I see some constructions in my area where I live for commercial buildings. I was wondering how the heck the walls just sprung up over night. I did not know that those were molded and poured on site and just lifted up after the concrete hardened. I did not know that there are such thing as wax coating to prevent the freshly poured concrete stick to the slab. Thanks to your video, now I know how the walls sprung up like mushroom overnight... 😀 👍👍
That's an awesome Job! did you use a laser screed to pour all the panels that you showed towards the very end of your video? what brand of adhesive do you use for the form kickers and reveals? Thanks! I think you guys did a great job!
When we set them they are set on shims, then grout is poured all around the bottom. On this particular project, the panels fix to each other overlapping and grouted
@@rockyfrance Thanks. I see these tilt up warehouses and other buildings going up around me. I see the welding going on at the roof trusses but never really see anything going on at the ground level. I thought there may be a key way at the floor slab that the panels slip into when they are hoisted into place. Thanks again.
@stevengiles346 we actually poured out footers and left the floor 2 ft back from the footers so the walls set directly on the footers with shims. After the building is built , we came back and poured the 2 ft strip all the around the building, which helps lock it in.
Walls lock in when trusses are set and welds are made at embeds on panel joints. Then closure strip is poured to lock walls in on bottom. Closure strip usually is around 6-12ft depends on how building is tilted with crane. and closure strip ties into your existing slab of building @@stevengiles346