- Introduction
- General Objectives in Formwork
Building
- How Formwork affects concrete
quality
- Causes of failures
- Planning for Safety
- Relationship of architect,
engineer, and contractor
- Measurement and payment for
formwork
- How the architect-engineer can
reduce form costs
- References
- Overall Planning
- Development of a basic system
- Key areas of cost reduction
- Planning for maximum reuse
- Economical form construction
- Setting and stripping
- Other costs affected by formwork
plan
- Planning examples
- Materials, Accessories, Proprietary
Products
- Lumber
- Engineered wood products
- Plywood
- Other framing and facing materials
- Insulation and insulating forms
- Hardware and fasteners
- Prefabricated forms
- Shoring and scaffolding
- References
- Loads and Pressures
- Vertical loads
- Lateral pressure of fresh concrete
- Lateral loads
- Other loads
- References
- Form Design
- Notation
- Basic Simplifications
- Beam formulas
- Design criteria
- Bearing examples
- Wall, slab and beam form design
- Form accessories
- Column form design
- Shoring and scaffolding
- Bracing for lateral loads
- Camber and adjustment for
settlement
- References
- Design Tables
- Sheating design
- Joists, studs, beams
- Double members
- Wood shores
- Form design Using the Tables
- Design tables
- Formwork drawings
- General layout and detail drawings
- Check list of details
- Recheck of structural drawings
- Drawing approval
- Building and Erecting the Formwork
- Carpentry Shop and Job Mill
- Footings
- Slab on grade and paving work
- Wall forms
- Column forms
- Beam or girder forms
- Slab forms
- Shoring and Scaffolding
- BRIDGE FORMWORK
- Foundations
- Piers
- Pier caps and tie struts
- Superstructures
- Arch bridges
- Segmental box girder bridge
construction
- Making precast bridge segments
- References
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- Using the forms
- Placing reinforcement and inserts
- Preparation for concreting
- Inspection and form watching
- Placing and vibrating-effect on
formwork
- Removal of forms and shores
- Reshoring
- Care and storage of forms and
accessories
- Cold weather protection
- References
- Formwork for Architectural Concrete
- Specifications: Defining quality
- Architectural formwork design
- Exposed concrete surfaces
- Construction of architectural
forms
- Stripping
- Cleanup and repair
- References
- Shells, Domes, Folded Plates
- Shell form design considerations
- Building the forms
- Placing concrete
- Form removal
- Inflated forming methods
- References
- Mass Concrete
- Low lift formwork
- Handling, erecting, stripping
- Non-cantilevered formwork
- Roller-compacted mass concrete
- Foundations or starting lifts
- Curing, joint cleanup, insulation
- Planning and supervision
- Tolerances
- References
- Tunnels and Shafts
- Tunnel forming components
- Concrete placement methods
- General design considerations
- Form construction
- Stripping time
- Tolerances
- Shafts
- Special Techniques in Concrete
Construction
- Slipform construction
- Horizontal slipforms
- Traveling forms
- Tilt-up construction
- Lift method of construction
- Preplaced aggregate concrete
- Shotcrete
- Tremie concrete
- PRECAST CONCRETE
- Advantages of precasting
- Formwork
- Stripping
- Erection and joints
- PRESTRESSED PRECAST CONCRETE
- Forms for post-tensioning
- Forms for pre-tensioning
- References
- APPENDIX
- Acknowledgments
- Glossary
- Guide to Formwork for Concrete, ACI
347-04
- ACI 318-03 Code and Commentary-Chapter
6, Formwork, Embedded Pipes, and Construction Joints
- OSHA Regulations, Subpart Q-Concrete
and Masonry Construction
- Index
- Metric Conversion Factors
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