Shaw Book - Volume 1 Mar. 2016 | Page 146

140_151SubgradeFrmwrk 10/21/04 11:26 PM Page 144 SHAW & SONS 10 RULES OF SUCCESSFUL ARCHITECTURAL CONCRETE PAVING A. Batch plant supplying the concrete. B. Project address. C. Date of report. D. Owner to whom concrete is being supplied. E. Mix design number. Creating quality architectural concrete takes the combined efforts F. PSI strength at 28 days. of the project designer, concrete contractor, concrete mix engineer G. 3/8-inch or 1-inch coarse aggregate identified. and concrete batch plant. The following checklist touches on some H. Slump with +/- range indicated (typically 4 inch to 5 inch, of the basic principles that Shaw & Sons implements to produce +/- 1 inch). quality architectural concrete paving. We believe that the thorough- I. Fine and coarse aggregate supplier. ness of these rules that we follow is what sets Shaw & Sons apart. J. Gradation chart for aggregates. K. Cement type and brand with sacks/CY of concrete. L. Batch weights per 1 CY for cement, fine and coarse aggregate, RULE 1 THE STATEMENT OF MIX DESIGN The most important document when planning an architectural concrete paving installation is the project Statement of Mix Design (see facsimile below). This document describes the ingredients of every cubic yard of concrete used on a project. Shaw & Sons ensures that the following process is adhered to and included in each mix when securing a concrete mix design: water and admixtures. M. Method for testing used. N. Water/cement ratio. O. For what paving type (per architects drawing ) is each individual mix design. P. Signed stamp and date from engineer. Q. Typical strength results per local building code. R. Signed by concrete lab. S. Signed and checked by two Shaw & Sons officers. 144 RULE 2 CONCRETE, ADMIXTURES AND CONCRETE MATERIAL SOURCING Concrete: ALWAYS SPECIFY SOLE-SOURCE MATERIALS. Concrete is a mixture of cement, water and aggregates (fine and coarse). Cement and water combine to make a paste, which binds the aggregates into a rock-like mass, and this paste then hardens under a chemical process called hydration. Freshly mixed concrete is made of five basic ingredients (total weight approx. 4,000 pounds per cubic yard): 1. Cement (Type I, II, III, IV or V) – 16% of total volume (approx. 600 to 660 pounds per cubic yard). 2. Fine aggregate (washed concrete sand) – 52% of total volume (approx. 1,650 to 2,050 pounds). 3. Coarse aggregate (3/8-inch pea gravel or 3/4 – 1 inch gravel) – 21% of total volume (approx. 800 to 1,000 pounds). 4. Water – 11% of total volume (approx. 400 pounds). 5. Air – naturally occurring forms approx. 6% of total volume.