Publications From The Concrete Centre
Publications From The Concrete Centre
Publications From The Concrete Centre
Concise Eurocode 2
Concise Eurocode 2
For the design of in-situ concrete framed buildings to BS EN 1992-1-1: 2004 and its UK National Annex: 2005 R S Narayanan FREng C H Goodchild BSc CEng MCIOB MIStructE
yanan, the main author of this publication, hairman of CEN/TC 250/SC2, the committee le for structural Eurocodes on concrete. He is t to Clark Smith Partnership, consulting engineers.
R S Narayanan FREng C H Goodchild BSc CEng MCIOB MIStructE
Goodchild is Principal Structural Engineer for rete Centre where he promotes efcient concrete d construction. Besides helping to author this on, he has managed several projects to help with duction of Eurocode 2.
House, 4 Meadows Business Park, pproach, Blackwater, Camberley, Surrey, GU17 9AB 0)1276 606800 Fax: +44 (0)1276 606801 cretecentre.com
www.concretecentre.com/publications
The Concrete Centre aims to assist all those who design and construct in concrete to fully realise the potential of the material. To help to achieve this, The Concrete Centre has published a wide range of guidance and technical literature to explain the procedures and processes involved for the effective use of concrete. This catalogue presents the current range of brochures published by The Concrete Centre and some of its industry partners. These titles and more are available for download or to order as hard copies from The Centres website. To access this full list of publications visit www.concretecentre. com/publications
School Construction
Contents
Civil Engineering Sustainable Solutions using Concrete Concrete and Fire Concrete and Sound Insulation Concrete Framed Buildings Concrete in Housing Concrete in Buildings (series) Concrete in Civil Engineering (series) Concrete in Sustainable Construction Concrete Structures Concrete Wind Towers Concrete Towers for Onshore and Offshore Wind Farms Crosswall Construction Energy and CO2: Achieving targets with concrete and masonry High Performance Buildings using Insulating Concrete Formwork High Performance Buildings using Tunnel Form Construction Home Office Project Profile Highway Safety Barrier High Performance Hospitals Hybrid Concrete Construction New Concrete Engineering New Concrete 07 Office Cost Study Post-tensioned Concrete Floors Precast Concrete in Buildings Precast Concrete Paving Remediating Brownfield Land School Construction Shed Structures: a new approach Sustainable Concrete Thermal Mass Thermal Mass for Housing 2 2 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 5 5 5 6 6 6 6 7 7 7 8 8 8 9 9 8 9 9 10 10 10 10 Cement and Concrete Industry Publications CCIP is an industry initiative to produce quality technical design guidance. Titles are published by the British Cement Association, British Precast, the British Ready-Mixed Concrete Association, The Concrete Centre and The Concrete Society. A Design Guide for Footfall Induced Vibration of Structures Best Practice Guidance for Hybrid Concrete Construction Cost Model Study Commercial Buildings Cost Model Study School Buildings Concise Eurocode 2 Concrete Buildings Scheme Design Manual Concrete Bridge Construction Design and Construction using Insulating Concrete Formwork How to Design Concrete Structures using Eurocode 2 How to Design Masonry Structures using Eurocode 6 (series) How to Design Reinforced Concrete Flat Slabs using Finite Element Analysis How to Specify Concrete for Civil Engineering Structures using BS 8500 Hydraulically-bound Mixtures for Pavements Properties of Concrete for use in Eurocode 2 RC Spreadsheets: version 3 (CD and User Guide) The Essential Guide to the Remediation of Brownfield Land Utilisation of Thermal Mass in Non-Residential Buildings 11 11 12 12 12 12 13 13 13 14 14 14 14 15 15 15 15
www.concretecentre.com/publications
All advice or information from The Concrete Centre is intended for use in Great Britain only by those who will evaluate the significance and limitations of its contents and take responsibility for its use and application. No liability (including that for negligence) for any loss resulting from such advice or information is accepted by The Concrete Centre or its subcontractors, suppliers or advisors. Readers should note that publications from The Concrete Centre are subject to revision from time to time and should therefore ensure that they are in possession of the latest version.
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Concrete can contribute to the construction of inspirational buildings. Concrete Framed Buildings (see page 3) is an overview publication relating to the use of concrete frames in buildings. Other brochures, which form part of this set, focus on specific elements of concrete construction and include: precast concrete; hybrid concrete construction; crosswall; posttensioning and school and hospital buildings. Further details on these brochures can be found within this guide.
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Concrete in Housing
A series of reprints of articles published in Concrete magazine. The articles cover topics such as modern methods of construction, basements and foundations, sustainability and high-rise residential buildings. n Publication date: 2006 n Ref: TCC/04/04 n Free
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Concrete Structures
This fourth annual edition of Concrete Structures, inserted as a supplement in The Structural Engineer, includes articles on the sustainable use of aggregates; commercial savings; school solutions; solid facades for concrete structures and the project which commanded the best ever BREEAM score. n Publication date: 2007 n Free PDF download available
Further issues in this series are available visit www.concretecentre.com/publications
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Crosswall Construction
Crosswall Construction
Crosswall is a modern and effective method of construction which uses precast, cellular concrete components to achieve structurally robust, fast, economical medium and high-rise buildings. This publication explains the benefits of using crosswall construction and includes case studies of projects which have benefited from its effectiveness. n Publication date: 2007 n Ref: TCC/03/26 n Free PDF download available
Guided Buslanes
Publications on design and construction for guided bus solutions are available from our partner organisation, Britpave. For a full list, visit www.britpave.org.uk
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Home Office headquarters, Westminster, London. It was decided at an early stage to adopt an innovative, hybrid concrete superstructure frame. The frame contains a high proportion of precast concrete stitched together with in-situ concrete columns, walls and slab topping. This case study, along with others which illustrate innovative concrete construction, is available to view online at www. concretecentre.com/ casestudies.
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The highway safety barrier, known as the Britpave Step Barrier, is a technologically advanced restraint which will save lives, ease congestion on our roads, reduce maintenance costs and help to protect our fragile environment. Guidance material on the safety barrier, including acoustic studies, drawings and a barrier design DVD are available from our partner organisation, Britpave. Visit www. britpave.org.uk for more information.
Image courtesy of Britpave
SMALL HEADLINE
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Concrete block paving provides a hard surface which is good to look at, comfortable to walk on, extremely durable and easy to maintain. It adds a richness, complexity and human scale to any setting. For more information and to download numerous publications on paving, including: Urban Paving, Home Zones Paving, Sustainable Paving and the regular Pave It magazine, visit the website of our partner organisation, Interpave, at www.interpave.org
Sustainable paving at Berkeley Homes housing estate, Oxford. Image courtesy of Marshalls plc
New Concrete 07
Published as a supplement in Building magazine, this brochure highlights the benefits of building in concrete and uses case studies to demonstrate how projects have used concrete. It also includes findings of a school and commercial buildings independent cost model study as well as an article on the new generation of formwork for concrete structures. n Publication date: 2007 n Free - PDF download available
Further issues of this supplement are available visit www.concretecentre.com/publications
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School Construction
School Construction
Concrete construction can provide cost effective, comfortable, flexible and fire resistant schools, with good acoustics and minimal vibration. This publication covers concrete solutions for school construction. Four case studies are also included, one of which is a detailed cost comparison on school design. n Publication date: 2007 n Ref: TCC/03/25 n Free PDF download available
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Sustainable Concrete
The majority of people see concrete as a popular and robust building material. Less appreciate that it is also a key material of choice for those looking for a sustainable solution. This publication shows how concrete can help achieve sustainable construction and gives examples of how concrete contributes to the three pillars of sustainability - environmental, economical and social. n Publication date: 2007 n Ref: TCC/05/03 n Free PDF download available
Thermal Mass
Thermal Mass
A CONCRETE SOLUTION FOR THE CHANGING CLIMATE
Our climate is already changing and will continue to change significantly within the lifetime of buildings designed today. This publication provides a general guide to understanding thermal mass and fabric energy storage (FES). It outlines the application of FES techniques using cast in-situ and precast concrete floor slabs in non-domestic buildings and gives readers full references to facilitate further reading. n Publication date: 2005 n Ref: TCC/05/05 n Free PDF download available
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Concise Eurocode 2
This publication summarises the reference material that will commonly be used in the design of reinforced concrete framed buildings to Eurocode 2. With extensive clause referencing, readers are guided through Eurocode 2 and other relevant Eurocodes. The publication, which includes design aids, aims to help designers with the transition to design to Eurocodes. n Publication date: 2006 n Ref: CCIP-005 n Price: 45
British Cement Association and The Concrete Centre
Concise Eurocode 2
For the design of in-situ concrete framed buildings to BS EN 1992-1-1: 2004 and its UK National Annex: 2005
yanan, the main author of this publication, hairman of CEN/TC 250/SC2, the committee e for structural Eurocodes on concrete. He is to Clark Smith Partnership, consulting engineers.
R S Narayanan FREng C H Goodchild BSc CEng MCIOB MIStructE
Goodchild is Principal Structural Engineer for ete Centre where he promotes efcient concrete construction. Besides helping to author this n, he has managed several projects to help with uction of Eurocode 2.
House, 4 Meadows Business Park, proach, Blackwater, Camberley, Surrey, GU17 9AB 0)1276 606800 Fax: +44 (0)1276 606801 retecentre.com
cement
concrete
O Brooker
Many cement and concrete industry publications on the technical features of concrete bridges have been published by The Concrete Centre and its partner The Concrete Bridge Development Group. These include documents on the fast construction of concrete bridges (ref: CBDG/014 TG5); the use of lightweight aggregate in bridges (ref: CCIP-015); high strength concrete in bridge construction (ref: CCIP-002); self-compacting concrete in bridges (ref: CCIP-003) and guidance on the assessment of concrete bridges (ref: CCIP-024). For more information on these and other publications, visit www.cbdg.org.uk
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cement
concrete
T Harrison R M Moss
R S Narayanan R Webster
This compendium of publications is authored by a number of industry specialists and is led by Owen Brooker. Owen is senior structural engineer for The Concrete Centre where he promotes efficient concrete design through guidance documents, presentations and as an expert on the national helpline.
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How to Design Reinforced Concrete Flat Slabs using Finite Element Analysis
Finite element (FE) analysis, a powerful computer method, has become an increasingly popular method of analysing concrete flat slab structures. However, there are some pitfalls to avoid, that often catch out the unwary. This publication seeks to introduce FE methods, explain how concrete can be successfully modelled and how to interpret the results. n Publication date: 2006 n Ref: TCC/03/27 n Price: 10.50
Author: John Kennedy is an independent pavement engineering consultant and UK principal expert on European Technical Committee 227 Road materials for hydraulically-bound mixtures.
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PAGE 16 The brochures in this catalogue are just a selection of the full range produced by the cement and concrete industry. To see a complete list of publications from The Concrete Centre visit www.concretecentre.com/publications. More literature is available from: The Concrete Bookshop (www.concretebookshop.com) Other organisations providing guidance on concrete construction: British Cement Association (www.cementindustry.co.uk) British Precast (www.britishprecast.org) British Ready-Mixed Concrete Association (www.brmca.org.uk) Britpave (www.britpave.org.uk) Concrete Bridge Development Group (www.cbdg.org.uk) Interpave (www.interpave.org) Quarry Products Association (www.qpa.org) The Concrete Society (www.concrete.org.uk) For a full list of trade associations visit www.concretecentre.com To register for publication alerts which advise of the latest publications visit www.concretecentre.com/register or, if you are an existing subscriber to The Concrete Centres newsletter, update your profile at the website to ensure you receive these publication updates.
Concrete Quarterly
The Concrete Centre website is home to the Concrete Quarterly archive. Dating back to 1947, these publications have a wealth of articles documenting historical concrete projects right up to the innovative uses of concrete in the present day. CQ is aimed at all members of the project team and demonstrates the potential of concrete in terms of architectural vision, structural solutions, best practice and performance. In addition to covering concrete projects, which can be large or small but always innovative and interesting, CQ provides a regular update of industry news and viewpoints.
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The Concrete Centre aims to enable everyone involved in the design and use of concrete to realise the potential of concrete. As a centre for excellence and design guidance, The Concrete Centre offers a reservoir of concrete information and assistance.
In your office
The Concrete Centres professional regional staff can provide bespoke project advice and keep your practice up-to-date with technical reports and design guidance from the sector. For more information visit www.concretecentre.com/cpd or email [email protected]
The Concrete Centre, Riverside House, 4 Meadows Business Park, Station Approach, Blackwater, Camberley, Surrey GU17 9AB 01276 606800