Krishna Institute of Engineering &technology: Ghaziabad
Krishna Institute of Engineering &technology: Ghaziabad
Krishna Institute of Engineering &technology: Ghaziabad
&TECHNOLOGY
Ghaziabad
ON
AT
(CPWD)
SUBMITTED BY:-
ALOKMISHRA
0902900015
(CE-3RD YEAR)
GUIDED BY:-
It is indeed a great pleasure and privilege to present this report on training at CPWD.
Thanks to all other CPWDofficials, operators and all other members of CPWD, yet
uncounted for their help in completing the project and see the light of success.
I am very thankful to friends, colleagues and all other persons who rendered their
assistance directly or indirectly to complete this project work successfully.
I extended my due thanks to Er. VINOD who gave mevaluable time and suggestions andg
uide me a lot at various stages of my Summer Training.
S.NO DESCRIPTION
1. INTRODUCTION
2. PROJECT OVERVIEW
3. SITE LOCATION
4. FORMWORK
5. PLANNING
7. PROJECT MONITORING
8. QUALITY
9. CONCLUSION
The Central Public Works Department of India is a Central Government owned authority that
is in charge of public sector works in the country. Central Public Works Department (CPWD)
under Ministry of Urban Development is entrusted with construction and maintenance of
buildings for most of the Central Government Departments, Public undertakings and
autonomous bodies.
In the Indian History both pre and post independence - CPWD has a glorious era of more than 150 year
with dedicated, energetic and committed corps of Engineers and Architects. Before being re-structured to
its present form in 1930 “Central Public Works Department” originated in July 1854 when the Governor
General of India decided to set up a Central Agency:
“to exercise universal control over public works in India with best of scientific knowledge with
authority & system”.
Central Public Works Department, Delhi is the premier agency of Govt. of India engaged in
planning, designing, construction and maintenance of Government assets in the field of built
environment and infrastructure development. Assets in built environment include Hospitals,
Schools, Colleges, Technical Institutes, Police Buildings, Prisons, Courtsetc; assets in
infrastructure development include Roads, Bridges, Flyovers, Footpaths, Subways etc.
CPWD Delhi also sustains and preserves these assets through a well developed system of
maintenance which includes amongst others specialized services like rehabilitation works, roads
signage and aesthetic treatments like interiors, monument lighting, landscaping.
MISSION
Central Public Works Department, I P Bhawan,New Delhi Page 5
1. Sound Planning and Design
2. Engineered Construction
3. Effective Maintenance
5. Capacity Building
7. Manpower Planning
8. Transparency in Management
3. Detailed planning of all services to make the buildings operational in all respects.
2.Engineered Construction
3.Effective Maintenance
5.Capacity Building
to:-
to government employees.
(2) Increase the office space thereby providing comfortable working environment
to government employees
7.Manpower Planning
CDO was created in the year 1969 with a view to provide higher level of design inputs in
multi-storeyed projects which could not be handled by the design units under Chief
Engineers. As pressures on availability of land increased, CPWD could utilize the services
of CDO for high rise built habitats and complex projects such as jetties and bridges. CDO
has provided its services to over 350 projects in CPWD and 35 projects in last four years
alone. Important projects designed by CDO are Parliament Library Complex, Parliament
Annexe Building, National Gallery of Modern Art, National Museum, Supreme Court
Extension, National Stadium, and Afghan Parliament in Kabul, Lal Bahadur Shastri
complex structures (with structural cost over Rs. 25 Crores) incorporating state of art
consultation process of BIS for framing new Codes and handbooks and thus setting
standards for the Construction Industry as a whole. CDO also offers its services in
Design Manuals, Fly ash utilization guidelines, and seismic assessment reports of critical
government buildings. CDO also develops computer aided design and planning software
CDO is headed by the Chief Engineer (Designs) who is responsible for the overall
administrative and technical control of the unit. Four Superintending Engineers directly
report to the C.E (Designs). S.Es are the direction officers for control, coordination and
execution of all tasks related to modelling analysis, design, detailing and drafting of
Cell CPWD responsible for e-Governance in the department. Each SE has three Executive
Engineer (Designs) reporting to him, who is responsible for all modelling, design and
drafting tasks and preparing design proposals. Each EE is assisted by a small team of Asst
Executive Engineers/ Asst Engineers, Junior Engineers and Draughtsmen. CDO is manned
All design and drafting work in CDO is fully computerised. Design and analysis is done by
using softwares such as STAAD, eTABS, STRUDS, SAP, STAADFoundation etc. Drafting
work is done through AUTOCAD using heavy duty full size HP drafter plotters. Computing
The CPWD is determined to use IT to usher in era of e-Gov to simplify processes, bringing
in transparency, accountability, efficiency; effectiveness and need based timely and quality
information to all its stakeholders, and to use the available resources more effectively.
The CDO unit of CPWD has been entrusted this job. Many steps towards e-Gov initiatives
have already been taken e.g. PIMS for HR management, including training module and
monitoring of PG and VIP references; web based project monitoring system for monitoring
physical and financial progress of the projects, access to client to view the progress of the
CPWDSEWA in Delhi & NCR and being extended for PAN India for maintenance related
complaints management; enlistment for class one contractors; and CPWD website for
2. PROJECT OVERVIEW
STIPULATED DATE OF
COMPLETION: 02-08-2012
“Police Station& Staff Quarters at KhajuriKhas near Sonia Vihar, New Delhi”
1. Land
2. Store
3. Health unit
5. Canteen
SIGNIFICANCE OF FORMWORK
1) Formwork constitutes 30% of the cost and 60% of the time in concrete construction.
2) Quality of concrete finish and soundness of concrete depends very much on the formwork
system
1) Flex system
3)Aluform system
SITE CLEARANCE-
A number of conditions determine the kind of building that may be erected on a plot of ground.
These conditions may determine where on the lot it may be located. There are also covenants
that are legally binding regulations. These may, for example, set the minimum size of a house,
prohibit utility buildings, or ban rooftop television antennas.
Zoning laws regulate the setback and other factors that play into the equation of house location
on a lot. Septic tanks also require special consideration.
A Certificate of Occupancy is an important piece of paper. It
is the final piece of paper, the sign-off, that says the construction
of the building is complete and it is ready to be occupied. Any town that has adopted the BOCA
or UBC building codes requires a CO. In most instances, the bank making the mortgage loan
requires a certificate of occupation as well.
There are eight types of Portland cement. They are designated by Roman numerals and with an
A suffix on three of them
Normal concrete is made of fine aggregates (sand) and regularaggregates (crushed stone or
gravel), plus water. Concrete will set up hard enough in normal weather in about 3 hours.
However, it takes 28 days for it to reach its fullest strength. Concrete may have admixtures. The
Romans added lard, blood, milk, and other materials to make the concrete more workable.
There are at least 6 known admixtures.
Normal concrete contains a small amount of air by adding anair-entrainment admixture, the
amount of air in the concrete can be increased by 10 percent or more by volume. By using an
accelerator, it is possible to have concrete reach its 28-day full strength in only 7 days. Calcium
chloride is the most common accelerator. Pozzolonas are natural volcanic ash or artificial
materials that react with lime in the wet concrete to form cementing compounds. Fly ash is a
by-product of coal-burning power generating stations.
Romansobtained fly ash from Mount Vesuvius eruptions. Fully loaded concrete mixer trucks
may weigh as much as 80,000 lbs, or 40 tons. If the mixer can’t get close enough to unload the
concrete where needed, it is necessary to use chutes, mixer-mounted conveyors, motorized
buggies, or wheelbarrows.
Another term for rebar is deformed steel bar. This is the steel reinforcement used in concrete
to increase its tensile strength. Three types of bar support material are available: wire, precast
concrete, and moulded plastic. Rebar is supported by chairs made of plastic or welded wire.
Welded-wire fabric (WWF) looks like fencing and is manufactured with plain or deformed cold-
drawn wire.
Slump is a measure of how consistent, fluid, and workable a batch of freshly mixed concrete is.
Any change in the slump may mean that the amount of water, the temperature, hydration, or
setting has changed. Slump is a measure of the amount of water in the mix.
Though the foundation supports a building, the earth is the ultimate support. The foundation is
a system comprising foundation wall, footing, and soil. The prime purpose of an efficient
structural foundation system is to transmit the building loads directly to the soil without
exceeding the bearing capacity of the soil. A properly
Designed and constructed foundation system transfers the loads uniformly, minimizes
settlement, and anchors the structure against racking forces and uplift. Because soil type and
bearing capacity are the crucial factors in the foundation system, the foundation must be
designed and built as a system. Too many residential foundations are designed and built
without any concern for the soil.
Types of Foundations
The many types of foundations can be separated into two broad groups: shallow foundations
and deep foundations. Shallow foundations consist of four types: deep basements (8-foot
walls), crawl spaces, slabs-on-grade, and frost-protected shallow foundations. They include
spread footings, mat or raft footings, long footings, and strap footings.
Deep foundations extend considerably deeper into the earth.
They include drilled caissons or piers, groups of piles driven and cast-in-place concrete piles,
and floating foundations.
A number of different construction systems can be used. Casting- place concrete is the most
widely used material for residential foundations, followed by concrete block. Other methods
include precast foundation walls, cast-in-place concrete sandwich panels, and masonry or
concrete piers, all weather wood foundations (AWWF), which are now called permanent wood
foundations (PWF), or preserved.
Footings (which may be square, rectangular, or circular) are strips of concrete or filled concrete
blocks placed under the foundation wall. Gravel or crushed stone footings are used with PWFs.
The purpose of the footings is to transfer the loads from walls, piers, or columns to the soil. The
spread footing is the most common type used to support walls, piers, or columns. The National
Concrete Masonry Association (NCMA) has developed a system of solid.
Monopile foundation
A monopile foundation utilizes a single, generally large-diameter, foundation structural element to
support all the loads (weight, wind, etc.) of a large above-surface structure.
Dried Piles
Also called caissons, drilled shafts, drilled piers, Cast-in-drilled-hole piles (CIDH piles)or Cast-in-
Situ piles. Rotary boring techniques offer larger diameter piles than any other piling method and permit
pile construction through particularly dense or hard strata. Construction methods depend on the geology
of the site. In particular, whether boring is to be undertaken in 'dry' ground conditions or through water-
logged but stable strata - i.e. 'wet boring'.
'Wet' boring also employs a temporary casing through unstable ground and is used when the pile bore
cannot be sealed against water ingress. Boring is then undertaken using a digging bucket to drill through
the underlying soils to design depth. The reinforcing cage is lowered into the bore and concrete is placed
by tremie pipe, following which, extraction of the temporary casing takes place.
Augercast pile
An augercast pile, often known as a CFA pile, is formed by drilling into the ground with a hollow stemmed
continuous flight auger to the required depth or degree of resistance. No casing is required.
Augercast piles cause minimal disturbance, and are often used for noise and environmentally sensitive
sites. Augercast piles are not generally suited for use in contaminated soils, due to expensive waste
disposal costs. In cases such as these however a displacement pile may provide the cost efficiency of an
augercast pile and minimal environmental impact. In ground containing obstructions or cobbles and
boulders, augercast piles are less suitable as refusal above the design pile tip elevation may be
encountered. In certain cases drill motors that produce more torque and horsepower may be able to
mitigate these events.
Specialty Piles:
1. Micro piles
2. Tripod piles
3. Sheet piles
4. Soldier piles
5. Suction Piles
6. Ad freeze Piles
When working with concrete, certain methods and techniques must be employed to ensure the
best finished product. This chapter discusses the following:
1) Screeding
2) Tamping and jitterbugging
3) Finishing (including Floating, Troweling,Brooming, Grooving, and Edging)
4) Curing (including curing time and curing methods)
1)Screeding
To screed is to strike-off or level slab concrete after pouring. Generally, all the dry materials
used in making quality concrete are heavier than water. Thus, shortly after placement, these
materials will have a tendency to settle to the bottom and force any excess water to the
surface. This reaction is commonly called bleeding. This bleeding usually occurs with non–air-
entrained concrete. It is of utmost importance
that the first operations of placing, screeding, and darbying
be performed before any bleeding takes place.
2)Tamping or Jitterbugging
The hand tamper or jitterbug is used to force the large particles of coarse aggregate slightly
below the surface to enable the cement mason to pass a darby over the surface without
dislodging any large aggregate. After the concrete has been struck-off or rodded (and, in some
cases, tamped), it is smoothed with a darby to level any raised spots and fill depressions. Long-
handled floats of either wood ormetal (called bull floats) are sometimes used instead of darbies
to smooth and level the surface.
When the bleed water and water sheen have left the surface of the concrete, finishing may
begin. Finishing may take one or more of several forms, depending on the type of surface
desired.
Finishing operations must not be overdone, or water under the
surface will be brought to the top. When this happens, a thin layer of cement is also brought up
and later, after curing, the thin layer becomes a scale that will powder off with usage. Finishing
can be done by hand or by rotating power-driven trowels or floats. The size of the job
determines the choice, based on economy.
The type of tool used for finishing affects the smoothness of the concrete. A wood float puts a
slightly rough surface on the concrete.
A steel (or other metal) trowel or float produces a smooth finish.
Extra rough surfaces are given to the concrete by running a stiffbristled broom across the top.
4)Floating
Most sidewalks and driveways are given a slightly roughened surface by finishing with a float.
Floats may be small, hand-held tools , with the work done while kneeling on a board, or
they may be on long handles for working from the edge.
shows a worker using a long-handled float, and shows
the construction details for making a float.
When working from a kneeling board, the concrete must be stiff enough to support the board
and the worker’s weight without deforming.
This will be within two to five hours from the time the surface
water has left the concrete, depending on the type of roof.
A roof includes the roof cover (the upper layer, which protects
against rain, snow, and wind) or roofing, the sheathing to which it is fastened, and the framing
(rafters) that support the other components. Because of its exposure, roofing usually has a
limited life. It is made to be readily replaceable. Roofing may be made of many widely
diversified materials, among which are the following:
2) Metal or aluminium
3) Slate
this may be the natural product or rigid manufactured slabs, often cement asbestos, though
these are on the decline since the controversy over asbestos.
these are placed between the pliesand a mopping of tar or asphalt overall. Tar-felt roofs
usuallyhave the top covered with embedded gravel or crushed slag.
5) Roll roofing
Roofs
The slope of the roof is frequently a factor in the choice of roofing materials and method used
to put them in place. The lower the pitch of the roof, the greater the chance of wind getting
under the shingles and tearing them out. Interlocking cedar shingles resist this wind prying
better than standard asphalt shingles. For roofs with less than a 4-inch slope per foot, do not
use standard asphalt. Down to 2 inches, use self-sealing asphalt. Roll roofing can be used with
pitches down to 2 inches when lapped 2 inches. For very low-pitched
Slopes, the manufacturers of asphalt shingles recommend that the roof be planned for some
other type of covering.
Aluminium strip roofing virtually eliminates the problem of wind prying, but these strips are
noisy. Most homeowners object to the noise during a rainstorm. Even on porches, the noise is
often annoying to those inside the house.
Spaced roofing boards are sometimes used with cedar shingles.
This is usually done as an economy measure and because the cedar shingles add considerably
to the strength of the roof. The spaced roofing boards reduce the insulating qualities.
Roll Roofing
CEMENT
SECOND SHEET
FIRST SHEET
Roofing (with no cupped boards or other protuberance), the slate-surfacedroll roofing will
withstand a surprising amount of abrasion from foottraffic, although it is not generally
recommended for that purpose.
Windstorms are the most relentless enemy of roll roofing. If the wind gets under a loose edge,
almost certainly a section will be blown off.
A built-up roof is constructed of sheathing paper, a bonded base sheet, perforated felt, asphalt,
and surface aggregates.
The sheathing paper comes in 36-inch-wide rolls and has approximately 432 ft2 per roll. It is a
rosin-size paper and is used to prevent asphalt leakage to the wood deck. The base sheet is a
heavy asphalt-saturated felt that is placed over the sheathing paper.
It is available in 1, 11/2, and 2 squares per roll. The perforatedfelt is one of the primary parts of
a built-up roof. It is saturated with asphalt and has tiny perforations throughout the sheet. The
perforations prevent air entrapment between the layers of felt.
SHEATHING PAPER
BASE SHEET
PERFORATED FELT
ASPHALT AGGREGATE
Prior to the application of the built-up roof, the deck should beInspected for soundness. Wood
board decks should be constructed of 3/4-inch seasoned lumber or plywood. Any knotholes
AGGREGATE
GRAVEL STOP
ASPHALT
ROOF CEMENT
NAILS—3" O.C.
This is done to continuously track the performance of the project progress, cost sand condition
contribution. Corrective actions can be taken when required and provides data.
The following three reports are made for the tracking-
8. QUALITY:-
The implementation of Quality Assurance in the field will require close co-operation
among the three agencies, namely (a) field engineers (b) the construction agency, and
(c) the Quality Assurance team at Circle level for strict compliance of Quality Assurance
Procedure forming part of agreement.
Multi level Quality checks have been created in CPWD as detailed below:
Field level
The direct responsibility for ensuring proper quality of work as per approved
specifications for achieving the intended performance and structural, functional and
aesthetical parameters, and the desired life of the building/installation/structure rests
with the construction team of Executive Engineer, Assistant Engineer and Junior
Engineer.
The functions of the Quality Assurance team at Circle level are to check the compliance
of Quality Assurance system by the field units, to locate the lapse/deficiency in the
implementation of the Quality Assurance Plan, and to guide the field engineers in
quality related aspects of the work.
This Core Wing carries out the following main functions to ensure systematic and
comprehensive Assurance of quality in the works: -
· Quality Assurance of works under the Special DG(S&P), (TD), ADG (Border) and
Engineer- in- Chief (CPWD), Delhi.
· To carry out investigations and enquiries with regard to quality related aspects.
Quality Assurance works in various Regions are being looked after by the Regional QA
units headed by the Superintending Engineer (TLQA) or Director Works of the Region.
The CSQ unit of CPWD is responsible for Contract related matters and quality assurance
functions.
The unit headed by a Chief Engineer is located in Nirman Bhawan and has 5 separate
cells headed by superintending engineers to look after specific areas. The specific areas
are
4. Techno-Legal matters
The unit is also responsible for enlistment of class-1 contractors in CPWD besides
formulating rules and regulations for enlistment of contractors by different authorities.
All contract related issues, techno legal issues referred to DGW by field units or by other
organisations are dealt by this unit. The responsibility of bringing out schedules and
specifications also rests with the CSQ unit.
10.CONCLUSION:-
I hope this experience will surely help me in my future and also in shaping my career.