95 – 100
5 30 – 45
2.36 30 – 35
1.18 15 – 25
0.60 10 – 20
0.30 5 – 10
0.15 0–5

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Aggregates for granolithic concrete shall as a minimum:

 comply with the requirements for heavy duty floor finishes in BS EN 12620, except as modified
by this specification or the Particular Specification
 be suitable for a wearing finish
 be selected in accordance with criteria in this specification for hardness, surface texture and
particle shape, and deleterious substances
 consist of crushed rock with a 10% fines value not less than 150 kN

Granolithic concrete screed shall be laid on top of the unset base concrete, and compacted and
worked to the correct levels. The surface shall be floated with a steel float after hardening until
water sheen has disappeared. Cement or cement-sand shall not be sprinkled onto the surface.
The layer shall be 12 mm to 18 mm thick.

If a granolithic layer is required to be placed on set concrete, the latter shall be scrabbled and
cleaned to expose the aggregate, and an approved bonding agent applied. The layer shall not be
less than 50 mm thick.

If required, compounds shall be added or applied to give a concrete with improved dust-proof and
oil-proof qualities. The compounds shall be used in accordance with the manufacturer's
instructions.

Granolithic concrete paving shall be placed in panels not exceeding 3 m square. Approved
contraction joints shall be provided around the perimeter of each panel.

4.6 Glass Reinforced Cement (GRC)

4.6.1 Materials

4.6.1.1 Source Approval

Glass Reinforced Cement products shall be manufactured in accordance with the requirements of
BS EN 1169: Precast concrete products. General rules for factory production control of glass-fibre
reinforced cement.

Test data demonstrating, compliance with the requirements of BS EN 1170: Parts 1 – 7: Pre-cast
concrete products: test methods for glass-fibre reinforcement and the International Glass fibre
Reinforced Concrete Association: Method of testing glass fibre reinforced cement (GRC) material
shall be submitted.

When required by the Engineer representative samples shall be submitted and an inspection of the
manufacturing facility shall be offered.

Preference shall be given to any manufacturer operating a certified quality system. This may be
BS EN ISO 9001 or BS EN ISO 9002 of the GRCA Approved Manufacturer’s Scheme.

4.6.2 Delivery Control

4.6.2.1 Documentation

Each delivery of pre-cast GRC items shall be accompanied by the following documentation:

 Delivery documentation indication documentation indicating for each item:


o the date of manufacture of each item
o the standard used to control the manufacturing process
 Quality Control Documentation providing assurance that test of delivered product undertaken
in accordance with the applicable requirements of BS EN 1170 and International Glass fibre
Reinforced Concrete Association: Methods of testing glass fibre reinforced cement (GRC)
material were satisfactory.
 Manufacturer’s recommendations for Handling, Storage, Packaging and Protection.

4.6.2.2 Handling Storage Packaging and Protection

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Handling storage packaging and protection shall be in accordance with the manufacturer’s
recommendations.

Items damaged in such a way that they are structurally unsound or their appearance is not in
accordance with approved samples shall be rejected.

4.6.3 Methodology and Workmanship

Installation methodology and workmanship shall be in accordance with the requirements of Clause
3.2.

4.7 Mortars, Grout and Render

4.7.1 General

Mortar, grout and render shall be used freshly mixed.

4.7.2 Cement Mortar

Cement-mortar shall normally consist of one part cement to four parts fine sand by volume with
just enough water to achieve workability.

4.7.3 Grout

Grout shall consist of cement mixed with water in approved proportions. Fine sand may be
included in approved quantities. Approved admixtures may be included to meet project-specific
performance requirements.

4.7.4 Render

Rendering shall consist of three parts fine, sharp sand to one part cement applied in two 10 mm
coats and one 5 mm finishing coat. The colour of the finishing coat shall be as approved.

4.7.5 Acid-Resistant Epoxy Mortar

Acid-resistant epoxy mortar shall be obtained from an approved manufacturer and shall be applied
in accordance with the manufacturer's instructions.

5 PART 5 SUMMARY

5.1 Approvals

5.1.1 Submittals

5.1.1.1 Method Statements


 Every concreting operations (or linked set of operations) including inspection and test plan.
 Concreting operations including cathodic protection.
 Underwater concreting operations having mix design, activities, wash out and placement trials.
 Details and method of incorporating micro-Silica.
 Grouting method for pre-stressing.
 Method of incorporating the admixture.
 Method of Vacuum dewatering.
 Application of coatings (including equipment/access and testing).
 Method of bedding, backing and jointing of pre-cast units.
 Method of determination of water absorption for light weight aggregates.
 Method of Application of paint
 Method of testing glass fibre reinforcement.

5.1.1.2 Test Certificates


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 Third party quality assurance in accordance with ISO 9001 for all materials.
 Periodic testing of cement, aggregates and reinforcement as per frequency mentioned in the
specification.
 Water testing before and during duration of contract. Tests to verify for sulphate and chloride
content shall be carried out every month.
 Tanking sheet membrane
 Laboratory trial mixes for various tests mentioned in the document.
 Plant trial/site mixes for various tests mentioned in the document.
 Compressive strength testing for concrete for all test specimens.
 Testing certificate for cement.
 Testing for density of concrete
 Testing for chloride content, sulphate and alkali content for each concrete mix.

5.1.1.3 Manufacturer’s Certificates


 Cement manufacture test certificate for each consignment of cement brought on site.
 Statement from ready mix supplier confirming suitability of concrete for each application.
 Test Certificates for reinforcement bars.
 Details of pre-cast subcontractor facilities (methods, experience and inspection schemes).
 Polypropylene fibres
 Test and product analysis certificates shall be provided for stainless steel reinforcement
 Details of pre-tensioned pre-cast elements showing source, unit and concrete type.
 Admixture (including compatibility).
 Test certificate for grout.

5.1.2 Inspections
 Inspection of storage condition of bagged cement
 Inspection of storage condition of steel reinforcement
 Inspection of storage condition of pre-stressing components
 Pre-pour inspection
o the fixing and condition of reinforcement and items to be embedded has been approved
o the condition of the containing surfaces or formwork has been approved
o the Contractor’s responsible person has issued the Contractor’s Permit-to-Load and has
submitted the same to the Engineer with the Contractor’s inspection records
 False work inspection
o built as designed,
o solidly founded,
o assembled from members which are straight and undamaged,
o securely and well fixed and connected,
o dimensionally correct
o propping and back propping
 Formwork
o reinforcement
o depth of cover to reinforcement
o embedded items
o checking washing and cleaning
 Joint Face (Post Concrete)
 Inspection prior to executing any concrete repairs

5.1.3 Tests

Table 21 Tests and Standards


Property Standard
Cement
Finess or Specific Surface Area BS EN 196-6
Soundness and setting time BS EN 196-3
Strength BS EN 196-1

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Property Standard
Chloride BS EN 196-2
Sulphate BS EN 196-2
Major Oxides (Ca, Si, Al, Mg, Fe) BS EN 196-2
Insoluble residue BS EN 196-2
Loss on Ignition BS EN 196-2
Moisture content BS EN 15167, Annex A
(ggbs and pfa) BS EN 450
Alkali (Na2O equivalent) BS EN 196-2
45 micron residue (pfa)_ BS EN 450
Activity Index (pfa and ggbs) BS EN 196-1

Aggregates
Source approval BS 812
Hollow shells content (BS 812-103.1)
Material passing 75 micron BS 410 / BS 812-103
Grading (BS 812-103)
Magnesium sulphate soundness BS 812-121
Specific gravity BS 812-2
Water absorption BS 812-2
Clay, silt and dust content BS 812-103
Clay lumps and friable particles) ASTM C142
Organic impurities ASTM C40, ASTM C87
Acid soluble sulphate content BS 812-118
Acid soluble chloride content BS 812-119
10% fines value for coarse aggregates BS 812-111
Elongation BS 812-105.1
Flakiness BS 812-105.2
Los Angeles abrasion test, ASTM C131 & ASTM C535
Drying shrinkage BS 812-120
Moisture content BS 812-109
ASTM C295, BS 812-104
Alkali silica reactivity
ASTM C289 & ASTM C1260

Water
pH BS EN 1008
Total dissolved salts BS EN 1008
Suspended solids BS EN 1008
Alkali bicarbonate BS EN ISO 9963-2

Reinforcement
Reinforcement testing BS 4449
Concrete spacers BS 7973

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Property Standard
BS 1881-121

Grouts for Prestressing


Grouts for Prestressing BS EN 446

Tanking Membrane
Tape Strength ASTM D638
Tensile Strength ASTM D638
Elongation Film ASTM D638
Tear Resistance ASTM D1004
Adhesion to Primed Concrete ASTM D1000
Adhesion to Self ASTM D1000
Puncture Resistance ASTM E154
Water Resistance ASTM D570
Environmental Resistance ASTM D543
Moisture Vapour Transmission Rate ASTM E96
Adhesive Softening Point ASTM D36

Concrete Test
BS EN 12350-2
Workability or consistence
BS EN 12350-5
Air content BS EN 12350-7
Fresh concrete density BS EN 12350-6
Bleeding ASTM C232 (non-vibrating)
Concrete compressive strength BS EN 12390-3
Flexural strength BS EN 12390-5
Hardened concrete density BS EN 12390-7

Concrete Durability Test


Absorption BS EN 1097-6 or equivalent
BS 1881-5:1970 and BS 1881-
Initial surface absorption tests (ISAT)
208:1996 or equivalent
Penetration of water DIN 1048 or equivalent
Chloride penetration Nordtest Method NT Build 492
Chloride Content BS 1881-124
Sulphate content BS 1881-124
Cover BS 1881-204

Precast Units
Concrete compressive strength BS EN 12390-3
Flexural strength BS EN 12390-5

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Property Standard

Lightweight Concrete
Sulphate content aggregate BS EN 1744-1
Loss on ignition of aggregate BS EN 1744-1
Concrete BS EN 206-1, Annex A

5.1.4 Mock-ups or Trials

The following trials shall be undertaken:

 Production of concrete using white cement (Clause 1.1.2.2)


 Admixture compatibility trials (Clause 1.1.5.2)
 Laboratory trial mixes (Clause 2.2.3.1)
 Plant field trial mixes (Clause 2.2.3.2)
 Trial panel for achievement of cover (Clause 2.3.2.6)
 Full-scale mock-ups for cathodic protection (Clause 2.7.4.7)
 Control panels for acceptability of finish (Clause 2.7.5.8)
 100 m2 trial area of vacuum dewatering (Clause 2.7.5.10)
 Prototypes of precast units (Clause 3.2.2)

5.1.5 Concrete Mix Allocation to Elements

The following guidelines and Table are provided in this Specification to assist with the identification
and communication of the Service Environment Zone, and the Structural/Durability/Assessment
Strengths, for all elements to be constructed.

 The Designer should provide, on the Drawings or elsewhere, a table in the form of Table 22
below, and should provide the entries in the first three columns for each element of the Works.
 The entries in the fourth column should be provided by the Concrete Supplier.
 The entries in the fifth column should be provided by the Engineer

Table 22 Mix Allocation Table


Durability
Service
Structural Strength Assessment
Element Environment
Strength Achieved in Strength
Zone
Trials
SS Zone ref DS AS

Table to be filled in by:


Concrete
Designer Designer Designer Engineer
Supplier

Example:
2
Basement walls 40 N/mm Zone 6 55 N/mm2 55 N/mm2

MODULE 02 -- CONCRETE Page 60


5.2 Reference Documents

5.2.1 British Standards

Reference Title
BS 812-2 Methods for the determination of density
BS 812-101 Guide to sampling and testing aggregates
BS 812-102 Methods for sampling
BS 812-103.1 Method for determination of particle size distribution. Sieve tests
BS 812-103.2 Method for determination of particle size distribution. Sedimentation
test
BS 812-104 Method for qualitative and quantitative. Petrographic examination of
aggregates
BS 812-105.1 Testing aggregates. Method for determination of particle shape –
Flakiness index
BS 812-105.2 Testing aggregates. Method for determination of particle shape –
Elongation index of coarse aggregate
BS 812-109 Methods for determination of moisture content
BS 812-111 Methods for the determination of ten per cent fines value (TFV)
BS 812-121 Method for the determination of soundness
BS 812-117 Testing aggregates – Method for determination of water-soluble
chloride salts
BS 812-118 Testing aggregates – Methods for determination of sulphate content
BS 812-119 Testing aggregates – Method for determination of acid soluble
materials in fine aggregate
BS 812-120 Testing aggregates – Methods for testing and classifying drying
shrinkage of aggregates in concrete
BS 1199 and 1200 Specifications for building sands from natural sources
BS 1881-5 Testing concrete. Methods of testing hardened concrete for other
than strength
BS 1881-122 Methods of testing concrete. Method for determination of water
absorption
BS 1881-124 Testing concrete. Methods of analysis of hardened concrete
BS 1881-204 Testing concrete. Recommendations on the use of electromagnetic
covermeters
BS 1881-208 Testing concrete. Recommendations for the determination of the
initial surface absorption of concrete
BS 3148 Methods of test for water for making concrete (including notes on
the suitability of the water)
BS 3416 Specification for bitumen-based coatings for cold application,
suitable for use in contact with potable water
BS 3643-1 ISO metric screw threads. Principles and basic data
BS 3692 ISO metric precision hexagon bolts, screws and nuts. Specification
BS 4027 Specification for sulphate-resisting Portland cement
BS 4246 Specification for high slag blast furnace cement
BS 4251 Specification for truck type concrete mixers
BS 4449 Steel for the reinforcement of concrete. Weld-able reinforcing steel.
Bar, coil and decoiled product. Specification.
BS 4482 Steel wire for the reinforcement of concrete products. Specification.
BS 4483 Steel fabric for the reinforcement of concrete. Specification
BS 5135 Specification for arc welding of carbon and carbon manganese
steels
BS 5606 Guide to accuracy in building
BS 6588 Specification for Portland pulverized-fuel ash cements
BS 6744 Stainless steel bars for the reinforcement of and use in concrete.
Requirements and test methods
BS 7973-1 Spaces and chairs for steel reinforcement and their specification.
Product performance requirements
BS 8007 Code of practice for design of concrete structures for retaining
aqueous liquids

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BS 8204-1 Screeds, bases and in situ floorings. Concrete bases and cement
sand levelling screeds to receive floorings. Code of practice
BS 8204-2 Screeds, bases and in situ floorings. Concrete wearing surfaces.
Code of practice
BS 8500-1 Concrete. Complementary British Standard to BS EN 206-1. Method
of specifying and guidance for the specifier
BS 8500-2 Concrete. Complementary British Standard to BS EN 206-1.
Specification for constituent materials and concrete
BS 8666 Scheduling, dimensioning, bending and cutting of steel
reinforcement for concrete. Specification
BS EN 196-1 Methods of testing cement. Determination of strength
BS EN 196-2 Methods of testing cement. Chemical analysis of cement
BS EN 196-3 Methods of testing cement. Determination of setting time and
soundness
BS EN 196-6 Methods of testing cement. Determination of fineness
BS EN 196-21 Methods of testing cement. Determination of the chloride, carbon
dioxide and alkali content of cement
BS EN 197-1 Cement. Composition, specifications and conformity criteria for
common cements
BS EN 197-4 Cement. Composition, specifications and conformity criteria for low
early strength blast furnace cements
BS EN 206-1 Concrete. Specification, performance, production and conformity
BS EN 446 Grout for pre-stressing tendons. Grouting procedures
BS EN 450 Fly ash for concrete. Definitions, specification and conformity criteria
BS EN 480-1 Admixtures for concrete, mortar and grout. Test methods.
Reference concrete and reference mortar for testing
BS EN 480-2 Admixtures for concrete, mortar and grout. Test methods.
Determination of setting time
BS EN 480-4 Admixtures for concrete, mortar and grout. Test methods.
Determination of bleeding of concrete
BS EN 480-5 Admixtures for concrete, mortar and grout. Test methods.
Determination of capillary absorption
BS EN 480-6 Admixtures for concrete, mortar and grout. Test methods. Infrared
analysis
BS EN 480-8 Admixtures for concrete, mortar and grout. Test methods.
Determination of the conventional dry material content
BS EN 480-10 Admixtures for concrete, mortar and grout. Test methods.
Determination of water soluble chloride content
BS EN 480-11 Admixtures for concrete, mortar and grout. Test methods.
Determination of air void characteristics in hardened concrete
BS EN 480-12 Admixtures for concrete, mortar and grout. Test methods.
Determination of the alkali content of admixtures
BS EN 934-2 Admixtures for concrete, mortar and grout. Concrete admixtures.
Definitions, requirements, conformity, marking and labelling
BS EN 1008 Mixing water for concrete. Specification for sampling, testing and
assessing the suitability of water, including water recovered from
processes in the concrete industry, as mixing water for concrete
BS EN 1011-1 Welding. Recommendations for welding of metallic materials.
General guidance for arc welding
BS EN 1011-2 Welding. Recommendations for welding of metallic materials. Arc
welding of ferritic steels
BS EN 1090-2 Steel, Concrete and Composite Bridges. Specification for Materials
and workmanship, steel.
BS EN 1097-6 Tests for mechanical and physical properties of aggregates.
Determination of particle density and water absorption
BS EN 1169 Precast concrete products. General rules for factory production
control of glass-fibre reinforced cement
BS EN 1170-1 Precast concrete products. Test method for glass-fibre reinforced
cement. Measuring the consistency of the matrix. 'Slump test'
method
BS EN 1170-2 Precast concrete products. Test method for glass-fibre reinforced
cement. Measuring the fibre content in fresh GRC, 'Wash out test'

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BS EN 1170-3 Precast concrete products. Test method for glass-fibre reinforced
cement. Measuring the fibre content of sprayed GRC
BS EN 1170-4 Precast concrete products. Test method for glass-fibre reinforced
cement. Measuring bending strength. 'Simplified bending test'
method
BS EN 1170-5 Precast concrete products. Test method for glass-fibre reinforced
cement. Measuring bending strength, "complete bending test"
method
BS EN 1170-6 Precast concrete products. Test method for glass-fibre reinforced
cement. Determination of the absorption of water by immersion and
determination of the dry density
BS EN 1170-7 Precast concrete products. Test method for glass-fibre reinforced
cement. Measurement of extremes of dimensional variations due to
moisture content
BS EN 1504-1 Products and systems for the protection and repair of concrete
structures – Definitions, requirements, quality control and evaluation
of conformity. Definitions
BS EN 1504-2 Products and systems for the protection and repair of concrete
structures – Definitions, requirements, quality control and evaluation
of conformity. Surface protection systems for concrete
BS EN 1504-3 Products and systems for the protection and repair of concrete
structures – Definitions, requirements, quality control and evaluation
of conformity. Structural and non-structural repair
BS EN 1504-5 Products and systems for the protection and repair of concrete
structures – Definitions, requirements, quality control and evaluation
of conformity. Concrete injection
BS EN 1504-10 Products and systems for the protection and repair of concrete
structures – Definitions – Requirements – Quality control and
evaluation of conformity. Site application of products and systems
and quality control of the works
BS EN 1744-1 Tests for chemical properties of aggregates. Chemical analysis

BS EN 1992-1-1 Design of Concrete Structures. General rules and rules for buildings
BS EN 1992-1-2 Design of Concrete Structures. General rules. Structural Fire Design
BS EN 1992-3 Design of Concrete Structures. General rules. Liquid Retaining and
containment structures.
BS EN 1993-1-1 Design of Steel Structures. General rules and rules for buildings.
BS EN 1993-1-2 Design of Steel Structures. General rules. Structural Fire Design
BS EN 1993-1-3 Design of Steel Structures. General rules. Supplementary rules for
cold-formed members and sheeting.
BS EN 1993-1-4 Design of Steel Structures. General rules. Supplementary rules for
stainless steels.
BS EN 1993-1-5 Design of Steel Structures. Plated Structural Elements
BS EN 1993-1-6 Design of Steel Structures. Strength and Stability of Shell
structures.
BS EN 1993-1-7 Design of Steel Structures. Plated Structures subject to out of plane
loading.
BS EN 1993-1-8 Design of Steel Structures. Design of Joints.
BS EN 1993-1-9 Design of Steel Structures. Fatigue.
BS EN 1993-1-10 Design of Steel Structures. Material Toughness and through
thickness properties.
BS EN 1993-5 Design of Steel Structures. Piling.
BS EN 10016-2 Non-alloy rods for drawing and/or cold rolling. Specific requirements
for general purpose rod
BS EN 10088-1 Stainless steels. List of stainless steels
BS EN 10088-2 Stainless steels. Technical delivery conditions for sheet/plate and
strip of corrosion resisting steels for general purposes
BS EN 10088-3 Stainless steels. Technical delivery conditions for semi-finished
products, bars, rods, wire, sections and bright products of corrosion
resisting steels for general purposes
BS EN 12001 Conveying, spraying and placing machines for concrete and mortar.
Safety requirements

MODULE 02 -- CONCRETE Page 63


BS EN 12350-1 Testing fresh concrete – Part 1: sampling
BS EN 12350-2 Testing fresh concrete – Part 2: slump test
BS EN 12350-6 Testing fresh concrete. Density
BS EN 12350-7 Testing fresh concrete. Air content – pressure methods
BS EN 12390-1 Testing concrete – Part 1: Shape, dimensions and other
requirements for specimens and moulds
BS EN 12390-2 Testing hardened concrete – Part 2: making and curing specimens
for strength testing
BS EN 12390-3 Testing hardened concrete – Part 3: compressive strength testing of
test specimens
BS EN 12390-4 Testing hardened concrete – Part 4: Compressive Specification of
testing machines
BS EN 12390-5 Testing hardened concrete – Part 5: flexural strength
BS EN 12620 Aggregates for concrete
PD 6682-1 Aggregates –Part 1: Aggregates for concrete – Guidance on the use
of BS EN 12620
PD 6682-4 Aggregates –Part 4: Lightweight Aggregates for concrete, mortar
and grout – Guidance on the use of BS EN 12620
testing of test specimens
BS EN 12696 Cathodic protection of steel in concrete
BS EN 13055-1 Lightweight aggregates. Lightweight aggregates for concrete,
mortar and grout
BS EN 13139 Aggregates for mortar
BS EN 13263-1 Silica fume for concrete. Definitions, requirements and conformity
criteria
BS EN 13369 Common rules for precast concrete products
BS EN 14889-1 Fibres for concrete. Steel fibres. Definitions, specifications and
conformity
BS EN 15167-1 Ground granulated blastfurnace slag for use in concrete, mortar and
grout – definitions, specifications and conformity criteria
BS EN 15167-2 Ground granulated blastfurnace slag for use in concrete, mortar and
grout – conformity evaluation
BS EN ISO 376 Metallic materials. Calibration of force-proving instruments used for
the verification of uniaxial testing machines.
BS EN ISO 2560 Welding consumables. Covererd electrodes for manual welding arc
welding of non-alloy and fine grained steels. Classification
BS EN ISO 3506-1 Mechanical properties of corrosion-resistant stainless-steel
fasteners. Bolts, screws and studs
BS EN ISO 3506-2 Mechanical properties of corrosion-resistant stainless-steel
fasteners. Nuts
BS EN ISO 4026 Hexagon socket set screws with flat point
BS EN ISO 4027 Hexagon socket set screws with cone point
BS EN ISO 4028 Hexagon socket set screws with dog point
BS EN ISO 4029 Hexagon socket set screws with cup point
BS EN ISO 4762 Hexagon socket head cap screws
BS EN ISO 7380 Hexagon socket button head screws
BS EN ISO 9001 Quality management systems – requirements
BS EN ISO 9002 Quality management and quality assurance standards. Generic
guidelines for the application of ISO 9001, ISO 9002 and ISO 9003
BS EN ISO 9963-2 Water quality. Determination of alkalinity. Determination of
carbonate alkalinity
BS EN ISO 17660-1 Welding. Welding of reinforcing steel. Load-bearing welded joints.
BS EN ISO 17660-2 Welding. Welding of reinforcing steel. Non load-bearing welded
joints.

5.2.2 American Society for Testing Materials (ASTM)

ASTM A 615/A615M-08b Standard Specification for Deformed and Plain Billet-Steel


Bars for Concrete Reinforcement
ASTM A820/A820M-08a Standard Specification for steel fibres for fibre-reinforced concrete
ASTM C33-03 Standard Specification for Concrete Aggregates

MODULE 02 -- CONCRETE Page 64


ASTM C40-04 Standard Test Method for Organic Impurities in Fine Aggregate in
Concrete
ASTM C87-05 Standard Test Method for Effect of Organic Impurities in Fine
Aggregate on Strength of Mortar
ASTM C94/C94M-06 Standard Specification for Ready-Mixed Concrete
ASTM C131-06 Standard Test Method for Resistance to Degradation of
Small-Size Coarse Aggregate by Abrasion and Impact in
the Los Angeles Machine
ASTM C142-97 Standard Test Method for Clay Lumps and Friable
Particles in Aggregates
ASTM C150-07 Standard Specification for Portland Cement
ASTM C227-03 Standard Test Method for Potential Alkali Reactivity of
Cement-Aggregate Combinations (Mortar-Bar Method)
ASTM C232-07 Standard Test Methods for Bleeding of Concrete
ASTM C289-07 Standard Test Method for Potential Alkali-Silica Reactivity
of Aggregates (Chemical Method)
ASTM C295-08 Standard guide for petrographic examination of
aggregates for concrete
ASTM C494/C494M-05 Standard Specification for Chemical Admixtures for Concrete
ASTM C535-03e1 Standard Test Method for Resistance to Degradation of
Large-Size Coarse Aggregate by Abrasion and Impact in
the Los Angeles Machine
ASTM C618-08 Standard Specification for Coal Fly Ash and Raw or Calcined
Natural Pozzolan fort Use in Concrete
ASTM C1240-05 Standard Specification for Silica Fume Used in
Cementitious Mixtures
ASTM C1260 Standard Test for Potential Alkali Reactivity of Aggregates
(Mortar-Bar Method)
ASTM D36-06 Standard Test Method for Softening Point of Bitumen
(Ring-and-Ball Apparatus)
ASTM D543-06 Standard Practices for Evaluating the Resistance of
Plastics to Chemical Reagents
ASTM D570-98 Standard Test Method for Water Absorption of Plastics
ASTM D638-08 Standard Test Method for Tensile Properties of Plastics
ASTM D1000-04 Standard Test Methods for Pressure-Sensitive Adhesive-
Coated Tapes Used for Electrical and Electronic
Applications
ASTM D1004-03 Standard Test Method for Initial Tear Resistance of Plastic
Film and Sheeting
ASTM E96/E96M-05 Standard Test Methods for Water Vapour Transmission of
Materials
ASTM E154-08 Standard Test Methods for Water Vapour Retarders Used
in Contact with Earth Under Concrete Slabs, on Walls, or
as Ground Cover

5.2.3 NORDTEST Methods

NT Build 492 Concrete, Mortar and Cement-based Repair Materials: Chloride


Migration Co-efficient from Non-Steady-State Migration Experiments
NS 3045 Silica fume for concrete – Definitions and requirements

5.2.4 DIN Methods

DIN 1048-5 Testing concrete; testing of hardened concrete (specimens


prepared in a mould)
5.2.5 GSO Standards

GSO 488 White Portland Cement

GSO 1914 Portland Cement

MODULE 02 -- CONCRETE Page 65


5.2.6 Miscellaneous Documents

ACI 305.1-06 Specification for hot weather concreting


BRE Digest 330 Alkali-silica reaction in concrete. Part 2 – Detailed guidance for new
construction, 2004
Concrete Society TR 47 Durable bonded post-tensioned concrete bridges, 2nd edition, 2002
Concrete Society CS136
/CIRIA C577 Guide to the construction of reinforced concrete in the Arabian
Peninsula, 2002
SCI Publication 123 Concise guide to the structural design of stainless steel, 1993

MODULE 02 -- CONCRETE Page 66


Client’s Design life Service environment Ground Investigation

Information
Provided by
Designer
Brief requirement (e.g.: exposure to salts) (e.g. BRE SD1
classification)
Particular Drawings Design Particulars
Specification (e.g.: reinforcement Form of construction
cover) (e.g.: pre-cast, jointed)

Selection of
Special Pre-cast
Concrete Type for
Concrete concrete
specified

Selection of Generic Concrete Mix


Environment
(Section 2.2.1,
Tables 7, 8 and 9) Identify
Materials
The concrete shall comply with (1.1)
relevant Particular
Specifications and national and
Request
international standards referred
Mix Selection- Approvals for
to therein
Concrete Durability Materials
and Strength
(2.2.1.3, Tables 7
and 8)

Site-batched Ready-mixed Concrete

Confirmation of Actual Mix


Concrete (2.2.2.3) (2.2.2.2)
Request Preliminary Or*
Approvals for
Production Method Laboratory Trials Submission of data for
(2.2.3.1 including existing mix with 6-
testing) Not approved months compliance data

Fail Fail Pass

Plant /Field
Testing (2.2.3.2,
including testing)
Approved Approved

Delivery Control (1.2) Full-scale trials


Site Storage, Handling and (if required)
Protection (1.3)
Submission and Approval of
Method Statements

Concrete Pour Placing and


Preparation (2.3) Finishing (2.7) Submit details and method
statements relevant to 1.3 to 2.10.
Concrete Batching (2.4) Curing and Request Approvals for Method of
Protection (2.8) Production
Mixing (2.5)
Tolerances (2.7)
Transporting (2.6)

Post Concreting (2.9)


Production and

Concrete Production, as per this Specification, including checks, submissions and approvals as required
Works Stage

Production Control (2.2.4) including request for approval based on strength, chloride and sulphate ions
content, durability, density, temperature, workability data

*– when Particular Specification required or


Compliance data not accepted MODULE 02 -- CONCRETE Page 67
Abbreviations
ACB Air Circuit Breakers EMC Electromagnetic Compatibility
ACOP Approved Code of Practice EPDM Ethylene-propylene-diene-monomer
ACRIB Air Conditioning and Refrigeration Industry copolymer
Board FA Fresh Air
ADCM Acoustic Doppler Current Meters FBA Factory Built Assembly
AFMA Australian Fisheries Management Authority FRP Fibre Reinforced Polymer
AGMA American Gear Manufacturers’ Association FSC Forest Stewardship Council
AISI American Iron and Steel Institute GANA Glass Association of North America
AS Acceptance Strength GGBS Ground Granulated Blast-furnace Slag
ASTA Association of Short-circuit Testing GMS Galvanized Mild Steel
Authorities GRC Glass Reinforced Cement/Glass Reinforced
ASTM American Society for Testing Materials Concrete
ATS Automatic Transfer Switch GRP Glass Reinforced Plastics
AWS American Welding Society HCFC Hydrofluorocarbons
BASEC British Approval Service for Electric Cables HDPE High Density Polyethylene
BOCA Building Officials and Code Administrators HEPA High Efficiency Particulate Air
BRE Building Research Establishment Ltd. HFC HydroFluoroCarbon
BS British Standards HPL High Pressure Laminate
BSRIA Building Service Research and Information HPPE Higher Performance Polyethylene
Association HRC High Rupturing Capacity
CBR California Bearing Ratio HSE Health and Safety Executive
CCTV Close Circuit Television HSFG High Strength Friction Grip
CECOMAF Comité Européen des Constructeurs de HV High Voltage
Matériel Frigorifique HVCA Heating and Ventilating Contractors’
CENELEC Comité Européen de Normalisation Association
Electrotechnique ICBO International Conference of Building Officials
CFC Chlorofluorocarbons IGCC Insulating Glass Certification Council
CIBSE Chartered Institution of Building Services IGE/UP Institution of Gas Engineers – Utilization
Engineers Procedures
CHW Chilled Water IP Ingress Protection
CI Cast Iron ISAT Initial Surface Absorption Test
CLW Cooling Water ISO International Standard Organization
CM Current Margin / Communication cable ITP Inspection Testing Plan
CMP Communication cable (Plenum) KD Kiln Dried
CP Code of Practice kVA Kilovolt Ampere
CPC Circuit Protection Conductor LCD Liquid Crystal Display
CPT Cone Penetration Testing LED Light Emitting Diode
CRS Categorised Required Strength LPG Liquid Petroleum Gas
CRT Cathode Ray Tube LS0H Low Smoke Zero Halogen
CRZ Capillary Rise Zone LSF Low Smoke and Fume
CT Current Transformer LV Low Voltage
c(UL) Underwriters Laboratories Incorporated MCB Miniature Circuit Breaker
(Canada) MCC Motor Control Centre
DEO Defence Estate Organisation MCCB Moulded Case Circuit Breakers
DFT Dry Film Thickness MDF Medium Density Fireboard
DI Ductile Iron MDD Maximum Dry Density
DIN Deutsches Institut für Normung MDPE Medium Density Polyethylene
DPC Damp Proof Course MEP Mechanical Electrical Plumbing
DPDT Differential Pressure, Differential MICC Mineral Insulated Copper Covered Cable
Temperature MIO Micaceous Iron Oxide
DS Durability Strength MMI Man Machine Interface
DVR Digital Video Recorder MOD Ministry of Defence
DW Ductwork Specification MS Micro-silica
EA Exhaust Air MSDS Material Safety Data Sheet
ECMA European Computer Manufacturers MSRPC Moderate Sulphate Resistance Portland
Association Cement
EA Exhaust Air N Nitrogen
ECMA European Computer Manufacturers NDFT Nominal Dry Film Thickness
Association NEMA National Electrical Manufacturers’ Association
ECR Extra Chemical Resistant NFPA National Fire Protection Association
EIA Environmental Impact Assessment/ NRC Noise Reduction Coefficient
Electronic Industries Alliance NS Norwegian Standard

MODULE 02 -- CONCRETE Page 68


O/D Outside Diameter
ODP Ozone Depletion Potential
OFS Oil Fired (Appliance/Equipment) Standard
OFTEC Oil Firing Technical Association
O&M Operation and Maintenance
OPC Ordinary Portland Cement
PD Published Documents
PE Polyethylene
PFA Pulverised Fuel Ash
PFC Power Factor Correction
PM Project Manager
PTFE Polytetrafluoroethylene
PVC Polyvinylchloride
PVC-u Unplasticised Polyvinylchloride
PWTAG Pool Water Treatment Advisory Group
QA/QC Quality Assurance/Quality Control
RA Return/Recycled Air
RCCD Residual Current Circuit Breaker
RCD Residual Current Device
R&D Research and Development
REFCOM Register of Companies Competent to handle
refrigerants
RPM Reinforced Plastic Mortar
RPZ Reduced Pressure Zone
RTD Resistant Temperature Detector
RTR Reinforced Thermosetting Resin
SA Supply Air
SBCCI Southern Building Code Congress
International (Incorporated)
SDR Standard Dimension Ratio
SIS Swedish Institute of Standards
SP Super-plasticizing
SPDT Single Pole Double Throw
SRPC Sulphate Resistance Portland Cement
SS Structural Strength
SSPC Steel Structures Painting Council
TIA Telecommunication Industry Association
TRA Trussed Rafter Association
UL Underwriters Laboratories Incorporated
ULPA Ultra Low Penetration Air
UP Unsaturated Polyester Resin
UPS Uninterruptible Power Supply
UTP Unshielded Twisted Pair
UV Ultra Violet
VC Vitrified Clay
VR Video Recorder
WBP Weather and Boil Proof
W/C Water Cement Ratio
WIS Water Industry Specification
WP Water Proofing
WRAS Water Regulations Advisory Scheme
XLPE Cross Linked Polyethylene

MODULE 02 -- CONCRETE Page 69

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