demayeng
Structural
- Dec 16, 2008
- 116
We've been asked to look at a suspended concrete floor in an existing building (built around 1980) to advise on load capacity. There are no existing drawings available.
Out of interest, how would this process occur? If the client does happen to find some drawings, I could analyze it no problem, but how do you know if it was ever built to plan? How do you know if all the steel went in correctly? We could probably test the concrete quality.
And do we assume responsibility for the whole building if we were to check the slab? Seems like a process that is fraught with liability compared to designing a new building. If we said the slab was OK, then next week a bracing failure flattens the building and we're the last engineers to look at it, surely we would be on the prosecutor's list? Checking and signing off the whole building would be a mammoth task.
ps this is all hypothetical as I have declined to do the work, but I'm just curious as to what others would do in this situation.
Thanks!
Out of interest, how would this process occur? If the client does happen to find some drawings, I could analyze it no problem, but how do you know if it was ever built to plan? How do you know if all the steel went in correctly? We could probably test the concrete quality.
And do we assume responsibility for the whole building if we were to check the slab? Seems like a process that is fraught with liability compared to designing a new building. If we said the slab was OK, then next week a bracing failure flattens the building and we're the last engineers to look at it, surely we would be on the prosecutor's list? Checking and signing off the whole building would be a mammoth task.
ps this is all hypothetical as I have declined to do the work, but I'm just curious as to what others would do in this situation.
Thanks!