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Structures and Construction in Historic Building Conservation

Front Cover
Michael Forsyth
1 Review
John Wiley & Sons, Apr 15, 2008 - Technology & Engineering - 248 pages
Structures & Construction in Historic Building Conservation traces the history of structures in various materials and contains guidance on the survey, assessment and diagnosis of structures and the integration of building code requirements within the historic fabric.

It discusses conservation engineering philosophy, exposes the conflict between building codes and conservation legislation, and offers solutions. Leading-edge, on-site metric survey techniques are described and a range of structural advice is given, including methods of repair in relation to philosophical principles. Causes of induced movement in historic buildings are explained, together with basic soil mechanics and the assessment and diagnosis of structural failure. Chapters also cover the conservation of different types of construction: masonry, iron and steel, and concrete and reinforced concrete.

Fourteen chapters written by the experts present today's key issues in structures and construction for historic building conservation: Bill Blake, Michael Bussell, David Cook, Dina F. D'Ayala, Steve Emery, Michael Forsyth, Ian Hume, Peter Norris.
  

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Good, but from what I have seen... the use of reflectorless survey shots and the data collected have mixed results depending on the type of equipment used (Leica better than others) and many other factors. "Redundancy" is the best way to prove that your data is True & Corrrect

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About the author (2008)

Dr Michael Forsyth, Director of Studies in Historic Building Conservation, University of Bath, UK.

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