sugarbare10
Civil/Environmental
- Jan 29, 2015
- 5
Recently I inspected several exterior steel column base plates with crumbling grout all around the top of the concrete foundation pedestal. Constructed over 50 years ago, the engineer specified a 2" thick grout cap covering the entire surface of the concrete pedestal,the base plate measuring 12" square and the concrete pedestal, 30" square. Because of the large flat area, water soaking into the grout over the years has totally pulverized the grout cap with freeze/thaw action. Lenses of grout have spalled out leaving large and small pieces grout rubble. Esthetically it's unsightly, and the question is whether to repair by chiping away the loose debris and regrout just the immediate area around the base plate. Structurally the anchor bolts appear conservatively sized to carry the loads, might they be exposed eventually to corrosion damage? The concrete pedestal does not appear to be affected by the spalled grout.
The remote location, the public rarely visits the site, so owner wants to be put at ease to leave it as is or should he repair the spalled grout base plates. Several other columns/base plates aren't spalled yet, but their grout surfaces are severely mosaic cracked and in time will undergo the same damage. Is there a waterproof sealant that can be applied to the cracked surfaces during the summer months to preserve them from spalling? If so, would this have to be repeated each summer?
The remote location, the public rarely visits the site, so owner wants to be put at ease to leave it as is or should he repair the spalled grout base plates. Several other columns/base plates aren't spalled yet, but their grout surfaces are severely mosaic cracked and in time will undergo the same damage. Is there a waterproof sealant that can be applied to the cracked surfaces during the summer months to preserve them from spalling? If so, would this have to be repeated each summer?