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Updated: July 8th, 2008 05:26 PM EDT

Concrete Meets History

Cleveland Cement Contractors covers the concrete work on the restoration of the 216-year-old Virginia Capitol
The Capitol’s central structure, built in the late 1700s, has no concrete foundation, but is supported by brick walls 4 to 6 ft. thick.
Cleveland Cement Contractors installed a new concrete mechanical tunnel on the grounds of the Virginia State Capitol.

Rebecca Wasieleski
By Rebecca Wasieleski


Clay Haselden, senior project manager with Cleveland Cement, explains that the building had to remain fully functional and was occupied by the Virginia General Assembly and other Capitol tenants while much of the outside construction was taking place.

“The skin was being removed from one end of the building and we were digging a tunnel on the other end while people were still working inside,” Haselden says. “When the governor had a meeting we had to quit digging holes or stop running heavy equipment outside his window.”

The majority of Cleveland Cement’s exterior work was on the visitor center and security entrance extension. The Capitol’s south portico was shored and underpinned with jet-grouted columns and a 60-ft. deep slurry wall. Then the site was shored and excavated from 30 ft. at the existing building and tapered down toward the street. The hillside extension eventually will be covered by dirt and the new entrance will open up at street level.

“Because it’s underground, there is an extensive waterproofing system,” Murphy says. “This site was pretty dry because it was just an open cut to an existing street, so the water all drained down toward the street. We encountered very little water problems. But the problems we did run into were with existing utilities — some are 150 years old, like brick sewer lines that you excavate underneath and they collapse. (Replacement of these lines is part of the restoration.) With a lot of these utilities, no one ever knew where anything was. The records that predated the Civil War that would have recorded where utilities were, if there ever were any, are lost.”

Cleveland Cement also built a new concrete mechanical tunnel that ties into the extension, and in an existing concrete mechanical tunnel Cleveland made repairs by sealing exposed rebar with a noncorrosive bonding agent and sealing up the walls.

Inside work

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