General Carowinds discussion
User avatar
By Axel
#73368
These look like tons of cuts in the new concrete.... anyone have any idea what they would do that for?

walkway 031815.png
walkway 031815.png (235.77KiB)Viewed 2870 times
User avatar
By Axel
#73371
^ my question was serious. are you implying they are not cuts, or that the reason for them should be obvious?
User avatar
By DavidW
#73372
They are cut so that if the concrete breaks from expanding/settling, it will likely break along those lines. If you look at any concrete work, you will see those types of lines cut.
By uscbandfan
#73375
I thought (which is confirmed by that article) that control joints are cut vertically, not horizontally. These cuts here are cross cuts (horizontal cuts). Seems to me they're for aesthetic reasons.

Never know. Maybe they're gonna lay lights in them and have effects on the entrance way, That'd be cool.
By phlake
#73377
That article was specific to masonry structures (ie, vertical brick walls). For concrete pavements there is no practical distinction between "horizontal" and "vertical". For trafficways, there is "longitudinal" (in the direction of traffic) and transverse (perpendicular to traffic), but all pavement is laid roughly horizontal.

When designing the jointing for concrete pavements or sidewalks, the contraction (cut) joints are placed in order to provide a weak spot in the concrete. The nature of the material is such that the concrete WILL crack; contraction joints help to control where those cracks will occur.

As the concrete expands and contracts, it does so in all directions, not just in the direction of the traffic flow. Because of this movement, you can typically expect cracks to occur at specific intervals. The interval of cracking is based on the thickness of the pavement primarily (thicker pavement can resist cracking for longer distances). Because the concrete is expanding in both directions, the "panels" between cuts need to be roughly square. Very rectangular panels will correctly control the cracking in one direction, but will often develop an unsightly crack down the middle in the other direction.

Looking at these two walkways, notice that the freshly poured concrete on each side of the state line strip is roughly one third the wide of the total walking area on the bridge's walkway. Therefore, you'll need approximately three times as many cuts to keep the panels "square" on the state line side than we saw on the bridge side.


I hope this helps clear up any issues for you. Please let me know if you have any other pavement questions.
By waross
#73379
HavenHamilton wrote:I do have one more technical question. If you step on a crack, does it break your mother's back?



I do know that if you smoke on crack, it breaks your mother's heart.
User avatar
By Jarsh
#73380
I'm wondering if the area where the state line path flares out next to the edge of the circular area won't be for something distinguishing the different states, like what was originally shown in the animation, just further up.
User avatar
By Chris
#73381
coasterbruh wrote:You really do like them huh lol! What do they taste like?

When done right, they are pretty amazing. I realize that doesn't answer your question. :mrgreen:
By uscbandfan
#73383
Would love to see an arial photo of the area where the two parking lots meet and the drop-off lot. Would be neat to see how the old ties in with the new.
By uscbandfan
#73384
Does anyone know whether they powerwash or clean the pavers in any way when construction is done or do they just let them alone and let the sand remove itself naturally via wind or rain? They look like they are a lot more red than they currently appear.
User avatar
By FamousAmos
#73385
They will bring in a water truck and powerwash everything before Media Day.
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