Expansive Cutting Work
When a general contractor needed to remove 15,000 square feet of 16-inch-thick concrete weighing more than 3,000,000 pounds in one month, they contacted a professional sawing and drilling contractor.
Glasgow Station Upgrade
Key infrastructural work at one of Scotland’s busiest railway stations was completed on budget and ahead of schedule, thanks to West Lothian-based Core Cut Ltd. The contractor was chosen by Story Contracting, which had been awarded a rail track slab replacement contract as part of a £742-million ($915-million) improvement program.
All Jazzed Up
Using a custom-fabricated concrete sawing machine, a Houston-based CSDA contractor was able to safely and quickly cut 4,500 14-inch-square concrete piles as part of a wider $807 million construction project at Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport.
A Cut Above (from Below)
Contractors use diamond wire to cut and remove large sections of heavily-reinforced concrete on piers, dams, bridge sections and in areas where work space is restricted. Of these restricted work areas, none present more challenges than when the structure is underwater.
Journey of the Mayflower
A major remodeling of a 10-story office building in Dallas, Texas included over 32,500 linear feet of 5-inch-thick suspended slab sawing to create atrium and parking ramp openings, some measuring 125 feet long by 25 feet wide.
Without Wasting a Drop
A demolition contractor was tasked with demolishing two aging concrete silos near Santa Fe, New Mexico’s water supply. The water intake structures sat in the Nichols and McClure reservoirs on the Santa Fe River and supplied 40 percent of the area’s drinking water.