CHP 2
CHP 2
CHP 2
ADVANTAGES
Smooth and economical working of the project. To Reduces the completion time of the
project. To Provide more safety in the working of the project. To Material wastage and
deterioration are reduced.
NECESSARY CONDITION
Take care in mind the following condition for good construction
1) site layout should come with the feature with depicts better work performance
2) material must be closed to the spot of usage
3) necessity facility should be available for all works
4) keep machinery at place where it can easily be managed for work
5) site layout must come with merit that ensures inter-communication among all jobs at
constructional sites.
REQUIREMENTS
Following requirements should be observed while preparing site layout
1) project drawing and specification should carefully be observed that aid up in
understanding the project nature
2) required area should be estimate for incorporating machinery and other facility
magnitude of machinery and material should also be estimated if material is not easily
available more area has to be reserved for material storage
3) material of same nature should be stored closure to each other
4) machinery should be installed on appropriate place where it can easily be operated and
looked after
1) NATURE OF WORK
According to the type of building site layout may also be different to the nature of work. For
example site layout prepared for building will be totally differ from the site layout prepare
for roads.
Maintenance and tools/machinery is also affect the site layout moreover availability of
material also be affected the site layout
2) LOCATION OF PROJECT
Location of the project is also affect the site layout of a project. For example site layout
prepare for smooth ground will be different from the site layout prepared for sloped ground.
Major project should provide adequate area for keeping materials around while small project
occupy surrounding space for keeping material around while small project occupied
surrounding space for keeping material
3) METHOD OF CONSTRUCTION
Method of construction also affect site layout. Likewise multistoried buildings involved
heavy construction machinery and normal building and normal building involves ordinary
construction equipment. So site layout prepared for both types of building would be different.
Similarly site layout prepared for canal would be differ in sense that weather excavation
would be done by machines or by labors.
4) AVAILABILITY OF LABOUR
There would be no need of accommodation in case of local labor however the scenario will
be different if labor are out of town. In this case accommodation along with other facility
have to be provided.
5) AVAILABILITY OF MACHINERY
If machinery is not locally available then there should be area reserved for keeping them
when they are brought into site layout
2) Warehouse
Warehouse-should be preferably located near the administration block so that incoming material
can be easily stored and outgoing material can be watch properly.
4) Location of workshop
workshop for welding fitting electrification carpenter and mechanical etc. Should be located near
the site of work and easy Roads
5) Service
Services like temporary petrol pump, temporary substation, telephone line, water supply line
should be properly planned in job layout out.
6) Temporary roads
Temporary Roads should be planned in job layout for easy handling of materials and equipment.
7) Staff accommodation
In the job layout staff quarters should be located away from the actual work site at silent place all
the staff should be located at one place so that service can be made available easily.
8) Identification of facility
The Following are the temporary facilities are identified to be constructed on site,
1) Site Office
2) Booking office
3) Subcontractor’s office
4) First Aid and Medical Room
5) Guard Room
6) Toilet on Site
7) Engineer and Staff quarters
8) Labor quarters
9) Equipment Maintenance room
10) Parking for machines
11) Bar bending shop
12) Fabricated rebar storage yard
13) Carpentry shop
14) Cement warehouse
15) Batching plant and aggregates storage
16) Testing Lab
17) Material storage lab
18) Water tank
19) Scaffolding storage
20) Canteen
ELECTRIC SUPPLY
Electricity is required for many of jobs at site so electric supply should also be managed if there
is electric supply at the site connection may be obtain from it. Electric generator may be brought
into used in case of no electric supply that will run on fuel.
DEWATERING
DEFINITION
When water table exists at a shallow depth below ground surface, it is essential to lower the
water so as to carry out construction of foundation, basement, and metro tunnels etc. This is
achieved by pumping out water from multiple wells installed at the site. The process is called as
dewatering.
1. SHEET PILE
Ground water flow into excavations constructed by sheet pile walls should be minimized in order
to save the cost of the provision of pumping systems or well points to lower the water table
inside the excavation.
In case a layer of impermeable material like clay is located slightly below the excavation, it may
be desirable to drive the sheet piles further into this layer and the cost of further driving may be
less than the cost of the provision of continuous pumping in the excavation. On the other hand, if
there is no impermeable layer beneath the excavation, engineers may consider driving the sheet
piles further so as to increase the flow path of groundwater into the excavation and this helps to
reduce the amount of water flow into the excavation. Similarly, a cost benefit analysis has to be
carried out to compare the extra cost of driving further the sheet piles with the reduced pumping
costs.
2. DIAPHRAGM WALL
Are structural concrete walls which can be cast in-situ or using pre-cast concrete methods.
Suitable for most subsoil and their installation generates only a small amount of vibration and
noise. The high cost of these walls makes them uneconomic unless they can be incorporated
into the finished structure. Normally use for basements, underground car parks and similar
structures.
Have some applications with in-situ concrete diaphragm walls. Lack in design flexibility. The
panel or post panel units are installed in a trench filled with a special mixture of bentonite and
cement with a retarder to control the setting time. This mixtures ensures that the joints between
the wall components are effectively sealed. To provide stability, the panels of posts are tied to
the retained earth with ground anchors.
3. SLURRY CUT-OFF
These are non-structural thin cast in situ unreinforced diaphragm walls. They are suitable for
sub soil of silt, sands and gravels. They can be used on sites where there in is sufficient space to
enclose the excavation area with a cut off wall of this nature sited so that there is sufficient earth
remaining between the wall and the excavation to give the screen or diaphragm wall support
provide adequate support is given these wall are rapidly installed and are cheaper than the
structural version
4. GROUTED MEMBRANE
Are used to form a curtain or cut-off wall in high permeability soils where pumping methods
could be uneconomic. The curtain walls formed by grouting methods are non-structural
therefore adequate earth support will be required and in some cases this will be a distance of at
least 4m from the face of proposed excavation.
5. CONTIGUOUS PILES
Contiguous piles can be faced with a reinforced rendering or covered with a mesh reinforcement
sprayed with concrete to give smooth finish. In this method cast In front of the contiguous
piling a reinforced wall remaining in a copping beam to the pile.
6. GROUT INJECTION
Grout mixtures are injected into the soil by pumping the grout at high pressure through special
injection pipes inserted in the ground. The pattern and spacing of the injection pipes will depend
on the grout type and soil conditions. Grout types: Cement grouts Chemical grouts Resin grouts.
7. CEMENT GROUT
Cement grout are used to form a curtain in soil which have high permeability. Cement grout are
used in fissured and joined rock stratas and are injected into the ground through a series of
grouting holes bored into the ground in lines with secondary intermediate boreholes lines if
necessary. The grout can be a mixture of neat cement and water or cement and sand up to ratio of
1:4.
8. BENTONITE GROUT
This method is same as cement grout for dewatering I this method holes are filled up with
mixture of cement and sand. This is inexpensive method and suitable for ground with tiny
particles.
9. CHEMICAL GROUT
This method is suitable for land with medium grand soil in this method drained holes are filled
up with gel composed of two chemicals. One chemical is sodium silicate and other chemical is
calcium chloride. Both together make a dilute solution that prevent water.
10. RESINE GROUT
These normally comprise an epoxy resin mixed with a filler: the type of filler depends on the
brand of grout. However, a new sort of water-based resin has recently been developed which has
advantages over the traditional resin-based grouts.
Resin-based grouts tend to be more expensive than conventional cement-based grouts. They can
also be more difficult to use. However, they set harder and do not break down as easily as the
latter, giving them advantages in certain situations such as areas where hygiene is very important
or where the grout may be subjected to aggressive chemicals, such as swimming pools.
1) SUMP PUMPING
Sump pumping is the simplest form of groundwater control by pumping (i.e. dewatering). In its
basic form it involves allowing groundwater to seep into the excavation, and directing the
groundwater to localized low points (called sumps) in the excavation. Water collects in these
sumps, which are equipped with ‘sump pumps’ – robust pumps with the capacity to handle some
solids in the water. Water is then pumped away (perhaps requiring some treatment to remove
suspended solids prior to discharge at the ultimate disposal point). Sump pumping is widely used
in construction dewatering and mine dewatering (where it is often called in-pit pumping).
Sump pumping can be used for two separate purposes, though the form of a sump pumping
system may be similar for either requirement, and a single sump pumping system can meet both
requirements in some cases:
1. For surface water control: To collect and remove surface water run-off within the
excavation, the water being channeled to sumps by means of collector ditches or
channels.
2. For groundwater control: To collect and remove groundwater seeping into the excavation
through the base and slide slopes, the water being channeled to sumps by means of
collector ditches or channels.
This blog mainly focuses on sump pumping for groundwater control.
In appropriate ground conditions and for suitable excavation types, sump pumping can be used
as the principal method of groundwater control.
Where cut-off walls are used as part of groundwater control by exclusion, sump pumping is often
also needed to deal with: residual seepages from any leakages through the wall; the water
initially stored in the soil enclosed within the cut-off wall; and any run-off from precipitation
falling into the excavation.
2) WELL POINT SYSTEM
Well point dewatering is widely used for excavations of shallow depths, especially for pipeline
trench excavations. In appropriate ground conditions a well point system can be installed
speedily and made operational rapidly. A typical well point system consists of a series of small
diameters wells (known as well points) connected via a header pipe, to the suction side of a
suitable well point pump. The pump creates a vacuum in the header pipe, drawing water up out
of the ground. For long pipeline trenches, horizontal well points may be installed by special
trenching machines.
Well points are typically installed in lines or rings around the excavation, and are pumped by
diesel or electrically powered pumps, with associated header mains, water discharge pipes,
power supply generators, electrical controls and monitoring systems.
Groundwater Engineering provides complete well point dewatering solutions:
Design of dewatering systems
Well point installation
Equipment sales and rental
Monitoring systems
On-site operation and maintenance
3) SHALLOW BORED WELL
This method is very suitable for sandy gravels and water bring rocks and is similar in principle to
well pumping but is more appropriate then the letter for installation which have to pumps for
several months since running cost or generally less.
This method is subject to the same list restriction as well point system and can be arranged as a
multi system if the depth of lowering exceed 5m.
6. ELECTRO-OSMOSIS
In practical application of electro-osmotic dewatering (EOD), it is very important to increase
the dewatering rate, and to decrease the final water content and the electric power consumption
for water removal. In a batch apparatus for dewatering operation of colloidal suspensions or
sludges, electric power applications, such as alternating current (AC) electric field and
interrupted or intermittent electric field, and also arrangements and configurations of the
electrode in contact with the suspension or sludge can be available for improving the
performance of electro-osmotic dewatering. The effects of these electric field applications and
the electrode arrangements and configurations on the dewatering processes are shown, and the
usage of electro-osmotic dewatering is focused to biomaterials such as sewage/activated
sludge, waterworks sludge, food processing products and wastes, and biomass sludge.
This method work on a principle that a negative charges which attract the positively charged
ends of the water molecules creating a balanced states.
CONSTRUCTION OF MULTI STORY BUILDING
A multi-story building is a building that has multiple story and typically contains vertical
circulation in the form of ramps, stairs and lifts.
The number of story is determined according to the diagram below:
2) CLEARANCE OF SITE
Clearance of site may be initiated after studying plan layout. Bushes may be removed ground
may be leveled if it is not. Then they creates many problem so first solve it.
3) LAYOUT
After clear the ground site layout is marked according with the map which is called layout.
The marking is done with lime and then accordingly checked for more accuracy theodolite
and total station equipment may be used.
4) EXCAVATION
Foundation of multi storied building may be raft. For which required depth is prepared
according to design.
Procedure for construction of foundation starts with decision on its depth, width
and marking layout for excavation and centerline of foundation. Foundation is
the part of structure below plinth level in direct contact of soil and transmits
load of super structure to soil. Generally it is below the ground level. If some part
of foundation is above ground level, it is also covered with earth filling. This
portion of structure is not in contact of air, light etc., or to say that it is the
hidden part of the structure.
5) PROCUREMENTS OF MATERIALS
Material procurement Procurements is a term describing the purchasing process for goods and
services. In building construction, material procurement is the process by which
the materials required to construct a building are selected, ordered, invoiced, paid for and
delivered to the site.
6) LAYING OF FOUNDATION
After excavation process method to laying of foundation starts.
In case of lengthy building it is divided for ease and manner that one part is being excavated
while other excavated part is being done with foundation.
Foundation of multi-storied building is like raft sometimes pile are used below the foundation
strength of building usually depends on the strength of foundation hence foundation lying
should be given extra attention.
7) CONSTRUCTION OF UPPER STORY
Multi-story building are usually constructed of frame structure system in which load being
exerted on beams and column of the structure while wall are only used for cover. Column are
prepared for succession of each story however they are inter welded together or overlapped if
welding facility is not available.
Curing facility is also important on concrete walls are mason after completion of frame
structure as they work as cover and usually are of bricks of concrete block. These covering
walls are usually of 10cm with that are built up in mortar of 1:4 ratio These wall should not be
mason together then 1.3 meter in a day form work and scaffolding should be of standard in
multi storied building.
8) ELECTRIC SUPPPLY
In multi-story building the electric supply layout is prepared for each story separately. Walls
and ceiling are grooved to fit pipes and boards in them. After plastering wire are passed through
those pipes and relevant fitting are them installed. Wiring test id then conduct after finishing all
stuff of wiring.
At the end electric is delivered after obtaining certificate from the inspector.
9) WATER SUPPYL & SANITARY
Pipes of water supply and sanitary are installed before plastering. Gas supply line is laid out on
outer walls and roof and should be done by skilled workers.
1) Before starting any project, indication the area of construction storage of material, machinery
and offices etc. is called ______________
a) Alignment
b) Site clearance
c) Site layout
d) Management
2) Location of office is preferred in site layout_________
a) Near entrance
b) Near the exit
c) Near the labor colony
d) Central place
3) Best of administrative block is in ____________ size
a) Near entrance
b) Near the exit
c) Near the labor colony
d) Central place
4) Location of labor colony________
a) Near entrance
b) Near the exit
c) Near the labor colony
d) Central place
5) Water which is stand on the surface of earth in the form of lakes and ponds_______
a) Surface water
b) Sub-surface water
c) Water table
d) Hard water
6) Under ground water can be controlled by___________
a) Sheet pile
b) Cement grout
c) Slurry cut off
d) All of these
7) Method of temporary exclusion of water__________
a) Sump pumping
b) Well pointing
c) Shallow bored well
d) All of these
8) The tallest building of Pakistan is ___________
a) Pakistan tower
b) Ocean tower
c) HBL karachi
d) Burj khalifa
9) The tallest building of the world is __________
a) World trade center
b) Burj khalifa
c) Picaso tower
d) Eiffle tower
10) Method of permanent exclusion of water_______
a) Diaphragm wall
b) Grout injection
c) Continuous pile
d) All of these
11) Factor affecting site layout __________
a) Nature of work
b) Location of project
c) Availability of labor
d) All of these
12) Cost of foundation of ordinary building id considered ____________ of the total cost of
construction
a) ¼
b) ¾
c) 1/8
d) ½
13) Electric current is used in this method of exclusion of ground water_____________
a) Sump pumping
b) Well point system
c) Electro-osmosis
d) None of these
14) Under ground water can be controlled by
a) Sheet pile
b) Cement grout
c) Slurry cut off
d) All of these
15) The place where building is constructed
a) Site
b) Side
c) Site lay out
d) All of these
SHORT QUESTION + ANSWER
****************************