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June 2010
Bath Stone Mine Searches.

We have now accumulated recorded information on mining in Northeast Somerset and West Wiltshire.

This covers Bath Stone, iron mining and coal to provide searches for areas where extraction has taken place.

However, the search will only show recorded workings and does not provide interpretive inferences outside those known workings, as we do for metal mining. 

May 2010
Cornwall Consultants has been awarded the contract for a study of the concrete in a five-storey building in Plymouth.

This involves cover depth to rebar, chloride attack, cement content, concrete class and strength as well as aggregate type. Well outside the usual mundic testing routine.

Searches at present include ongoing large tracts of land for potential SWW pipeline routes.

 

 

Mundic Tests

sampling“Mundic” is a term that covers a range of potential housing problems that occur in the South West resulting mainly from the use of reactive aggregates in concrete.

The 'mundic' problem arises largely from the use of mine wastes as aggregate in concrete and can affect properties that were built prior to 1950. As a result mortgage lenders insist that all concrete block or mass concrete houses constructed before (and sometimes after) this date undergo a Concrete Screening Test to establish whether the property is at risk from accelerated concrete degradation.

The RICS Guidelines provide the accepted method for determining whether a property is, or could be, affected by the 'mundic' problem. Cornwall Consultants Limited, together with Petrolab Limited, provide a one-stop service to the public and to lending institutions. We assisted with the initial development of the RICS Guidelines and continue to so do.

 

 

The Preliminary Screening Assessment (Stage 1) consists of taking several 50mm diameter drill cores from the walls and footings, together with samples from the internal walls. These cores are examined in the laboratory using a stereomicroscope. In most cases this stage places the property as either Class A (pass and mortgageable) or Class C (fail and unsound).

e600If there is an element of doubt where the property cannot be classified Class A or Class C, the Guidelines recommend that further work is undertaken on the samples to resolve the position. This involves the samples being cut into a thin-section and being examined using a high power petrographic microscope. This stage of work could lead to the concrete being allocated to Class A, AB or B. Class AB is normally mortgageable and is also used for dense mass concrete footings. Class B is for concrete that is sound at present but carries a risk of deterioration and as such is normally unmortgageable. There is a third stage of testing to possibly clear Class B, although it is expensive and time consuming.

The fee for the Stage 1 procedure includes taking samples, under the supervision of a surveyor, petrographic examination and reporting. We have examined over 13,000 properties using the above tests of which approximately 80% have been passed as Class A concrete at Stage 1 and approximately 5% have gone straight to Class C. The remaining 15% have undergone Stage 2 examinations and many of these have subsequently been re-graded as Class A or AB.

A Screening Test can normally be scheduled within one week of instruction. A Stage 1 verbal result is then usually available for the client (providing that payment has been received) two working days after the date of sampling.

We can also test for Alkali-Silica reaction, chloride attack and re-inforcement corrosion.

Useful Links:

www.petrolab.co.uk
 
www.bradleys-estate-agents.co.uk   Surveyors
 
www.dowlingdodd.co.uk    Surveyors
 
www.cawleyassociates.co.uk   Surveyors

 

 

cornwall consulting