Local News>Concrete expert raises
quality test alarm
Mark Titus - Business Writer
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Jamaica is without a proper testing facility to ensure that the highest
quality standards of concrete and other building inputs are maintained
in construction projects, and one local expert is sounding a warning about
the dire consequences of the continued absence of a concrete laboratory.
Dr Robin Osborne, associate professor at the faculty of the built environment
at University of Technology (UTech) has suggested that concrete mixing
and application in Jamaica leaves much to be desired and raises serious
quality issues.
Osborne was the man retained back in 2006 as a consultant by local manufacturers
Caribbean Cement Company Limited (CCCL) to investigate the impact of the
release of some 550 tonnes of faulty cement into the market.
He is recommending improvements in concrete technology and the setting
up of a laboratory for testing concrete and other construction inputs.
Testing Services in Jamaica
"I would be a bit uneasy to say that I can completely go to sleep
on what I see offered for testing services in Jamaica," Osborne said.
"Jamaica needs to look very rigorously at its quality of testing
services for concrete and other input material," he warned during
an address at Wednesday's concrete conference in Kingston.
According to Osborne, an authority on concrete testing in the Caribbean,
both the private sector and the Government stand to benefit from the savings
to be had from the prevention of substandard building. Such testing, he
asserts is essential in the Government's bid to build low-cost housing.
"The cost of research and testing intelligently managed is far less
(than the cost of substandard building in terms of) the savings it would
produce."
Asserting that, "When you don't have good labs you make wrong measurements,"
Osborne said he has made representation to the management of the cement
company for the firm to spearhead the setting up of a benchmark laboratory
in Jamaica.
The facility, he maintained, should be made accessible to the public
and should provide consistent and reliable results.
Examine Building Practices
Osborne said that the cement investigation gave him an opportunity to
visit construction sites across Jamaica and examine building practices
up close to determine the extent of the problem caused by the bad cement.
"I am not hiding the fact that there were serious problems (with
the cement at that time), but I found instances in the field where there
was insufficient professional diligence."
The construction expert is of the view that the absence of the lab has
led to poor construction practices, including engineers being sometimes
guilty of not giving proper assessment.
The failure of home builders to employ professionals has led, he contended,
to the mismanagement of building material.
Between October 2005 and February 2006, CCCL, the monopoly cement maker
was forced to recall the substandard product and suspend production, sparking
a crisis in the construction sector that shut down building projects and
put tens of thousands of persons out of work temporarily.
CCCL explained the fiasco as, "The inadvertent release of non-conforming
cement to the market."
It has since autopsied its failed quality control procedures and corrected
the problems, under the watch of the Bureau of Standards, which has since
stepped up its monitoring and now does daily batch-by-batch testing of
cement coming off the Rockfort, Kingston bagging line.
mark.titus@gleanerjm.com
The Financial Gleaner
The Financial Gleaner
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