The house will be built in Northern Virginia this winter were the temps
will be below freezing at night about half the time and an occasional
snow storm. It will have a poured concrete basement and brick siding.
The sheething will be weather coated OSB with Tyvec house wrap. The
excavation will start sometime in January and the project is suppose to
be finished in five months. As the homeowner I would like to know some
things to watch out for, to make sure the proper practices are followed
for wintertime construction. Any info would be greatly appreciated.
When we are doing winter work on Corps jobs we maintain concrete and mortar
above 50 degrees for 3 days and above freezing for 7 days. We do this by
building tents of cure blankets and reinforced visqueen and heat them with
forced air propane heaters. Since the R value of our tents is so low we use
a lot of fuel. We also must be very wary of fire i.e. igniting the tent
and/or form material with the heaters. In our experience, the second night
is the most critical; by then the concrete isn't generating very much heat
and isn't past the point of freezing yet. Sometimes we are required to use
recording thermometers inside our tents to "prove" the concrete has been
maintained above the minimum temperatures. When we are left to do our own
quality control we maintain the concrete above freezing for 3 days and then
remove the tent and the forms; generally we cover the concrete with cure
blankets without heat for a couple more days. On concrete walls we use the
kickers and forms and scaffolding for framework to drape the tent over. On
masonary walls we use the mason's scaffolding as the frame for the tent. The
area we work, is Montana. We have poured good concrete in below zero weather
as evidenced by the test cylinders left under the tent with our concrete.
Sometimes, working and pouring and tenting concrete in those conditions isn't
much fun. Reliable power is a must; if the power fails in the middle of the
night then...... Reliable 500,000 btu heaters are also prized. Good concrete
and good hammers "ring" when you give it the simple test of a whack or two.
Edges, like corners that are crumbly are a tell-tale and so is soft mortar
that is a few days old. I've made a good living in construction, mainly
because we pour concrete year around. Good luch with yours.
ron
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Any more questions?
Jim Ilkay
bui...@texas.net