a. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to a precast wall section and a method of constructing a wall.
b. Related Art
Concrete wall sections are well known and are used for a variety of purposes for example storing bulk products in a defined area, creating temporary wall structures while building work is being carried out for example as well as for creating more permanent wall sections. Wall created from such sections have the advantage that they are precast off site and delivered to the required location where the walls simply built by placing the sections where required and bolting them together, if desired, once placed.
A problem with known concrete wall sections and methods of building a wall from such structures is that if it is desired to create a wall for example running beside a newly built road where it is required to retain large quantities of soil, for example then the bulk and weight of the concrete wall sections required to withstand such required load is not very practical. It is a known problem that if a section is subject to an impact, for example if a section is hit by a fork lift truck during loading of bulk product, then and individual section can fail because the force of the impact is not spread through to other concrete wall sections.
A more robust structure may be created by casting concrete walls cast in situ. When creating such a wall, formwork known in the trade as ‘shuttering’ is built to hold the concrete in place whilst it hardens sufficiently. Such a formwork structure is usually made from huge steel plates bolted together and braced against the ground in order to withstand the pressures involved in retaining large amounts of concrete during hardening.
Before the concrete is poured into the formwork/shuttering any reinforcing structure, usually formed from steel bars, are inserted and tied together.
The cost of the shuttering system can cost more than ten times the cost of the materials required for the wall itself and furthermore, if walls are required which are three of four meters high then the health and safety precautions which need to be taken can be costly.
Therefore it is desirable to create a concrete wall section and a method of building a concrete wall with the low cost and convenience of using precast wall sections but with the strength and durability of a wall built in situ using shuttering.
The invention provides concrete wall sections for use is building a wall and a method of building a wall therefrom. The invention is used to create concrete wall which have a better finish than walls formed in situ and which are cheaper and quicker to erect than walls formed in situ, but which don't′ suffer from the disadvantages associated with wall built using conventional concrete wall sections.
According to the invention there is provided a wall section for use in building a wall comprising: a wall portion having a front face portion and a rear face portion; a connecting portion connecting said front face portion to said rear face portion and defining a cavity therebetween; in which the connecting portion has an aperture for receiving concrete mix and which in use allows the concrete mix to fill said cavity.
In a preferred embodiment the wall section comprises a plurality of connecting portions defining a plurality of cavities between the front face portion and the rear face portion and in which each connecting portion has an aperture allowing received concrete mix to flow between and to fill the plurality of cavities.
Advantageously, one or more connecting portions further comprise a recess at the end of each connecting portion arranged to align with a recess in a corresponding connecting portion and allowing concrete to fill a further cavity thus created when two or more wall sections are aligned with one another.
Preferably the wall section further comprises a foot portion connecting the front and rear face portions at the base of the wall section.
In a similar way to the connecting portions, the foot portion further comprise a recess at the end of said foot portion arranged to align with a recess in a corresponding foot portion and allowing concrete to fill a further cavity thus created when two or more wall sections are aligned with one another.
In a preferred embodiment each of the front and rear face wall portions have a recess on their inner face for receiving reinforcing rods and the well section may further comprise one or more reinforcing rods connected to a recess in the front wall portion and connected to a recess in the real wall portion.
Preferably the reinforcing rod comprises two rod portions connected together and pulling the front face portion and the rear face portion together.
According to another aspect of the invention there is provided a method of building a wall using a plurality of wall sections comprising a wall portion having a front face portion and a rear face portion; a connecting portion connecting said front face portion and said rear face portion and defining a cavity therebetween; in which the connecting portion has an aperture for receiving concrete mix the method comprising the steps of: placing a plurality of wall sections adjacent one another such that the plurality of wall portions are aligned; pouring concrete mix though an aperture in a connecting portion in one or more of said plurality of wall sections until the cavity in each wall section is substantially filled.
Preferably the wall section further comprises a plurality of connecting portions defining a plurality of cavities between the front face portion and the rear face portion and in which each connecting portion has an aperture and in which the pouring step is continued until all of the cavities in all of the wall sections are substantially filled.
In a preferred embodiment one or more connecting portions further comprise a recess at the end of each connecting portion arranged to align with a recess in a corresponding connecting portion and in which the method further comprises filling the further cavity thus created when two or more wall sections are aligned with one another.
In order to reinforce the resulting wall, each of the front and rear face wall portions have a recess on their inner face and a plurality of short reinforcing rods connected between corresponding recesses and in which the method further comprises, after placing a plurality of wall sections adjacent one another and prior to pouring the concrete mix, inserting long reinforcing rods through a plurality of cavities resting on said short reinforcing rods.
Preferably the long reinforcing rods are staggered with respect to each other such that a long rod spans different wall sections to those spanned by another long rod.
In the following description like features of the invention are referenced by like numerals when shown in different embodiments.
Connecting portions 9 and 10 connect the front face portion 7 to the rear face portion 8. In particular an upper connecting portion 9 spans the gap between the front face portion 7 and rear face portion 8 of the wall portion at a top of the wall portion 2. In this way, the upper connecting portion 9 joins the front and rear face portions 7, 8 and forms a top edge or top surface 19 of the wall section 1.
A second connecting portion 10 also spans the gap between the front and rear face portions 7, 8. In this embodiment, the second connecting portion 10 is located approximately halfway up the height of the wall portion 2. This second connecting portion 10 extends across the full width of the wall portion 2.
In this way two substantially rectangular cavities 4, 5 are formed within the wall portion 2. A first cavity 4 is bounded on four sides by internal surfaces 17, 18 of the front and rear face portions 7, 8 respectively and the upper and lower connecting portions 9, 10. Similarly a second cavity 5 is bounded on four sides by internal surfaces 17, 18 of the front and rear face portions 7, 8 the lower connecting portion 10 and the foot portion 3. The ends 14, 15 of each of the cavities 4, 5 are open such that the cavities 4, 5 extend for the full width of the wall portion 2 and create respective openings 14, 15 in each of the end faces 20, 22 of the wall portion 2.
The two cavities 4 and 5 may be accessed through an aperture 6, the function of which will be described in due course. In particular, an aperture 6, 6′ is present in each of the connecting portions 9, 10. In this embodiment, the apertures 6, 6′ comprise a cylindrical bore extending substantially vertically through each of the connecting portions 9, 10, as shown in
The aperture 6′ is the lower connecting portion 10 provides a path between the upper and lower cavities 4, 5, the importance of which will be described later.
The wall section 1 is precast from concrete using a mould in a manner which is well known in the art. In some cases it may be advantageous to precast the wall section 1 having solid connecting portions 9, 10 and then drill through these connecting portions to form the apertures 6, 6′.
In a method of building a free-standing wall a number of wall sections 1 are placed side by side such that their respective end faces 20, 22 are in contact and their respective front and rear face portions 7, 8 are aligned. Once all of the required wall sections 1 have been placed in their correct positions concrete is poured through each of the apertures 6 in the top connecting portions 9 of one or more sections 1. The concrete flows through the aperture 6 into the upper cavity 4 and is then able to flow through the aperture 6′ in the second connecting portion 10 and into the lower cavity 5.
Because the ends 14, 15 of the cavities 4, 5 are open, concrete is able to flow through into an aligned cavity 4, 5 in an adjacent wail section 1.
Once the concrete has set the result is a very strong wall similar to a wall cast in situ due to the fact that all the adjacent wall sections 1 are connected by set concrete in adjacent cavities 4, 5
In a preferred method of building a free-standing wall, the foot portion 3 is located in a trench dug prior to placing the wall sections in aligned positions to form the wall. Once the wall sections are in position, further concrete is poured into the trench and around the foot portion 3 in order to make the wall more secure and to compensate for any irregularities or unevenness either in the base 31 of the precast wall section units or in the surface upon which they are placed.
Referring now to
When wall sections 1 are positioned side by side so as to form a free-standing wall, the end faces 20, 22 are in contact and these recesses 11,12,11′,12′,11″,12″ align to form a further vertical cylindrical cavity. When concrete is poured in to create the connected wall, the cylindrical cavities thus formed are also filled with concrete which acts to create an even stronger completed wall by bonding together adjacent end faces 20, 22
These reinforcing rods 15 serve both to reinforce the additional concrete received within the cavities 4, 5 and also to brace the front face portion 7 and the rear face portion 8 together.
The recesses 13, 14 are formed during moulding of the wall section 1 by attaching a number of threaded pipes to the interior of the mould using a magnet. After the concrete has set in the mould the pipes are removed leaving a plurality of threaded recesses 13, 14 in the internal surfaces 17, 18 of each of the front and rear face portions 7, 8, into which a reinforcing rod 15 may be inserted. In particular the threaded pipes create correspondingly aligned threaded recesses 13, 14 in the front and rear face portions 7, 8. A first part of a reinforcing rod is inserted into a recess 13 in an internal surface 17 of the front wall portion 7 and a second part of a reinforcing rod is inserted into a recess 14 in an internal surface 18 of the rear wall portion 8. The two aligned rod parts are then clamped together and tightened so that the front face portion 7 and rear face portion 8 are held together.
As well as reinforcing the resulting wall and holding the front and rear face portions 7, 8 together, the use of the short reinforcing rods has another advantage. Once a number of wall sections 1 have been aligned to form a free-standing wall, longer reinforcing rods 16 may be introduced into the cavities 4, 5 of the wall portion 2 substantially perpendicularly to the short reinforcing rods 15. The longer reinforcing rods 16 rest on the shorter reinforcing rods 15 and span the full width of the wall section 1 and thus serve as further reinforcement for the resulting wall. A single long reinforcing rod is shown schematically in
Whilst the term concrete is used throughout is will be clear that the present invention extends to wall sections which may be cast from any material having properties similar to those of concrete, and which may be cast in a similar manner.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0921309.1 | Dec 2009 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB2010/052018 | 12/3/2010 | WO | 00 | 8/20/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2011/067605 | 6/9/2011 | WO | A |
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