I had hoped to get our first architectural concrete wall placement off today but we had a few minor set backs and I didn't want to rush it. So it's all set for Monday at noon. I think we can make up for the lost time on the next placement since it's a carbon copy of this one. Structural steel is T minus 3 weeks.
So here's what things look like. This is the formwork on the back of the U shaped wall. Since this side of the wall won't show, I saved a few bucks and made some of the forms out of regular plywood.
One of the nice things about coil ties is that they can pass through one another, which comes in handy since they all pass through the same plane. I arranged the outside row of ties to hold the bulkheads at the ends of the wing walls.
Since concrete exerts pressure in all directions equally, we have to hold the bulkheads on the ends of our straight wall too. In this case we ran exterior ties in the form of coil thread.
You've heard me refer to
ThermoMass quite often. Well, here it is;
It's essentially 2" rigid insulation that has been covered with a fiber reinforced film to increase its strength. The insulation is fitted with nylon spacers that hold it in the center of the wall during concrete placement.
In our case we cut the 4x8 sheets in half so they'd fit between our coil ties, which we turned on edge. Here's a shot of the
Thermomass inside of a closed form. You can see that the spacers are slightly shorter than the wall thickness to facilitate a thin layer of paste to obscure them.
The nylon spacers have grooves cut into them to help hold the concrete on either side of the insulation together. The coil ties will assist with this as well. We'll also install some U bars at the top to tie the two sides together a bit more firmly.
Since one side of the wall actually bears on the floor slab and isn't really tied down, I felt like we needed a little more overturn resistance, especially in the short term when the wall is standing by itself and subject to wind loads. So I added some #5 bars to the end of the wall to tie it down.
A couple other formwork details; Yes those are biscuits. It's the only way we could figure out to adequately align the closing side of the form.
Can't forget the electrical rough in. There'll be a Lutron lighting controller on either side of the U wall to allow you to turn the lighting scenes in the main living space on or off as you pass by either side.
It's just a standard metal box I taped up to keep it from filling up with mud.
Well that's about it for now. All of the parts and pieces are now in for the ICF's so Monday, we'll start working two fronts. Did I mention that structural steel is now T minus 3 weeks?