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NHS hospital reinforcing RAAC planks amid collapse fears

Image: LABC

An NHS hospital is undertaking reinforcement works to reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (RAAC) planks amid fears they have deteriorated and could collapse.

West Suffolk Hospital has installed 27 metal supports under planks within the building to make it safe. RAAC planks were used in the roofs, floors and walls of NHS buildings between the 1960s and 1980s and had an expected lifespan of around 30 years.

This form of precast concrete was really an aerated silica product, according to the Concrete Society, and offered little protection to the corrosion of embedded metal. The Concrete Society added that pre-1980 RAAC roof planks are now past their expected service life and there has already been some failures.

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