A comprehensive engineering audit was undertaken following reports of premature surface cracking, localized settlement, ponding of water, and concerns regarding construction quality within a newly completed reinforced concrete hardstand facility.
The investigation identified multiple critical non-conformances involving both construction practices and quality assurance procedures. These included unauthorized progression of works beyond approved inspection stages, omission of specified subbase preparation activities, inadequate compaction of foundation layers, inconsistent concrete slab thicknesses, and deficiencies in curing and quality verification records.
Site investigations, non-destructive testing, destructive verification works, and document reviews indicate that the completed hardstand does not fully satisfy the approved design intent or specified engineering requirements.
The facility is therefore considered structurally non-compliant pending completion of corrective works and independent verification.
2. BACKGROUND
The hardstand was designed to accommodate:
Heavy goods vehicles (HGV)
Container handling equipment
Forklifts and mobile cranes
Static storage loads
Industrial logistics operations
The approved design consisted of:
Reinforced Concrete Slab
Lean Concrete Blinding Layer
Compacted Crusher Run Subbase
Engineered Fill Layer
Prepared and Compacted Subgrade
Each layer was designed to work together as an integrated load transfer system.
Failure of any component may result in cracking, settlement, joint failure, or long-term structural deterioration.
3. OBJECTIVES
The audit was undertaken to:
Verify structural compliance with approved design drawings.
Assess slab thickness consistency.
Verify concrete quality and strength.
Assess subbase and formation preparation.
Review construction quality records.
Determine root causes of observed defects.
Recommend corrective and preventive actions.
4. REFERENCES
The assessment was performed with reference to:
4.1 Concrete
ASTM C42 – Core Testing of Concrete
ASTM C39 – Compressive Strength Testing
ASTM C805 – Rebound Hammer Testing
BS EN 12390 Series
4.2 Earthworks and Compaction
ASTM D1557
ASTM D6938
BS 1377
4.3 Construction Specs
Approved IFC Drawings
Material Specifications
Inspection and Test Plans (ITP)
Project Quality Plan
5. DESIGN REQUIREMENTS
7. FIELD OBSERVATIONS
The site inspection identified:
8. TESTING
The investigation included:
8.1 Non-Destructive Testing
Rebound Hammer Survey
Visual Assessment
Surface Level Survey
8.2 Destructive Testing
Concrete Core Extraction
Compressive Strength Testing
Trial Pit Excavation
Subbase Verification
9. RESULTS
10. ROOT CAUSE ANALYSIS
The failures are assessed to be systemic rather than isolated.
Potential contributing factors include:
10.1 Technical
Inadequate compaction effort.
Improper moisture conditioning.
Poor concrete curing practices.
Variations in concrete placement methods.
10.2 Management
Insufficient supervision.
Weak quality assurance enforcement.
Schedule-driven construction pressures.
10.3 Procedural
Bypassed hold points.
Incomplete testing.
Inadequate documentation controls.
11. RISK ASSESSMENT (ENGINEERING)
12. CONCLUSION
The investigation concludes that:
The hardstand construction does not fully comply with approved design requirements.
Concrete strength results consistently fall below specified requirements.
Thickness deviations exceed permissible tolerances in several locations.
Subbase compaction does not satisfy engineering specifications.
Quality assurance controls were not effectively implemented.
The completed hardstand cannot presently be certified as compliant for long-term heavy-duty service.
13. CORRECTIVE ACTION PLAN (CAPA)
13.1 Immediate
Suspend further hardstand construction activities.
Conduct comprehensive root cause investigation.
Increase frequency of verification testing.
Excavate trial pits to confirm subbase conditions.
Undertake structural assessment of affected areas.
Remove and reconstruct severely defective panels.
13.2 Verification
Repeat core testing.
Repeat compressive strength testing.
Conduct additional FDT testing.
Verify slab reinforcement cover.
Confirm subbase thickness and compaction.
14. PREVENTIVE ACTIONS
Reinstate mandatory inspection hold points.
Implement digital QA/QC tracking systems.
Strengthen contractor supervision requirements.
Improve concrete temperature monitoring.
Increase independent testing frequency.
Introduce third-party quality audits.
Establish formal competency assessments for site personnel.
15. RECOMMENDATION
The reinforced concrete hardstand shall be classified as:
REJECTED PENDING RECTIFICATION AND INDEPENDENT VERIFICATION
No practical completion certificate, handover approval, or final acceptance should be granted until all identified deficiencies have been rectified and compliance has been independently verified through testing, inspection, and engineering certification.


