Skip to content
Category

Concrete buildings and structures

page 1
reinforced concrete
composite building material
Roman concrete
building material used in construction during the late Roman Republic
prestressed concrete
form of concrete used in construction
formwork
thumb|Animation depicting construction of multi-story building using aluminum handset formwork. thumb|Modular steel frame formwork for a foundation. Rebar has been stubbed up out of the concrete slab to form the base of future [[columns]] thumb|upright|Timber formwork for a concrete column. Adjustable metal screw jacks both stabilize and plumb the form thumb|Aluminum formwork system thumb|Sketch of the side view of traditional timber formwork used to form a flight of stairs thumb|Placing a wall form. A matching form will be placed on the opposite side to create the space to pour concrete into
blockhouse
thumb|Completed in 1750, Fort Edward (Nova Scotia)|Fort Edward, Nova Scotia in Canada is the oldest remaining military blockhouse in [[North America.]] thumb|upright|Reconstructed European wooden [[keep at Saint-Sylvain-d'Anjou, France, has a strong resemblance to a North American western frontier log blockhouse]]
Arch of Reunification
Pyongyang Monument
concrete slab
common structural element of modern buildings
pillbox
concrete dug-in guard posts, normally equipped with loopholes through which to fire weapons
large panel system building
building constructed of large, prefabricated concrete slabs
arch dam
solid dam made of concrete that is curved upstream in plan
Schwerbelastungskörper
thumb|'''' thumb|View of one of the unrestored instrument rooms inside the thumb|One of the posters at the site with information about Albert Speer's construction plans for the triumphal arch thumb|Height comparison between the triumphal arches of Germania and Paris The '''''' (German: "heavy load-exerting body") is a large concrete cylinder located at the intersection of Dudenstraße, General-Pape-Straße, and Loewenhardtdamm in the northwestern part of the borough of Tempelhof in Berlin, Germany. It was built by Adolf Hitler's chief architect Albert Speer to determine the feasibility of const
arch-gravity dam
dam with the characteristics of both an arch dam and a gravity dam
precast concrete
construction product produced by casting concrete in a reusable mold
buttress dam
dam with a solid, water-tight upstream side that is supported at intervals on the downstream side by a series of buttresses or supports
Brasilia TV Tower
architectural structure
Sibelius Museum
museum in Turku, Finland
roller-compacted concrete
special blend of concrete
Monument to the Negev Brigade
sculpture by Dani Karavan
concrete cover
thickness of concrete above the reinforcement bars
waffle slab
concrete flooring structural system
Friedenskirche (Monheim-Baumberg)
church building in Germany
BIS Tower
administrative tower and headquarters of the Bank for International Settlements in the city of Basel, Switzerland
Cathedral of the Redeemer
the cathedral church of the Reformed Episcopal Church of Spain
Abel Tasman Monument
monument in New Zealand
housing series
types of apartment buildings