bigmig
Structural
- Aug 8, 2008
- 386
I had a contractor approach me who told me about a residential floor system he poured, without control joints.
The slab is the finished floor. They polished it. They basically cure it slowly, misting it with water daily for about 3 weeks.
If/when the slab does crack, they router out a minimal amount of material and epoxy it, then polish it again, giving
it the appearance of basically a granite stone.
He said that large warehouses and big box retailers are all pouring their floors without joints, because the shopping carts
and castor wheels hate joints. Also the cost benefit of not having joints is apparently significant on these large projects.
I researched it, and sure enough, that is how they do these boxstore slabs.
My question is in regards to smaller, residential construction. Has anyone done this? Are there design guides?
Thanks in advance.
The slab is the finished floor. They polished it. They basically cure it slowly, misting it with water daily for about 3 weeks.
If/when the slab does crack, they router out a minimal amount of material and epoxy it, then polish it again, giving
it the appearance of basically a granite stone.
He said that large warehouses and big box retailers are all pouring their floors without joints, because the shopping carts
and castor wheels hate joints. Also the cost benefit of not having joints is apparently significant on these large projects.
I researched it, and sure enough, that is how they do these boxstore slabs.
My question is in regards to smaller, residential construction. Has anyone done this? Are there design guides?
Thanks in advance.