SteelPE
Structural
- Mar 9, 2006
- 2,759
I am currently putting a proposal together for an architect client. The project involves an existing 10” slab that contains a radiant heating system. The system is outside a hangar and is used to reduce/eliminate the need for snow removal. Somewhere along the line the heating system has failed and they are looking to replace the system (I was told this is normal). Other than the failed system, the slab itself is fine. The existing slab has #5’s at 12” o.c. each way mid depth. I have been told that the existing system is tied to the existing reinforcing.
Method 1: Demolish the entire slab and reconstruct.
Method 2: Remove a portion of the existing slab and casting a new system in heating place (chip” say 4” off the top of the slab, place a new heating system down and cast a new 4” slab on top). The final depth of the chip would be determined.
Method 2 seems extremely labor intensive, putting that aside, would there be any negatives to this method? Obviously, the surface would not be smooth (which would work to our advantage as we would want the existing and new slabs to act as one).
Would the existing and new slabs act as a single unit once construction is complete?
What type of bonding agent would you apply to the existing slab to get to two slabs to work together?
Method 1: Demolish the entire slab and reconstruct.
Method 2: Remove a portion of the existing slab and casting a new system in heating place (chip” say 4” off the top of the slab, place a new heating system down and cast a new 4” slab on top). The final depth of the chip would be determined.
Method 2 seems extremely labor intensive, putting that aside, would there be any negatives to this method? Obviously, the surface would not be smooth (which would work to our advantage as we would want the existing and new slabs to act as one).
Would the existing and new slabs act as a single unit once construction is complete?
What type of bonding agent would you apply to the existing slab to get to two slabs to work together?