jar546
CBO
I recently observed a large apartment project in Florida, where the entire structural system was built out of cast-in-place reinforced concrete. What stood out was the method: large steel gang forms, resembling container boxes, were craned into position to create one apartment “box” at a time. Concrete was poured in place, allowed to cure, then the forms were stripped and moved to the next unit.
The end result looks like a stack of concrete boxes, side by side and then above, until the building takes shape. Unlike slipforming, which is a continuous pour with moving forms, this system waits for curing between cycles. It is also different from precast modular construction, since every element is poured and finished on site.
The industry-standard description for this is:
Cast-in-place reinforced concrete box construction using large steel gang formwork, cycled floor by floor.
This method is often used on mid-rise apartment projects because it provides durability, fire resistance, and speed once the formwork system is in place. It also has implications for inspection, shoring, and sequencing since each “box” is structurally monolithic once cured.
Has anyone else seen this method used in your jurisdictions?
The end result looks like a stack of concrete boxes, side by side and then above, until the building takes shape. Unlike slipforming, which is a continuous pour with moving forms, this system waits for curing between cycles. It is also different from precast modular construction, since every element is poured and finished on site.
The industry-standard description for this is:
Cast-in-place reinforced concrete box construction using large steel gang formwork, cycled floor by floor.
This method is often used on mid-rise apartment projects because it provides durability, fire resistance, and speed once the formwork system is in place. It also has implications for inspection, shoring, and sequencing since each “box” is structurally monolithic once cured.
Has anyone else seen this method used in your jurisdictions?