16 weeks and the first floor is in. Hats of to the organisation of this operation and to the workers. It is plesure to watch the workmenship of differend disciplines working close together in a commen goal. 👒 👒 off!!
Thank you for all your hard work putting this video series together. It has been interesting and fascinating to watch the progress and little setbacks since day one and I am looking forward to many more interesting weeks of progress to come. ;)
Hello H C, another awesome and busy video, that was a massive amount of concrete. All trades working flat out but a big shout out to the steel workers on the lift shaft and the concrete finishers after the big pour. Thanks for all you're hard work producing the video but remember to stay safe 😷
@@sydneyshinshi easy money perhaps. But I'm sure the stress factor is way up constantly maneuvering and picking and setting things all day long, every day. Would be interesting to know if they have the same operator every day, or have substitutes. Just the thought of being in that cab 8 or 10 hours, every day......
acabo de ver do Brasil as 22:20 do dia 27/06/2020 mais uma grande show da construção americana, como os trabalhadores americanos trabalham bem como o trabalho é bem feito e coordenado parabéns a todos trabalhadores dessa grande obra, abraço a todos
Great series! The Sonotube round column forms is confounding to me! How can that be economical vs reusable steel or fiberglass forms? Maybe it's due to site storage limitations.
Re removal of wall concrete, sometimes the concrete doesn't test right so they have to remove and replace it. Supplier or its insurance has to eat the removal and replacement cost.
My ex wife used to test concrete in the middle of the night in Cairo when USAID were building pyramidal hospitals there back in the late 80s, iirc. When she found they had used sea sand instead of the proper construction sand, she could tell because it contained shells, she made them dig and chisel out the whole night's pour. In that case the concrete supplier got to pay the bill for the work and then supply new concrete to the required spec.
Not anybody sitting around or having a smoke break. Seems to be small groups, 10 or so working with their section of the project. I have not seen an identifiable boss or supervisor. Worker seem to know jobs well and work flow is very organized. I have seen no injuries or accidents.
With (meyer629)....also see if the site super on the next job put a camera on the boom (trolley hook) looking down sync it with another camera looking at the job. See what happens.
Do you know how tall this building is going to be? Since they installed tower mounted concrete pumper booms it looks like this will most likely exceed the California Pacific Medical Center in height. As to the concrete pours I am surprised we have not seen any of those Ride on cement trowels like we saw during the CPMC construction. On the topic of cement it was about time they used the booms to fill up the column casts instead of the bucket. As always great video!
I don't have access to the final plans, and the only actual plans I've seen are from years ago and likely out of date. However, this may give you a general idea: handelarchitects.com/project/1001-van-ness
HC, what is that re-bar cage they are building? Since this a senior citizen building is that going to be the pharmacy? It will take an effort to get in that without the combination or key.
That structure of heavy re-bar is a structural element designed to resist earthquake loads, which will try to move the bottom of the building out from under the top floors. If that were allowed to happen those skinny concrete columns, which do a good job of holding up vertical loads (the weight of the floors above) would do almost nothing to keep the upper floors in place below the moving lower floors. That would cause those columns to break up, and the building would fall. The strong structural walls are designed to force all the floors to move horizontally as a unit, and thus avoiding bending and breaking the skinny columns. They have to be very strong, as you can see by all the re-bar. A strong earthquake can generate horizontal accelerations on the order of one "g," that is equal to the force of gravity. To resist that load the shear walls have to be able to support a horizontal load in the order of all the weight above them. As an approximation, we can think of it this way: if the building were turned on it's side, supported only by the foundation, those walls would have to be able to keep the upper floors from falling to the ground.
@@constructionwatcher5381 thank you, it does look overbuilt. In the past several videos I could see a new bar added here and there. Was somebody looking that close to see a missed 4 bar half way up the side toward the camera?
someone please explain the rebar tying. does EVERY place they cross need to be tied? There can't be much structural benefit from the wire, so is the wire only to hold it all together before the walls get poured? Also, has the scaffolding been removed from the floor below already and it's being reused here, or does it stay longer and how long?
Yes, notice when they pour the vibrator to make it settle. That would push the rods apart if they weren't tied together. The scaffolding is used until the concrete is set enough to support it's own weight then it can be removed. This was a major factor in the Hard Rock Hotel collapse in New Orleans, when they went to remove it, it was buckling under the weight of the concrete that couldn't support itself.
Removing the scaffolding depends on the concrete mix used. Usually takes 2-3 weeks but if you use rapid hardened concrete mix, you can achieve the 90% strength in 3 days
Hospital Construction Sorry, I’m not complaining, I was just thinking out loud as I saw blue post tension cable on the upper floors but not on this above ground lower floor.
❓❓ To the left of elevator shaft is a 2 x 4 wooden fall railing covered with orange plastic fencing. I think it is still open to the floor below in that area. Earliest part of video, during the large floor pour, multiple truck loads of concrete were offloaded just outside the orange fencing area. I saw no concrete pumper or hoses in that area so I think that concrete was going to a lower floor. Anyone have any idea where those multiple concrete loads were actually going❓❓
That’s a shotcrete pump for a crew doing some interior walls of some sort. They don’t move concrete quite so fast. You can see them set up on Tuesday morning on the street to the right rear and they work on finishing the back wall.
The entrance to the parking garage is on the opposite side of the building, half way up the street on the right. See handelarchitects.com/project/1001-van-ness -- the 5th image down shows it clearly.
@@notatoad after a big earthquake in albania I had to check for column damage in her apertament building. It was hard knowing which one was an actual Column so this is important information for me and others
Question: in the thumbnail for this video a worker is cutting a circle out of wood. It will be used to secure the sonotubes at the top and bottom. What kind of wood is it? And about how thick? It's really thick. Thanks.
At 38:20 you can see a good close-up of one of them in place. Clearly two sheets of plywood, together about as thick as the 2 by 4, or 1 1/2 inches. So looks like two sheets of 3/4" ply.
This is not even 80% job. There are at least 4 notes I can call out this week only. concrete spacers on the columns and the first floor slab is one of them.
Спасибо! Каждые выходные смотрю ваши выпуски, отдыхаю .)
Translated from Russian "Thank! Every weekend I watch your releases, rest.)"
Another great video, HC! Always a Saturday morning treat on the east coast. Your music choices keep getting better. Thanks for all your hard work.
Good morning from the U.K. it’s Sunday STAY SAFE!
Another amazing video for the best construction channel on TH-cam keep up the great work 👍
16 weeks and the first floor is in.
Hats of to the organisation of this operation and to the workers.
It is plesure to watch the workmenship of differend disciplines working close together in a commen goal. 👒 👒 off!!
Thank you for all your hard work putting this video series together. It has been interesting and fascinating to watch the progress and little setbacks since day one and I am looking forward to many more interesting weeks of progress to come. ;)
very interesting layout, uneven floors and interesting walls pop up everywhere
Hello H C, another awesome and busy video, that was a massive amount of concrete. All trades working flat out but a big shout out to the steel workers on the lift shaft and the concrete finishers after the big pour. Thanks for all you're hard work producing the video but remember to stay safe 😷
Considering how much fun I had screeding just one 11'x11' slab, these guys do an amazing job with no guides but the MK-I eyeball.
very nice, tell next week . Thanks
I like the Tuesday clouds! Way cool
and with 5/19/20 the first floor " floor" is fully laid , north & south. nice job and video. Music give a happy accomplished rhythm. Big set completed
Love your time laps and the Music is great too keep them up i love them thank you
22:18 That how you do it properly in the construction industry for the columns way faster. And also one pours from the top no sideways...!!!👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Would be exciting to see from the crane operators perspective! Poor guy has to stay up there all day!
Big money and easy work.
@@sydneyshinshi easy money perhaps. But I'm sure the stress factor is way up constantly maneuvering and picking and setting things all day long, every day. Would be interesting to know if they have the same operator every day, or have substitutes. Just the thought of being in that cab 8 or 10 hours, every day......
Wow I'm not sure the crane driver wants to see how much that tower moves around its Scary just to watch it awesome Vlog thanks
He knows how much a tower moves.
acabo de ver do Brasil as 22:20 do dia 27/06/2020 mais uma grande show da construção americana, como os trabalhadores americanos trabalham bem como o trabalho é bem feito e coordenado parabéns a todos trabalhadores dessa grande obra, abraço a todos
Great video!
Can someone please comment my comment!
Nice , good successful!!!
Great stuff, keep them coming. Music works at 1/2 playback speed 😀
Great series! The Sonotube round column forms is confounding to me! How can that be economical vs reusable steel or fiberglass forms? Maybe it's due to site storage limitations.
Good Morning from Germany 963 ;-)
44:53 lol has his pants like rapper !
Lol I see that that is funny
I wondered if anyone would notice that except me
Starts the deck pour before 9am in the left hand corner but do not return to complete the pour until around 5pm , boy that must be some cold joint
Greetings to all my fellow Umarelli
Learned a new word today! Hadn't heard that word before.
Re removal of wall concrete, sometimes the concrete doesn't test right so they have to remove and replace it. Supplier or its insurance has to eat the removal and replacement cost.
My ex wife used to test concrete in the middle of the night in Cairo when USAID were building pyramidal hospitals there back in the late 80s, iirc. When she found they had used sea sand instead of the proper construction sand, she could tell because it contained shells, she made them dig and chisel out the whole night's pour. In that case the concrete supplier got to pay the bill for the work and then supply new concrete to the required spec.
In that case wouldn't they need to remove the entire wall, not just the top 2-3'?
Super
super.
Not anybody sitting around or having a smoke break. Seems to be small groups, 10 or so working with their section of the project. I have not seen an identifiable boss or supervisor.
Worker seem to know jobs well and work flow is very organized. I have seen no injuries or accidents.
That bloke laying the ply on the thursday was a goer on his own but looks like he knocked off at 2pm. Must have had enough.
Lool that’s a one man job no need for a apprentice there’s no drops or Any need for cutting.
With (meyer629)....also see if the site super on the next job put a camera on the boom (trolley hook) looking down sync it with another camera looking at the job. See what happens.
Do you know how tall this building is going to be? Since they installed tower mounted concrete pumper booms it looks like this will most likely exceed the California Pacific Medical Center in height. As to the concrete pours I am surprised we have not seen any of those Ride on cement trowels like we saw during the CPMC construction. On the topic of cement it was about time they used the booms to fill up the column casts instead of the bucket. As always great video!
Have you read Hospital Construction's description, directly under the video? The very first line answers your question.
The ride on trowels will be making an appearance in a future episode. I would like to ride on one someday...
- Haha... that dude @ 33:54 needs a bigger come-a-long than the 3/4 ton he's using on pulling that wall corner in....
Hello colleagues. I am also a construction worker. Pleased to make your acquaintance and wish you all good health always happy
where do you buy those waterproof boots ? I never see them for sale :)
Wellington boots for men on Amazon - those ones?
@@peterdowning5846 Thanks, will look there
Hi from France.
Would it be possible to have access to the architects' final plans or drawings?
It's just to get an idea. Thank you ^^
I don't have access to the final plans, and the only actual plans I've seen are from years ago and likely out of date. However, this may give you a general idea: handelarchitects.com/project/1001-van-ness
@@HospitalConstruction Thank you. These drawings give me a general idea. Perfect
By min 14:45 they montage a strip on a steel column ... why is this? ( I'm a viewer from the Netherlands 🇳🇱) thanks...
so that the steel does not lie against the wall but is always surrounded by concrete
Dunkelwolke a ok...thanks
HC, what is that re-bar cage they are building? Since this a senior citizen building is that going to be the pharmacy? It will take an effort to get in that without the combination or key.
I think you are referring to the central core, which will be an elevator shaft as well as a major structural component.
That structure of heavy re-bar is a structural element designed to resist earthquake loads, which will try to move the bottom of the building out from under the top floors. If that were allowed to happen those skinny concrete columns, which do a good job of holding up vertical loads (the weight of the floors above) would do almost nothing to keep the upper floors in place below the moving lower floors. That would cause those columns to break up, and the building would fall.
The strong structural walls are designed to force all the floors to move horizontally as a unit, and thus avoiding bending and breaking the skinny columns. They have to be very strong, as you can see by all the re-bar. A strong earthquake can generate horizontal accelerations on the order of one "g," that is equal to the force of gravity. To resist that load the shear walls have to be able to support a horizontal load in the order of all the weight above them.
As an approximation, we can think of it this way: if the building were turned on it's side, supported only by the foundation, those walls would have to be able to keep the upper floors from falling to the ground.
@@constructionwatcher5381 thank you, it does look overbuilt. In the past several videos I could see a new bar added here and there. Was somebody looking that close to see a missed 4 bar half way up the side toward the camera?
someone please explain the rebar tying. does EVERY place they cross need to be tied? There can't be much structural benefit from the wire, so is the wire only to hold it all together before the walls get poured?
Also, has the scaffolding been removed from the floor below already and it's being reused here, or does it stay longer and how long?
Yes, notice when they pour the vibrator to make it settle. That would push the rods apart if they weren't tied together.
The scaffolding is used until the concrete is set enough to support it's own weight then it can be removed. This was a major factor in the Hard Rock Hotel collapse in New Orleans, when they went to remove it, it was buckling under the weight of the concrete that couldn't support itself.
usually ties with zig zag pattern leaving 3 or 4 in between
Removing the scaffolding depends on the concrete mix used. Usually takes 2-3 weeks but if you use rapid hardened concrete mix, you can achieve the 90% strength in 3 days
Thanks! Did I miss something or was it not necessary to post-tension this floor?
I can't and/or don't capture/show everything
Hospital Construction Sorry, I’m not complaining, I was just thinking out loud as I saw blue post tension cable on the upper floors but not on this above ground lower floor.
@@escapelevel1 No worries. Post tensioning isn't needed on some of the lower floors.
great music. Those guy's must be tired running around at that pace all day. Hope they get well paid!!!!
2nd comment in how many floors is this building
Probably as many as are mentioned in the very first line of the description, right below the video.
❓❓ To the left of elevator shaft is a 2 x 4 wooden fall railing covered with orange plastic fencing. I think it is still open to the floor below in that area. Earliest part of video, during the large floor pour, multiple truck loads of concrete were offloaded just outside the orange fencing area. I saw no concrete pumper or hoses in that area so I think that concrete was going to a lower floor. Anyone have any idea where those multiple concrete loads were actually going❓❓
It looks like below that is the entrance to the parking garage
Probably a stairwell between floors. The concrete was probably poured into vertical forms forming the stairwell walls.
That’s a shotcrete pump for a crew doing some interior walls of some sort. They don’t move concrete quite so fast. You can see them set up on Tuesday morning on the street to the right rear and they work on finishing the back wall.
The entrance to the parking garage is on the opposite side of the building, half way up the street on the right. See handelarchitects.com/project/1001-van-ness -- the 5th image down shows it clearly.
@@constructionwatcher5381 wow! That's a beautiful looking building!!!
why are some of the pillars circular and the others are square? why are they not all the same type
i _think_ it's because the square ones will be hidden inside walls, and the round ones will be exposed.
@@notatoad after a big earthquake in albania I had to check for column damage in her apertament building. It was hard knowing which one was an actual Column so this is important information for me and others
Sis, what is the title of the song?
Everything is listed in the description.
Quantos metros quadrados
👍
👍👍👍
1st comment! Love these videos.
You beat Hospital Construction to it this time. Congrats. :)
@@davidsilvera7436 He, he, he.
Question: in the thumbnail for this video a worker is cutting a circle out of wood. It will be used to secure the sonotubes at the top and bottom. What kind of wood is it? And about how thick? It's really thick.
Thanks.
prob multiple layers of plywood glued together to desired thickness.
He's cutting 2 sheets, probably mdf or plywood
At 38:20 you can see a good close-up of one of them in place. Clearly two sheets of plywood, together about as thick as the 2 by 4, or 1 1/2 inches. So looks like two sheets of 3/4" ply.
I was wondering Why Is there No Flag on the crain ?? Calif Or USA flag
There should be a "Hospital Construction Channel" flag there, of course!
@@HospitalConstruction go put one up at night!
👍✌️❤️
This is not even 80% job. There are at least 4 notes I can call out this week only. concrete spacers on the columns and the first floor slab is one of them.
hello