LEED Building Vacated Due to Structural Issues


CitySalem 150x150 LEED Building Vacated Due to Structural IssuesReceived its LEED certification in 2002.

Construction defects often take a long time to develop.  Take, for example, the Courthouse Square building in Salem, Oregon, which is used for county offices and retail stores.  It was constructed in 2000 and received its LEED certification in 2002.

As early as 2002, problems were identified at the project, including cracked grouting and loose tiles.  But it was not until July 2010 that the Courthouse Square buiding had to be vacated due to structural problems:

“Henderson said the county started monitoring the floor in 2008 after an evaluation by David Evans and Associatesfound floor deflection, stating that ‘portions of the original structural floor slab design were inadequate with regard to code requirements’. . . .

The county’s original plan was to stay in the building as the firm did tests on the building’s integrity, but that plan changed when the floors got worse. 

‘It’s only been in the last short time that the seriousness of these issues have come to light,’ said Henderson. ‘We had an incident on Friday where we believe one of the post tension cables ruptured.’

The cables are located in the building’s concrete floor slabs to provide rigidity. Several cables are in the slabs for redundancy and backup support, so the county at first did not believe one ruptured cable posed an immediate threat.

But after the rupture, further inspection found that 33 to 35 of the building’s 220 columns where bearing a weight that is more than code allows. The county then decided to vacate the building.”

Learn more click here


Share

Leave a Reply

   Connect With Us

Subscribe (RSS)

SSL

About  |  Register  |  Legal  |  Contact us  |  Find a Job
Advertising  |  Affiliate Program  |  Professional Directory  |  Get Listed Today
© 2010 Tradeslive - All Rights Reserved
Tradeslive RSS 2.0   |   Tradeslive Atom   |   Tradeslive Comments