Roman Concrete - Printable Version +- RomanArmyTalk (https://www.romanarmytalk.com/rat) +-- Forum: Research Arena (https://www.romanarmytalk.com/rat/forumdisplay.php?fid=4) +--- Forum: Roman Military History & Archaeology (https://www.romanarmytalk.com/rat/forumdisplay.php?fid=8) +--- Thread: Roman Concrete (/showthread.php?tid=17211) |
Roman Concrete - Astiryu1 - 07-27-2010 According to Rome:Total War (an event window that pops up) The "Porticus Aemilia" near the Tiber was the First Concrete building. In the message it states that it consisted of: Rubble Mortar Volcanic Ash Water and formed inside of wooden moulds. I wonder if there is more detail and if anyone knows or has tried the mixture ratios. Re: Roman Concrete - Nathan Ross - 07-27-2010 It was the earliest in Rome, apparently. The Porticus Aemila was a huge warehouse building beside the Tiber docks, originally brick but rebuilt in concrete in 174BC. There's a short description of it, with diagram, here (lower half of the page). There were probably older concrete buildings around the Bay of Naples area, but they're lost to erosion now. The Romans were using underwater (hydraulic) concrete down there around the 3rd-2nd centuries BC. A couple of interesting sites: Roman Concrete Research An Analysis of Hydraulic Cement in Roman Maritime Structures - Nathan Re: Roman Concrete - Astiryu1 - 07-27-2010 Excellent! Thank You Very Much. I am into construction methods and hoped someone could relay something like this. I am complete crap at researching stuff on the internet and pointers like this give me valuable sites to go off of. Re: Roman Concrete - diyapolis - 07-27-2010 hi I live turkey for the add, I'm from Turkish sites. If tolbar google, you can turn to their own language. Thank you. http://www.restoraturk.com/koruma-ve-re ... harci.html Romans, especially in the underground tunnels were used rock salt too. Rock salt is a feature that hardens over time. A tunnel is made of rock salt is very difficult to break down or drill. Re: Roman Concrete - Epictetus - 07-28-2010 Craig, have you looked at Vitruvius? Here he discusses concrete. If you are interested in Roman building methods I bet you will love most of this work. I find him fascinating. Re: Roman Concrete - Astiryu1 - 07-28-2010 Awesome! Now I have seen Vitruvius. I am impressed. Re: Roman Concrete - sulla felix - 07-28-2010 If you are into methods and techniques then the book Roman Building: Methods and Techniques by Jean Pierre Adam is simply the only book to consider. Expensive, so maybe a library loan. I bought the first edition some years ago and it is a fantastic book. Re: Roman Concrete - Eleatic Guest - 07-29-2010 Early concrete vaulting: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Roman_domes Re: Roman Concrete - Robert - 07-30-2010 Thanks for the tip, Barry. I went and ordered it. Who knows, I may have a Roman villa to build someday ..... Re: Roman Concrete - jvrjenivs - 07-30-2010 Quote:If you are into methods and techniques then the book Roman Building: Methods and Techniques by Jean Pierre Adam is simply the only book to consider. Expensive, so maybe a library loan. I bought the first edition some years ago and it is a fantastic book. Yes, indeed highly recommended. Re: Roman Concrete - sulla felix - 07-31-2010 Quote:Thanks for the tip, Barry. I went and ordered it. Who knows, I may have a Roman villa to build someday ..... Then this is the book for you! :lol: Good luck with that villa. |