Debris to be reused for construction
12/01/2020, JOHN L. PAUL , K.A. MARTIN,KOCHI
Almost everything of the over 70,000 tonnes of debris from the apartment blocks brought down through implosion at Maradu will be transported to yards spread over 10.6 acres at Aroor and Chadiroor within 70 days to be reused for construction.
The demolition contractor will be responsible for segregating the debris and retrieving steel (the reinforcements) for reuse in civil works, in the course of the coming 45 days. The rest of the debris will be cut to size ranging from 6 mm to 20 mm, using rubble master, a concrete-and demolition-downsizing machine, and transported to the yards, sources said.
This aggregate can be used to construct roads and solid blocks used for buildings, said Achyuth Joseph, partner of Aluva-based Prompt Enterprises, which bagged the tender to remove the debris for ₹35.16 lakh.
“The rubble master machine, imported from Austria, is expected to arrive in Kochi on January 20. The debris that is sorted to standardised sizes can be used for making floor tiles, hollow bricks, and for paving roads. They would be of better quality than aggregate sources locally, due to their improved adhesive property.”
The debris of H2O Holy Faith and Jain Coral Cove apartments can be fully reused, since they have been built using hollow bricks.
The rubble from Alpha Serene and Golden Kayaloram can be used for filling basement of buildings, since they were built using bricks, which may be tough to be downsized to standardised pieces, he said.
“Overall, we are equipped to remove 300 loads of debris from the five sites every day, in covered trucks. Guidelines issued by the Kerala State Pollution Control Board will be adhered to,” Mr. Joseph added.
12/01/2020, JOHN L. PAUL , K.A. MARTIN,KOCHI
Almost everything of the over 70,000 tonnes of debris from the apartment blocks brought down through implosion at Maradu will be transported to yards spread over 10.6 acres at Aroor and Chadiroor within 70 days to be reused for construction.
The demolition contractor will be responsible for segregating the debris and retrieving steel (the reinforcements) for reuse in civil works, in the course of the coming 45 days. The rest of the debris will be cut to size ranging from 6 mm to 20 mm, using rubble master, a concrete-and demolition-downsizing machine, and transported to the yards, sources said.
This aggregate can be used to construct roads and solid blocks used for buildings, said Achyuth Joseph, partner of Aluva-based Prompt Enterprises, which bagged the tender to remove the debris for ₹35.16 lakh.
“The rubble master machine, imported from Austria, is expected to arrive in Kochi on January 20. The debris that is sorted to standardised sizes can be used for making floor tiles, hollow bricks, and for paving roads. They would be of better quality than aggregate sources locally, due to their improved adhesive property.”
The debris of H2O Holy Faith and Jain Coral Cove apartments can be fully reused, since they have been built using hollow bricks.
The rubble from Alpha Serene and Golden Kayaloram can be used for filling basement of buildings, since they were built using bricks, which may be tough to be downsized to standardised pieces, he said.
“Overall, we are equipped to remove 300 loads of debris from the five sites every day, in covered trucks. Guidelines issued by the Kerala State Pollution Control Board will be adhered to,” Mr. Joseph added.
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