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SEALANTS
New Group Attacks Floor Moisture
Issues
Concrete flooring failure costs at
least $1 billion annually
By Tudor Hampton in Chicago
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(Photo courtesy of CDL)
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A new task force
of 40 members including contractors, architects, engineers,
scientists, sealant manufacturers and flooring producers convened
for the first time April 17-18 in Chicago in order to better
understand how moisture develops on concrete floors and how
it can be controlled.
"These issues are starting
to cost concrete guys a lot of money," says Tommy Ruttura,
president of Ruttura & Sons Construction Co., Farmingdale,
N.Y., and president of American Society of Concrete Contractors.
Ruttura says that stakeholders have not yet found any groundbreaking
solutions as a result of the meeting. But he believes the
multi-disciplinary approach will help ease a problem that
costs an estimated $1 billion a year in callbacks, claims,
remediation and litigation each year.
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STICKY
Team hopes for collective action.
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"Instead of being adversaries,
we're all talking together to see how we can solve this problem,"
says Howard Kanare, senior principal scientist at Construction
Technology Laboratories Inc., Skokie, Ill., a wholly owned
subsidiary of the Portland Cement Association. "Finally,
we've gone from finger-pointing to a collective thought process,"
says Ray Thompson, a representative of Armstrong World Industries,
Lancaster, Pa.
The group's members identified
cost-cutting methods on fast-track construction projects as
primary contributors to concrete moisture problems. "Flooring
manufacturers are coming to us wanting warranties" that
are considerably stronger regarding vapor pressure, says Wally
Giambastiani, manager of technical sales and service for W.F.
Taylor Adhesives, Dalton, Ga. "Because of fast-track
construction, they are trying to compensate for it by putting
warranties in place that aren't necessarily going to work."
Bruce Suprenant, vice president
of engineering and technical services for specialty contractor
Baker Concrete Construction, Monroe, Ohio, agrees, adding
that architects and engineers no longer can design independently
of each other. "We want a compatibility check,"
he says.
The forum, called the Inter-Industry
Working Group on Concrete Floor Issues, is expected to meet
again late this year or early next year.


Producer Protests Pentagon Sealant
Specs
Investigates performance claims
By David Geer
Upset that a German
sealant was specified for the Pentagon renovation in light
of German opposition to Operation Iraqi Freedom, Rep. Steve
LaTourette (R-Ohio) is pressing the Dept. of Defense to award
a $1.1-million contract to ChemMasters Specialty Construction
Products, a domestic coatings producer based in his hometown
of Madison, Ohio.
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WEDGED
Renovation awaits evaluation of competing coatings.
(Photo courtesy of Pentagon Renovation Program)
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DOD is in the middle of a top-to-bottom
overhaul of the Pentagon, the first major renovation of the
nearly 60-year-old building. The project, which is being performed
in wedges, began in 1993 and is expected to wrap in 2010,
costing $3 billion. Tadjer, Cohen and Edelson (TCE), Silver
Spring, Md., the structural engineer working for prime contractor
Hensel Phelps Construction Co., Greeley, Colo., for Wedges
2-5, specified Keim Concretal, a corrosion-inhibitor supplied
by The Cohalan Co./Keim Mineral Systems, Lewes, Del. Cohalan
Co., an independent U.S. firm, uses in its coatings mineral
ingredients from Keimfarben GmbH of Germany. TCE says that
buildings coated with Keim products "are still in good
condition after 75 to 100 years," says Pentagon Renovation
Program spokesman Brett Eaton.
Hank Vavrik, president of ChemMasters,
says his firm approached LaTourette because TCE "would
not put in its specification requirements Keim's product
or its equivalent.'" According to Vavrik, the phrase
"or its equivalent" would have permitted the contractor
to opt for ChemMasters' product. However, a Pentagon Renovation
Program report dated March 27 says the ChemMasters system
"is not technically comparable."
Eaton says an independent analysis
was conducted to review the products and the results will
be released shortly. If it is found that the Keim product
"was not technically superior," it is possible there
would be a switch to ChemMasters' product. "But I don't
think that is the case," Eaton says.
Please email press releases for new products to ENR's Products Editor at ENR_products@mcgraw-hill.com
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