A number of factors related to the incorporation of large masses of students during the previous decade, led from 1970 on to an increased demand for schools, a demand that should be met in a short period, something which could not be achieved with the methods and resources used so far. Driven by the emergence of the plan of Basic Secondary Schools in the Countryside (ESBEC) the following tasks were immediately undertaken:
Given the required massiveness and the existing economic and technical conditions, the system to be designed should meet, as closely as possible, the following general conditions:
This resulted in what is known as the Girón Building System, which consists of precast reinforced and prestressed concrete components designed to be produced in fixed production facilities from which they would be transported to different assembly sites. Once the system was designed, production facilities were built in different regions of the country so demand would be met even in the most remote locations. The large volume of school buildings also required a new organizational structure, so specialized construction brigades were organized, equipped with cranes and other necessary equipment; these in turn were divided in sub-brigades for foundations, assembly and terminations, which allowed that the same brigade could work sequentially in different sites. The system has proven its flexibility for design, to the point that its use has spread to all social buildings, such as hospitals, hotels, offices, etc., and together with the established material and organizational base has allowed to satisfy a good part of the existing demand. General characteristics:It is essentially composed by a reinforced concrete skeleton structure with flooring formed by reinforced or prestressed ribbed concrete slabs with a Double-T cross section. The outer walls and partitions are also of reinforced concrete. Some of them contribute to resisting the horizontal forces acting as diaphragm walls when the skeleton is insufficient for this purpose, with the peculiarity that these diaphragm walls do not have to coincide in the same vertical plane or continue down to the foundation, facts that makes the composition of each floor level easier for the architects. The structure can withstand working loads or overloads of 300 and 600 Kg/m2, wind pressures of 175 kg/m2 and earthquakes up to grade 7, according to the M.S.K scale. The system allows a modular network of 6.00 x 6.00 m or 6.00 x 7.50 m or or any combination thereof. Buildings up to 5 levels with 3.30 m floor to floor heights can be built with this system. In buildings of one to two levels, floor heights of 4.20 m are possible in the ground floor. Components:Structural frame's breakdown:
Connection between the frame's parts:
Connection between frame and panels:
Prefabricated System's components:According to their function they can be categorized into the groups described below:
Production Facilities:In the late '70s there were 20 plants producing system components in the country. The elements are manufactured in metal molds, and in some plants, exceptionally, closure panels and divisions were fabricated using vertical molding batteries or basculating tables. In the other plants they were made through stackable horizontal molding. Technical and Economic Indices:Structure (not including foundations, closures and partition walls)
Design Systematizing:In order to facilitate the design of Girón structures 6 different brochures have been published giving designers from different specialties the information needed for developing their projects.Within this information, vertical loads for most of the possible layouts are included, as are a series of graphics and tables which allow a quick selection of the required types of columns, vases and foundations. The drawings of standard details have also been printed, so that the time devoted to preparing each project's documentation is greatly reduced. Source: L. Abrahantes, R. RodrÃguez, R. Barbosa, R. Togores, E. MarÃn, Informe sobre el Plan de Construcciones Escolares, circa 1982. |
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