In most completed building
projects, the items of work either classified as wall or associated with the
use of block/bricks normally constitutes at least 20 percent of the total
volume of work done. Now that’s substantial. Block/Brick wall often extends
from the substructure through to the superstructure and extensively, the
external works. In Nigeria, the most common types of walls built till date are made
from hollow sandcrete blocks which come in standard widths of 6 and 9-inches
(i.e. 150 and 225mm). Although in some parts of the country, there is appreciable
use for solid sandcrete blocks.
There is also a growing
market for baked Redbricks, Polyblocks, Lateritic Coldbricks, Nvarsform, Hydraform,
Ecobrava, etc. as well as hollow and solid concrete blocks made from crushed
stones. But put together, they still accounts for less than 50% of the total
existing wall forms in modern construction in the local industry. For medium
and large sites, it has been observed that the time taken to produce
blocks/bricks readily available for use is often mismanaged thereby
contributing largely to project overstay.
On the one hand, contractors have
overtime observed that relying on supply of blocks/bricks from a production
factory increases the overall project costs and do not always guarantee desired
quality and speed of delivery; therefore it becomes imperative or perhaps reasonable
to produce on site.
Visits to several estate
project sites across the country recently reveal that the old single-or
double-mould block machine is still in common use. When asked why they choose
to stick to the old ways of doing things, they often lament that they do not
have reliable information on how to get mass block/brick production machines
and may equally not know how to use them. Working with a unit of the popular
single-mold machine, workers are only able to produce some 300-500 blocks per
day (i.e. 8-hour construction time). Then the down-times which are pretty-more
frequent than the new variants. These low production capacities measured
against time spur contractors of sizeable sites to acquire some more units of
the same ‘old-clog’ machine just to beat time. But why have 3 units of the same
machines with 3 different operators each and their respective 4-man supports to
produce say 1000 blocks a day when with just a single gang you can produce 1000
or more blocks a day using a single unit of mass-production machine? Ironically,
its penny foolish, pound foolish.
Furthermore, using variants
of multi-mould machine erases the cost associated with the use of block
palettes (i.e. the sitting table/plank for freshly-molded blocks) which as at
December 2016 goes for an average price of 400 Naira per piece. The new machine
class literarily lay blocks directly on the floor as it pulls along. In-tune
contractors and block makers are fast trading-off their old machines for the
new variants. Interestingly, most of these machines possess higher compression potentials
and come with automatic mould changing functions. Some users order for those
with trio-capacities; for produces blocks, lateritic bricks and concrete pavers
together. For mega projects, machines
with installed capacities of 3000 - 5,000 bricks/blocks per day are highly
recommended. It is believed that the market for these new machine variants
would increase rapidly in coming months.
nice blog thank you for sharing
ReplyDeleteInvisible Grilles