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2545344
BUILDING PATHOLOGY : COMMON DEFECTS (PART 1)
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APC BUILDING PATHOLOGY Mind Map on BUILDING PATHOLOGY : COMMON DEFECTS (PART 1), created by tayto16 on 20/04/2015.
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building pathology
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tayto16
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BUILDING PATHOLOGY : COMMON DEFECTS (PART 1)
TIMBER DEFECTS
Beetle rot
Dry / wet rot
Causes
Species of timber
Chronic dampness
Poor ventilation
Normal internal temperature
Effects / signs
Sound hollow and dull
Be of abnormal colour
Wood disintegration
Fungi
Dry rot
Brown
Cubical
Fluffy
Yellow mycelium
Musty smell
Will not grow in saturated conditions
Red spores
Wet rot
Less pervasive and harmful generally
Minimum moisture content of 20%
Produces cubical failure in wood similar to dry rot
Olive green / brown fruiting body
Affected timber darkened
Surface may appear to be sound
DAMP
Rising damp
Moisture present in ground below walls rising up through fabric of wall
Capillary action
Below ground moisture sources
Free water in subsoil (water table)
Water main breach
Build up from drain / pipe leaks
Investigation using trial holes
Confirm existence of DPC which may be concealed
Verify construction of walls below ground
Establish height of water table
Chemical analysis
Can confirm that salts present could only have been derived from below ground sources.
Causes
Defective DPC
DPC bridging
No DPC
Characteristics
'Tide line' of yellow / brownish staining
Damp / rotting floors or skirting boards
White fluffy deposits on walls
Penetrative damp
Refers to any moisture sourced outside the habitable space
Occurs through roofs, chimneys, parapet walls and walls above ground level
Physical mechanisms enabling water to enter fabric (Causes)
Gravity
Lateral winds
Surface tension
Higher external pressure
Examples
Leaks in rainwater goods
Rain splash to base of walls
2 more examples
Characteristics
Requires link from outside to inside
Needs time to percolate into building
Can by mistaken for rising damp
Carries sulphates and carbonates
Condensation
2 main types
Surface
Interstitial
Moisture caused by everyday living.
Occurs when warm moist air comes into contact with a cold surface which is lower in temperature.
Factors that contribute (Causes)
Temperature
Ventilation rate
Amount of moisture available
Examples
Build up of condensation on glazing panes, can lead to rotting of window cill
Black mould in crescent shape formation
Characteristics
Can be mistaken for rising damp
Needs cold surfaces to form water
Does not contain contaminants
Can form inside walls and roofs
Causes mould marks in still areas
CORROSION
Causes
Carbonation
CO2 in atmosphere reacts with cement hydrates to form Calcium Carbonate
Lowers alkalinity of concrete, which leads to depassivation of steel reinforcement
Chloride action
Cast in chlorides
Up until 1977, CaCl routinely added to concrete as an accelerator
De-icing salts
Salt spreading on pedestrian areas
Salts brought in by cars
Marine environment
Effects
Carbonation
Uniform corrosion
Hairline cracking along line of reinforcement
Chloride action
Localised, severe pitting corrosion
Bulging / cracking of concrete
Rust staining
STRUCTURAL MOVEMENT
Subsidence
Vertical downward movement of a building
Loss of support beneath foundations
Causes
Clay soils
Trees
Leaking drains
Mining activity
Effects / signs
Distortion of openings
Stepped cracking
Cracks extending through DPC
Cracks mirrored internally
Seasonal opening and closing of cracks
Settlement
Usually occurs in new or relatively new buildings.
Cause
Initial
Ground compacting beneath building, adjusting to new load
Long term consolidation
Water table variation
Load variation
Effects / signs
Same as subsidence
Moisture movement
Causes
Irreversible
Once-off change in baseline moisture content
Bricks : period of moisture absorption as they adjust from post-firing dryness
Concrete : undergoes shrinkage during initial drying out
Reversible
Direct wetting / drying
Effects / signs
Bulging / distortion
Tensile cracks
Affects traditional, permeable materials
Thermal movement
Causes
Seasonal and diurnal patterns
May produce permanent movement
Effects / signs
Cracking
Blistering
Displaced movement
Reversible process
Factors affecting failure
Rate of temperature change
Differential movement between components
Thermal capacity of component
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