The Civil Engineering Contractor February 2018 | Page 25

INSIGHT pollution that would result from the extraction, manufacturing, and transportation of virgin materials. “The durability of concrete structures is a key factor in their suitability for reuse. The architect or designer needs to apply many different strategies to ensure that the structure is sustainable in terms of its environmental and social impact, to minimise the use of energy (whether embodied or consumed during the use phase), and to minimise the use of water and the generation of waste during the entire life cycle of the building. All of this can only be assessed by carrying out a full life cycle assessment of the structure,” Perrie adds. He says recycling concrete also has many other benefits, including the reduction of natural resource exploitation, lower transport costs of new building materials, and increased employment opportunities — an important element in a country such as South Africa where many people are jobless. The most common usage of recycled dumping of concrete at landfill sites. Recycled concrete can be used as aggregate for building products such as bricks, blocks, layer works in road construction, or land reclamation, thereby reducing the amount of material sent to landfills. This recycling also reduces the need for new virgin materials, thereby saving resources and the energy required to process them. Crushed concrete also absorbs carbon dioxide,” Perrie contends. He says that at several ready- mixed concrete plants, wash water is collected and reused in fresh concrete, and aggregate from returned concrete is screened out and reused. This reduces the amount of waste generated at the plants. Precast components from structures can also be reused in new buildings instead of demolishing and recycling the concrete. Structures using precast elements can be designed for such reuse. “In former industrial areas and inner-city precincts, there are many old factories, old warehouses, and the like that can be converted into very desirable dwellings. Concrete buildings can often be adapted relatively easily for new uses — for example, unused office space can be retrofitted for use as residential accommodation. Effective building retrofitting usually leaves the building structure largely intact.” The benefits of reuse and retrofitting include: • Saving natural resources, including raw materials, energy, and water required for new structures; • Reducing the quantity of solid waste sent to landfill; and • Lowering the energy usage and “If you think about the impact of built infrastructure 20 years, 30 years, 40 years, 50 years down the road, this [recycling] will have a big impact in terms of reducing concrete’s impact on our environment.” Yahya Kurama – University of Notre Dame, US concrete currently is in roads, with 41 states in the US already using recycled concrete in their road projects. In Anaheim, California, for example, 700 000 tons of recycled concrete were used on a new highway project, resulting in savings of about USD5- million. In Australia, building materials for the construction of the Western Link highway at Melbourne included around 15 000m 3 of recycled concrete, yielding savings of AUD4-million. Perrie continues: “Concrete can also be recycled for other purposes. Old demolished concrete structures provide a potentially rich source for recycling concrete for a wide range of applications; precast concrete components are often reused in new buildings; and CEC February 2018 - 23